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Legacy of Shame: Colin Powell’s Blood-Soaked Service to the Empire

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by Kenn Orphan, October 19, 2021, www.counterpunch.org

Colin Powell just died from Covid-19. So we should expect a tsunami of eulogies from politicians, the mainstream media and even a few liberals who seem to enjoy sanitizing the murderous lives of the ruling class. Those of us on the left who refuse to play the games of polite society when it comes to war crimes will likely be chastised. And he will take his place among the “great generals” of the American Empire. All warmongering societies do this, so it should come as no surprise. But no amount of gushing tributes can erase the truth.

The man who helped whitewash the massacre of civilians at My Lai during the war against Vietnam, pushed hard for the Gulf War in the 1990s, and gave the green light to Ariel Sharon in his murderous assault on civilians in Jenin and land grabs in the occupied West Bank, also sold the war against Iraq at the beginning of this century with a fistful of lies. Iraq never attacked the US. It did not have “weapons of mass destruction.” But the Bush administration was salivating for blood and oil after the attacks on the US on the 11th of September, 2001. And any morsel of fiction that would justify their lust for violence was welcomed.

Powell would later blame his role in peddling these lies on an “intelligence failure.” This is the go-to excuse for the American military establishment, as we see with the latest atrocity they committed in Afghanistan, the recent drone bomb incineration of a family in Kabul after the disastrous pull out of American troops. Now that he is dead, he will not face justice at the Hague for these crimes. But really, no member of the American ruling class ever does.

In this same week we lost Sister Megan Rice who was 91 years old. Rice was imprisoned for two years in federal prison when she was in her 80s after she broke into a government complex to protest nuclear weapons. Her activism was influenced by her parents who worked with Dorothy Day for economic justice during the Great Depression and by her uncle who had spent four months in Nagasaki, Japan, following the criminal nuclear bombing of civilians by US forces. After living and working in West Africa for 23 years as a teacher and pastoral guide she returned to the US and became a major activist in the peace movement. Sister Rice will not get the attention of a dead general in the mainstream press or by politicians of the ruling parties. Those who expose war crimes or who advocate peace are generally marginalized, imprisoned or silenced in militaristic societies.

Americans have a remarkable ability of sanitizing the crimes of their ruling class. Their lives often seem to eclipse the mountains of corpses on which they stand atop. The regions left in disarray and ruin. The lives and families and hopes that were forever disfigured or shattered. All of that disappears, is explained away, or is designated as a mere footnote when one of the elite dies. The nationalistic panegyrics that are employed are designed to do just that. A kind of novocaine that glazes over eyes and numbs collective memory. But as the late Howard Zinn said: “‘There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people.” And, despite the enormous effort made, that shame cannot be sponged away in death.

Kenn Orphan is an artist, sociologist, radical nature lover and weary, but committed activist. He can be reached at kennorphan.com.

Artists Join Forces in Online Exhibit to Save Philippine Forests

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By Mario Alvaro Limos, 20 October 2021, esquiremag.ph

While nature sometimes seems far and detached from the daily lives of Filipinos living in urban centers, a group of young up-and-coming artists in the Philippines want to use their art to bring the beauty of nature back into the minds of people.

“The aim of ‘Project: KAGUBATAN’ is to use the power of art to make an impact for our watersheds and forests in the Philippines,” organizer Gab Mejia, National Geographic Explorer and World Wide Fund (WWF) Philippines National Youth Council (NYC) member, said.

While nature sometimes seems far and detached from the daily lives of Filipinos living in urban centers, a group of young up-and-coming artists in the Philippines want to use their art to bring the beauty of nature back into the minds of people.

“The aim of ‘Project: KAGUBATAN’ is to use the power of art to make an impact for our watersheds and forests in the Philippines,” organizer Gab Mejia, National Geographic Explorer and World Wide Fund (WWF) Philippines National Youth Council (NYC) member, said.

“It might not be immediately clear for most Filipinos, but forests have a multitude of benefits in many aspects of our life that we take for granted such as clean water, clean air, food, livelihood, and many more,” Mejia said.

The project will stage an educational webinar series at 5 p.m. on October 30, and November 19 and a virtual forest exhibit that will be launched on November 10. At least eight young Filipino artists from different mediums are collaborating on the project.

