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“In the end, the question is not which party to side with, but how the Philippines can best protect its territorial integrity. It is not in our interest to play a willing part in US military maneuverings in the region. If there is a perception that China is bullying us, the solution is not to run for help to a bigger bully. Diplomacy within the framework of mutually beneficial relations with our neighbors in the region should be our utmost weapon. Clearly, the best foreign policy is one that is anchored on the assertion of national sovereignty and not one that relies on a Big Brother to protect the country’s interests.”

From US agenda in Asia and the risks that Aquino is courting by Arnold Padilla. [Emphasis mine]

Sample costumes from the Facebook page of Velada Tomasina

To close its celebration of its Quadricentennial, the University of Santo Tomas is holding a two-day festival (January 25-26) that hopes to recreate UST in the “perspective of the cultural milieu of old Manila at the turn of the 19th century” through “period costumes, songs, dances, poems and festivity.”

This, I think, is a great opportunity for us to appreciate the role of UST students in Philippine history. It was, after all, the period of Jose Rizal, Emilio Jacinto, Apolinario Mabini and Padre Jose Burgos. However, I am disturbed by the tendency of the administration and many students to regard this celebration as a mere pageantry of costumes and deodorized commemoration of whatever concept of grandeur they have of “old Manila,” devoid of any socio-political context of its times.

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A few days ago, a paper written by ex-President Gloria Arroyo entitled “It’s the economy, student!” was released to the public. In the piece, the ex-President went on great length to champion her economic programs on one hand and to and bash President Aquino for failing to ‘sustain’ the gains she boasts to have accomplished on the other.

What really is the fundamental difference between economic policies of the two? Nothing. President Aquino merely continues the same economic policies of President Arroyo.

Both Presidents’ economic programs adhere to the same dogma of neoliberal globalization. It’s the economy, all right–the economy of big businessmen, foreign investors and their local counterparts. Whether or not ordinary Filipinos benefit from such economic growth is merely incidental. They have a phrase for it–”trickle down” effect. Numbers that proclaim economic growth are rendered meaningless by the fact that poverty has continued to worsen over the decade, so much that the government had to re-define and lower the poverty threshold. The vision of economic prosperity and survival is entirely dependent on foreign investors and all the economic programs of President Aquino and his predecessors are aligned with the agenda of these monopoly capitalists and their local counterparts.

Both Presidents have pushed for the further privatization of public utilities by selling contracts to roads and other public services to private profiteers. Both administrations have strengthened the deregulation of industries imbued with public interest and rejected clamors to repeal the laws that allow such deregulation, from the oil industry (Oil Deregulation Law) to power generation and distribution (EPIRA) to education (Education Act of 1982), which have resulted to public services that are increasingly out of reach to ordinary Filipinos and are increasingly profitable to private corporations.

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Praying for miracles

It was reported that as many as 8.5 million Filipinos trooped to Manila last Monday to join the procession of the Black Nazarene icon, believed by many to perform miracles. If you are not awed by the sheer size of the multitude, let us put it in perspective. Eight and a half million is just a little less than ten percent of the entire population. It is almost the size of the population of the entire Metro Manila, swarmed in a few square kilometers of space. This year’s procession is said to have been the largest in the history of the Feast of the Black Nazarene.

This enormous outpouring of a great mass of Filipinos in the procession represents two things. First, the intense faith and devotion of Catholic Filipinos. And second, more importantly, that millions of our fellow Filipinos identify with the tribulations of Jesus Christ and are willing to join what may figuratively be the world’s largest stampede to pray for miracles–which tells a lot about the social conditions we find ourselves in as a nation.

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On “Squatters”

Nakiusap ang mga nanay ng Corazon de Jesus na makabalik sila sa kanilang sinisira nang mga tahanan para maisalba ang natitira nilang mga gamit. Pero pinipigilan sila ng mga pulis. (photo and caption by KR Guda of PinoyWeekly.org)

There is something particularly bothersome with the condescending arrogance displayed by some people with regard the issue of the urban poor and their problem on housing. Relying on pure legalese, they forward an overly simplified position that since “squatters” do not own the land where their shanties are built on, they deserve to be evicted–by force.

These people fail to recognize the social context of the problem. A fourth of Metro Manila, a staggering 584,425 families according to the National Housing Authority, are informal settlers. When the problem affects a significant portion of the population it ceases from becoming a purely legal problem of property rights and land ownership. It becomes a tragic social phenomenon, in much the same way as peasant landlessness is, and thus calls for fundamental political and economic solutions like agrarian land reform.

If you think squatters are not entitled to live in their homes, you might as well ask for the eviction of a fourth of Metro Manila for squatting on idle lands. Wow. If you don’t realize it, many of Manila’s laborers come form the urban poor. They do everything from cooking and serving your food, doing your laundry, and ironically–building your homes. You might as well ask for the paralysis of economic activity in the national capital.

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There are those who say that the fight against budget cuts and the grossly insufficient government budget on our public schools, universities, hospitals and other social services is a campaign only of state university and public school students, teachers and staff, of medical professionals and employees in public hospitals, and of those who avail much of the government’s social services. They are the ones who can easily understand the need to go on strike in order to assert greater state subsidy for our schools and hospitals.

What is in it for us students in private schools? In our immediate interest, there is apparently nothing that concerns us. But you see, the reduction of state subsidy in state universities provides our private schools, which already control more than 70 percent of the country’s higher education system, greater leverage to control the “higher education” market. As it is, college education has already become a commodity to be availed of by those who can afford it and for private gain, not a right and a social service for national development as it should be. It is this situation of greater privatization, where young Filipinos and their families are left with very few alternatives but to surrender to the whims of the private sector, where tuition and other fees are exorbitant and largely deregulated, if not abandon any dreams of entering college altogether. This manifests in staggering figures admitted by the government’s education agencies—eighty percent (80%) of Filipino youth are not able to enter college or even technical-vocational schools. The point is, if tuition increases in private universities is something that concerns us, the fight of our state universities against budget cuts is also our fight. We need a strong public higher education system to serve as a counter-weight against private school owners’ free hand in dictating the control and orientation of our higher education system. The moment we allow our state universities to deteriorate or increase their rates, we can be certain that our private schools will have an easier time raising our tuition.

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Light and funny, but sharp and insightful information video about the oil price hikes in the Philippines.

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

Kabataan Party-List
Kabataan Party-List
Kabataan Party-List
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