Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Kaarawan ni Andres Bonifacio

Mayroong dahilan bakit nagiging isang bayani ang isang indibidwal, at karaniwang ito ay may direktang kinalaman sa kapaligirang kanyang ginalawan. Ika nga ni Louis Kossuth, nagiging isang bayani ang isang tao kapagka nalalampasan niya ang mga pagsubok sa kanyang buhay. At tunay nga, sa hindi iilang pagkakataon, hindi pa nga batid ng isang tao na siya na pala'y isang bayani sapagkat para sa kanya, ang kanyang mga ginawa o ginagawa ay isang reaksyon lamang sa mga pagsubok ng kanyang kapaligiran.


Nang isinilang si Andres Bonifacio noong 1863 (halos tatlong taon ang tanda ni Jose Rizal sa kanya) sa may tubaan sa Tondo, yaon ay isang panahong may kalungkutan. Katatapos lamang ng isang makapanghihilakbok na lindol noon.


Isang 6.3 magnitude quake ang tumama sa kamaynilaan. Halos madurog ang mga kabahayan at istruktura sa Pilipinas. Ilang libo ang namatay dahilan sa lindol (para sa karagdagang information, i-request ang aking libro, " Bagong Istorya: Great Stories of the Filipino People"). Naganap ito noong Hulyo, 1863.



A thick black smoke from an incessant fire rages in Manila, capital of the Spanish regime in Asia. The smoke can be seen almost a mile away. For someone unfamiliar with how things are, these columns of smoke may mean war or another pirate attack against the city.  The smell of rotting flesh however, belies a far deeper cause of this conflagration.

The year was November 30, 1645, feast day of Saint Andrews, patron saint of the Manilenos. A year ago, Manilenos were feasting on roast pig and lighting their Indian-made incenses. For religious Manilenos, the feast day was the most important in the liturgical calendar. The feast day signalled the start of the Feasts of the Saints, a month-long series of celebrations.

Today, however, Manilenos were neither rejoicing nor worshipping. Manila, the pride of the Far East, the so-called Venice of Asia, has just been hit by a powerful earthquake.

The entire city was a disaster zone, likened to Hiroshima or Nagazaki, or that of a city pillaged by thousands of barbaric hordes. Everywhere you look, devastation and desolation.

There were no tall buildings left standing. Piles of crushed adobe blocks were all that were left of those fabled European-styled palatial stone houses of Manila’s elites. The quake, a 7.5 magnitude in the Richter scale, reduced everything to rubble.

Those left standing looked like twisted Rubick’s cubes, with huge cracks in their walls. The proud structures of Spanish colonial power—Malacanang palace and Manila Cathedral—were both pulverized. Curiously, only those made of nipa straws and bamboos withstood the tremendous power of Nature. Six hundred to 3,000 people were killed and many left homeless.[1] For those who survived, it was the blackest day to hit Manila in centuries. [2]

Was this a sign from above, a portent of things to come? Years before, hordes of conquered natives assisted by marauding Chinese and Indian migrants, stormed the capital and left it for dead. They killed every Spaniard in sight, only to be repulsed by Tagalog mercenaries.[3]

Some people even whispered that the quake could have been part of Ladia’s revenge. Ladia, a Bornean and descendant of Lakandula tried to rouse the Manilenos to revolt against the Spaniards. That was two years ago. Ladia, old people say, has supernatural powers. Could it be that this was his way of avenging his dastardly death?[4] Or, this was punishment from God against Manilenos for not supporting their compatriots in Zambales and Pampanga who are now rising against the Spanish?

For whatever it was, the quake reminded Manilenos of how deadly Nature’s wrath was. For many Filipinos and Chinese living in Manila at that time, this was not just a quake. It was a portent of dire things to come.

A generation, however, passed before these scenes of devastation were repeated in the capital. Two hundred and fifty years past, and the same destruction struck Manila again. That day was June 3, 1863.

Manilenos had just finished saying the Angelus and most were enjoying their simple meals together when, at half past seven, the church bells rang. It was customary to ring the bells thrice.

This evening, it was different. The bells rang in continuous fashion, the sounds grew louder and longer, accompanied by loud crashing and thrashing sounds. It was horrifying, as everything started swaying and thrashing wildly, even violently.

