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Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Palace blames new classroom backlog on calamities, growing population

June 2, 2014 2:31pm
Life goes on in Bohol on first day of classes
Life goes on in Bohol on first day of classes. At the Sagbayan Central Elementary School in quake-damaged Bohol province, some classes are held inside temporary tent classrooms on Monday, June 2, the first day of school. No lights, no electric fans, just teachers and students wanting to make education happen. Ivan Mayrina

Following reports of classroom shortages nationwide despite the government's earlier pronouncement that the backlog has already been addressed, Malacañang said on Monday that recent calamities and the country's growing population have resulted in a new backlog.

"The student population is growing, and also there were considerable damage from the typhoons that were incurred from the various typhoons that we experienced, and therefore, the construction goes on," presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said during a press briefing.

If not for these, he said they wouldn't have a shortage of classrooms since they have already addressed the backlog left by the administration of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2010.

"We have already fully completed [that] and, in fact, we are a bit more than the backlog. That was the 2010 backlog that was present when we came in," he said.

President Benigno Aquino III had earlier promised to wipe out the classroom backlog of 66,800, which Education Sec. Armin Luistro said his department had surpassed by 13.

Lacierda, however, said he will still have to ask the Department of Education regarding the new backlog. "We will ask DepEd as to the total number of classrooms set to be constructed," he said.

Opening of classes

The Palace official, meanwhile, said that Monday's opening of classes was "generally peaceful and orderly."

"As of this time and date, school opening from the PNP’s standpoint has so far been generally peaceful and orderly," Lacierda said, citing information from the Philippine National Police (PNP).


In preparation for this, Lacierda said the PNP deployed 18,500 of its people to more than 7,400 police assistance desks nationwide.

"This is over and above the regular mobile and foot patrols that will be likewise focused on the different schools and campuses. The PNP has earlier set the operational guidelines and procedures to ensure a safe, secured, and peaceful opening of classes up to the succeeding weeks," he said.

Teachers' threat

As for the threat of public school teachers to go on mass leave pending the government's action on their request for salary increase, Lacierda reiterated his call for them to consider the welfare of their students.

"We understand their concerns but I hope that the teachers will consider the concerns of the students," Lacierda said.

Lacierda added that there is a need to study their petition for a wage increase since this will also affect other state employees.

"We will have to look at the numbers kasi, at the end of the day, it boils down to how much are they proposing, and then how much it will impact the national budget, and what will be the sources of revenue for the increase of—assuming—of the proposed wage increase on the part of government employees," he said. —KBK, GMA News

Is depicting Filipinos as domestic helpers racist?

