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What a revolutionary government means

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CROSSCURRENTS

By: Antonio T. Carpio – @inquirerdotnet, Philippine Daily Inquirer / August 27, 2020

An obscure group calling themselves the Mayor Rodrigo Roa Duterte-National Executive Coordinating Committee publicly invited President Duterte “to head a revolutionary government under a revolutionary constitution to last until December 31, 2021.” The group claimed to be one of the original supporters of the President Duterte when he ran for president.

The reactions of the President’s spokesperson and legal counsel are intriguing. Spokesperson Harry Roque declared that the call for a revolutionary government “does not enjoy any support from government right now,” implying that there may be government support in the future. Legal counsel Salvador Panelo explained that “the call of a revolutionary government must come from the people and not from a single organization or an individual,” implying that if there are more groups supporting the call, Mr. Duterte may consider it.

Thankfully, Mr. Duterte immediately shot down the idea of a revolutionary government. Although Mr. Duterte apparently knows the leaders of the group, some of whom are undersecretaries in the Department of the Interior and Local Government, he chose to disown the group. “Wala akong pakialam diyan, wala akong kilala sa mga tao na ’yan at hindi ko ’yan trabaho,” Mr. Duterte emphatically declared.

Mr. Duterte will be committing political hara-kiri if he instigates or approves a revolutionary government. A revolutionary government automatically abrogates the Constitution and vests all government power in the President alone. Congress and the Supreme Court can exist and function only upon tolerance of the President, and all their acts and decisions are subject to his approval. What will happen once a revolutionary government is declared by the President?

First, petitions will immediately be filed before the Supreme Court to declare the imposition of a revolutionary government unconstitutional. While more than two-thirds of the members of the Court are appointees of Mr. Duterte, all the members of the Court will certainly declare the revolutionary government unconstitutional, whether or not they are in favor of the revolutionary government. By definition, a revolutionary government abrogates the Constitution.

Second, a majority in both the Senate and the House of Representatives will likely pass resolutions denouncing the imposition of a revolutionary government, which makes the Senate and the House extinct as independent legislative bodies. As a matter of self-preservation, the Senate and the House will have no choice but to oppose the imposition of a revolutionary government.

Third, the military and the police will have to make a choice whether or not to take orders from a revolutionary government. We know how they will decide. Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana has publicly declared that a revolutionary government “is illegal and unconstitutional.” AFP spokesperson Gen. Edgard Arevalo has announced that “Chief of Staff General Gilbert Gapay xxx rejects the establishment of a revolutionary government.” Philippine National Police spokesperson Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac has likewise declared that “any move that will go against the Constitution will not be supported by the PNP.”

Fourth, the Philippine economy, which shrank 16.5 percent in the second quarter of this year because of the pandemic, will drop to the bottom once a revolutionary government is imposed. Foreign and local investors will swiftly take their money out of the country. It will be the worst nightmare coming true for the economic managers of Mr. Duterte.

Fifth, the Philippines will become a pariah in the international community as the United States and European Union countries will most likely refuse to recognize the revolutionary government. There will be grave concerns of human rights violations by the revolutionary government, spurring most likely the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to finally decide the investigation against Mr. Duterte.

Finally, imposing a revolutionary government is the dumbest move that Mr. Duterte can make. The military obeys Mr. Duterte because the Constitution makes him the commander in chief of the Armed Forces. If Mr. Duterte abrogates the Constitution to which all soldiers have sworn allegiance, then he ceases to be their commander in chief, and the military may then follow his constitutional successor, just like in Edsa Dos. Legally, Mr. Duterte will have no one to command in the military. Morally, the military can refuse to follow Mr. Duterte whose acknowledged protector is President Xi Jinping, the architect of China’s expansion in the West Philippine Sea and the nemesis of the military.

acarpio@inquirer.com.ph

‘Modified enhanced’ stupidities

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By: Ma. Ceres P. Doyo – @inquirerdotnet, Philippine Daily Inquirer / August 27, 2020

The emoticon I would use for “modified enhanced” stupidities is the yellow smiley face with a big laughing mouth, two fat tears bursting out, and furrows between the eyebrows ( ) as if saying, it is so damn funny if it is not so damn stupid and tragic.

