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DIOS NA MAHABAGIN, KAILAN  PA KAYA?
    WHAT'S the big deal when  Lapu-Lapu killed
 Magellan in 1521?  Nothing
   much
   really. During  Lapu-Lapu's time, Mactan was
 strictly tribal. Think
 small,
   gid.  There were no big ideas such as
 nationalism or  geopolitics.
   Lapu-Lapu
   was simply, the local siga-siga and Magellan was
 the culture-shocked
   Westerner, a native first-timer in the exotic 
 East.
   We  lionize Lapu-Lapu as a hero and nationalist.
 Ang totoo, mayabang
 lang
   si
   Lapu-Lapu. But his defeat of a foreign invader,
 did not make a Filipino
   nation. The timing was wrong. And don't you
 believe that bull that
 Spanish
   explorers came to find spices of the East to
 improve the taste of their
   bland  cuisine. Their hidden agenda was to
 spread their kingdom through
   colonization,  the euphemism for land  grabbing.
 During  the 333 years
 of
   Spanish rule (1565-1898), hundreds of rebellion
 were waged by  native
   firebrands in many parts of the archipelago. Not
 one succeeded. Our
   rebels
   were either caught, garotted, or simply ignored
 by the Commandante as
   nuisances. Puro  malas!
   The  execution of Rizal in 1896 was a traumatic
 experience for
 Filipinos.
   Those who read Rizal's Fili and Noli were
 incensed by the abuses of the
   church -people and state regime of the
 Spaniards. Emotions ran high,
 from
   Aparri to Jolo. The  critical mass needed for
 nationhood was formed. At
   last
   we could rebel as a  people, as a  nation. The 
 Katipunan did their
 battle
   heroics, originally led by the firebrand
 Bonifacio and later on by the
   crafty Aguinaldo. With more Katipunan charges
 (Sugod mga Kapatid),
 freedom
   seemed  possible.
   Between  1897 and 1899, stealth, betrayal, and
 skullduggery bedeviled
 our
   prospect for  independence. The Aguinaldo and
 Bonifacio factions engaged
   in
   an ugly infighting  (the talangka mentality)
 resulting in the execution
 of
   Bonifacio.
   Meantime,  an ambitious American Admiral named
 Dewey (not Dewey Dee, the
   fast one) entered  Manila Bay and defeated a
 luckluster Spanish navy.
   Aguinaldo reneged on the pact  of Biak na bato.
 He resumed the
 revolution
   by
   proclaiming the Philippine  Independence in 
 Kawit. Meanwhile,  American
   and
   Spanish soldiers held a "moromoro" battle in
 Intramuros with  the
   Spaniards
   surrendering. Aguinaldo's republic and his KKK
 patriots were left  out
 and
   ignored. Naisahan tayo. Minalas na naman.
   The  Filipino-American War broke out. Tall
 American soldiers looking
 like
   Clark  Gable chased and battled the outlawed
 Filipino revolutionaries,
   ending in  the capture of Aguinaldo in Isabela.
 Thanks to the
 mercenaries
   from Macabebe.  This was the mother of all 
 kamalasan. At  that time,
 our
   population was 8 million. The gap between the
 rich and the poor  was
   estimated at 30% middle-class and rich, 70%
 low-class and rural  poor.
   During  the Commonwealth period (1901-1941),
 which followed, there were
   lots
   of learning  on democratic principles, its
 structure and governance.
   Technology transfers  were done on
 Constitutional Rights, Public
   Education,
   Transportation, Health,  International Trade and  Industrialization.
The
   Americans turned out to be good  tutors.
 Filipinos also went crazy over
   American brand products like Libby's  corned
 beef and Portola sardines,
   Hershey's Kisses and Wrigley's chewing gum, 
 Camel cigarettes and Model
 T
   Ford for the hacienderos of Pampanga and 
 Iloilo. Hollywood  films made
   Pinoy males fantasize on Jean Harlow, Betty
 Grable, and  Mae West. Thus,
   Filipino colonial mentality began. We fondly
 called this  period Peace
   Time.
   By the way, American troops massacred innocent
 people in  Balanguiga.
 Mga
   hayup din  pala!
   1941.  Disaster! World War II! After attacking 
 Pearl Harbor, the
 Japanese
   army invaded  our country defeating the combined
 American and Filipino
   forces (USAFE).  General McArthur, the proud and
 handsome Army chief,
 fled
   to Australia at  the height of the  battle. For 
 four miserable years we
   suffered the sadism of the Japanese militarists
 rule.  Torture, famine,
   and
   death were for us, the order of the day. Kawawa.
 Malas na  malas!
   The  American forces returned in 1945 to
 liberate the country. McArthur,
   General  superiority complex himself, sporting
 Ray Ban sunglasses and
   corncob pipe  swaggered back to Manila. Piqued
 at his humiliation in
 1941,
   McArthur ordered  the bombing and shelling of
 Manila till kingdom come.
   The
   whole-wide expanse  South of Pasig - from Post
 Office to Vito Cruz,
   including all of Intramuros -  was pulverized.
 Manila was the most
   destroyed
   city of World War  II. Our  culture, our
 heritage, and historical assets
   (seven beautiful churches in  Intramuros,
 hundreds of elegant Art Deco
 and
   neo-classical architecture
   in Paco  and Santa Ana) were sacrificed
 recklessly and completely erased
