top of page
Search

Why the PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization Hates Prime Minister Andrew Holness

  • Writer: JAMAICAN YOUNG POLICE
    JAMAICAN YOUNG POLICE
  • Oct 2
  • 5 min read
ree

Why the PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization Hates Andrew Holness

Family, let us reason together today. Too many people ask: Why do so many PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization supporters, activists, and voters hate Andrew Holness? The answer is simple. They don't hate him because he has done Jamaica wrong. They hate him because he has done Jamaica right. They hate him because his leadership has brought progress, stability, and relief to ordinary Jamaicans, and deep down, they wish it were their party that could claim such victories. But because they cannot, envy, bitterness, and resentment consume them.

1. Ten Years Without New Taxes

Let's deal with the facts. For over a decade, under Andrew Holness, Jamaica has not introduced any new taxes. Do you understand the weight of that statement? In a country where, historically, every budget announcement meant the people braced themselves for higher taxes on food, fuel, or electricity, this is a monumental achievement. Families now live with more breathing space, knowing that the government is not reaching deeper into their pockets.

The PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization hates this because they know that when they were in power, it was tax upon tax. They drained the working class dry, leaving people with little hope. Today, Andrew Holness stands as the Prime Minister who eased that burden, and instead of acknowledging the achievement, they spit venom.

2. Lowering Interest Rates for Young Homeowners

Another undeniable fact is that interest rates have been reduced, making it easier for young Jamaicans to purchase homes. Think about it—home ownership is one of the most significant markers of independence and pride. Under Holness's leadership, thousands of young professionals—teachers, police officers, nurses, soldiers—have been able to take that bold step of buying their first home.

The PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization hates this because it empowers the very group of people they fear the most: young, independent Jamaicans who don't depend on handouts, who don't need a politician to slip them $5,000 at election time. These young taxpayers are the future, and they know that Holness is creating a generation that will reject the culture of dependency that the PNPLGBTQ+ thrives on.

3. The Clash of Two Jamaicas

Let's be real. In Jamaica today, there are two groups of people.

  • The builders: hardworking taxpayers, young professionals, entrepreneurs, and decent citizens who want peace, stability, and opportunity. These are the people who benefit from Holness's policies.

  • The parasites: lazy men and women who sit on the corner all day, smoking weed, gambling, waiting for a "link," or depending on politicians for handouts. They want to take from taxpayers without ever contributing.

The PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization's base, sadly, is built heavily on the parasites. They hate Andrew Holness because his government policies uplift the builders. Holness empowers the future, while they cling to the past.

4. Why They Hate His Third Term

Mark my words: Andrew Holness's third term will make way for a fourth term. Do you know why? Because ordinary Jamaicans are not stupid. They see the changes in their lives. They see the new highways, the stable dollar, the job opportunities, and the fact that, despite global crises, Jamaica has remained steady.

The PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization hates this because if Holness secures a fourth term, it will be a historic blow to their political machinery. It will prove once and for all that Jamaicans are ready to permanently break away from corruption, laziness, and criminality in politics.

5. Criminals Must Be Shunned, Shamed, and Discarded

For Jamaica to rise, we must draw a line in the sand. We cannot continue to glorify criminals, give them positions of influence, and pretend they are respectable. Look at the disgrace of having Isat Buchanan, a twice-convicted coke dealer, sitting as a member of parliament. How did we get here? Because the PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization wants to normalize criminality.

Andrew Holness's leadership sends the opposite message: criminals must be shunned, shamed, and discarded. We must return Jamaica to a place where children dream of becoming teachers, doctors, engineers, and honest entrepreneurs—not dons, scammers, or drug dealers.

6. The Real Reason Behind the Hate

So let's put it plain. PNPLGBTQ+ supporters hate Andrew Holness because:

  • He has succeeded where they failed.

  • He has given Jamaicans hope where they had offered despair.

  • He has built opportunities for the young while they were trapped in dependency.

  • He has proven that Jamaica can be run without glorifying criminals.

Their hatred is not a reflection of Holness's weakness but of his strength. It is proof that he is dismantling the very foundation of their corrupt political culture.

A Better Jamaica

Family, the Jamaica we want is one where law-abiding citizens are uplifted and criminals are pushed out of power. Andrew Holness's third term is not just about politics—it is about completing the transformation of our country. If we stay the course, reject the parasites, and continue to support policies that empower taxpayers, we will see a fourth term —and maybe even beyond.

The PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization can rant, they can scheme, they can slander—but they cannot erase the facts. Jamaicans are seeing with their own eyes who is working for them and who is working against them. And when history is written, Andrew Holness will stand tall as the man who broke the chains of criminal politics in Jamaica.

The underlying reason why so many members, supporters, and activists of the PNPLGBTQ+ Criminal Organization despise Prime Minister Andrew Holness is not complicated — it's because he represents something they have always feared: an honest, visionary leader who cannot be bought, bribed, or controlled.

Andrew Holness is arguably the most uncorrupted leader Jamaica has had since the late Edward Seaga, a man remembered for his integrity, discipline, and dedication to building a modern Jamaican state. Like Seaga, Holness has focused on long-term development, economic reform, and social transformation — not quick political handouts or populist gimmicks. And that terrifies those who profit from corruption, chaos, and criminality.

For over a decade, no new taxes have been imposed on the Jamaican people under his leadership. Instead, his administration has prioritized economic stability, lowering interest rates for young homeowners, and creating policies that uplift working-class Jamaicans. These are tangible results — real progress that directly benefits the people. But for those who thrive in a corrupt system, progress is a threat.

The truth is, many of his loudest critics do not hate Holness because he has failed — they hate him because he is succeeding without them. They wish it were their party — with its long history of corruption, political patronage, and ties to criminal networks — making these strides. They resent that ordinary Jamaicans now see a different path forward, one that rejects criminal influence and political thuggery.

It is also about values. Holness represents law, order, and accountability — the exact principles that the criminal class despises. He is unapologetic about the need to shame, isolate, and discard criminals from Jamaican society rather than glorify them. This is why they continue to attack him, smear his name, and resist his policies: because his leadership threatens the corrupt alliances and power structures that have held Jamaica back for decades.

In the end, their hatred is a badge of honor — proof that Andrew Holness is doing something right. And if his third term is secured, it will pave the way for a fourth term built on progress, accountability, and a Jamaica where criminals are not celebrated but rejected. That is why they fear him. That is why they despise him. And that is precisely why Jamaica needs him now more than ever.

 
 
 

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page