Part 5: The Power Is Already in Our Hands
- Sylvian Hyde

- Aug 11
- 2 min read
Belize today stands at a crossroads. We are a nation of approximately 478,000 people, with one of the youngest populations in the region. Our median age is just 26, meaning more than half of our people have decades of life ahead of them.

The average life expectancy is about 75 years, and yet the people steering our ship are, statistically, already well past halfway on that journey.
Let us look at the numbers:
Prime Minister John Briceño – 65 years old.
Deputy Prime Minister Cordel Hyde – turning 52 in just a few days.
Francis Fonseca – 58 years old.
Others in leadership are in their late 50s, 60s, and even 70s.
These are facts. While age itself is not the enemy, the reality is that the future will be lived by the young, but it is being decided by those nearing the end of their natural life expectancy.

For decades, we have watched both major political parties shape our history books and edit our school curriculum. In doing so, they have conveniently omitted truths that would empower the people. Like an intentional Truman Show, we have been made to see only the stage they want us to see. The real history, the real power, remains hidden in the wings.
The result is clear. We have systemic barriers that keep wealth and opportunity concentrated in a few hands. We have an economy that too often serves the connected rather than the capable. We have a politics that feels more like a circus than a service.
Here is the truth they do not want you to see:
We are the majority, numerically, generationally, and energetically.
We do not need permission to lead.
Every movement in history that brought change began when people decided they had waited long enough.

I am speaking directly to my generation and those younger. The time is now. Learn our full history. Educate yourself and each other. Build networks outside of the political machines. Remember this truth: the baton will not be handed to you; you must take it, and run.
Our parents and grandparents fought for independence in their time. This is our independence moment, not from a foreign empire, but from the systems that have kept us small in our own land.
Belize’s greatest resource is not oil, sugar, or tourism.
It is us. And we are only just getting started.
xoxo,
“Today fi you, tomorrow fi me. Nah watch mi… watch yuself.”






Comments