After a minute, silence came. Then, moans, screams, shrills and wailings began. A 6.3 magnitude quake hit the capital and nearby provinces.[5] It was stronger than the 1645 quake because the epicenter was just in the East Zambales fault line near Manila bay. [6]

In a blink of a minute, everything changed—from a city filled with pleasurable sights—to a desolate, howling wilderness. All churches, except one, were completely obliterated from the face of the earth. Nothing was spared—the Palacio del Governador, the military barracks, hospitals, buildings and stone houses—all were left in ruins. Stone churches bore the brunt of the strong earthquake similar to the big one which occurred in 1645.[7] Nature’s wrath was so strong; many analysts say that this was probably an intensity 10 earthquake.[8]

Stone structures built along the banks of Manila Bay and the Pasig River were heavily damaged. Many residents of Tanay, Pilillia, Taguig, Cainta and San Mateo were left homeless. Scores of Bulakenos in San Isidro and Guinguinto died. A large avalanche claimed the lives of people in the mountains of Angat while those in Lubao Pampanga were mortally injured.

Houses and churches were wiped out in Cabugao and San Pedro in Laguna, as well as in Tunasan in Muntinlupa. Coastal towns in Cavite were likewise destroyed, most swept away by a huge tsunami.[9] Only Pangasinan and the Ilocos provinces were spared.

All in all, about 1,172 structures collapsed while most were heavily damaged. More than 400 people died and 2,000 injured. [10] 

In Manila alone, 300 people died. [11]  The districts of Binondo, Santa Cruz, Tondo, San Miguel, Quiapo, Lipa, Tambobo and Navotas were completely ruined. A church and portions of a garrison collapsed in the district of Santa Cruz, with thirty five people in it. Forty six public buildings and 570 houses crumbled. Based on accounts, cracks were seen on the ground. [12]

Ships littered the coasts of Manila Bay and fragments of destroyed trading vessels were all about, most seen floating in the murky waters. The force of the quake was so strong, it created a 20-foot tsunami that literally swallowed caracoas and ships docked in the bay. Before the waters receded, the floods swamped Cavite first, before the ocean returned in an opposite direction.[13]  Aftershocks were strong enough to reach even the sleepy town of Hinulawan in Cebu.

Manila and nearby provinces were left desolate and in complete disarray. What the Filipino rebels and insurgents failed to do for decades, Nature destroyed in minutes.  The political and economic structures of the Spanish government were completely destroyed. [14]  Property damage was estimated at US$ 3 million.[15]

German traveler Jagor Fedor[16] in one of his writings vividly narrated the state of destruction wrought by this devastating earthquake.

Manila is situated on both sides of the river Pasig. The town itself, surrounded with walls and ramparts, with its low tiled roofs and a few towers, had, in 1859, the appearance of some ancient European fortress. Four years later the greater part of it was destroyed by an earthquake.

On June 3, 1863, at thirty-one minutes past seven in the evening, after a day of tremendous heat while all Manila was busy in its preparations for the festival of Corpus Christi, the ground suddenly rocked to and fro with great violence. The firmest buildings reeled visibly, walls crumbled, and beams snapped in two. The dreadful shock lasted half a minute; but this little interval was enough to change the whole town into a mass of ruins, and to bury hundreds of its inhabitants. A letter of the governor-general, which I have seen, states that the cathedral, the government-house, the barracks, and all the public buildings of Manila were entirely destroyed, and that the few private houses which remained standing threatened to fall in. Later accounts speak of four hundred killed and two thousand injured, and estimate the loss at eight millions of dollars. Forty-six public and five hundred and seventy private buildings were thrown down; twenty-eight public and five hundred twenty-eight private buildings were nearly destroyed, and all the houses left standing were more or less injured.

At the same time, an earthquake of forty seconds' duration occurred at Cavite, the naval port of the Philippines, and destroyed many buildings.

Three years afterwards, the Duc d'Alencon (Lucon et Mindanao; Paris, 1870, S. 38) found the traces of the catastrophe everywhere. Three sides of the principal square of the city, in which formerly stood the government, or governor's, palace, the cathedral, and the townhouse, were lying like dust heaps overgrown with weeds. All the large public edifices were "temporarily" constructed of wood; but nobody then seemed to plan anything permanent.

