Posts published during May, 2011

Macau

April 16, 2011. We only had three days to spend in Macau. Our second day was reserved for the standard city tour. To give you an idea of how small Macau is, Macau’s land area is smaller than Makati’s, or Manila’s. It’s just about the size of Pasig City. Needless to say, it is a very small “Special Administrative Region” of China.

Our first stop for the half-day tour of Macau was the A-ma temple. (I know, in any standard city tour in any East Asian city, there’s always a temple visit and they’re all pretty much the same). The tour included this in the itinerary not because it was an extraordinary sight or spectacle, but because it was a way of introducing tourists to a brief history of Macau.

It is apparently because of this temple why Macau got its name. When Portuguese sailors arrived in this territory many centuries ago, they asked for the name of the peninsula. The locals thought they were referring to the temple, so they answered “A-Ma Gau”.

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At 05:36People find themselves surrounded by hideous poverty, by hideous ugliness, by hideous starvation. It is inevitable that they should be strongly moved by all this.

Accordingly, with admirable, though misdirected, intentions, they very seriously and very sentimentally set themselves to the task of remedying the evils that they see. But their remedies do not cure the disease, they merely prolong it. Indeed, their remedies are part of the disease. They try to solve the problem of poverty–for instance, by keeping the poor alive–or in the case of a very advanced school, by amusing the poor.

But this is not a solution. It is an aggravation of the difficulty.

The proper aim is to try and reconstruct society on such a basis that poverty will be impossible…

At 9:50I’m not against charity, my god, in an abstract sense, of course it’s better than nothing! Just–let’s be aware that there is an element of hypocrisy there…

Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

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May 1, 2011. By past 5 in the afternoon, the protest march had reached the gates of Mendiola, the road that leads to the Presidential palace. The “Peace Arch” gates had been shut, and thousands of police from across Metro Manila and soldiers deployed from Southern Tagalog were ordered assembled behind barbed wires and barricades. An over-reaction and an exaggeration it was.

President Aquino refused to appear before the thousands of workers and supporters that day, even if he had earlier sat down with “moderate” labor groups and promised them some crumbs in consolation. In an insulting display of his real biases, a few days later, President Aquino indulged the national employers’ confederation and attended their banquet (similarly attended by representatives form the foreign chambers of commerce) and assured them that he will not support a substantial legislated nationwide across-the-board wage hike. In short, the President vowed to protect big businessmen’s greed for profits through the pressing down of wages.

Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

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Minimum wage in the National Capital Region (NCR) is stunted at a mere P404 a day. On the other hand, the daily cost of living for an ordinary family is pegged at almost P1,000 a day, making it barely possible for an ordinary family in NCR to make ends meet even when both parents are working. In the provinces, minimum wages are even lower, and even much lower for those working in the agriculture sector, even if the prices of many goods including processed foods and petroleum are more expensive in the provinces. In a blatantly ironic and tragic manifestation of the grave inequalities that pervade in the Philippines, the government, through the social welfare department, announced two days later that it will dole out rice subsidies–to farmers!

A recent survey showed that incidence of hunger in the country is at its highest in twelve years, and that more than half of the population rated themselves as poor.

Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

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Meanwhile, the productivity rate of Filipino workers actually increased over the past years, creating wealth for investors and capitalists. Business papers consistently report record billions in profits for companies the past years. Government reported that the economy grew by more than 7% in 2010. A research group had earlier correctly debunked the retrenchment and closure threats of companies saying that “Government data show that establishments in the country with total employment of 20 and over had combined profits of Php895.2 billion” and that a P125 nationwide wage hike will only cause a mere 15% cut in profits.

Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

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The demand for higher wages is thus not merely a whim of workers, but a just and timely demand for social justice that has been consistently denied them for decades under the ruling system. A P125 wage increase will not be sufficient to equitably distribute the wealth that the country collectively creates, but it will at least provide economic relief to millions of Filipinos. The present government’s rejection, even just of this simple demand, is a manifestation of its real character as merely an institution that preserves the status quo that serves the interests of a few, and thus justifies the people’s struggle for genuine social change.

More reading:
* Filipino workers must unite to expose and oppose the anti-worker US-Aquino regime
* Labor day outrage and paranoia
* Biggest show of protesters in May 1 ‘Day of Outrage’
* Mayo Uno: Hudyat ng mas matindi pang paglaban
* P13.35 too small a wage hike, employers should fight oil price hikes – KMU

Leadership Seminar with SK Federation of Ilagan, Isabela

April 24, 2011. Subic, Zambales. We were invited to conduct a leadership training seminar for the Sangguniang Kabataan federation of Ilagan, Isabela. I gave a talk on how to write resolutions. Aside from talks, we also facilitated some ‘team-building’ games.