June 3, 2014
by FallenAngel
Apparently, quite a few Filipinos seem to think so. Given the highly hypersensitive nature of the Filipinos, it was only natural that they would react with rage to the screenshot below found in certain Hong Kong textbooks.
hongwrong1
The blog site Hongwrong.com couldn’t help but make a parody of such depiction of “racial harmony” as is being propagated in Hong Kong, and came up with the picture below. (Do remember that it’s satirical, please.)
hongwrong2
Before we go around exploring the question I posed in the title, I think it better to answer other more important questions first.
What is wrong, if anything, with being a domestic helper (DH), per se?
By itself, nothing. Every job has its function in society. Domestic helpers are tasked with taking care of the house, cleaning up after their employers’ messes, taking care of the employers’ children, etc.
In other words, they do the “dirty work” so that their employers don’t have to. As a friend of mine said: Marangal din na trabaho naman ang DH ha. (A DH job is a noble one too.)
If we refer back to the controversial page in the textbook, maybe we should ask: Is there a stigma attached to being a katulong in Filipino society?
In Filipino society, an integral part of many households is the katulong, or household help. As much as Filipinos don’t like to admit it, many households would feel either helpless or inconvenienced without one.
Labor, however, is cheap and plentiful in the Philippines. Many Filipinos who are unable to finish their schooling and lack technical and vocational skills often have no choice to become household help in order to make ends meet.
We shouldn’t be surprised, then, that a prevailing attitude towards the katulong is to take him/her for granted. I would hazard a guess that many families pay their household help cheap wages to work under conditions that are difficult, and oftentimes border on oppressive.
We cannot neglect to mention that the employment situation in the Philippines is dire. The number of jobs available is limited; the number of job-seekers and unemployed is much larger. Not all the available workforce is qualified for the jobs that are in demand. Those who are employed find that their salaries are not enough to meet the ever rising cost of goods and living here.
As a result, many of them are left with no choice but to seek employment abroad. And a lot who do end up as domestic helpers.
But why do Filipinos consider being depicted as domestic helpers racist?
The only answer I can really think of: because Filipinos themselves regard household help with a certain “disdain”. Katulong ka lang. (You’re just household help.)
Socio-economic class is a big divide to cross here in the Philippines. Upward mobility is difficult, if not impossible here; if Filipinos are born poor, very few of them are able to advance out of it. It is part of Filipino culture to be resigned to one’s fate and to wait for “blessings from above” instead of the ethic of hard work being inculcated at an early age. Unfortunately, it is also part of Filipino culture to be deferential to people with higher social rank than one’s own; on the flipside, those with higher social rank act like spoiled, entitled brats. Such is the nature of the beast.
Based on the comments I was able to glean in various communities and forums, Filipinos seem to think that the textbook is generalizing ALL Filipinos as domestic helpers, which, to their credit, is certainly not true. Filipinos work in various other fields in companies here and abroad such as engineering, finance, oil and gas, service industry, and natural sciences, to name a few.
There is a reason, however, that that stereotype or perception of Filipinos as domestic helpers exists: because there are so many of them. It is but a natural human tendency to tend to make an all-encompassing statement if one’s observation is consistent. That does not make it right, but it is what it is.
img_1566
Now comes a hard question that Filipinos will most likely avoid answering:
If we don’t like the DH stereotype, what do we plan to do about it?
The DH stereotype is linked to the overseas Filipino worker phenomenon (OFW). Filipinos going abroad has become all but a way of life. Certain Filipinos have more children than they can feed with their meager salary. Certain Filipinos have become excessively consumerist that they need more money to feed their lavish lifestyles and their unrestrained “need” to have the latest trendy gadgets and other stuff. Certain Filipinos are just unable to find good work here because they either lack the skills needed or are just having a hard time keeping up with a ballooning workforce.
The DH stereotype is an unfortunate but inevitable result of the Filipinos’ lack of long-term planning, lack of vision, and lack of ability to habitually honor commitments. The visible outcome: a good number of Filipinos living in poverty and being forced to work in jobs that they might not want.
The DH stereotype is not racist. Filipinos made the bed that they currently sleep in; they had it in their power to control how they are perceived by the world. Instead of controlling things we had power over and developing them as best as we could, we harvested our “assets” early and shipped them of as raw labor. We could have chosen to develop more professionals in fields such as science, engineering, but we didn’t.
So now, we are stuck with a perception that is ultimately our fault.
To be fair, it has been observed in Hong Kong that despite being a multicultural city, there are still pockets of underlying discrimination against certain ethnic groups. Certain sectors, such as textbook publishers, are still known to propagate stereotypes of other ethnic groups. But discrimination will remain in any society, that is a given; all the more so in a country whose name literally means “the middle kingdom”.
We may not be able to control how other ethnic groups perceive us, but it doesn’t change the fact that we can ultimately change how we show ourselves to the world. As I said above, the DH/OFW phenomenon is a consequence of the choices we made as a people in the past, and now it’s coming to bite us back, and hard. We had a chance to make ourselves self-sufficient, but instead we rely on foreign powers to provide for us what we can’t provide for ourselves.
To borrow words from the GRP webmaster, whether we see ourselves as members of the global community, or merely its employees, is entirely up to us.
Image-conscious Philippines has reared its ugly, balat-sibuyas head yet again. And, predictably, falls flat on its face.
[Photo of OFW's courtesy: heart-2-heart-online.com]

FallenAngel

Wer mit der Herde geht, kann nur den Ärschen folgen - whoever runs with the flock, can only follow ass.