Manila was a disaster zone, littered with animal carcasses and rotting corpses. Swarms of flies and birds of prey feasted on the bodies. It took two months before authorities were able to clear the streets of debris, rotting bodies, mud, and shards of glass.

Compounding the problem, huge torrential rains inundated the city for days. Waist-deep floods submerged large portions of the city. Mud affected those in higher areas.  

Barely three months past, another quake, stronger than the previous one, struck the city once more. A 7.4 magnitude quake hit Manila on September 27. A full month later, another big one destroyed all that were left standing after the June and September earthquakes.

The Birth of the Supremo

It was the twenty seventh day of October, a full month before the feast day of Saint Andrews. The year was 1863. Four months had passed after the strong quake of June and a few days after the 7.4 September quake.

Though this one was just an aftershock, the quake still destroyed newly constructed shacks built in the swampy Tutuban area, while newly paved roads cracked open due to strong aftershocks.

Men, women and children all lay lifeless in the streets, most mortally wounded from fallen trees and adobe blocks. Survivors all rushed to get the bodies to the hospital. But not all were recovered.

Days past before medical teams recovered the rotting corpses. Most were thrown in hastily dug burial pits and covered with soil. Neither pitch nor salt was ever put in their bodies. No effort was made to clean the streets, all muddied up because of torrential rains. Mud was a foot high in most places.

Like in previous years, huge floods came shortly after the quakes. Bodies buried in shallow graves were reportedly washed up and the bay ate them. Some were left rotting in the streets. Those who survived nature’s wrath died one after another, victims of the dreaded cholera and Malaria.[17]

In the newly established community in Tutuban, Santiago Bonifacio, the local teniente mayor, was deathly worried. His beautiful Spanish mestiza wife Catalina de Castro was nine months pregnant. They survived the quake, but barely had the resources to survive another one. Catalina was worried for her relatives in Zambales,[18] as reports came that her hometown was also damaged. Fortunately, her father, a Spaniard and her Chinese-Filipina mother survived the disaster.

The Bonifacios lived in a small nipa hut built in a swampy, shrubby area fronting the place where the central train station was soon to be constructed.[19] Azcarraga street, where the Bonifacios built their shack, was a busy street. People come to that area, especially local wine makers, to get the sap juices of nipa shrubs which abounded in the swamps.

When authorities cleared the place, and announced plans of building a train station, many Filipinos, especially budding entrepreneurs like Santiago, decided to build their houses there. They all thought Tutuban was the next boom town.[20] Tutuban was very near the docks, and the first place where traders load their cargoes sent to Divisoria, Quiapo and San Nicolas.

When the quake struck, Tutuban was heavily damaged, both by the aftershocks and the tsunami. The rise of sea water reached Tutuban, and flooded the swamps. Binundok, the center of Chinese trade, was also affected. The disaster happened so fast that not many people were able to save themselves. Many Manilenos died, including Santiago Bonifacio’s friends and big named clients. Some of those who survived, left the capital and went Southward. Many abandoned Tutuban, most except the Bonifacios. They had just migrated from Tipas Taguig. Santiago had to abandon his work as a ferry operator plying the Taguig-Pasig riverine route to make his fortune with his young family at Tutuban.

The strong quake eroded the soil and made huge cracks on the roads. What made it worst, torrential rains flooded the streets and made the roads un-passable. Many people got stuck in one foot high mud.

1863, was by far, the worst year for Manilenos. For one hundred and twenty two days, it rained in the capital, a record compared with only 26 the year before. [21] Manila, particularly, its sub-district of Tondo, was the perfect disaster area.

This day, however, was not all gloom. Several midwives were called, and attended to Catalina’s needs. After several hours of labor, a baby boy was born.

Santiago named him Andres in honor of his patron saint. He was his first born, a son who will eventually take care of his family. The proud father raised his baby boy unto the air, as if he is offering the young one to the gods.

“ Andres, to you O God, we offer this baby. Let his future be bright and despite of our hardships, let his be joy and happiness, “ prayed the young father, as his wife, tired yet happy that she was able to survive the terrible ordeal, uttered a small prayer, while she slowly went to sleep.


