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CPP declares August 8 as Fidel Agcaoili Day of Remembrance

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“The Central Committee calls on all revolutionary forces, progressives, patriotic and democratic forces, migrants and other oppressed sectors, political detainees, as well as various anti-imperialist organizations and personalities across the globe to conduct tribute meetings and other activities wherever they may be to commemorate and celebrate Ka Fidel’s life of struggle and service to the people and revolution,” the CPP’s Central Committee in a statement Wednesday, July 29, said.

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STATEMENT | NUJP at 34: Truth will prevail

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Today, July 30, 2020, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines turns 34 during what may be the most challenging and perilous time for our profession and, yes, the truth.

Pres. Duterte on WPS: ‘Wala akong magawa’

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“China is claiming it, we are claiming it. China has the arms. We do not have it. So, it’s simple as that. They are in possession of the property. Unless we are ready to go to war. Inutil ako diyan. Wala akong magawa.”

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UP cum laude graduate refuses glorification of poverty, explains why it’s a hindrance to success

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Clad in the University of the Philippines’ (UP) signature sablay and barong, sporting dyed silver hair and makeup, UP Diliman cum laude graduate Rene Principe declared that “contrary to popular belief, dyeing your hair is not a hindrance to success, but poverty is.”

Principe, who finished his Bachelor of Science in Applied Physics, narrated his journey from eating restaurant leftovers to becoming a degree holder from the country’s top state university, as per his Facebook page last Saturday, July 25. Not only did he earn his degree with honors, he also gets to represent the LGBTQ+ community in the field of science.

Principe was one of the 2,892 candidates for graduation who earned their college degrees during the university’s first virtual commencement exercises on July 26. The graduating batch of 2020 had 28 summa cum laudes, 302 magna cum laudes and 683 cum laudes, according to DZUP’s Facebook post on the same day.

Principe clarified that while his success should be celebrated, it should also make others face the “enraging” truth about the education system.

“I refuse to glorify the extreme poverty that I went through,” he said. “Because the same poverty that everyone might think inspired me to make it all the way is the same poverty which hinders millions of Filipinos access to quality education.”

‘Walang-wala’

At 8 years old, Principe dreamed of becoming an astronaut as a means to escape this world.

He recalled how it used to be painful to see his classmates enjoy fresh food during lunch while he had to make do with a reheated, half-eaten chicken drumstick from people he do not know.

“We just migrated to Cagayan de Oro after we lost our home in Compostella Valley from [a] fire. We’re left with nothing, as in WALANG-WALA (nothing at all),” he said. “Education was our only way out of extreme poverty but even that was hard.”

Fast forward to his college life, Principe got in the university and initially studied Physics, then eventually shifted to Applied Physics, because “that’s the closest I’ll ever be to studying ASTRONOMY.”

Principe also acknowledged how fortunate he was to have support “pouring [from] all directions.”

“I dedicate this victory wholeheartedly to every single Filipino to whom I owe my UP education, and for that I vow to serve this nation with my utmost honor and excellence,” he said.

On ‘glorifying poverty’

“I refuse to be labeled as the cream of the crop, because I believe Filipinos should stand beside me in this victory, not behind me,” Principe explained.

He said he disagrees with the notion that attaining a college degree should be as hard as “passing through the eye of a needle.”

“I believe with all my heart that education is a right, not a privilege,” he stressed.

“I refuse to believe that poverty is NOT a hindrance to success because it is, my victory is an exception but it is not the norm,” Principe added. At the same time, he also refuses to “believe that life is inherently UNFAIR because it shouldn’t be.”

The UP graduate then highlighted the “inequality” maintained by the “ruling class” which makes the “the rich much richer and the poor much poorer.” Principe credited his university for opening his eyes and teaching him that learning is not confined within the four corners of a classroom.

“Let the inaccessibility of our healthcare enrage you. Let the expensiveness of education enrage you…,” he said. “That rage is valid because it is rooted from your empathy towards the oppressed and the underprivileged.”