   from the face of the  earth. Sayang na  sayang!
   In  1946, we gained our Independence from the
 Americans. We were a free
   nation at  last. We had enough exposure and
 lessons on how to govern a
   democratic country,  the first in Asia. Our
 population was 17 million.
 The
   dollar exchange was US$1  to P2.
   But  there was still no peace from 1947 to 1966.
 A widespread communist
   rebellion led  by Taruc, the Lava brothers, and
 its
   armed guerillas called  Hukbalahap waged bloody
 war with government
   troops.
   Filipinos killed  kapwa Filipinos. Malas na 
 naman! Our  politicians and
   bureaucrats learned to engage in graft and
 corruption (What are  we in
   power
   for?) - such as the war surplus bribery, the
 Tambobong  wheeler-dealing
   and
   the Namarco scam. Talo!
   Six  presidents were elected to manage the
 country from 1947 to 1972,
   under
   the  democratic system. They were Presidents
 Roxas, Quirino, Magsaysay,
   Garcia, Macapagal, and  Marcos. Economists 
 looked back to the decades
 of
   the 50s and 60s as the best years of the 
 Philippine economy, surpassing
   Asian countries. The nostalgia was naivete, a 
 useless ego-tripping. The
   gap
   between the rich and the poor remained big. 30% 
 middle-class and rich,
   70%
   low-class, rural and urban poor. We were 27
 million  people. US$1 was to
   P4.
   During the  late 60's, the Maoist communists led
 by Dante intensified
 its
   drive to  overthrow the government. Marcos added
 fuel to the fire by
   creating a communist  spook. Violence and mayhem
 rule the streets. The
   youth
   went up in arms! Martial  Law was declared in
 1972 and Marcos became
   dictator. Freedom of assembly and  statement
 went out of the window.
 What
   followed were years of dictatorial abuse, crony
 capitalism, shackled
 free
   enterprise, near economic collapse and a
 demoralized middle class. The
 gap
   between the rich (30%) and poor (70%) remained
 in a quagmire. Our
   population
   was  40 million. Exchange rate was US$1 to P7.
 Kawawang kawawa! Malas na
   malas!
   In 1983, Ninoy Aquino, Marcos' exiled arch
 rival,was assassinated  upon
   his
   return. Push came to  shove. Cardinal  Sin egged
 on the people on to
   protest. Outrage, self-pity, shame and fury 
 raged and rumbled like a
   tidal
   wave, culminating in the incredible People Power
  Revolution. The very
   sick
   and obstinate Marcos fled (hijacked by Americans
 from  Clark) to Hawaii
   (sounds like Paoay) where he died. His alleged
 millions of  stolen
 dollars
   intact and unresolved. Up to  now... But  People
 Power was our shining
   glory! The whole world applauded our saintly 
 courage, our dignified
   defiance, our bloodless solution to expel a
 dictator. We  were the toast
   of
   all freedom-loving countries, the envy of all
 oppressed  people.
   In 1986, we placed Cory Aquino, Ninoy's widow,
 in Malacanang. She  was
   virtuous, sincere and full of good intentions
 for the
   country. But what  happens? Coup  attempts by
 Honasan, power struggle,
   political squabbles, and the  infighting for
 juicy deals harassed the
   amateur Cory presidency. So nothing  happened.
 No progress took place.
 The
   economy was still bad. The poor suffered  more
 and more. Sure we got
   democracy back on its feet. But the Filipino
 resolve  didn't happen.
   People
   Power pala was ningas cogon power. Sayang  na
 sayang! Tha gap between
 the
   rich and the poor remained at 30%  (middle-class
 and rich), 70%
   (lower-class
   and rural/urban poor). Exchange rate  was US$1
 to P25. We were 55
 million
   people.
   In  1992, Cory's choice, Fidel Ramos, West
 Pointer, soldier, and hero of
   the
   People Power won the presidency. He had the
 bearing, the
 single-mindedness
   and  the vision to bring the country to a tiger
 economy status. Ramos
 was
   a
   terrific salesman of the Philippines to the
 world. He was able to hype a
   climate of an  economic ground. He removed
 barriers to progress. He was
 an
   apostle of  privatization. His mantra was, less
 government, more private
   sector! Fidel hit  the right note and the
 economy
   went on a roll. Fidel wanted to run for 
 reelection but failed to swing
   the
   cha-cha (an idiotic acronym for  Constitutional
 Change) so he could run
   again.
   In  1997, the Asian economic crises struck,
 triggered by a balloons
 burst
   of
   the  hyper speculative Bangkok economy. The
 financial debacle created a
   disastrous  effects in the investment
 institutions of Manila, Jakarta,
   Kuala
   Lumpur, Hong  Kong, Seoul, and Taiwan. All the
 Ramos gains evaporated
 into
   thin air. Malas  na naman! The poor, specially
 Mang Pandoy, were poorer
   than
   ever.
   1998 was  showbiz time! The "Erap para sa
 Mahirap" show opened to the
   chagrin of  Makati Business Club. Pasensya na po
 kayo, mga elitists.
   Democracy is also  weird. The choice of the masa
 must be respected.
   Catastrophe! Chavit Singson exploded jueteng
 bombs! For days on end, a
   nation sick in the stomach, sat through