[1] Jagor, Fedor, de Comyn, T., Wilkes, C., and Virchow, R. (2004). The Former Philippines Through Foreign Eyes, Kessinger Publishing, 500 p.
[2] According to Tsunami, it was the movement in the San Manuel and Gabaldon faults that caused the earthquake. Tsutsumi, H., Daligdig, J.A., Goto, H., Tungol, N.M., Kondo, H., Nakata, T., Okuno, M., and Sugito, N. (2006). Timing of surface-rupturing earthquakes on the Philippine fault zone in central Luzon Island, Philippines. EOS Transactions, American Geophysical Union 87, Supplement.
[3] The 1602 Chinese revolt which led to the capture and burning of Manila and Tondo. It nearly succeeded in toppling Spanish power when the rebels tried to enter Intramuros.
[4] Ladia led some natives to revolt against Spain only to be arrested and executed.
[5] Officially, according to Philvocs, it measured 7.9, not just 6.3. Recent studies however established it as 6.3. The reason why many cities were destroyed because of ground cracks and a tsunami.
[6] Bautista, Maria Leonila P. Historical Earthquake Damages to Intramuros, the walled city of Manila. Philvocs. 2009, p. 17. This is part of a powerpoint presentation.
[7] This earthquake killed 600 people and destroyed the Manila Cathedral. Philvocs said that the quake measured 8.4 in the Richter scale.
[8] Garcia, L.C., R.G. Valenzuela, and E.P. Arnold 1985 Southeast Asia Association of Seismology, U.S. Geological Survey, Vol. IV - Philippines, June.
[9] Soloviev, S.L., and Ch.N. Go 1974. A catalogue of tsunamis on the western shore of the Pacific Ocean. Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Nauka Publishing House, Moscow, 439 p. [Canadian Translation of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences No. 5077, 1984, translation available from Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information, National Research Council, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A OS2, 447 p.]
[10] Maso, Rev. Miguel Saderra 1910 Catalogue of Violent and Destructive Earthquakes in the Philippines, with an Appendix, Earthquakes in the Marianas Islands; 1599-1909. Department of the Interior, Philippine Islands Weather Bureau, Manila Central Observatory, 1910.
[11] Lomnitz, C. 1974 Development in Geotectonics #5, Global Tectonics and Earthquake Risk, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Co., Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1974.
[12] Ibid, Soloviev.
[13] Milne, J. 1911 Catalogue of Destructive Earthquakes, Report of the 81st Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Portsmouth, London, United Kingdom, pp. 649-740.  Sevilla, Valenzuela and Bellosiool 1965 Seismicity of the Philippines. Individual Studies by Participants to the International Institute of Seismology and Earthquake Engineering, Tokyo, Japan, December 1965, Volume 2, Part 1, p. 34-63.
[14] Ramirez Martin, Susana Maria. El terremoto de Manila de 1863: medidas, politicas y economicas. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, 2006. Pp. 1-155.
[15] http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/idb/struts/results?EQ_0=928&t=101650&s=8&d=22,26,13,12&nd=display. Fedor’s account however pegged the destruction at US$ 8 million.
[16] Jagor's Travels in the Philippines in the “The Former Philippines thu Foreign Eyes” (The out-of-print 1875 English translation corrected from the original German text).
[17] Diseases spread very rapidly in Manila during colonial times because of unsanitary conditions and lack of an immunization program by the government.  Linda A. Newson, “Conquest, pestilence and demographic collapse in the early Spanish Philippines. “ in Journal of Historical Geography, Volume 32, Issue 1, January 2006, Pages 3-20.
[18] Catalina is a Spanish-Chinese mestiza from the province of Zambales.
[19] Hermenegildo Cruz. Ang Kartilya ng Katipunan, November 1922, p. 6. From the Gutenberg Project.
[20] The place was then a very promising area for Filipinos who want to become traders. It was on June 28, 1875 when a royal decree from Spain was passed regarding the establishment of a railway system in Luzon, with its key central station in Tutuban Tondo Manila.