Funds raised from the artworks will be donated to WWF-Philippines’ reforestation project in the Ipo Watershed with a target of 1,000 seedlings. The funds will also support the Bantay Gubat in the Ipo Watershed led by the Philippine Parks and Biodiversity and the Bantay Danaos of the Agusan Marshlands led by Youth Engaged in Wetlands.

“The diverse young artists work on different mediums of art from photography, painting, to digital illustrations with subjects related to the interconnected relationships of people, nature and culture,” Mejia said.

“We hope this virtual forest exhibit and educational webinar series can inspire new artists around the Philippines to take on this journey of curiosity, creativity, and to ultimately drive positive impact for nature and culture, to create beyond themselves for the betterment of our environment,” he added.

The artists participating in the exhibit include:

  • Issa Barte – Illustrator and Visual Artist; founder of For The Future 
  • Javi Cang – Nature and Travel Photographer
  • Sara Erasmo – Still Life Photographer and Multimedia Artist
  • Chesleigh Nofiel (Alagá at Sining) – Painter and Naturalist
  • Gab Mejia – Conservation Photographer and Environmental Storyteller
  • Angelo Mendoza – Travel Photographer and Filmmaker
  • Kara Pangilinan – Visual Artist and Muralist
  • Ivan Torres – Filmmaker and Nature and Travel Photographer
  • Pau Villanueva – Documentary Photographer

The virtual reality forest exhibit will allow audiences to immerse themselves in an environmental journey following a river that goes from lush mountain forests down through agroforests and eventually to wetland forests. It will showcase artworks by the artists showing forest landscapes, endemic flora and fauna, and people who depend on the forests.

Webinars dubbed “Art for Conservation Conversation” will feature artists along with WWF-Philippines’ Forest for Water program manager Paolo Pagaduan to engage and educate audiences about the importance of forests and the Ipo Watershed. In recent years, the watershed’s forest cover has dramatically dropped from 85 percent to just 40 percent.

“Water does not just come from the faucet. Most of Metro Manila’s residents are probably not aware that 96% of their water supply comes from the Ipo Watershed. The natural environment there reliably keeps water clean and fresh as a form of ecosystem service, so it is important that we protect and conserve it as much as possible,” Pagaduan said. 

Mejia believes that art and storytelling are powerful tools to connect humans with nature and the Conservation Conversation series will be one way to bring the beauty and importance of nature closer to Filipinos.

“As we humans crave intimacy and relationships, art gives us a profound understanding and depiction of the world and the diverse environments we navigate in,” Mejia said.

“This exhibit sheds light on the forests of the Philippines and its invaluable role in providing solutions for these environmental issues. We hope it also empowers and inspires a new generation of local artists to create and pursue a career in the arts working for the conservation of nature,” he added.

Learn more about the Ipo Watershed and WWF-Philippines’ Forest for Water program here.

Russia reports cases of more contagious COVID-19 variant

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Oct 21, 2021,Reuters

MOSCOW, Russia

Russia reports some COVID-19 infections with the AY.4.2 variant of COVID-19, believed to be even more contagious than the Delta one

Russia has reported some COVID-19 infections with a new coronavirus variant believed to be even more contagious than the Delta one, the RIA news agency said on Thursday, October 21.

It is possible that the AY.4.2 variant will spread widely, RIA quoted the state consumer watchdog’s senior researcher Kamil Khafizov as saying.

That could cause the rate of new COVID-19 cases, already at record highs in Russia, to rise even further,.

The new variant could even replace Delta eventually, although the process is likely to be slow, he said.

President Vladimir Putin this week approved a government proposal for a week-long workplace shutdown at the start of November, after coronavirus-related deaths across Russia in the past 24 hours hit yet another daily record of 1,028 on Wednesday, with 34,073 new infections. – Rappler.com

Drug war details out: Probe shatters cops ‘nanlaban’ narratives in 52 cases

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By: Tetch Torres-Tupas – Reporter /INQUIRER.net / October 20, 2021

MANILA, Philippines—In 2016, a female drug suspect was killed after an alleged firefight with police officers during a buy-bust operation. An investigation later revealed that Jessica Albaran had not even held a firearm.

The case of Albaran was one of 52 that were turned over to the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) for further investigation and case building up and for possible criminal charges to be filed against police officers involved.

In the 20-page report released by the Department of Justice (DOJ) on Wednesday, all the suspects in the 52 cases are “nanlaban,” meaning they tried to fight the police during an arrest or attempted to flee after being arrested.

