Dear Editor,
It is with a profound sense of outrage and collective shame that we, the insulted and the forgotten, must address the recent spectacle emanating from the highest office in our land. What was presented as humor at an elite gathering was, in truth, a vulgar revelation of character—a chilling display of how power, when divorced from empathy, curdles into contempt.
The imagery is stark and sickening. On one hand, we have the desperate hope of citizens for whom a promised cash grant represents not a luxury, but a lifeline; a chance to breathe, to eat, to survive another month. This hope, this solemn promise made to strap the nation, was not a hidden concern. It is the daily anguish of our people. Yet, on the other hand, we witnessed the President transform this anguish into a punchline for a roomful of “fancy people.” To take the raw need of the destitute and use it as fodder for dinner satire is not merely a lapse in judgment. It is a fundamental moral failure. It is the crassest form of vulgarity, not of language, but of spirit.
This episode lays bare a disturbing philosophy of governance: the people as playthings, to be embraced before elections and hammered after. The thinking, as laid bare by his actions, appears to be that vulnerability creates a license for mockery, that dependency translates to dominion. The citizen becomes a “toy,” a “ball to be kicked around,” because they are “available, weak.” This is not leadership; it is predation. Leadership embodies service, sacrifice, and solemn respect for the governed. It requires a heart that feels the weight of the people’s struggle, not a tongue that mocks it for applause.
What is most unconscionable is the calculated betrayal. The very promise that served as a headline for political gain was later wielded as a joke for social gain among the privileged who willingly played along unhinged. This double exploitation—first of votes, then of dignity—is conduct utterly unbecoming of the office. He has belittled not only the hopeful but, in his glib performance, has diminished the very stature of the presidency. To play on the needs of others for personal or in-group amusement reveals an unhinged disconnect from the reality over which one is meant to preside over.
We reject this cruelty. We condemn this performance as a grotesque parody of leadership. To the entitled circle who shared in that “cruel joke,” your resounding laughter echoes as a complicit chorus, underscoring a Guyana divided between those who feast on privilege and those who famine in hope.
Therefore, we demand not silence, but accountability. While legal immunities may exist, there is no immunity from the judgment of the people, from the stain on one’s legacy, or from the basic human duty to make amends. A responsible leader, one capable of self-correction, would offer an immediate and public apology. Not for political expediency, but because it is the minimally decent thing to do. After all you are the final arbiter of your legacy. Let this be the end of the “cash grant comedy.” Let the only follow-up be the swift fulfillment of the promise and, at the very least, that tiny apology to restore a shred of sanity to our public discourse. And, of course, the money. The people’s money. Their dignity, however bruised, is not for sale. But the promise made to them must be kept.