The Power of Love · Love Is the Way

The Rise of Gaston Browne's Antigua

Black Power, matured. Love, ordered into law.

Marcus Garvey in Antigua.
Garvey’s arrival marked the transition from endurance to consciousness. Self-reliance and dignity were articulated as obligations of governance, not merely aspirations of identity.

Rastafari elders.
When law failed morally, Rasta preserved order spiritually. Discipline, scripture, memory — governance incubated outside the state until the state could be reclaimed.

The African Saints.
Long before empire, African thinkers shaped Christian moral law. Augustine, Cyprian, Athanasius — they understood that love without order degenerates into chaos, and law without love becomes terror.

St. Augustine of Hippo.
A Black Berber from North Africa. His insight remains decisive: love is not emotion, but the correct ordering of responsibility.

The Hanging Tree.
Here, violence was once legal. These sites explain why memory must anchor law, and why justice cannot be theatrical.

Gaston Browne

This is governance without spectacle. Power held calmly, law aligned with conscience. Black Power expressed as stewardship.

Antigua & Barbuda High Court.
On January 16 at 9:00 AM, the court ledger updates. No ceremony. No noise. Reality is recorded.

LOVE IS THE WAY.
Not sentiment. Structure.

Black Power, matured.
Love, ordered into law.

The New Economic Order.

By Alki David

Alki David — Publisher, Media Architect, SIN Network Creator - live, direct-to-public communication, media infrastructure, accountability journalism, and independent distribution. Born in Lagos, Nigeria; educated in the United Kingdom and Switzerland; attended the Royal College of Art. Early internet broadcaster — participated in real-time public coverage during the 1997 Mars landing era using experimental online transmission from Beverly Hills. Founder of FilmOn, one of the earliest global internet television networks offering live and on-demand broadcasting outside legacy gatekeepers. Publisher of SHOCKYA — reporting since 2010 on systemic corruption inside the entertainment business and its expansion into law, finance, and regulation. Creator of the SIN Network (ShockYA Integrated Network), a federated media and civic-information infrastructure spanning investigative journalism, live TV, documentary, and court-record reporting. Lived and worked for over 40 years inside global media hubs including Malibu, Beverly Hills, London, Hong Kong and Gstaad. Early encounter with Julian Assange during the first Hologram USA operations proved a formative turning point — exposing the realities of lawfare, information suppression, and concentrated media power. Principal complainant and driving force behind what court filings describe as the largest consolidated media–legal accountability action on record, now before the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court. Relocated to Antigua & Barbuda and entered sustained legal, civic, and informational confrontation over media power, safeguarding, and accountability at Commonwealth scale.