Of the 52, one case only resulted in wounding the suspect.

Out of 52 cases, 32 revealed that the police failed to conduct a paraffin test or that documents such as operations reports, ballistic examination results, chain of custody reports, autopsy reports, and death certificates were missing.

In 11 cases, the suspects tested negative in the paraffin test, meaning they did not fire a gun, while in two instances, the police examined  the firearm but not the suspects.

In the case of Spanish national Diego Lafuente, the police said the suspect drew his firearm from his beltbag and fired at the police officers. But Lafuente is not shown to have a beltbag, based on the pictures taken of him.

In one of the 52 cases, the supposed drug suspect was not of sound mind, and some cases were not related to drugs. As a result of the testimony of both the victim and another eyewitness, robbery suspects were killed “execution-style” in one case.

The majority of the over 150 police officers involved in the 52 cases have been suspended, with the shortest suspension being 31 days and the longest six months.

Very few of them have been demoted or fired.

Only two criminal cases were recommended.

This is the first time that the DOJ has released details of drug-related cases that they are reviewing.

The way we are

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EDITORIAL, Philippine Daily Inquirer /October 20, 2021

What is the state of the Philippines as it prepares for general elections in May 2022? Ain’t pretty, and voters should wonder, unless it takes them for fools, why Malacañang has taken continuity for its theme and, through its candidates, is pushing more of the same for the next six years.

For one thing, the Philippines’ indebtedness has ballooned to $3.07 billion per the World Bank. It was the global lender’s top borrower for the fiscal year July 1, 2020-June 30, 2021, topping even India, which means that even the children, malnourished and stunted ones included, will be in hock in the foreseeable future, the demands of debt service gobbling what otherwise should be devoted to their welfare. President Duterte’s administration took out these loans for health-care and vaccine financing, as well as for conditional cash transfers, customs modernization, disaster resilience and recovery, peace-building in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, and certain agriculture projects—all while suspicious multibillion-peso transfers were occurring from the Department of Health to the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management, and the undercapitalized Pharmally Pharmaceutical Corp. was cornering medical-supply contracts at questionable prices.

For another thing, most Filipinos have been effectively muzzled; they are fearful of speaking openly against the administration, and deem it unsafe for media people to say, whether in print or on air, anything critical of the same. They appear to have been impacted by Malacañang’s moves on such news outlets as Rappler and ABS-CBN. “Most people, from north to south, say it is dangerous for media people to be critical of the administration,” Inquirer columnist Mahar Mangahas wrote last week, citing results of surveys undertaken by Social Weather Stations. “Most people, from all walks of life, say the same. In the past two years, the people haven’t been seeing press freedom.”

For yet another thing, the Philippines’ standing in the global Rule of Law Index has continued its precipitous plunge, slipping to its worst—No. 102 among 139 countries, falling three more notches from its ranking last year—since 2010, when the country was first included in the evaluative survey conducted by the World Justice Project. Those who remember when the Philippines ranked 51st among 102 countries surveyed in 2015—deemed “a success story” in terms of its adherence to the rule of law—would be disheartened at being apprised of its steady drop: to 70th place (among 113 countries) in 2016 when Mr. Duterte became president, to 88th (among 113) in 2017-2018, to 89th (among 126) in 2019, and to 91st (among 128) in 2020. The countries were surveyed in terms of constraints on government powers, absence of corruption, open government, fundamental rights, order and security, regulatory enforcement, civil justice, and criminal justice.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra has maintained that “our law enforcement, prosecutorial, and judicial institutions, while not perfect like all other human institutions, are nevertheless functioning as they should.” But surely certain bereaved families, still awaiting the results of the Department of Justice’s review of extrajudicial killings under Mr. Duterte’s “war on drugs,” will not readily agree. Surely the family of Ritchie Nepomuceno of Cebu City—who was reported to have accused in March 11 cops of extortion and their team leader of twice raping her, and who was shot dead in April as she stood by a road—will reserve judgment on Guevarra’s declaration. Etc.

And, with huge caches of “shabu” still regularly turning up in various places despite the thousands upon thousands of EJKs, surely voters cannot reasonably be expected to uphold the continuity represented by the presidential run of Sen. Bato de la Rosa, the former top enforcer of the bloody antidrug campaign now the subject of investigation by the International Criminal Court.