[21] J.M. Vaquero, “ Early Meteorological records of Manila: El Nino episode of 1864” in Atmosfera 18(3), 149-155 (2005).
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Experience the Philippines, Maki-Fiesta Filipino--the main tourist magnet (Maki Fiesta sa Pilipinas)




Tourism secretary Ramon Jimenez disclosed that come December, the department will unveil strategies on how to effectively promote our country. As the chief promoter of the Philippines, Jimenez needs a "kick-ass" campaign that will approximate or even surpass the success of Wow Philippines. (Wow Philippines was the creative brain child of BBDO Guerrero, one of the top advertising agencies in the Philippines)

Tourism is one of the top priorities of this administration. If done properly, tourism can generate billions of dollars worth of investments, with minimal costs. Tourism creates jobs. Tourism creates businesses. Tourism builds positive perceptions about the country.

What marketing strategy will the Tourism department implement? Will they prioritize the four ps (Price, place, positioning and promotions) or the new marketing strategy of four C's (consumer or community, cost, competition and communication)?

If we are to analyze the central philosophical construct of the Tuwid na Daan of the Aquino administration, we must recognize that central to this construct is the people's participation. Where is the people in all these schemas?

Let's identify first, the main reason why tourists go to the Philippines. Why do tourists go here and visit?

There is no study conducted by either the Bureau of Immigration or the Department of Tourism about this topic.

They always presume that tourists go here (1) for rest and recreation or leisure (2) business (3) visiting friends or relatives (4) medical tourism or (5) MICE. Since we don't have the figures or percentages of priority in these five categories, we create a strategy that I describe as chopsuey. It’s like the Philippines is everything for everybody. No.

The Philippines is not for everybody. If we are to really position the Philippines in the scheme of things, it is always consider a niche. Why? First, it is not as easy to go here as what we initially perceive. Our rates, to be honest, are really not as cheap as other destinations. Cost-wise, we are comparable with Thailand and Singapore, and if we are to consider cost competition, expect us to be higher than others and less competitive in terms of rates.

Now, if we compare ourselves with Thailand, surely, more tourists will choose to go there rather than here. Why? Thailand has a focused marketing communications strategy. Thailand's main selling point is its rich culture and biodiversity, two main reasons why it is unique. Its Buddhist temples, unique cuisine and striking mountains and valleys are attractions, good reasons why tourists go there regularly.

Apart from this, Thailand has effectively branded itself as a place for “Muay Thai”, now a global martial arts phenomenon. Many foreigners stay in Thailand to learn this art form. Nevermind if it is the most brutal boxing sport in the world. And I don’t mean that foreigners go there because they’re blood thirsty, oh no. Central to the sport is the acceptance of its Buddhist influences.

So we have very definite and unique reasons why, if you’re a tourist, you want to go to Thailand.

How about our country? Why will you go to the Philippines?

Some say, our beaches are the main attractions. For me, no. there are more beautiful beaches around the Caribbean and even in Europe, North America and in the islands of Micronesia that equals if not surpass our beaches. If I’m an American, why would I go and travel half way around the world, when I can spend my money in a romantic Caribbean trip?

Others say, well, our natural wonders are definite attractions. We have the underground river. We have majestic, gold colored hills in Bohol and unique lakes and rivers, all in pristine condition.

I travelled throughout this country and frankly, our natural wonders are comparable with Malaysia and Indonesia, even Cambodia. Do they have a thousand small isles and islets in one location? Yes, they do. Do they have jagged and rocky outgrowths in their beachfronts? Yes, they have.

Now, if we are to say that tourists are attracted to our “modern growth” as a nation, well, how can we surpass the megaliths of Malaysia, Hongkong, Korea, Singapore, China and Japan? 

Admit it—we pale in comparison since Metro Manila is still not as modern and as cosmopolitan as these places.

Okey, so what do we want to offer to foreigners so that they will come and visit here?
I dare say, let’s offer them a very unique experience.

Let’s focus on the consumer. What is the main need of a tourist?

Answer---tourists want to have fun. Having fun means going around, looking at strange things, praising natural wonders, meeting new friends, enjoying the food, drinking tons of beer, without forking thousands of dollars in the process.
Offer tourists the very reason we like to stay here in this country---the experience of being Pinoy, or Filipino.

Among all Asian countries, ours is the most unique. Fact is, our culture as a People is the richest and most diverse there is in Asia. Our culture is the synthesis of every good in the world---a heady mix of Asian and Western influences. 

