PAUL, BECKFORD, CRAWFORD, AND LINDSEY all put out to pasture by Omar Davis, the political "gilligog" of our time!
May the eagle man's soul rest in peace!
Message Board Archives
PAUL CHEN YOUNG DEAD AT 82
In reply to XDFIX
You could not mourn the man's passing without getting in to politics eeh?
In reply to XDFIX
lots of people ignore the fraud that took place in that crisis,and so Omar became the scapegoat.
In reply to camos
Well said
In reply to camos
They were a lot of fraud in the financial system however do you think those high interest rates were not a cause?
Tell me which business can operate much less compete with interest rates of 50% to 100%?
In reply to nitro
Don't mess up.
Didn't the high interest rates come after?
High interest rates were the nineties, no??
That other Chen Young stuff was 20 years before.
//
In reply to Ewart
You know what I remember about Chen Young - when he said Jamaicans had no right to weekends off. I remember tracing him off in public for that one.
In reply to XDFIX
the political "gilligog" of our time!
Thought the proper cultural expression is "Ginnygog"
In reply to DonD
correct or ginigog
In reply to DonD
Yep. Without the "y" though.
//
In reply to Ewart
Chen Young's eagle "empire" collapsed in the 90s with Workers Bank, Citizens and some merchant banks.
In reply to nitro
Yes but when did he leave Jamaica"?
//
In reply to nitro
interest rates are relative; banks charge more than they pay!
In reply to Chrissy
Yes DonD
Ginnygog: an influential person, some Jamaicans say "gilligog" which I guess is a parish thing!
Ewart - with the "Y"!
In reply to Dukes
Nothing wrong with political tears in mourning!
"Ginigog": Must admit not a word I have heard or used before.
Maybe I have, but never registered. Not a regularly used Bajan word, but must be of some prominence in the Yard.
So educate me, my Jamaican friends, of the origin.
In reply to Casper
Don't know the origin, but:
The term ginnigog is usually used to refer to one who is supposedly knowledgeable of or very good at doing something. It could be used to describe anyone, from a marbles player to a nuclear physicist
In reply to CWWeekes
Correct. And it is often used with a slight sneer.
And by the way, yours is the spelling I am familiar with.
Ginnygog is soft "g." as in the liquor gin.
//
folks! is ginnygog a synonym for rhyging?
Search
Live Scores
- no matches