Mr. Duterte has been pitching for administration candidates, assuring them the necessary aid and comfort, and reiterating his early promise of sacks of money for their campaign. (Malacañang has yet to pronounce it a joke, or not.) Grizzled pols “on-trend” with substitution and place-warmers are cynically mouthing things about abjuring “personality politics.”

Meanwhile, ordinary folk stew in monster commuter queues. Those of a certain age will recall the economic hardships—all documented—during the martial rule of Ferdinand Marcos, whose son and namesake, now past 60 and still denying knowledge of his father’s crimes, is angling to resume residence at the Palace. The unrelenting increase in oil prices continues to augment the difficulties endured by Filipinos still gripped by the pandemic.

Foreign debts, censorship, impunity … The occasions for déjà vu are breathtaking.

Senate panel: Pharmally, gov’t execs in ‘grand conspiracy’

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By: DJ Yap – Reporter /Philippine Daily Inquirer / October 20, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte is at the center of a “grand conspiracy” to defraud the government of billions of pesos perpetrated at the height of the pandemic by his Chinese friend and former economic adviser Michael Yang, executives of Pharmally Pharmaceutical Corp. and former and current budget procurement officers, according to a report by the Senate blue ribbon committee released on Tuesday.

It was the President “who allowed his friends to bleed this nation’s coffers dry,” said Sen. Richard Gordon, who disclosed his committee’s preliminary report during Tuesday’s hearing, the 12th since the inquiry started on Aug. 18.

“It is clear and categorical to us that this grand conspiracy could never have happened without the imprimatur of the President,” said the senator, who has been the target of many tirades from Duterte since the investigation started.

He said criminal charges should be filed against Yang, who allegedly provided financial backing for Pharmally, a company capitalized at only P625,000, so that it could fulfill its contracts amounting to P11.5 billion in 2020 and 2021 to supply the government with, among others, face masks and shields, personal protective equipment (PPE) and COVID-19 test kits.

Gordon said the deals with the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management (PS-DBM) and the Department of Health (DOH) were “were grossly and manifestly disadvantageous to the government.”

‘Special audit’

Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque dismissed the allegations against Duterte as a “tall tale.”

“I will repeat, first of all, there was no overprice in the purchase of the PPEs according to the chairman of the Commission on Audit (COA),” Roque said in a press briefing.

He also insisted that no law was violated in awarding the contracts to Pharmally because the Bayanihan 1 law authorized the President to make emergency purchases amid the pandemic.

“If there was no violation of the law and no overprice, why will there be a grand conspiracy? That is a tall tale from a person who is politicking,” he said, referring to Gordon, who is running for reelection.

In separate hearings held by the House of Representatives and the Senate, COA Chair Michael Aguinaldo told lawmakers that its report contained no statements on overpricing.

Deportation

Aguinaldo did not say there was overprice but neither did he say that there was no overprice because COA’s “observation,” the audit body’s term for its comments, was “related more to inventory management” rather than prices of procured goods.

He told the Senate that there would now be a “special audit” to look into it.

Gordon’s committee said Yang, a businessman, should be deported. But under Philippine law, such a move is usually made once all charges against a foreigner are resolved.

The committee said Yang was liable specifically for perjury, violations of the Bayanihan 1 law and the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act “for causing undue injury” to the government by giving a private party unwarranted benefits, and entering into contracts which were “manifestly and grossly disadvantageous to the government.”

Yang, who was defended by the President on several occasions, had denied that he gave Pharmally a loan so it could pay Chinese companies for the pandemic supplies.

Last year, the DOH transferred at least P42 billion of its pandemic funds to the PS-DBM to procure items that it found hard to purchase on its own. But the COA flagged the transfer for lack of a memorandum of agreement or other supporting documents.

‘Unwarranted benefits’

“Our inquiry in aid of legislation reveals unconscionable, unabashed and unethical circumventions of our republican way of governance,” Gordon said.

“We found that those involved prioritized their profits, commissions or kickbacks, instead of coming up with the right way to quell the pandemic,” he said.

The Senate discovered that the PS-DBM awarded Pharmally the lion’s share of the contracts totaling P8.7 billion just for 2020 despite being undercapitalized.

“From our investigation, it was clear that there were ‘unwarranted benefits, advantage or preference or favoritism’ for Pharmally, which only had a capital of P625,000, no experience in contracting, and even declared a loss in its first year of business. But it secured a whopping P8 billion to P11 billion in contracts from PS-DBM,” Gordon said.