Memes, cartoons, photographs, and comments on Facebook on the travails of our daily quarantined lives get instant emoticon and emoji responses, the netizens’ way of virtually showing their emotions. There is no emoticon or emoji to depict murderous feelings, is there? But there’s one for throwing up.

Filipinos have been force-fed alphabet soup these past six months, the government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic that has not abated in our neck of the woods. GCQ (general community quarantine), ECQ (enhanced community quarantine), and MECQ (modified enhanced community quarantine) have been ruling our daily lives. Six months after they were invented, many have yet to decipher the discombobulating tongue-twisters that correspond to equally discombobulating protocols to follow.

If you modify the enhanced or the general, is it to raise its severity or to lower it? Is general, as the word suggests, more encompassing and therefore more strict than modified? One has to read the dos and don’ts that correspond to the clump of letters to be able to follow.

This is not a delayed reaction. I had said some months back that the Inter-Agency Task Force or IATF (add that to the soup) for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases should have used numbers the way weather experts refer to typhoon severity.

And how to say modified and enhanced in Filipino? And community quarantine? If you cannot translate it, drop it. Use numbers instead. Is there no com-mu-ni-ca-tor in the house?

Another example of modified enhanced stupidity was the required metal and plastic barrier between the motorcycle rider and the one riding behind. To prevent virus spread? It was enforced without the IATF consulting cycle experts on the risks. It was required even for spouses who slept in one bed at night and who still had to show proof of marriage. That prompted a frequent rider to carry a placard-size copy of a marriage certificate.

The metal separator and the spouses-only rule have been scrapped, but they left holes in people’s pockets. So is it now a same-address rule?

After the alcohol ban was lifted, I found out that one could buy beer only after 1 p.m. The cashier was almost done with my groceries but said that I have to wait two minutes more because it was only 12:58 p.m. Could I first pay for the bulk of the items, she asked, then she would call me back to pay for the two cans of beer.

A colleague’s post on the same experience got comments ranging from the absurd to the ridiculous. Among them, that those with the previous night’s hangover would have been sober by 1 p.m. Or that was one way to cause a 1 p.m. clustering in the beer and wine section and spread COVID-19.

And there’s the required use of a face mask even while driving alone in one’s own car.

A lampoon photo on Facebook shows a poor family observing the social distancing protocol in their one-room shack. One was seated on the floor, one by the door, another on the window sill, still another on the beam close to the ceiling. As I had also said before, why not give locked-down families who live in cramped places some scheduled outdoor breaks?

Getting a lot of laughs are video spoofs of the Department of Education’s idea of distance, blended, remote, and alternative learning despite problematic or zero internet connections. Like the video of Ma’am who could not connect to her virtual classroom and had to clamber up the fence, then the roof, then the top of the tree. But there were real photos of teachers in a webinar seated on the roadside trying to catch a signal on their gadgets.

President Duterte’s minders, keepers, and handlers take the cake for making their boss habitually address the nation at close to midnight. This Midnight Cowboy, along with his Cabinet officials who look like lost souls, has been making only nocturnal TV appearances from his domicile in Davao City where he is said to be in perpetual isolation and under observation.

Now comes that ragtag band of miscreants calling for a Duterte-led revolutionary government. LOL emoticon here.

Send feedback to cerespd@gmail.com

Immigrant finds strength, solace in Carlos Bulosan

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By: Danny Petilla – @inquirerdotnet , Philippine Daily Inquirer / August 16, 2020

SEATTLE — Ninety years ago during the Great Depression, the 17-year-old peasant Carlos Bulosan traveled from his small village in the Philippines and arrived in this city.

Bulosan would become one of the great writers of his generation and make a decisive impact in the struggle of Filipino migrant laborers in America.

But the anniversary of his arrival here came and went without fanfare last month, no thanks to the pandemic gripping the United States and the rest of the world.

