For Colored Girls
An emotionally charged story about love, heartbreak, healing, and strength.
to Regency Theatre in Grand Bahama and you do not want to miss it!
For decades, the standard paradigm in Artificial Intelligence has been reactive. Whether through the pattern matching of Large Language Models (LLMs) or the trial-and-error loops of Reinforcement Learning (RL), AI has primarily functioned by mapping inputs directly to outputs. However, a profound shift is underway. Researchers are increasingly converging on the concept of World Models—internal, predictive simulations of reality that allow machines to "dream," plan, and reason about physics before they act. By moving beyond statistical correlation toward an understanding of causal dynamics, world models represent the most viable path toward Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).
The idea of relocating the primary prison facility from Nassau to a Family Island or even an undeveloped island in The Bahamas is as bold as it is complex. It reflects one of the most significant potential shifts in the Bahamian approach to corrections, community planning, and regional development. At face value, its appeal is clear: reduce social friction in densely populated urban communities, free up valuable land in Nassau, and possibly re-envision the correctional system toward a more rehabilitative model. But once the idea is unpacked, it reveals an array of logistical, economic, social, cultural, political, and ethical challenges that must be carefully weighed.
Why, in The Bahamas, are banks hesitant to lend money for a person to start a new business but would more easily lend money for a person to buy a vehicle?
In The Bahamas, this contrast in lending is a common frustration for entrepreneurs. The difference boils down to how banks perceive risk versus security. A car loan is considered a "safe" consumer product, while a new business is seen as a high-stakes "gamble."
Here is a breakdown of why it is significantly easier to get a car loan than a business loan in the Bahamian banking landscape.
Living in the Bahamas has long been associated with images of tropical beauty, beaches, and luxury tourism. For many Bahamians, however, daily life is marked by a very different reality: households face persistently high prices for basic goods and services, and earning enough to cover those costs remains a struggle for a large portion of the population. The cost of living in the Bahamas sits among the highest in the world, far exceeding what many local incomes can comfortably support. Understanding why this is so — and what can be done — is essential to grasping both the everyday economic challenges facing Bahamians and the broader political dynamics leading up to the 2026 general election.
Child-to-parent abuse, sometimes called child-to-parent violence or CPV, is a form of family abuse in which a child uses harmful behaviors to control, intimidate, or dominate a parent or caregiver. These behaviors can be physical, emotional, psychological, verbal, financial, or coercive in nature. While it is most commonly discussed in relation to adolescents, adult children can also be abusive toward their parents, particularly when dependency, unresolved family conflict, or mental health and substance issues are involved.
This type of abuse is often hidden and underreported. Many parents feel deep shame, guilt, or fear about admitting that their own child is hurting them. Others worry about being judged as bad parents or fear legal consequences for their child. As a result, child-to-parent abuse tends to remain invisible, misunderstood, and minimized, even though its impact on parents can be severe and long-lasting.
Understanding why this abuse happens, how it manifests, and what parents can do is essential for breaking the cycle and offering meaningful support to affected families.
In the contemporary era of hyper-connectivity, the smartphone has evolved from a mere communication tool into a portal to the collective anxieties of the world. Among the various behaviors birthed by the attention economy, "doomscrolling"—the act of continuously scrolling through bad news despite the anxiety it causes—has emerged as a defining psychological challenge of the 2020s. While the act of consuming news is as old as the printing press, the velocity, volume, and algorithmic precision of modern social media have transformed a simple habit into a destructive cycle that threatens global mental health.
The Public Procurement Act of The Bahamas represents foundational legislation designed to govern how public funds are spent on goods, services, and works across all sectors of government. Its purpose is to ensure that government procurement is conducted transparently, competitively, responsibly, and in a manner that delivers value for taxpayers while supporting broader policy goals. Although initially enacted in 2021, the Act has been revised and replaced with newer versions (notably the Public Procurement Act, 2023) to address implementation issues and incorporate policy priorities such as support for small businesses and economic diversification.