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Kabataan Party-List
Kabataan Party-List
Kabataan Party-List
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Hong Kong Disneyland

The end of the afternoon till early evening was spent at “Tomorrowland,” the ‘futuristic’ section of Hong Kong Disneyland. We got so tired walking around the park for the entire afternoon, so we didn’t explore Tomorrowland that much. Tisay and I just went for the race track ride “Autopia”, where visitors can ride cars and actually drive around guided tracks. There are other rides but by the time we got there the lines were too long and we were too tired and impatient to wait. There’s also a height requirement for “Space Mountain,” a virtual roller coaster of sorts, so we couldn’t go in without leaving Tisay behind.

A visit to Disneyland is usually capped by witnessing the nightly lights-up and pyromusical show at the Sleeping Beauty Castle. It was nice, though don’t get your expectations too high. I felt like I’ve seen many better fireworks before. The experience of witnessing it can be magical for younger children, I guess. The fireworks are accompanied by music from Disney’s animated classics so it can be nostalgic for young adults, too.

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Hong Kong Disneyland

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April 14, 2011. Late in the afternoon, we took HK Disneyland’s train that goes around the theme park in a loop. There are two stations, one in Fantasyland and the main station is back at Main Street, near the entrance to the park. We made one full loop from the central station before taking a stroll down Main Street to have some afternoon snacks and shopping. Prices inside HK Disneyland are exorbitant, so be prepared. (A plastic bottle of Coke can cost as much as the equivalent of 200 pesos).

Hong Kong Disneyland

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Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

May 1, 2011. As many as 25,000 people joined the Mayo Uno mobilization in the National Capital Region. Protests in other cities in the regions were also held and joined in by thousands more. Kilusang Mayo Uno reported that more than 65,000 Filipinos joined various protests and mobilizations across the country. 5,000 reportedly joined in Calamba City, Laguna; 15,000 in Masbate, Bicol; 5,000 in Davao City; 1,000 in Cagayan de Oro City; 3,500 in Caraga provinces; 3,000 in Bacolod City, and thousands more in other cities and urban centers.

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At past 4 PM, the people began their march from Liwasang Bonifacio to Mendiola, at the crossroads that lead to the gates of Malacañang Palace. The protest march snaked through Lawton and Manila City Hall, across Pasig River via McArthur Bridge, through Avenida Rizal and into Recto Avenue until they reached Mendiola.

Chants of “Walang pagbabago sa ilalim ni Aquino!” “Sahod itaas! Presyo ibaba!” reverberated on the streets below the elevated trains of LRT’s 1 and 2, to the cheers of pedestrians and ordinary folk on the sidewalks.

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Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

May 1, 2011. From España Avenue, Manila, one of the contingents of the Mayo Uno mobilization marched towards Plaza Miranda where thousands of workers and supporters had a brief program and lunch break before converging with the other contingents in Liwasang Bonifacio.

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By 1 PM, all contingents from across the National Capital Region converged on Liwasang Bonifacio and began the afternoon program where speakers from various labor organizations and unions, along with speakers from sectoral organizations took turns verbalizing the collective sentiment and the demands of the people for substantial higher wages.

President Aquino had earlier rejected the proposed P125 legislated wage hike towing the employers’ propaganda line that such significant wage hike would cause large scale retrenchments, closures and runaway inflation. In reality, businesses have been earning record profits the past decade and can actually afford a P125 across the board wage hike–only that they want to maintain their wide profit margins. Speakers during the program correctly criticized the Aquino administration for blatantly protecting and serving the interests of the local ruling elite and foreign capitalists running the big businesses in the Philippines.

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Rapidly increasing prices of basic goods and services have pushed many millions of Filipinos to the thresholds of poverty and starvation. A recent survey showed that incidence of hunger in the country is at its highest in twelve years, and that more than half of the population rated themselves as poor. This, even if the poverty threshold has been lowered from a decade ago.

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Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

May 1, 2011. Thousands of Filipinos in the National Capital Region marched on the streets of Manila on Labor Day demanding for a nationwide hike in wages. Rising costs of goods, from petroleum products to food and other basic commodities and a regime of stunted wages to protect greedy investor and capitalist profits have been pushing millions of Filipino families into the threshold of poverty and starvation.

(In the picture above), one of four contingents set to converge at Liwasang Bonifacio marched along España carrying banners demanding for a nationwide hike in wages and a rollback of prices.

Towing the employers confederation’s line, the Aquino government earlier announced that it is not considering to support a P125 nationwide legislated wage hike, as it will allegedly cause runaway inflation, lay-offs and closures among businesses. A research group had earlier debunked such myth saying that a P125 wage hike will only cause a 15% cut in profits, which employers can very well afford. Militant labor center Kilusang Mayo Uno called such threats as mere blackmail.

Mayo Uno 2011, Labor Day in Manila

(In the picture above) a banner in the rally reads, “Trabaho sa sariling bayan, hindi labor export policy!” (Jobs in our own country, not labor export policy!). The government’s failure to create jobs in the country through a policy of genuine agrarian reform and national industrialization has created a massive number of unemployed Filipinos whom the government effectively forces to seek precarious overseas employment to feed their families, through a policy of labor export. Such oversupply of labor also justifies the government’s rejection of any demand to substantially increase the minimum wage. Almost 10 million Filipinos, ten percent of the population, are currently working overseas.

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