‘Queer in Science’

Principe disclosed that growing up, he did not have any role model to look up to as a queer individual.

“There ain’t no queer astronauts or queer versions of Einstein, not that I know of,” he said. “I hardly knew any Filipino scientists too.”

The LGBTQ+ community is often “caged inside a box of what we can achieve and what we’re capable of,” he noted.  He also described how the LGBTQ+ community is viewed by some people as only relevant for “their entertainment,” while pursuing other fields is “just pure abomination.”

“I’m always proud of how our community dominated the entertainment industry and so, let my victory be a symbol that we the LGBTQ+ community has always had something to contribute to the science community too,” he said.

After graduating, Principe will be pursuing a master’s degree in Physics at the university. He will also be working as a junior faculty in its National Institute of Physics this coming semester.#

Cha Lino, Inquirer, July 28, 2020

PH ‘stimulus’ smallest in region

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Philippine
spending in response to the COVID-19 pandemic is among the smallest in the
region, said research group IBON. The narrow-minded obsession with
‘creditworthiness’ stops the government from taking the urgent
steps needed to restore livelihoods and save the economy. The group said that having
economic managers dominated by finance people rather than development experts
is the biggest obstacle to real recovery.

According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Policy
Responses to COVID-19 tracker, the fiscal policy response of the Philippines is equivalent to
just 3.1% of its gross domestic product (GDP). IBON noted that this is the
smallest among the major economies of Southeast Asia. This is less than in
Singapore (19.7%), Vietnam (13.3%), Thailand (9.6%), Indonesia (4.4%) and
Malaysia (4.3%). It is also less than half of the global average of around 6.2%
of GDP.

The Philippines’ ranking does not change even if the Bayanihan
2 bill recently approved by the Senate is passed into law, said the group. The
proposed Php140 billion stimulus program is worth just 0.7% of the GDP and will
bring the country’s fiscal response only to 3.8% of GDP. The IMF notes that
country data are not always strictly comparable but the figures are nonetheless
indicative.

IBON said that upcoming national government (NG) budgets meanwhile
see the smallest post-crisis ‘stimulus’ increases in decades, further
undermining economic recovery. Department of Budget and Management National
Budget Memorandum No. 136 only foresees a 5.7% budget increase in 2021 falling
to an even smaller 1.8% increase in 2022, despite the country facing the worst
economic decline in its history in 2020 because of the pandemic. The budget
increase in 2021 would be the smallest in a decade and in 2022 the smallest in
over 30 years.

These increases also compare unfavorably with budget increases
after the 1997 Asian financial crisis and 2008 global financial and economic
crisis. After the Thai Baht collapsed in 1997, the NG budget rose by 9.3% in
1998 and then by 8.0% in 1999. After the Lehman Brothers firm collapsed in
2008, the NG budget rose by 9.1% in 2009 and by 2.7% in 2010.

The economic managers have been blocking larger stimulus packages
proposed by Congress since at least May, the group said. The House of
Representatives and Senate took up more meaningful stimulus measures worth at
least Php1.3 trillion or more but stopped when the finance department told them
to because these were ‘unfundable’ and ‘unsustainable’. These
measures would have been closer to the global average.

Among others, this also affirms that the so-called power of the
purse of Congress is illusory and how the president and executive branch are
actually in complete control of the country’s finances. The
president can implement a bigger stimulus package if he wants to.

The obsession of the economic managers with ‘creditworthiness’ is
misplaced, said IBON. Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia have lower credit ratings
than the Philippines but are spending more to respond to and recover from the
pandemic. Financing can be raised by reallocating from less productive
infrastructure and debt service, and by a more progressive tax system with
higher taxes on large firms and the wealth of the country’s super-rich.

The magnitude of the country’s response has to be commensurate to the crisis at hand. This should span health measures, continued cash subsidies to improve household welfare and boost aggregate demand, and support especially to Filipino and domestic market-oriented micro, small and medium enterprises, said the group.