To escape the virus stalking America, my family and I drove a thousand miles from Los Angeles, determined to mark the historic milestone by visiting Bulosan’s grave in Mount Pleasant Cemetery at Queen Anne Hill in this city, where the number of Covid-19 cases has abated.

Bulosan died in Seattle on Sept. 11, 1956. It was to be my first time in the city, in part to fulfill a promise I had made to Aurea Bulosan Gentile, the writer’s only surviving niece and guardian of his literary estate, that I would visit the grave of her famous uncle.

I met Aurea and her two daughters Laveta and Karen in LA in October 2017, when they were guests at our Carlos Bulosan Book Club of which I am a founding member.

Now 90 years old, Aurea lives in Huntington Beach, California.

No other Filipino writer has had a huge impact on generations of Filipino-American readers as Bulosan. It can be argued that the history of Filipinos in America took a quantum leap with the publication in 1946 of his semi-autobiography, “America is in the Heart.”

Now required reading in most Asian-American study programs in the United States, the book was reprinted in May last year by Penguin Classics, making Bulosan the fourth Filipino writer to be so honored after Jose Rizal, Jose Garcia Villa and Nick Joaquin.

Bulosan’s literary canon has inspired writers across the ethnic spectrum from Jessica Hagedorn and Maxine Hong Kingston to Thanh Nguyen, the last Asian-American to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2016.

I find it fitting that three Filipino-American writers across three generations—E. San Juan Jr., Jeffrey Arellano Cabusao and Elaine Castillo—wrote the prefaces to the Penguin edition.

Bulosan’s impact across generations is reflected in my own family. I first read “America is in the Heart” in 1984, as I worked to complete my degree in journalism at the University of Santo Tomas (UST). My sons Iggy and Neale would read the book three decades later as part of their literature classes in California.

The late poet Ophelia Alcantara Dimalanta, our literary criticism professor at UST, urged our graduating class of 1984 to embrace Bulosan’s writings and take part in the effort to rescue his literary legacy from oblivion.

As a journalist, I admired Bulosan’s almost messianic belief that he would become the voice of Filipinos in America and in his homeland.

As an immigrant, I also found solace and comfort in his words when I—in much the same way he did—struggled to hold down menial jobs when I first arrived in America in 1991 as a refugee.

Bulosan, his life and his work are still relatively unknown in the Philippines.

But his legacy is being revived in his hometown of Binalonan, Pangasinan, where a museum in his honor is being built, according to activist Cindy Domingo, one of the founders of the Bulosan Exhibit in Eastern Hotel at the International District in Seattle.

Landscape of desolation

Bulosan, a school dropout, disembarked at the port of Magnolia (now Pier 91) on steerage aboard the Dollar Line from Manila in July 1930, when the Philippines was still an American colony.

Far from the tech hub that it is today, Seattle was a muddy shantytown reeling from the economic collapse of 1929 that left people without jobs, without homes and without food.

It was this Seattle and its landscape of desolation that met Bulosan. He traveled the West Coast in search of jobs in farms and orchards and even made it to the canneries of Alaska.

The young man would soon encounter a racist America that brutalized poor immigrants and lowly migrant workers like himself. His frail body would soon be at the receiving end of cruel beatings from racist thugs and the police.

He found some solace in public libraries where, it is said, he spent hours reading books of all kinds. It seemed inevitable that he would become an activist and union organizer.

But Bulosan, traumatized by physical abuse and social injustice, was often in poor health. He taught himself to write prose and poetry while battling tuberculosis at the LA County Hospital in California and later at the Firland Sanatorium here.

His powerful words in defense of the working class have reverberated through time, inspiring such leaders as Larry Itliong and Philip Vera Cruz, whose activism is immortalized in a school now named after them in Union City, California.

If Bulosan were alive today—in the age of Facebook and Twitter — he would feel vindicated in his crusade against prejudice and injustice in a country undergoing a reckoning of its racist past.

If Bulosan were alive today and had a Twitter account, he would be trolling President Donald Trump who called Filipinos “animals” and “terrorists” on Aug. 4, 2016, in Portland, Maine, when first campaigning for the presidency.

