
Do you see the ambiguity
In this poem’s title?
Take a little time and study it,
It might be vital.
Tint is very topical
In Barbados these days
And is currently being connected
To crime in some ways.
Especially dark tint
Re vehicles involved
Making it extraordinaryly difficult
For crimes to be solved.
Placing police at risk
When they enact a pull-over
Since the cops can’t clearly see
The vehicle’s driver.
It tint right, says the AG
Or fair to the cops
And this heavy tint on a vehicle
Must be stopped.
We now have equipment
To test if it tint right
And whether it legally facilitates
Adequate light.
"It tint right"
Say those using the tint
Contrary to the Attorney General
Who sees a crime link.
"It tint right"
Bringing such a law,
That it is for some and not all
Tells me it is flawed.
There is no limit
For the high-up authority
But a whopping $500.00 fine
For the poor and lowly.
Suggesting to me
Crime is linked to the poor
And the high-up and better off
Do crime no more.
However dark their tint,
"It tint right"
But for poor people to do similar
"It tint right".
Inflection and intonation
Are not in print
But "it tint right" spoken correctly
Will be distinct.
If we say, it tint right;
We know what we mean
But if we tell you de car tint right,
The job is clean.
Whose "tint right", I ask,
Will win the day?
Looks like the Attorney General
Will have his way.
"It tint right"
Meaning the job is great
Versus "it tint right" as in unfair
Is poor people's fate.

Add another $10.00
Every day the tint is on,
This will work the police harder
Stewart Russell © June 10, 2025
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