Thursday, May 28, 2026
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
The Foundation of Modern Progress: The Imperative of STEM Education
The Foundation of Modern Progress: The Imperative of STEM Education
We are living through a period of technological and scientific acceleration unprecedented in human history. From the rapid deployment of artificial intelligence and quantum computing to the urgent quest for sustainable energy solutions and personalized medicine, the defining challenges and opportunities of the 21st century are fundamentally technical.
At the center of this societal shift is STEM education—an acronym representing Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. Once viewed merely as a specialized track for future scientists and academics, STEM education has evolved into an essential pillar of foundational literacy, economic vitality, and global problem-solving. To understand its importance in today’s world is to recognize that STEM is not just a collection of school subjects; it is the primary engine driving modern civilization.
Golden Showers Flowers
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Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Say What You Mean and Mean What You Say
Say What You Mean and Mean What You Say
Don’t twist your words like vines in rain,
Or speak in riddles full of strain.
A truthful tongue lights up the way,
Say what you mean and mean what you say.
A promise made should still stand tall,
Not fade away when troubles call.
Strong honest words will never sway,
Say what you mean and mean what you say.
The gossip crow may flap and cry,
While half-truths drift and multiply.
But trust is gold that thieves can’t sway,
Say what you mean and mean what you say.
Monday, May 25, 2026
The Stinking Passionflower in The Bahamas
The Stinking Passionflower in The Bahamas
The Stinking Passionflower, scientifically known as Passiflora foetida, is one of the most unusual and recognizable wild vines found throughout tropical and subtropical regions of the world, including The Bahamas. It belongs to the passionflower family, a group of plants famous for their intricate flowers and climbing vines. Although some passionflowers are cultivated for their edible fruit and ornamental beauty, the Stinking Passionflower is mostly known as a wild-growing medicinal vine that thrives in disturbed soils, roadside thickets, bushy lots, coastal scrublands, and abandoned fields.
In The Bahamas, the plant is familiar to many older Bahamians who grew up in the Out Islands or rural communities where knowledge of “bush medicine” was commonly passed from one generation to another. Despite its unpleasant odor and somewhat untidy appearance, the vine has long been valued in folk medicine and traditional remedies.
Saturday, May 23, 2026
Illegal Drug Trafficking From South America Through the Caribbean and The Bahamas to North America
Illegal Drug Trafficking From South America Through the Caribbean and The Bahamas to North America
Illegal drug trafficking across the Caribbean basin is one of the most significant organized criminal enterprises in the Western Hemisphere. For decades, criminal organizations in South America have used the Caribbean Sea, island chains, remote coastlines, and weakly monitored maritime corridors to transport cocaine and other narcotics toward lucrative consumer markets in North America, especially the United States and Canada.
The Bahamas occupies a strategically important geographic position in this trafficking network because of its proximity to the southeastern United States, particularly the state of Florida. Its vast archipelago, scattered islands, extensive maritime territory, and numerous isolated cays make it both a transit point and a logistical corridor for smugglers moving narcotics northward.
This report examines:
- How illegal drugs are trafficked from South America through the Caribbean and The Bahamas
- Why North America remains a major destination for narcotics
- The methods used by traffickers
- The impact on Caribbean states
- Potential solutions to reduce and restrict trafficking
- Long-term strategic considerations
Friday, May 22, 2026
The Bermuda Triangle: The Bahamas Connection
The Bermuda Triangle: The Bahamas Connection
The Bermuda Triangle—a loosely defined patch of the western Atlantic Ocean spanning roughly 500,000 square miles between Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico—has gripped the public imagination for generations. At the absolute heart of this legendary expanse sit The Bahamas, an archipelago of over 700 islands, deep underwater trenches, and treacherous coral reefs.
While pop culture has blamed everything from alien abductions to the lost city of Atlantis, the true story of the Bermuda Triangle is a fascinating intersection of historical tragedy, sensationalized journalism, and raw, unforgiving marine science.