Monday, June 2, 2014

Prospects for full rehab of Leyte province dim despite Justin Bieber visit to Tacloban

December 11, 2013
by benign0
There has been no shortage of good intentions and resources to match these as far as efforts to get people residing in the disaster areas left by super-typhoon Haiyan (a.k.a. Yolanda) back up on their feet. The question that has become more pressing in recent days has been whether a recovery can be sustained and whether or not it will be fuelled from within Philippine society. Bekele Geleta secretary general of the International Federation of Red Cross socieities, however, warned against “aid dependency” even as the United Nations stepped up efforts to solicit aid funds for Haiyan’s victims in the Philippines.
“There are still needs and gaps in delivery of food and emergency shelter materials to some areas, but we must look towards gradually reducing people’s dependency on food aid,” [Geleta] said in a statement a day after completing a 72-hour visit to the disaster zone.
Can Justin Bieber save the Philippines?
Can Justin Bieber save the Philippines?
Recall an original UN estimate that more than $300-million was required to fund relief and recovery over a six-month period. The bill to rebuild the disaster area is now expected to be closer to $800-million. “The original plan was really urgent life-saving assistance with a relatively short timeline. Now we are looking at longer-term projects into rehabilitation and reconstruction,” UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) spokesman Jens Laerke reports to the media.
Sourcing of funds notwithstanding, a more pressing issue is how — and if — these funds are being allocated and used. It has come to light, that even as vast sums of money and resources came pouring in to aid the relief effort, the astounding inefficiency of the Philippine bureaucracy was all but fatal so much so as to bring to serious question the recovery prospects of Tacloban City and other affected areas observes Kevin H.R. Villanueva, a university research scholar in international politics and human rights at the University of Leeds…
The money pledges and relief supplies of food and water worldwide have been heartening. And yet they were, until recently, stuck in Manila, or in the case of cash donations, much has prudently been held in banks until plans for reconstruction come to light. Driven by the images of despair and desperation, people have themselves made haste to come to the aid of the survivors of Yolanda.
The argument to be made here is that there has been no single point person to whom accountability for immediate relief and the eventual task of rebuilding has been bestowed. The Filipino people will survive because it is in their character to counter and rise above adversity. But if we are all to genuinely learn and understand the lessons of this disaster, the question must be given a future perfect thought: Who will be in charge, if Tacloban and its people are to rise from the rubble?
Indeed, there are reports that even foreign relief teams have started wondering where the their Filipino counterparts are and whether Filipinos will ever step up to match the scale and intensity of relief efforts so far delivered by foreigners…
Foreign aid-givers, the Koreans and teams from a score of other countries, including U.S. Marines and Air Force people, U.N. experts and NGO’s, are visible everywhere. You wonder, though, why so few Filipinos.
The World Tribune report from which the above excerpt was taken continues, observing that “[Tacloban City mayor] Alfred Romualdez, wonders too. Specifically, he wants to know why Philippine soldiers aren’t all over the city, joining in the search for bodies, cleaning up the trash and aiding in reconstruction.” And the answer to that, yet again, is as expected: politics.
The problem, though, is a problem within a problem. Romualdez, successor to his father as mayor, is a member of the family of Imelda Marcos, widow of Ferdinand Marcos, overthrown in the People Power Revolution of 1986.
The woman who took over from Marcos was the late Corazon Aquino, widow of Benigno Aquino Jr., gunned down as he returned to the Philippines from the U.S. in August 1983 to challenge the Marcos dictatorship. Their son, Benigno Aquino III, now president, nurses the family wounds.
A categorical validation of this astute analysis came from no less than Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) Secretary Mar Roxas who, in a meeting with Romualdez, explained why the national government remains reluctant to provide much-needed support and resources to the on-going relief effort in Leyte province — the most hard-hit of the disaster zones left by Haiyan. “You’re a Romualdez and the President is an Aquino. We just want to legalize this. If it’s not legalized then, ok, you’re in charge… Bahala kayo sa buhay niyo [you all can go take care of yourselves],” Roxas explains.
mar_roxas_vs_romualdez
You gotta hand it to Sec. Mar Roxas. Never before has so much been explained using so few words.
[Photo of Justin Bieber in Tacloban courtesy Justin Biebz Spanish Fans.]

benign0

benign0 is the Webmaster of GetRealPhilippines.com.

