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China-Trained, Jamaican-Born Doctors: Left in Limbo
For decades, our health system benefited from physicians trained in Burma, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, Ghana, Hungary, India, Latin America, Nigeria, Russia, the UK, and the United States. Their children sat in our classrooms and their parents were among the most trusted doctors of our families. No one questioned their competence. Why then the sudden disdain for Jamaican youngsters graduating with Chinese diplomas? Is it because they did not enter medical school with enough

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 23, 20252 min read
Open letter to Gleaner Writer Olivia Brown and Glenmuir Student Raine Cooper
Grace and peace to you.
I am writing to commend you on your excellent report of 20 September on Glenmuir High School’s valedictorian, Ms. Raine Cooper.

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 21, 20251 min read
The Devilish Run-On Sentences Problem
A run-on sentence occurs when two or more independent clauses (complete thoughts) are joined together improperly—without correct...

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 20, 20252 min read


PUBLISHED| Dennis Minott, PhD | ‘Music with a Caribbean Beat’: Media’s persistent regional betrayal
We are, in so many ways, an outwardly looking musical nation; for our media to pretend otherwise is an abdication of leadership and imagination.

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 20, 20254 min read


From Mixed Nuts to Enlightened Nation Builders: Mentoring The Young in the Unpacific Caribbean
In every Caribbean household there is a container of mixed nuts, often presented to visitors at Christmas or stashed away for special occasions. The contents are never uniform. Some nuts are large, others small; some have shells that are stubbornly hard, others crack easily. Yet, taken together, they offer flavour, variety, and nourishment.
So it is with the Caribbean’s young people, particularly in A-QuEST princelings and doclings of Jamaica.

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 13, 20254 min read


“Music With a Caribbean Beat”: 'A Discriminatory Distortion'
By Dennis A Minott, PhD (I Praise God for Overseas, Multicultural, Polyglot Education) A conceptual illustration of a vintage radio dial...

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 13, 20254 min read


Open letter to: Educators of CARICOM Territories, Attention All: Ministers of Education, Permanent Secretaries, Education Officers, High School Principals, and Guidance Counsellors
Fairness, clarity, and global comparability—principals are urged to adopt A-QuEST’s Concordance to better represent student achievement.

A-QuEST (Minott)
Sep 8, 20253 min read


E-Quipping Little Jamaica to Run Like Bolt
A hypothetical government programme to install a minimum capacity of 150 Mbps download and 50 Mbps upload speeds in every Jamaican household would not be a mere infrastructure upgrade; it would be the foundational act of a profound national transformation, catalysing economic growth, social equity, and democratic renewal. High-speed, reliable internet is the central nervous system of modern commerce. For Jamaica, this would unlock several tiers of economic potential...

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 29, 20254 min read


NEWS: Letter of the Day | Jamaica Deserves Better, not Banality
We are faced with a dilemma: The Integrity Commission had gone on record saying that there are at least eight current parliamentarians whose statutory declarations have not been certified. How, then, can the electorate go to the polls to vote intelligently and with a clear conscience on current members on both political sides without knowing their honesty and financial status? It’s like “ buying puss in bag!” Such a dilemma could be one of the reasons for apathy among most of

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 29, 20252 min read


Fellow Jamaicans: My Democracy Dividends Proposal
Current polling predicts yet another cycle of low voter turnout. This persistent reluctance to participate in the democratic process stems, in large part, from widespread distrust of politics and politicians. Unless the electorate is given fresh, practical incentives to turn out and vote—for whichever party they choose—this apathy will endure...Read more

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 21, 20252 min read


The Great Betrayal: When greed masquerades as ambition
This confusion between ambition and greed is not unique to Jamaica. It is a regional affliction — and a regional danger. Renowned political psychologist Robert Hare, in his work on psychopathy in leadership, notes how a lack of empathy and a focus on self-gain can manifest in public life, with devastating consequences for the general populace. He could well have been describing the scenarios we see today.
In Guyana, oil wealth is already pooling in elite accounts even as m

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 17, 20257 min read


NEWS: Curtis Ward | Mindless arguments
I have heard and read some idiotic arguments and responses to the call for accountability for egregious behaviour which enriches...