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Health & Wellness Fair
presents
Health & Wellness Fair
Thursday, June 4th
10am - 2pm
Ivy Dumont Building, University Drive,
Nassau, Bahamas
Don't Be a Shirker
Don't Be a Shirker
When morning breaks with golden light,
Get up and face the day upright.
Don’t hide away or dodge the work,
Stand proud and strong — don’t be a shirker.
The farmer plows beneath the sun,
His labor’s hard, but must be done.
The lazy soul may smirk and lurk,
Yet gains no prize by being a shirker.
The fisherman casts out his line,
Through stormy seas and weather fine.
He rows ahead though waves may jerk,
He’ll never thrive if he’s a shirker.
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
The Pillars of Statecraft: The Imperative of Honesty and Integrity in Political Leadership
The Pillars of Statecraft: The Imperative of Honesty and Integrity in Political Leadership
In the architecture of modern democracy, public trust functions as the foundational mortar holding the bricks of state institutions together. When that trust erodes, the entire structure becomes vulnerable to instability. At the core of public trust lie two distinct but deeply interconnected ethical virtues: honesty—the commitment to truthfulness in speech and transparency in action—and integrity—the unyielding alignment of one’s actions with deep-seated moral principles.
While politics is frequently dismissed by cynics as an arena inherently defined by deception, Machiavellian maneuvering, and opportunism, history and political science demonstrate the exact opposite. Honesty and integrity are not merely naive, optional ideals for a politician; they are functional, systemic necessities for effective governance, social cohesion, and the preservation of democratic legitimacy.
I FRAMED IT: A One-of-a-Kind DIY Picture Framing Experience
I FRAMED IT
A One-of-a-KindDIY Picture Framing Experience
The event takes place on Friday, May 22, Saturday, May 23, and Sunday, May 24.
Guests are invited to bring specific sized artwork, photographs, or certificates to be professionally guided through the framing process.
Accepted items for this weekend event in May are:
• 4" x 6" photos/art/docs
• 5" x 7" photos/art/docs
• 8" x 10" photos/art/docs
• 8½" x 11" certificates/docs
Choose from a curated selection of solid wood frames and coordinating archival mats, then—with assistance from a master framer—assemble your finished piece yourself.
Leave with a beautifully framed item and the satisfaction of proudly saying, “I FRAMED IT.”
Food and beverages will be available for sale, and each day will feature live music segments to add to the creative atmosphere.
For more information
call 393-8834
THE PLACE FOR ART
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
AI Took My Job
AI Took My Job
I showed up Monday, coffee in my hand,
Ready to work like I always had planned.
But HR looked nervous, the boss looked odd,
Then somebody whispered, “AI took your job.”
The chatbot writes emails in half of the time,
Fixes bad grammar and makes it all rhyme.
It never gets hungry, it never says “nah,”
Just sits there all smug in a server bazaar.
I used to make logos and slogans for pay,
Now prompts do my workload in under a day.
A teenager typed “make it edgy and bright,”
And boom, there’s my paycheck disappearing from sight.
Monday, May 18, 2026
The Champion of the People: A Biography of Sir Milo Boughton Butler
The Champion of the People: A Biography of Sir Milo Boughton Butler
First Bahamian-Born Governor-General of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas
Introduction
Sir Milo Boughton Butler, NH, GCMG, GCVO (August 11, 1906 – January 22, 1979) stands as one of the most towering and transformative figures in modern Bahamian history. A fearless merchant, a passionate orator, and a relentless political activist, Butler spent more than four decades on the front lines of the struggle for racial equality, economic justice, and national sovereignty.
As a founding father of the modern Bahamas, his political activism helped dismantle the deeply entrenched white merchant oligarchy known as the "Bay Street Boys." His efforts paved the way for Majority Rule in 1967 and complete Independence in 1973. When the British flag was lowered, it was only fitting that Milo Butler—a man who had risen from a humble grocery shop in "The Pond" to the pinnacle of political influence—was appointed the first Bahamian-born Governor-General of the newly sovereign nation. His journey, immortalized in the folk song "From the Pond to Government Hill," remains an enduring symbol of self-determination, dignity, and national pride.
