Bermuda’s homeless shelter renovations delayed for lack of funds.

I bring this up primarily because Vexed Bermoothes, which I discovered while researching the entire Uighur thing, would like to know when the international community is going to help with that.

The planned overhaul of the Salvation Army’s homeless shelter has been delayed due to a lack of funds, according to Social Rehabilitation Minister Dale Butler.

Mr. Butler told The Royal Gazette yesterday that “the timeline has slowed down” for the complete renovation of the North Street facility, which was built in 1982 as a temporary structure.

The building was intended to last 15 years, but is still being used to house 55 homeless Bermudians 27 years on.

Answer:

(pause)

Hey, look! The new League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is out!

Moe Lane

Crossposted to RedState.

President Obama and the now-vex’d Bermoothes.

Heckuva job there, Barry.

You know, it’s not the fact that we’re apparently on the verge of toppling another foreign government that bemuses me, per se; toppling foreign governments is one of those things that the United States of America simply does, as a byproduct of our very existence. Whether or not that’s an inherently good thing is going to be a matter of some debate – particularly if you’re somebody who’s never lived under one or another of the unpleasant regimes that we’ve absentmindedly obliterated, over the years*. So I’m not particularly startled at the thought that it may be about to happen again.

Still. Bermuda?

Crockwell tells THE WEEKLY STANDARD that Bermudians are very concerned about the potential threat the Uighurs pose to the security and economy of Bermuda, and are outraged by the secretive and unilateral manner in which Bermuda premier Dr. Ewart Brown decided to accept the detainees.

“There’s a great deal of anxiety right now,” says Crockwell. “We have not received any information at all in terms of who these individuals are.”

“We hear reports that they have been associated with al Qaeda … that they were trained in terrorist camps,” as well as reports that the men are innocent. “So we don’t know” how much a security risk the former detainees pose. Crockwell says that the Bermudian people and members of parliament don’t know where the Uighurs are now being housed by the government.

“We think the premier, who made a unilateral decision, has put this country at risk. We believe that when there’s uncertainty we have to err on the side of caution,” Crockwell adds. Crockwell’s United Bermuda Party has already moved a motion of no confidence against Brown to remove him as the leader of parliament. He says that a “member of the backbench has stated not even the cabinet was informed of this decision,” which Crockwell described as a “unilateral autocratic decision made by one man who has created a national crisis for the island of Bermuda.”

Continue reading President Obama and the now-vex’d Bermoothes.