If you want to understand Chinese, Arab, Indian, Malaysian, Thailand and even Indonesian culture, go to the Philippines. If you want to experience Western style living, meaning American, this is the place to go. And if you want to experience Iberian culture in its Asiatic form, the Philippines is the best place to go.

All of these cultural influences are merged in the persona of the Filipino. The Filipino is the best reason why tourists would want to go to this country.

Tourists want to have a fiesta, and fiestas are an abundant lot here in the Philippines. Ask around, and the most memorable experience of a tourist in the Philippines is of his experience taking part in a fiesta.

The fiesta is simply, the Filipino’s version of baccalania. Feast your eyes in our hills, mountains, volcanoes, rivers, streams and valleys while you feast in our sumptuous and delicious cuisines and savor our warmest smiles, and our coolest life style. Plus! Buy Global brands in our shores in our big mega sales at great prices. 

Picture a freedom-loving person enjoying his place under the sun, ever mindful of respecting other people, while experiencing a most unique life here in the Philippines, that's a Filipino.




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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

KC Concepcion and her "breakup" with Piolo Pascual

Sultry KC "dinaan-daanan lang ni
Piolo"
KC Concepcion is one of the sweetest personalities in Philippine showbiz. Fact is, KC is one of the most desired. She's beautiful, sexy and intelligent. There is also one great thing about this actress--she is socially responsible. Others of her generation party and make a fool of themselves, but not KC. Yes, she figures prominently in social circles but she has the discipline of not letting her hair down after twelve. 


It is not hard to love a woman like KC.


For Piolo Pascual though, it's different.


If you watched the interview of KC Concepcion on the "supposed breakup of the KC-Piolo" relationship, you will ask yourself what were the things that a beautiful, rich and educated woman cannot give to a "guy" like Piolo?


What were KC's inadequacies? I mean, KC is old enough to decide whether to have sex or not. This is one common problem between couples. When a party demands something which the other side cannot or does not want to, it results to a split. 


It seems that the problem is not about sex---some say, its about sexuality.


KC lumangoy sa sariling kumunoy
Read between the lines and you'll presume that the thing which KC Concepcion cannot give to Piolo is something which any other woman cannot give and that is, the love of a man (?)


Piolo is being taken cared of by ABS-CBN. In the past, an issue broke out about Piolo's sexuality. His closeness with fellow ABS-CBN Talent Sam Milby was seen as a homosexual act by a showbiz reporter. Piolo protested and tried to fight for his manhood by going to the courts. That is the first time that a "guy" went to court just to prove his manhood. In other societies, the guy will either keep his silence or fight by violence. 


Some of my readers asked, " Ilan dito ang bading?"
So what if bading sila? Ang problema, ayaw
lumantad sila o ang iba pa.
In Piolo's case, he fought the legal fight. The issue persisted even when the case was withdrawn. No.


How would this issue about Piolo's sexuality ends when several people inside the very studio Piolo considers home, rat about him? I talked with several and really, Piolo's sexuality is one big "open secret."


I don't need "rats" to tell me about the truth. Truth, as they say, is evident. Look at the ads of Piolo and tell me if you see a guy there or not?


If you're a guy, you don't need to prove that in court. It just shows.


(Or probably we just misinterpret Piolo's sexuality. During the time of the Greeks, there is this thing called "Platonic" relationships. A Platonic relationship exists between guys. Several of Socrates' students, including Alexander the Great had platonic relationships with other guys. Yet, they remained heterosexuals)


In the case of Piolo, I remember how long ago, some Hollywood hunk by the name of Rock Hudson died without really revealing his sexuality. It was only days before his death due to AIDS, that Hudson finally admitted what Hollywood had known for years---that he was a homosexual.


Or at least, a bisexual.


I am a member of Ladlad, and I am a very proud father and a once promiscuous heterosexual. 


I ask Piolo to tell once and for all, his true sexuality. What keeps him from revealing his true self before the public? That he will lose his income if he comes clean?


Going back to KC, an insider says that KC was actually forewarned that this would happen. A friend of KC, who happens to be a director, already told her about Piolo's alleged "sexual preference".


