M.I. Leito responds to Oliver Arrindell.

Dear Mr. Oliver Arrindel,

I've been following your posts from a distance regarding your continue fight plan to obtain an economic permit to start an airline. I'm trying not to mingle in the ongoing public discussion you created against the Minister of Traffic and Aviation of Curaçao but I want you to know this. Take it as an advice even though you pretend to be the most self made man on the beautiful island of Curaçao. You are a "businessman" not a politician. If you want to talk bad about our Ministers, Parliament and our government you will never change it until you present strategic and pro-active solutions at hand not for the Minister but for our island. The way you are conducting this discussion is simply like a bad looser, who still holds the right to go to the court in a democratic country, but choose to be the ignorant barking dog. There is a Dutch saying "blaffende honden bijten niet" and that's why I think that the Minister isn't afraid of all the things you are saying lately about her. Besides her, you always had an aggressive defensive reaction and attitude everytime someone or the local media had another point of view about your integrity, business plan and aviation project. I remember how you attacked both Minister Balborda as Minister Jardim, journalists of radio Direct, public servants, Insel Air and headlines in our local newspapers. What kind of investor does this at all time, with which purpose and why? I mean literally everybody is that bad except you? Now you are trying to become a Antropologist, History teacher of slavery. These suites don't fit you at all by copy lectures of others on the web. Please look at yourself in the mirror and focus on what you want to achieve with your project. Trying to steal the show in the newspapers in Sint. Maarten proves your eager and ego for revenge. A street Fight attitude will not help you at all, neither the people who you supposedly are trying to give a job. You are showing your true self after all as a CEO as to how you will treat your own employees if your project will succeed. Bon manera ta siña na kas. I wish you the best of luck and be blessed.

Mr. M.I. Leito
Curaçao