 primetime TV aghast at watching
   the
   bizarre drama of  alleged bribery, gambling,
 drunkenness, womanizing,
   deceit, and corruption. A  lantern-jawed witness
 and a sexy intelligence
   "asset" hogged the witness  stand. Viewing  the
 scandals on TV was like
   watching dogs mating in the public square. It's 
 embarrassing but you
   can't
   take your eyes of them. The impeachment trial 
 serialized on TV was
   riveting. The defense lawyers, some wearing a
 canine sneer  (ngiting
 aso)
   insulted our intelligence often. (Lokohin n'yo
 ang  lelang n'yo). The
   whole
   country was stinking to high heavens. The 
 prosecution produced its own
   witnesses Clarissa Ocampo, Emma Lim,  Carmencita
 Itchon and many
 others.
   Idols  with feet of clay fell crashing into the
 dust. Those who voted
   against opening  the enveloped were legalese,
 procedural, and sounding
   intellectually brilliant.  Also heartless and
 thick-skinned. They
 couldn't
   fathom the heartbeat of the  nation. Cardinal
 Sin, aging and sickly,
   called
   the people again. It was People  Power II! Same
 humongous and collective
   umbrage, same brinkmanship, and same  staccato
 prayers! Generals Reyes
 and
   Villanueva simply joined the  mammoth EDSA
 crowd. No US jets from Clark
   this
   time. Erap was out! Gloria  was in! Hope 
 springs eternal. Malacanang
   regained its honor and dignity. Protocol was 
 observed. Absurdity was
   gone.
   Grammatical English was  back.
   2001.  More catastrophies! The peso plummeted to
 a horrifying P51 to
 US$1.
   The Abu  Sayyaf (extremist ideologues? Or
 mindless barbarians) were into
   kidnapping  and terrorism, gaining worldwide
 notoriety. Businesses are
   still
   closing shop. Thousands of workers are being
 retrenched. Prices of food
   and
   gasoline are very  high. (Galunggong is P80 per
 kilo!) Our streets
 became
   permanent garbage  dumps. Maggots multiply to
 spread disease. Our
   communities  stink. Again,  the whole nation was
 witnessing sickening
   crimes
   attributed to people in the  government. Talo na
 naman! We are now 75
   million people but the gap  between the rich,
 30% (middle-class and
 rich),
   70% (lower-class and rural/urban  poor) remains
 the same for one
 century.
   When  will this end? It's been more than 350
 years since Lapu's-Lapu's
   victory, 100  years since Rizal martyrdom and
 we're nowhere as a people,
   as
   a nation. Malas pa  rin! Some wise  guy said the
 Filipino is a damaged
   culture. Bully! And what do
   you call other  foreigners. They used slaves in
 their plantations, and
   landgrabbed from the  natives! What should we
 call such culture?
 Predatory
   Culture? Bully Culture?  What about another
 country? How many countries
   did
   it put under the barrel of  its gunships, so
 they could gloat that the
 sun
   never sets on their empire?" What  shall we call
 this culture? Sahib
   culture? Gunga Din culture? C'mon, give us a 
 break!
   We  Filipinos have strengths and endearing
 values. We are Christians,
   God-fearing,  and peace-loving. We are patient
 and tolerant (matiisin to
 a
   fault). We  are musical. We sing our blues away.
 We have a sense of
 humor.
   (We concoct and  text Imelda hyperboles and Erap
 malapropism.) We learn
   fast
   because we are  bilingual and highly educated.
 We've got thousands of
   MBA's
   and PhD's in  economics and management from AIM,
 WHARTON, HARVARD, UCLA,
   etc. We've got a  surplus of technocrats for  nation-building. We
want to
   work if there are  vacancies. We want to go into
 business if we have the
   capital. We want to obey  the law if the law is
 being enforced. We want
 to
   live and die here, if there is  peace and order.
   But,  but, and but. We have many shortcomings.
 We are immature in our
   politics. Given  a choice on whom to elect: a
 handsome pabling movie
 star
   or
   an honest and  brilliant political scientist,
 we'll vote for the movie
   star.
   No brainer  tayo dito.  Talo!
   We  have many stupidities. Like dogs, we pee
 (Bawal umihi dito) on walls
   and
   tires. Our driving is suicidal. Our service
 quality is inferior. Clerks
 at
   City  Hall act arrogant. Sales ladies at
 department stores don't know
   their
   product  features. Tourists get mugged by thugs
 in uniform. Police lay
   traps
   so they can  catch you and ask for  bribe.
 What's  wrong with us? We
 don't
   have a great leader. And good governance. (In
 Singapore,  Lee Kwan Yu
 did
   it. The constituency profile is similar to
 Filipinos. And what about
   Malaysia thatis much closer to our Maly
 provenance? Mahathir did it.)
   Admittedly, this country is impossible,
 tiresome, and frustrating. But
   it's
   the  only country we've got. We live and die
 here.
   Will we ever see the  dawn? Dios na mahabagin,
 Kailan pa kaya? Ubos na
 ang
   aming luha. Katog na ang aming mga tuhod. Tuyot
 na ang aming utak.
 Hingal
   na
   ang aming puso. Dios  na mahabagin, isalba Mo po
  kami. Hindi po  kami
   talunan. At lalo pong hindi kami tanga.
 Sunod-sunod lang po ang  malas.