KC was bull-headed and even wagered that she can allegedly change Piolo and "make a man out of him". Sadly, KC lost.


Remember how Sam Milby got terribly sad and went home to Canada when Piolo announced his relationship with KC? And remember how Mark Bautista bade the two "goodluck" when news spread about the KC-Piolo romance? 


According to several people, Mark Bautista won this time. 


Fact is, what is so wrong with being a homosexual or a bisexual? If Piolo is indeed one, then, let the public know. He owes his public big-time. Robin's brother did that, why not Piolo?


That is, if Piolo is really a member of the LGBT community. If he considers this article offensive, then, I have enough space for Piolo here. 











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Humiliating for us if we allow house arrest for Gloria

Senators Miriam Defensor-Santiago and Gregorio Honasan, both strong allies and friends of ex-President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo warned of international "outrage" if government pursues its intention of placing Arroyo under government controlled arrest. Warning us even that there might be a possible "show of sympathy" from some segments of the military.


I don't know about these two characters, but why would the international community care about Gloria? I know the Koreans wouldn't. They jailed their former presidents the way they jail their drug lords. I know the Chinese would'nt. They jail and even shoot to death erring officials of their political party. 


Just because not one single soul in this country has shown his outrage against government treatment of this situation means that foreigners would. Fact is, this Gloria issue is not in any way related to violations of human rights. 


In the eyes of many Filipinos, Gloria is being treated humanely. Of course, several segments of the elite, particularly those who enjoyed numerous perks during the time of Gloria, do ask that the government take cognizance of her previous position as President. And they demand that she be treated as grandly as what she got when she was pesident.


Why will we treat a former president like a monarch? I mean, come on! We are the only country in the world who considers presidents as kings and queens, when in truth and in fact, in other countries, presidents are just mere servants of the people.


Why are these elites so afraid of humiliating Gloria? When Gloria was in power, did it ever occurred to her that some of her actions were humiliating enough to cause our image as a nation to deteriorate? 


Probably these elites think the way Gloria thinks and that is, they are entitled to a cozy place even if they stole billions of pesos from the public coffers or they orchestrated the biggest electoral fraud in the history of the nation.


No.


For all the things that she is being accused of, prostituting the very voice of the People, demands an equal prostitution from the very people whom Gloria Arroyo robbed. 


We must end this unequal application of the law. We must treat Gloria Arroyo the way we treat other criminals or others accused of nonbailable offenses. 


We must end this feudalist thinking of bestowing kingly or regalia upon our Presidents and treat them as monarch. They are not monarchy. Gloria Arroyo is not of royal blood and even if she is, Gloria is not entitled to be treated differently because she was a former president or that Gloria is a woman. No.



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Monday, November 28, 2011

Raising twins--bane or blessing?

Many of my friends told me that having twins is a blessing. I used to have doubts, what with a depressed economy. 


I know how much baby's milk is, since my three years old youngest son still drinks it every week. It takes me 2,000 plus for a month or 24,000 plus a year. 


When we learned from doctors that my wife has just conceived twins, I had ambivalent feelings. How much would it cost? My wife told me that I need to prepare 20 for the wife, 30 for each child, bringing the cost to nearly 80,000 pesos. With a depressed economy, 80,000 is a lot of money. 


Today, I'll be able to see the bill and I pray that it will not be that much. You know how it is at Makati Medical Center. 


MOst of my money, I give to the poor. I help those poor folks sleeping along sidewalks in the Metro, particularly those in Manila and Quezon City. I only save some for my family's needs. I saved some for my wife's medical expenses but I do hope that this suffices. 


Aside from food (by the, the NSCB says 40-45% of one's income goes to paying for food), one needs to consider education, clothes, electricity bills, etc. For you to have a "decent" life nowadays, you need at least forty thousand pesos. 


That said, my food cost would definitely rise and of course, all others. I need more space in the house since we're already, what? eight plus kasambahay.


I don't know how other Filipinos with lower incomes manage to survive. 


Anyway, most of my friends told me that this is a double blessing. All I know is that God will neither abandon me nor forsake me. 


God has always been with me because I trust and worship Him. I always pray to Him. Fact is, last night, I was praying silently that nothing happens to my wife. Fortunately, nothing happened. She delivered normally. 