Pharmally director Linconn Ong, who is detained in the Senate on contempt charges for his supposed evasive and inconsistent testimony, faces possible charges of perjury, violations of the Bayanihan law and for disobeying summons from lawmakers.

Host of charges

Pharmally’s regulatory affairs head Krizle Grace Mago, who sought refuge in the House and recanted her earlier testimony that the company defrauded the government, was cited for “estafa” or swindling, perjury and Bayanihan law violation.

Charges of estafa, perjury and disobedience to Congress summons and Bayanihan law violation were also recommended against Pharmally’s corporate secretary and treasurer Mohit Dargani.

Former PS-DBM chief Lloyd Christopher Lao, Warren Liong, Jorge Mendoza and Mervin Tanquintic were also named in the report as possible respondents in criminal cases.

The panel endorsed charges of graft and corruption, and fraud against the public treasury and similar offenses against both Lao and Liong.

It also recommended a charge of falsification of public documents against Liong, Mendoza and Tanquintic in the alleged falsification of the inspection reports of deliveries made by Pharmally to the PS-DBM’s warehouses.

Gordon stressed that the panel was far from finished in its probe, suggesting that more people could be prosecuted.

“They are trying to cover up their unconscionable crimes. We will not allow them. We will pursue in the people’s name not only to punish the perpetrators but also for them to return the money they stole from all of us,” he said.

For the second time, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III and other officials of the executive department did not attend the blue ribbon hearing, invoking the President’s orders to ignore the committee’s summons.

In a letter to Gordon’s panel, Duque, however, gave “firm assurances” that DOH officials would continue to cooperate with the inquiry and would submit “any and all documents” to help the investigation.

Roque said the President believed that the officials had already given so much time to the inquiry that their jobs related to quelling COVID-19 were being compromised.

‘Enough is enough’

“The President is just saying that enough is enough at the time of pandemic,” he said.

Hundreds of doctors and leaders of medical groups have urged officials to cooperate in the investigation and attend the hearings.

The latest group to express support for the probe was St. Luke’s Medical Center Employees Association which opposed the President’s directive.

“Barring Cabinet members and other officials to attend hearings conducted by the Senate blue ribbon committee does not only disrespect the august chamber but is a clear attempt of the Duterte administration to protect the executives of Pharmally Pharmaceutical Corp. and their cohorts,” said association president Jao Clumia.

—WITH A REPORT FROM LEILA B. SALAVERRIA INQ

Cusi, Dennis Uy slapped with graft raps for selling Malampaya shares to Udenna

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By: Gabriel Pabico Lalu – Reporter / INQUIRER.net / October 19, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — Secretary Alfonso Cusi, Udenna chief executive officer Dennis Uy, and other personalities are facing graft complaints for their role in the sale of majority shares in the Malampaya gas field, which was approved by the Department of Energy (DOE).

In the complaint filed by concerned citizens before the Office of the Ombudsman on Tuesday, it was alleged that Cusi and other employees of the Philippine National Oil Company’s Exploration Corporation (PNOC-EC) and other incorporators from Udenna, Chevron, Shell Philippines Exploration BV conspired to provide Uy’s company a huge chunk of the shares under the buyout.

According to the complainants, identified as Balgamel De Belen Domingo, Rodel Rodis, and Loida Nicolas Lewis, the respondents violated not only Republic Act No. 3019 or the Anti Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, but also the provisions of P.D. No. 87 and R.A. No. 387 or the Petroleum Act of 1949.

“We are filing this Criminal Complaint […] against Sec. Cusi, Gen. Briguez, Aldevera, Cañezal, Cobol, Rabena, Tuason, Young, Tayag, Dela Cruz and Racela, who in conspiracy with Mr. Uy, Ms. Uy, Fadullon, Damuy, Braga, Abarquez, De Claro, Placino, Escalona and Kizilbash, John and Jane Does of UC Malampaya, acted with gross inexcusable negligence, thereby causing undue injury to the Government, and giving unwarranted benefits, advantage or preference to Udenna and its subsidiary, UC Malampaya,” the complainants said.

It could be remembered that in November 2019, it was announced that Uy — a Davao businessman who has close ties with President Rodrigo Duterte — bought nearly half of Malampaya under Udenna Corporation’s UC Malampaya.  It was then scrutinized in the Senate just this May 2021.