‘Wala pa ring programang matino para sa mga kabataan at sektor ng edukasyon’

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“Habang pataas ng pataas ang kaso ng COVID-19 sa bansa ay nananatili namang bulag at bingi ang pamahalaang Duterte [at] ang DepEd sa nga hinaing ng mga guro at magulang. Kahit pa man pataas at palala ang kaso ng pandemya sa bansa ay wala pa rin siyang programang matino para sa mga kabataan at sektor ng edukasyon.”

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Labor group denounces red-tagging, fake surrenderees

By JUSTIN UMALI
Bulatlat.com

SANTA ROSA, Laguna – Labor federation Pagkakaisa ng Manggagawa sa Timog Katagalugan (Pamantik-KMU) denounced assertions by the police and military that they were “front organizations of the CPP-NPA” after a July 23 surrender ceremony where they claimed that most of the participants came from “the labor sector in various parts of Laguna.”

Last July 23, Police Chief PGen. Archie Gamboa presented 131 alleged former members of the revolutionary New People’s Army in Camp Vicente Lim, Calamba, Laguna, along with what they claimed were surrendered arms and propaganda materials used by the so-called surrenderees.
The ‘surrendered’ materials included books, pamphlets, Mao caps, and election materials for progressive party-list Bayan Muna.

Pamantik-KMU questioned the legitimacy of the surrender ceremonies and disputed the claim by the PNP Police Region 4A that 94 of the 131 “surrenderees” were members of the group, asserting that this was another case of “forced surrender and harassment against Coca-Cola workers.”

Photo of Raffy Baylosis courtesy of PAMANTIK-KMU.

“If you would look at the video posted on July 23,” the group pointed out, “you could clearly see that Raffy Baylosis ‘surrendered’ again while pretending to be [an] NPA [member].”

Baylosis was a former leader inside the Coca-Cola Sta. Rosa plant as president of Liga na Pinalakas ng Manggagawa sa Coca-Cola FEMSA Philippines Sta. Rosa Plant (LIGA). In 2018, LIGA staged a picket protest and won regularization for 675 contractual employees inside Coca-Cola.

On May 1, Baylosis appeared as a spokesperson for 16 “NPA surrenderees” in a ceremony in Camp Vicente Lim. The 16 “surrenderees” were actually Coca-Cola employees who were forcibly brought to the camp the day before after their shift. Ten of the 16 employees were recently hired and had no connections with the labor union inside Coca-Cola.

According to Pamantik-KMU, Baylosis and another turncoat, Rey Medellin, have been responsible for the spate of harassments against Coca-Cola workers, including house-to-house visits by police officers to force them to “surrender”, and so-called “union seminars” which actually “recruit AFP [Armed Forces of the Philippines] reservists within the workforce to serve as toadies for Coca-Cola and the AFP.”

Pamantik-KMU also disputed claims by PNP PRO4A and the AFP Southern Luzon Command (SOLCOM) that they have been advocating “peaceful means to end” the armed conflict between the GRP and the CPP-NPA. According to the group, the police and military are using the fake surrenderee program to profit off the government’s Enhanced Comprehensive Livelihood Integration Program (E-CLIP).

“P/Brig. Gen. Vicente D. Danao, Jr. and Lt. Gen. Antonio G. Parlade, Jr. are profiting off fake surrender ceremonies while also discrediting legitimate organizations like Pamantik-KMU,” the group said.“They are even rewarding turncoats like Raffy Baylosis, who find ‘surrenderees’ from wherever they could so they could profit off them, by giving them a share in stealing taxpayers’ money.”

The labor organization reiterated that acts like this are meant to impinge on workers’ rights.
“It is clear that Duterte, the PNP, and AFP, are still pushing their dark designs to silence unionists and workers who only wish for decent living, wages, and benefits; things which they claim they are willing to give, but in actuality do not,” they said in a statement.

“Their promises are nothing more than mere words by wolves in sheep’s clothing.” (https://www.bulatlat.com)

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