I know that God keeps me safe for a reason. Apart from being an instrument of His love for these children, I will always be His instrument in making other people's life better. 


That said, I would not worry anymore. Just looking at the faces of my twins, make me a very proud father. They are a bundle of joy, a blessing.


I will name the first one, Adelaide, meaning "noble kind" while the other, Alyssa meaning "rational". I am waiting for my other Facebook friends to suggest more names to append to the first. 


God, the Most Merciful, the Most Powerful, the Most Kind!


Thank you for this day that You have given us. I worship Your Power and Your Kindness. I continuall worship your strength.


Forgive me of all my sins and cleanse me from the filth of my transgressions. Make my heart pure always and protect me from all uncleanliness.


Deliver me from the snares of the devil and always prepare my body, my soul and my spirit for paradise, the land you promisedto those who will persevere.


Make my family strong, and my newly born twins, stronger, wiser and kinder than others.  Touch their heads and their faces and bless them.


Ameen.









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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Who will be the next AFP Chief?

Six of the ten names submitted to the President are members of Philippine Military Academy Class 1978, the same class that adopted former president and now convict, Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Two of the names there, Lt. Generals Juancho Sabban and Oscar Rabena have sterling records of service in the military. 


Lieutenant Generals Detabali, Ralph Villanueva and Tabaquero are strong contenders too. I don't know about Mapagu who, early on in this administration, showed a streak of dissent.


Sources in the military however, said that no one among the 1978 PMA Class contenders are fit to become AFP Chief since the class dipped its fingers on the political pond early on. Most junior officers would want an apolitical Chief of Staff, someone who will attend to the numerous administrative problems being encountered by the organisation today. 


That said, Lt. General Dellosa seems to be the strongest contender due to his unblemished record as a professional soldier and his apolitical attitude towards his profession.


Choosing the right successfor for out-going AFP Chief of Staff General Eduardo Oban Jr is most critical, due to the sensitivities brought by the recent arrest and detention of Mrs. Gloria Arroyo. Talks of destabilization and a reported demoralization among the ranks are two key considerations which the President might want to consider before appointing the next AFP Chief of Staff. 


That was the error made by former president Joseph Estrada when he appointed former general Reyes as his Chief of Staff. Reyes was supposed to be an apolitical and professional soldier until he decided to take matters into his own hands, and thought of himself as another messiah. Reyes eventually stabbed Estrada in the back and supported his vice-president, and now convict Arroyo.


Aside from having a very nice professional record, Aquino should appoint someone with the right mindset particularly on organisational matters. The next AFP Chief of Staff should continue the anti-corruption and professionalism drive of Oban. 
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Friday, November 25, 2011

The Core of our Misery

Why was it that after Marcos, we were able to witness and experience two (2) Chief Executives who tried to do a Marcos? How was it that these two were able to turn a Constitutional Republican state into a veritable fiefdom? I thought that our Constitution had safeguards against dictatorial rule or at least protect us from any semblance of totalitarianism. How was it then that we continually produce lemons for presidents?


Is the answer generational, meaning, the generation that fought the Marcos regime, are themselves potential dictators disguised as human rights fighters? That these members of the counter-elite fought Marcos because of envy? That within the recesses of their souls, the reason for their struggle is not so much as to lift this country from the morass that Marcos did but for them to equal if not surpass the brazen-ness and bravado of Marcos?


Is the answer systemic, that the very democracy we so created is actually a tyranny disguised as a democracy?


Our body of law is supposed to protect and advance the welfare of the poor. But the nine year reign of the Arroyos just exposed the very nature of these laws as not so much to protect the poor, but were actually crafted to exploit the poor.


Much of the weaknesses of our institutions reflects the frailties of our legal and non-legal systems. These laws created or allowed monsters to thrive in our country and sets well-meaning people out of the power equation.


For example, you can be a president if you have at least 500 million pesos. A Jay Jaboneta for example can only probably get a Senatorial post but not a presidential one for it requires millions of pesos and millions of favors just to become one.


We can never have a president who will not be beholden to certain Big Business interests. And when that president's time is up, she then suffers what she or he did against the counter-elites. 


By the way, watch the State of the Nation by Jessica Soho over GMA TV. It is one helluva news and public affairs show.







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