UC Malampaya which Udenna wholly owns, bought the shares of Chevron Malampaya LLC which was under Chevron Philippines Ltd.

The same UC Malampaya is seen to acquire the 45 percent share of Shell Philippines Exploration BV — doubling its stake in the project to 90 percent.

READ: Udenna group commits to ‘rejuvenate’ Malampaya project 

Complainants said that monetary losses from the Chevron sale to Udenna is around P21 billion — based on the 45 percent share of Chevron in the years 2018, 2019, and 2020.  If this is combined with the 45 percent share of Shell, it may grow to around P42 billion a year.

“They, in conspiracy with the other Respondents, allowed or facilitated the effective transfer of Chevron’s rights, obligations and its 45% participating share to Udenna and UC Malampaya, despite the knowledge that the transaction had no prior approval from the DOE, and without ascertaining Udenna and UC Malampaya’s legal, technical and financial qualifications to perform Chevron Malampaya’s obligations under the JOA and the Service Contract,” the complainants said.

“As Directors and/or Officers of their respective Corporations at all the time material and relevant to this Criminal Case, the Respondents are obliged to inform themselves of all material information reasonably available to them. Having become so informed, they must act with requisite care in the discharge of their duties,” they added.

Aside from these, the complainants also pointed out that Cusi, as ex-officio chairperson of the PNOC-EC, could have challenged UC Malampaya’s offer to Cheveron as it may be a good chance for the government to invest as they expect the return to be good.

But the complainants claimed that PNOC-EC did not exert effort to purchase the shares, which are now with UC Malampaya.

“On 19 December 2019, Sec. Cusi, who is the Ex-Officio Chairman of PNOC-EC, said that the Board of Directors of PNOC-EC has approved its exercise of its right to match the offer of UC Malampaya for Chevron’s participating share in the Malampaya Project.  He also acknowledged that purchasing Chevron’s share is an ‘opportunity for [PNOC-EC] to invest, because [we see] that the return will be good’,” they said.

“However, despite knowledge of its right to match UC Malampaya’s offer and the anticipated good returns of the investment in Chevron’s share, PNOC-EC failed to exert any effort to purchase Chevron’s participating shares,” they added.

Last September 24, PNOC said that it is still studying whether it is prudent to even attempt to purchase Shell’s Malampaya shares in the natural gas field.

INQUIRER.net has sought the side of Secretary Cusi over the issue, but he has not yet responded as of posting time.


[EDITORIAL] Mala-diyos ang Facebook at mapanganib ito

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Oct 18, 2021 Rappler.com

Naging negligent ang kompanya sa pagtatanggal ng violence, disinformation, at nakasasamang content sa platform nito

Nitong Oktubre 5, nagtestify ang whistleblower na si Frances Haugen laban sa sarili niyang kompanya: ang Facebook.

Sabi niya sa wikang Ingles, “Narito ako dahil naniniwala akong nakasasama ang produkto ng Facebook sa mga bata, nagpapaigting ng pagkakawatak-watak, at nagpapahina sa ating demokrasya.”

Lahat ng sinabi ni Haugen ay matagal nang sinasabi ng mga kritiko ng Facebook. Tugma ito sa mga pahayag ng mga naunang whistleblowers na sina Roger McNamee, isang dating investor sa Facebook, Christopher Wylie, isang insider sa political consulting firm na Cambridge Analytica, at Sophie Zhang, isa pang dating empleyado ng social media giant.

Sabi ng Nobel Peace Prize laureate at CEO ng Rappler na si Maria Ressa, nanguna si Presidente Rodrigo Duterte sa pag-e-eksperimento at paggamit sa mga tools ng Facebook upang magpalaganap ng disinformation. (Sa buong mundo, kinikilala ang disinformation bilang sinadyang mapanlinlang na pahayag.)

Dagdag pa ni Ressa, dahil sa eksperimento ng Cambridge Analytica sa Pilipinas, naging “playbook na ito ng mga diktador.” 

Ayon sa Cambridge Analytica whistleblower na si Wylie, ang Pilipinas ang naging “petri dish” o unang eksperimento ng kompanya, na sa kalaunan ay ginamit sa operasyon laban kay Hillary Clinton at tumulong magpanalo kay Donald Trump.