If Bulosan were alive today, he would be fighting for Filipino nurses and doctors, who make up the bulk of the Filipino diaspora in America and who are dying at a staggering rate from Covid-19.

Green grass

When my family and I finally arrived at the cemetery where Bulosan is buried, I was overcome with emotion. At his grave, I knelt and felt the cold black granite with my febrile fingers.

The epitaph that Bulosan himself wrote while at the brink of death reads: “Here, here the tomb of Bulosan is. Here, here as his words, dry as the grass is.”

In this summer of the great pandemic, green grass grew over the grave of the great Carlos Bulosan. I hope his place in the pantheon of writers will be secure for many more summers.

‘Laban, Kampamilya’: Altermidya’s statement of support for the People’s Initiative for ABS-CBN franchise

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We, independent media outfits and journalists under the Altermidya Network, express our support to the People’s Initiative to Grant ABS-CBN a People’s Franchise or Pirma Kapamilya, a movement that seek to gather 7 million signatures for ABS-CBN.

The post ‘Laban, Kampamilya’: Altermidya’s statement of support for the People’s Initiative for ABS-CBN franchise appeared first on Kodao Productions.

‘Laban, Kampamilya’: Altermidya’s statement of support for the People’s Initiative for ABS-CBN franchise

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STATEMENT

We, independent media outfits and journalists under the Altermidya Network, express our support to the People’s Initiative to Grant ABS-CBN a People’s Franchise or Pirma Kapamilya, a movement that seek to gather 7 million signatures for ABS-CBN.

After 70 legislators voted a death sentence for the network and its 11,000 employees, many Filipinos and press freedom advocates remain hopeful of possible avenues to grant ABS-CBN a franchise.

‘People’s Initiative’ under the 1987 Constitution grants Filipinos the power to amend the Constitution or enact laws. This procedure is governed by Republic Act 6735 or “The Initiative and Referendum Act,” along with Commission on Elections (COMELEC) Resolution No. 10650.

Under the said rules, a proposed legislation needs the signature of at least 10% of all registered voters or about 6.1 million signatures based on the total registered voters in the 2019 National Elections Record. To ensure that enough signatures are secured after the verification process, a target of 7 million registered voters has been set.

The sheer number of signatures needed is not lost on us: indeed this road is painstaking and difficult, an arduous task only aggravated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Yet at a time when those in power are relentless in eroding our rights – press freedom, our civil liberties, our right to know –we take every instance we have to defend and reclaim these rights with every risk and effort.

The campaign has only just begun, and yet paid hacks and naysayers already accuse it of being an elaborate scheme funded by so-called oligarchs. This claim conveniently ignores how it was precisely those in power who conspired to steal from the Filipino people one of their main sources of information at the height of the public health crisis.

We have underscored from the beginning that this campaign is not a move to protect mere corporate interests. It is an assertion by the Filipino people who cannot tolerate abuses to our constitutionally-guaranteed right to press freedom and free expression.

The road may be difficult but the initiative is a form of taking back the power of the phrase “we, the sovereign Filipino people” enshrined in the 1987 Constitution. As we have always said and done in the past, we will fight back, together for press freedom, for the people’s to know, and for democracy.

Laban, Kapamilya!

The post ‘Laban, Kampamilya’: Altermidya’s statement of support for the People’s Initiative for ABS-CBN franchise appeared first on AlterMidya.

Mga gwardiya ng Hacienda Yulo, nanutok ng baril sa magsasaka

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Sinubukang pasukin ng mga guwardiya ang isang pamayanan sa Calamba, Laguna mula Agosto 22 hanggang 24. Armado ng armalayt at shotgun, sinubukang harangin ng kababaihan at nakatatandang magsasaka ang mga guwardiya na humantong sa panunutok at pagbabantang pamamaril.

The post Mga gwardiya ng Hacienda Yulo, nanutok ng baril sa magsasaka appeared first on Kodao Productions.

Zara’s burial sparks call for probe into state accountability in activists’ murders

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As slain human rights worker Zara Alvarez was buried in her home town in Cadiz to an emotional mass, calls are raised for an independent probe to see if State forces are complicit in her murder.