=====
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- Doy
    

KAAKBAY MEDIA STATEMENT
22 January 2002

GMA URGED TO BRIEF THE PEOPLE
ON THE PRESENCE OF US FORCES
IN MINDANAO

The Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan All Filipino Democratic Movement (Kaakbay) strongly urged President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to provide the people with a full and comprehensive briefing on the presence and role of the US forces in the fight against the Abu Sayyaf and the particular agreement covering such involvement.

Kaakbay said the disturbing secrecy of the terms of military engagements and the prevailing confusion on the constitutionality and legality of the presence of foreign troops are very compelling reasons for no less than the President to fully disclose to the people everything they should know about the military exercise.

Kaakbay President Alain Pascua said that if the Constitution expressly prohibits the presence of foreign troops unless covered by a treaty, if the the Visiting Forces of Agreement (VFA) prohibits the holding of joint military activity for more than one month, and if the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty requires the approval of the Council of Foreign Ministers, then it is safe to conclude that there is another kind of agreement that covers Kalayaan-Aguila 2002 which is being kept secret from the people.

"The people deserves to know the reasons behind the deployment of foreign troops against their fellow countrymen, even if they are bandits or rebels, and the requirements of such deployment such as its constitutionality and legality, finance and resources, etc. since at the end it will be them who will bear the brunt of its effects and results," Pascua said.

Kaakbay likewise questions the authority of Armed Forces Chief of Staff Gen. Diomedio Villanueva in reportedly signing in behalf of the Philippines of an "arrangement"with the United States that is supposed to be covering the exercise as a usurpation of authority and a clear evasion of the requirements of the Constitution and the laws.

Kaakbay strongly opposes the presence of foreign troops in the country, the direct involvement and deployment of American troops in purely internal matters such as banditry which the AFP and the PNP must solely overcome, and the re-establishment of US Military Bases in the country.

ALAIN PASCUA
National Chairman

KATIPUNAN NG MGA ANAK NG BAYAN
ALL FILIPINO DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT (KAAKBAY)
Address: 89-G Maginoo Street, Teacher's Village, QC. Cell: 0917-9945857
Tel/Fax: 4330556. Email: [email protected]

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