It’s all about profit

Hindi ba ito masosolusyunan ng pagtatanggal ng mga disinformation network – bagay na ginawa na ng Facebook?

Hindi lang kasi ito usapin ng bad actors o kontrabida sa isang digital landscape. 

Sabi ng mga data experts tulad ni Tristan Harris, isang data ethicist sa dokumentaryong The Social Dilemma, “If you’re not paying for the product then you are the product.” Kung hindi ka nagbabayad para sa isang produkto, ikaw ang produkto.

Mismong disenyo ng Facebook ay kumitil sa kalayaang mag-isip at magpahayag. Bakit ‘ka mo? Hindi ba’t kahit ano’y puwedeng sabihin sa Facebook? Paano ito naging kalaban ng kalayaang magpahayag?

Disenyo kasi ng Facebook na bigyang halaga ang virality at hindi ang katotohanan. Ang disenyong ito ang pinagkakakitaan ng Facebook dahil ibinebenta nila ang feature na ito sa advertisers: ang kakayahan nilang magtukoy ng behavior ng tao upang mainam na makapag-target ng ads. 

Ang disenyong ito ang nagsasaisantabi ng katotohanan para sa mga post na nakapagpapaliyab ng galit, poot, at takot. Habang sumisikat ang isang post, lalo itong binibigyang prayoridad at inihahain sa mga users – at walang pake kung totoo ang laman nito, basta mabenta, madikit, viral.

Kung isa kang nagkakalat ng disinformation, puwede mo nang gawing bayani ang mamamatay-tao, uliran ang balasubas, at masama at peke ang mga journalists na kritiko mo – kung mayroon kang troll armies na magla-like, magre-repost, magka-copy-paste ng mapanlinlang na “balita.”

At batay sa exposé ng whistleblower na si Haugen, walang balak ang Facebook na pigilan ang pagkalat ng disinformation sa plataporma nito, dahil hindi ito magwawaldas ng pera sa mga bilyong content moderators na kinakailangan upang masawata ang bilyon-bilyong disinformation araw-araw.

Sa bandang huli, it’s all about profit.

Uulitin namin, hindi neutral tool ang Facebook at dinisenyo ito upang hulihin ang ating atensyon at ma-adik tayo sa content nito.

Paano ito nagpapalaganap ng disinformation? Halimbawa, kung isa kang inang interesado sa mga bagay na tungkol sa parenting at pag-aalaga ng bata, makikita ng algorithms ng Facebook. Pero may isang grupo ng parents na anti-vaxxers – kaya’t inihain din ito sa ibang magulang. Kung nag-click ka, maaaring susunod na ihain sa ‘yo ang content ng Q-Anon, ang grupong nasa likod ng pagsugod sa Capitol Hill ng Estados Unidos noong Enero 6, 2021.

Dahil sa business design nito, pinasikat ng Facebook ang mga populist, authoritarian-style leaders. Minamanipula ng Facebook ang pinakamalalang ugali ng tao. Dinisenyo itong samantalahin ang kasamaan ng tao. 

Hindi natin masosolusyunan ang climate change o racial injustice at maging ang COVID-19 kung wala tayong kakayahang magkasundo.

Kino-quote ni Ressa at Harris is Edward O. Wilson, isang biologist, naturalist, at manunulat. Sabi niya paano natin matutugunan nang tama ang mga problema ng mundo kung ang ‘sangkatauhan ay nagtataglay ng paleolithic o caveman emotions, ang mga institusyon natin ay medieval, pero ang teknolohiya natin ay mala-diyos?

‘Facebook is dangerous’

Mabalik tayo kay Haugen. Sabi niya, alam ng Facebook ang ginagawa nito. Lumitaw daw ito sa mismong mga research ng Facebook pero naging negligent ang kompanya sa pagtatanggal ng violence, disinformation, at nakasasamang content.

Sabi niya, “Facebook in its current form is dangerous.”

Unang hakbang sa paghulagpos sa puppet strings ng Facebook ay ang pagkilala sa mga panganib nito. Ang Pilipinas ang may pinakamataas na engagement sa Facebook sa lahat ng bansa sa buong mundo kaya’t kailangang paigtingin ang diskurso ng publiko tungkol dito.

Papalapit na ang eleksiyon. Huwag hayaang Facebook ang magtakda ng landas ng ating kinabukasan. #WeDecide: Atin ang Pilipinas. – Rappler.com