Aint:
Do you check for me under your bed at night?
No I do not.I stop looking under my bed for things that go bump in the night the day my mother died.
Aint:
Pickapeppa sauce is Jamaican and folks in south Louisiana love it. I grew up eating Pickapeppa with Philadelphia cream cheese on crackers. Food. It's the great uniter.
That's good to hear,I thought you may have had an another agenda,that I was not aware of.I like "Cornish pasties" but I do not feel the urge to start a thread about Cornwall,so now you can understand why I thought as I did.
Helice:
I think now I will provide another youtube link for you.I have not heard this record for at least 20 years.I was thinking of you and Aint and I managed to remember the name of this song,see you do inspire me.This record was brought back to me when my mother returned from holiday in Jamaica in 1976.The song is called "heavy manners",the people of Jamaica at that time thought they were putting the enemies of Jamaica under heavy manners,but what they did not realize is that they may have thought they were winning the war,but America plays the long game.To be fair today I think the people of Somalia have learn't this lesson,playing the long game.
In Jamaica at that time America was busy causing havoc,bringing guns into the country,at the same time building up an early black devil Edward Seaga.This man Edward Seaga was built up by America to counter the people's heavy weight champion Michael Manley who wanted to link up with Cuba for economic reasons.America was not happy with what was going on in Jamaica so Labeled Michael Manley a communist then went about dealing with Jamaica like Africa.Jamaica has not recovered,and when our family return from holiday they are sad to see the continuing decline in the country.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfsPlV8LOSE
Helice I wll not post any more links to youtube I don't have to, the songs I have posted sum up the music of my era,and how the people in the ghettos were thinking at that time.
Have a great day.