Fred Stripe seemed to hit it right on the head George. And Captaind, who arrived in Negril prior to you proves Fred's statement. Captaind can blame your mid 70's crowd for changing Negril, but he doesnt because he knows better. Change happens. Time marches on...
There is nothing any more "wrong" with Negril now than there was when your mid 70's crowd came in and changed this small fishing village long before those who you choose to blame for changing Negril. Change is inevitable as Fred said, and you and your mid 70's crowd have to share the blame for that change as much as anyone else.
Here are some pics from the late 50's when they were shooting the Disney film 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea.
I dont see any "naked women and good weed" around Kirk Douglas, an Oscar nominee and being No.17 on the American Film Institute's list of the greatest male screen legends in American film history. If there were always naked women around as you claim, I am sure Kirk have been surrounded by them! (grin)
In these pics from 1959, you dont see any establishments at all, not even huts. And certainly no people having fun in the sun or feasting on food. Just trees, sand and water (and Kirk). The things you mention didnt come until the hippies "discovered" Negril and inevitably changed Negril from a small fishing village into the resort town it is today.
When I conceived the idea of Negril.com in 1993 and created it in 1995, there was no email at all on the island. Absolutely none, not even in Kingston. There were no internet providers at all on the island and only 2 computers in Negril.
No one in Negril had seen the internet. Only a few had even seen a computer for that matter, so it would have been impossible for me to support the wishes of my clients when there werent any at all. I envisioned and created Negril.com because I knew one day the businesses in Negril would have to become part of the internet world.
By introducing them to the first computer most people saw and exposing them to the internet by spending a small fortune calling Miami on a very slow cellphone connection through TOJ (pre-Cable & Wireless days), it helped the local businesses (the vast majority Jamaican owned and operated) realize that this technology would one day play an important role in their business. And it has. There are now more places with free wifi in Negril than there are in Kingston per square kilometer.
So George, I understand that you feel a sense of loss for the way things used to be 40 years ago. As humans, we all feel that sense of nostalgia from time to time. But before calling something a lie, it is generally best to get the facts first...