What caused the 6-month delay in the release of funding for repair of schools destroyed by Typhoon Haiyan?

June 2, 2014
by benign0
It’s always the same, year in and year out. The opening of the new school year in the Philippines never fails to make headline news. The figure now is twenty million. That’s the number of Filipino school kids who trooped to their classes today — a number just short of the population of Australia. Their plight, as the reports on mainstream media would have it, makes them akin to “heroes”. What with the floods, traffic, crooks, withering temperatures, and the creepy crawly predators that infest Philippine streets, these reports make it sound like the average Filipino student is lucky to make it to their classrooms alive.
No relief in sight for students in Haiyan-devastated areas
No relief in sight for students in Haiyan-devastated areas
And that’s even IF (in all caps) there actually are classrooms to get to. In a stroke of incredible timing, Philippine President Benigno Simeon “BS” Aquino III reportedly released today one billion pesos to repair state universities and colleges (SUCs) in areas devastated by super-typhoon Haiyan which struck central Philippines in November 2013. That’s right — right smack on the first day of school.
It sucks to be a SUC in the Philippines, doesn’t it?
The order to release the funds came just as classes were about to start, which means some students would return to damaged facilities and would have to wait for repairs to be completed.
Earlier, Sen. Francis Escudero expressed frustration that much of the huge amount that Congress had allocated for various rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts remained unreleased and unused.
The Commission on Higher Education submitted the fund request for the school repairs to the Department of Budget Management (DBM) in March, in the hope they could begin repairs in the summer before classes resume. It was told that budget officials were waiting for the guidelines for the fund release.
What exactly where these guidelines for the release of these funds?
Who was formulating them?
Why did they take so long to formulate and issue?
Because there is no freedom of information in the Philippines, we will probably not find out anytime soon. But suffice to say, many students won’t be getting the right facilities to learn their lessons for many months this school year. As early as mid-November 2013, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs had already issued a situation report indicating that almost USD24.7 million would be needed to fully rehabilitate schools damaged by Haiyan. That was a full six months ago.
Other foreign aid agencies have also pleaded their cases to the government to put priority on restoring education infrastructure in the disaster zones. “We need to get children back to schools… to bring back a sense of normalcy in their lives,” said Carin van der Hor of Plan International in a press conference held in late November 2013 shortly after Haiyan struck.
Sitting on Php1bn for six months: Budget Secretary Butch Abad
Sitting on Php1bn for six months: Budget Secretary Butch Abad
The Inquirer reported back in the 21st of May that the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) had submitted their funding request to the Department of Budget Management headed by Secretary Butch Abad in March 2014 following a damage report issued by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH). Two months had gone by with no response from the DBM.
Nobody seems to know what caused the delay. Senator Pia Cayetano is reportedly furious and asked the same obvious question again just a week ago: “But what’s holding up its release, considering that the school year is just about to start?”
“I understand that plans and budget proposals for rehabilitation have to be reviewed. But summer has come and is almost gone, still we have yet to see the funds released to our SUCs,” she added, noting that Congress allocated more than P100 billion for the rehabilitation of the areas devastated by the twin calamities.
This is aside from a P14.6-billion supplemental budget.
“And yet, according to the DBM, only P32.2 billion had actually been released,” Cayetano noted.
Still, that question was asked just a week ago. One wonders, though, why no such questions were asked over the six months following the disaster. Yet Malacanang had yesterday issued a statement to the media saying that “all efforts had been made to ensure a smooth start to the school year, including the deployment of policemen to ensure students’ safety.” Empty words as usual.
[Photo courtesy Norwegian Capacity.]

benign0

benign0 is the Webmaster of GetRealPhilippines.com.

