Dear Editor,
I am kindly asking our prime minister and our Opposition leader to make a call to all the drivers and conductors who are still playing nasty music on the public transport to stop doing so.
They should only play them in their bedrooms instead.
Dirty music and Jamaica are not friends, it should have no place in our society.
Why is this country so unmanageable? Why can’t these drivers and conductors learn manners and respect? When will a government in Jamaica put an end to nasty music in public places? Will it become a reality?
The government in Jamaica is not so powerless in banning lewd music in this society. It might have to ask the police to remove all the radios and videos from all the buses that are playing filthy songs.
Are we afraid of the trouble-makers who are wrecking Jamaica with pure filth? If so be the case, might as well they stop calling upon the God of supernatural power, or boycott the National Leadership Prayer Breakfast that is always well attended.
On the other hand, I am calling upon all the women and young girls who sit daily on these buses, listen to the rubbish and say nothing, to open their mouths and ask these buggers to stop polluting the place. It burns my heart to see big women sit in these buses enjoying the filth. Are they real? Do they have children?
When we are travelling on public transport, they must not take it for granted that we all listen to garbage. We must, instead, pray to God for a safe journey.
‘Wha sweet some a wi a guh sour wi.’ Mark my word.
Donald J McKoy
donaldmckoy2010@hotmail.com
I am kindly asking our prime minister and our Opposition leader to make a call to all the drivers and conductors who are still playing nasty music on the public transport to stop doing so.
They should only play them in their bedrooms instead.
Dirty music and Jamaica are not friends, it should have no place in our society.
Why is this country so unmanageable? Why can’t these drivers and conductors learn manners and respect? When will a government in Jamaica put an end to nasty music in public places? Will it become a reality?
The government in Jamaica is not so powerless in banning lewd music in this society. It might have to ask the police to remove all the radios and videos from all the buses that are playing filthy songs.
Are we afraid of the trouble-makers who are wrecking Jamaica with pure filth? If so be the case, might as well they stop calling upon the God of supernatural power, or boycott the National Leadership Prayer Breakfast that is always well attended.
On the other hand, I am calling upon all the women and young girls who sit daily on these buses, listen to the rubbish and say nothing, to open their mouths and ask these buggers to stop polluting the place. It burns my heart to see big women sit in these buses enjoying the filth. Are they real? Do they have children?
When we are travelling on public transport, they must not take it for granted that we all listen to garbage. We must, instead, pray to God for a safe journey.
‘Wha sweet some a wi a guh sour wi.’ Mark my word.
Donald J McKoy
donaldmckoy2010@hotmail.com