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 17, 20254 min read


Greed Mangles Nations; Ambition Cares For People
Greed Mangles Nations; Ambition Shepherds a People
Across time and place—from exemplary American presidencies to the bedrock of Singapore’s rise—thought-leaders and statesmen have recognised a potent truth: greed corrodes, but ambition, tempered by integrity, builds. As we reflect on Jamaica today—and indeed across CARICOM—we must confront a sobering transformation...Read More

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 17, 20254 min read


Can Jamaica treat Haitian refugees more kindly?
In the past few years, Jamaica has received small open sailboats from Haiti, usually carrying fewer than 60 passengers—men, women, and children—fleeing from untenable social, economic, political, health, security, and educational conditions. Their vessels are often perilously unseaworthy, their journeys a testament to desperation rather than adventure.
Our response as a state has, too often, been bureaucratic, transactional, and distant—characterised by military boots and

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 12, 20253 min read


The Banality of Greed In Jamaica's Governance
In an atmosphere still unsettled by previous integrity investigations, new Sunday Gleaner revelations questioning financial propriety have emerged like a slow-moving landslide—ominous, destabilising, and smothering public confidence. This is no longer about partisan politics. This is about civic oxygen—the very air we need to breathe as citizens.
Arendt warned that the greatest danger lay not in the monstrous, but in the mundane. And here in Jamaica, the mundane has become t

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 10, 20254 min read


Outlaw the Lie: Why Denying Climate Change Must Become a Crime in CARICOM
The time for polite debate is over. It is now a matter of survival. we write today to call—firmly and without apology—for the criminalisation of climate change denial across Jamaica and all CARICOM member states. Moreover, we urge that the deliberate misrepresentation of non-renewable energy technologies as "green" or "renewable" must henceforth be treated under the law as criminal fraud, prosecutable in open court....

A-QuEST (Minott)
Aug 3, 20255 min read


It’s Flipping Time for Greener Caribbean MBAs | Re-designing Curriculum for a Climate-resilient, Islanded Region
Our business schools must urgently recalibrate their mission, not as factories for conventional managers, but as midwives for a sustainable, resilient, and just economy tailor-made for both island and mountainous realities throughout the region.

A-QuEST (Minott)
Jul 21, 20256 min read


PUBLISHED| Breaking the monopoly: Unmasking the SMR mirage—Why Jamaica must reject billionaire nukes
Let us remember:
1. Puerto Rico’s Bonus Reactor shut down in disgrace.
2. Cuba’s reactor project collapsed amid geopolitical complications.
3. The Dominican Republic mothballed its nuclear ambitions.
4. Haiti in its heyday, wisely, never attempted one.
Instead of chasing nuclear mirages, Jamaica must double down on proven, scalable, and socially embedded renewables:..

A-QuEST (Minott)
Jul 17, 20253 min read


JPS Energy Reform Series: Parts I–III of Four Parts
It is not hyperbole to say that energy is destiny. And for too long, Jamaica's destiny has been dictated not by the people, nor by the imperatives of justice or resilience, but by monopolistic inertia. The 2027 expiration of the Jamaica Public Service Company (JPSCo)'s all-island licence is no mere bureaucratic milestone—it is a generational pivot point.

A-QuEST (Minott)
Jul 14, 20254 min read


Re: Pastor Wayne Rock's Health; An Open Letter Of Appeal To Our Friends And Well-Wishers
Wayne joined the T&T Police Service, graduating at the very top of his class, and serving faithfully in some of the most dangerous zones of North Trinidad. Roughly 30 years ago, he heeded God’s call to full-time ministry and took up the pastorate of a Nazarene congregation in Laventille, one of the most crime-plagued, drug-ravaged, gang-controlled, and economically underprivileged districts in the country.
There was no fanfare or applause.Yet for 30 years, Wayne gave his

A-QuEST (Minott)
Jul 8, 20253 min read
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