Philippines to remain ‘paper’ tech tiger until local tech solutions applied

June 2, 2014
by benign0
The Philippines has “all the ingredients of an emerging tech tiger” — on paper, that is. Despite an enormous population “addicted to social media” and low labour costs, the “patchy at best” mobile internet coverage and “atrocious” internet speeds — a “measly 3.6 megabits per second (Mbps), well below the regional average of 12.4 Mbps” — seasoned Silicon Valley entrepeneur Peter Fabian describes the Philippine tech scene as more of looking like “the end of the world”.
The BBC News report, however, provides some consolation…
The Philippine start-up scene is small, but people are starting to trickle in. Some are adapting Western products to the local market, like fast fashion ecommerce, daily deals sites or taxi service apps.
Mobile tech: Turning Filipinos into productive members of the economy, or into mere indebted consumers?
Mobile tech: Turning Filipinos into productive members of the economy, or into mere indebted consumers?
The key to a large but impoverished market like the Philippines that is hobbled by decrepit basic infrastructure lies in mobile. According to the BBC report, almost 60 percent of Filipinos are smartphone-equipped, “significantly higher than comparable emerging markets such as India, Vietnam or Indonesia.” This is a nation where a significant chunk of household income is poured into mobile technology. What funds this expenditure? Remittances from the Philippines’ huge army of overseas foreign workers (OFWs).
The Philippines is a vast consumer market. Much of this market is “unbanked” (the latest buzzword used by the world’s bankers scrounging around for growth opportunities in the Third World). This means that most Filipinos do not have credit cards and are therefore beyond the reach of sellers hawking their products via the Internet — for now. Tech investors see mobile devices as the key to bypassing this supply chain hitch.
In developing countries, mobile payment solutions have been deployed as a means of extending financial services to the community known as the “unbanked” or “underbanked,” which is estimated to be as much as 50% of the world’s adult population, according to Financial Access’ 2009 Report “Half the World is Unbanked”. These payment networks are often used for micropayments. The use of mobile payments in developing countries has attracted public and private funding by organizations such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, USAID and Mercy Corps.
Mobile payment, also referred to as mobile money, mobile money transfer, and mobile wallet generally refer to payment services operated under financial regulation and performed from or via a mobile device. Instead of paying with cash, cheque, or credit cards, a consumer can use a mobile phone to pay for a wide range of services and digital or hard goods. Although the concept of using non-coin-based currency systems has a long history, it is only recently that the technology to support such systems has become widely available.
House Bill 3984, “An Act Liberalizing the Entry and Scope of the operations of Foreign Banks in the Philippines” seeks to remove bars to foreign banks fully owning banking operations in the country was passed in mid-May this year. This development could further improve prospects of introducing innovative solutions that could improve the ordinary Filipinos’ access to markets and products.
The bigger question remains as to whether Filipinos are culturally-attuned to reaping the benefits of increasing openness and access to technology. “Addiction to social media” does not equate to tech savviness any more than knowing how to drive a car necessarily makes one a competent mechanic. Open markets may benefit societies with long traditions of industrial, commercial, and marketing acumen but may ultimately bury under mountains of consumer debt societies with nothing more than a collective predisposition to spend and consume ultimately useless products and services.
[NB: Parts of this article were lifted from the Wikipedia.org article “Mobile payment” in a manner compliant to the terms stipulated in the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License that governs usage of content made available in this site.]

benign0

benign0 is the Webmaster of GetRealPhilippines.com.

Double The Standard Double The Fun In Malacanang!