BREEF Community Snorkel is Back!
BREEF Community Snorkel
Whether you’re an experienced snorkeler or trying it for the very first time, this is your chance to explore The Bahamas’ beautiful marine environment alongside friends, family, and fellow ocean lovers.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
The Golden Guardian: Exploring the Mexican Prickly Poppy (Argemone\ mexicana)
The Golden Guardian: Exploring the Mexican Prickly Poppy (Argemone\ mexicana)
In the sun-drenched landscapes of The Bahamas, few plants are as visually striking or as ecologically resilient as the Mexican Prickly Poppy. Known locally as the "Thistle" or sometimes "Donkey Thistle," this plant is far more than a roadside weed. It is a botanical powerhouse with a deep history in traditional Caribbean medicine and a unique set of biological characteristics that allow it to thrive where other plants fail.
Origin and Geographical Distribution
The Mexican Prickly Poppy, scientifically classified as Argemone\ mexicana, is a species of poppy native to Mexico and Central America. Over centuries, it has naturalized across the Caribbean, South America, and even parts of Africa and Asia.
In The Bahamas, it is considered a naturalized exotic. It migrated through natural seed dispersal and human movement, finding the archipelago’s calcareous soil and subtropical climate to be an ideal match. Today, it can be found on almost every major island, from the pine barrens of Abaco to the dry coppices of Inagua.
Friday, May 15, 2026
AI Report: Top Priorities for the PLP Government
AI Report: Top Priorities for the PLP Government
Question to AI: What are the top priorities in The Bahamas that the elected PLP government should tackle first in its second term? Explain why and how?
AI Reply: The victory of the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) in the 2026 general election gives the government another opportunity to reshape the future of The Bahamas at a time when the country faces both major opportunities and serious vulnerabilities.
The Bahamian economy has recovered strongly since the COVID-19 collapse, driven largely by tourism, cruise arrivals, construction, and foreign investment. However, beneath the surface remain deep structural problems: violent crime, high living costs, energy insecurity, weak productivity, housing shortages, educational gaps, healthcare strain, climate vulnerability, public debt, and growing inequality between New Providence and the Family Islands. (IMF)
The new PLP administration’s success or failure will likely depend on whether it focuses first on the issues that most directly affect ordinary Bahamians rather than only headline economic growth numbers.
Art Show: Call for Art
ART SHOW
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Know When to Bow Out
Know When to Bow Out
There is a rhythm to the tide, a pulse within the sea,
A lesson in the falling leaf that drifts down from the tree.
It does not cling with desperate hands against the winter’s chill,
It understands the time has come to let the world grow still.
But we, with heavy, human hearts, find grace a bitter draft,
We cling to sinking vessels and we claim they are a raft.
We stay within the burning house until the smoke is thick,
Ignoring how the candle’s flame has vanished from the wick.
The stage is grand, the lights are bright, the music fills the air,
And while the melody is sweet, we’re glad to linger there.
But even finest symphonies must find their final chord,
Before the players grow too tired and audiences bored.
To stay beyond the curtain call, to pace the empty hall,
Is to invite the shadow-weight of pride before the fall.
The finest exit isn't made when all the cheers have died,
But when the spirit feels the turn of some internal tide.
It shows within a love that’s soured, where words have turned to glass,
Where every conversation is a bridge you cannot pass.
We fight for ghosts of who we were, for promises long dead,
And starve ourselves on crumbs of hope when we should seek for bread.
There is no virtue in the ache of holding what is gone,
No courage in the tired eyes that dread the coming dawn.
To bow away from hollow arms is not a sign of fear;
It’s honoring the sacred truth that you no longer hear.

















