June 2, 2014
by Gogs
He said such order from the President covered both the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) and Malampaya Fund scams, adding that investigations would be done fairly, without fear or favor.
Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr, June 1, 2014 
Back in August  the headlines screamed that Noynoy could care less about the imminent Pork Barrel protests and at the time of the actual protest the Malacanang Communications Group released a meme that lets it be known that Noynoy’s flock of followers in his so called Daang Matuwid is increasing. I was already disturbed that there was this notion being floated around that the missing in action Napoles was the only person anybody seemed to think was the sole person with monopoly on the answers. I then called for somebody in government to come out of the closet. No, not Noynoy. Silly me, I was trying to appeal to senators and congressmen who know more than they are letting on to come out expose the scam for what it is.   Maybe the flaw in my thinking was that I forgot that they were senators and congressmen. A fraternity of cheaters and scammers that will never admit they are cheaters and scammers.
The last thing Noynoy ever wanted was for anybody to realize he made up for lack of leadership skills with bribes from the pork barrel.
The last thing Noynoy ever wanted was for anybody to realize he made up for lack of leadership skills with bribes from the pork barrel.
I have no earthly idea how anyone who expects a private citizen like Janet Napoles to make off with a boatload of taxpayer money and for the powers that be in this government not to encourage it at least approve it. If you believe them, they claim to barely know her.  Do I hear a cock crowing??
We invented it, we use it and somehow a private citizen manipulated it. Do not blame us, nothing to see here.
We invented it, we use it and somehow a private citizen manipulated it. Do not blame us, nothing to see here.
Now an administration that spent their entire term blaming all of the ills on Gloria Arroyo says not to blame the PDAF on them.  According to Hermino Coloma “administration is one with the people in efforts to ferret out the truth .” “That is why we laid down steps and we strengthened institutions to promote greater openness, transparency and accountability of public officials, especially in the use of public funds,” Coloma said over radio dzRB.
You can go to other sources about what the different versions of the so called Napolist signify. For me, I will do the usual and point out the always present Malacanang double standard. It always important to see what a person does to see if their words warrant your attention.  Noynoy was a fifty year old nil achiever when he pole vaulted over his mother’s corpse into Malacanang. In a perfect world, he would be humbled by the responsibility the nation saw fit to bestow upon him. On the contrary, Noynoy has all the humility of a WWE wrestler.
The only economic miracles we can do are making your money disappear.
The only economic miracles we can do are making your money disappear.
My old boss ( who always was puzzled by skepticism towards Noynoy ) told me that people should never evaluate. Yet how many times do you read a story with the title :
MALACANANG CLEARS _______________.?
For example:
Is it Malacananang's role to clear anybody? Why is it only people call to the president? Are you dazzled by the speed?
Is it Malacananang’s role to clear anybody? Why is it only people call to the president? Are you dazzled by the speed?
Malacanang wants you to believe the scope of this problem is so much smaller than it actually is.
Malacanang wants you to believe the scope of this problem is so much smaller than it actually is.
Why do they call it Malacanang Palace? Why not just call it the Clearing House?
Why do they call it Malacanang Palace? Why not just call it the Clearing House?
Noynoy does more clearing than a dermatologist.
Coloma said “all information should be verified and assessed to know their probative value.”
President Aquino has repeatedly made known his stand to “let the evidence point to the direction of the inquiry,” Coloma said. He further adds “He said such order from the President covered both the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) and Malampaya Fund scams, adding that investigations would be done fairly, without fear or favor.”

Rule of law only exists for Noynoy when it is convenient for his allies, Mario.. What a princess.
Rule of law only exists for Noynoy when it is convenient for his allies, Mario. What a princess.
Where is that sentiment when De Lima focuses on three  senators that are not allies.  Coloma must be kept in protective glass and only comes out to apologize for Noynoy. You definitely do not see fair treatment even in his international pogi points speeches. When Noynoy likes to pretend he is combating China he talks about the rule of law.  Rule of law is strangely absent when it comes to railroading an impeachment or appointing someone under investigation to COMELEC.
The script to turn her into a super villain came later. To add to the "winnability" .
The script to turn her into a super villain came later. To add to the “winnability” .
Even without getting into extended detention or even the PCOS irregularities, there sure is an absence of “rule of law when it comes to Gloria Arroyo when it comes to Noynoy.  I do have my Batman Joker theory which I will elaborate on later. Noynoy has lived his life so blandly despite having the most colorful sister possible. Let us ignore for a moment that the color is predominantly red. Noynoy is nowhere without anchoring his identity to women. It is not like we have a problem of excess testosterone. His dead mother was in every poster, his famous sister and her famous husband were there to attract attention as well as teach their kid who the other candidates were. Gloria Arroyo makes her way into every speech home and abroad. He brings her up in every crisis. We all know Noynoy served under Gloria in Congress and the Senate. Surely if she was truly the evil Ursula from Little Mermaid, he would have known about it then. If he did know, why was he not the crusading corruption crushing cop then like he pretends to be now? I personally believe Gloria being evil is just a pro wrestling type story line that fit the Noynoy formula of being president. I do not in a million years believe Noynoy hatched this scheme personally. It is just the planets aligned. They have to align for a creature of this ineptness with the conspicuousness of wallpaper to be forefront in the  people’s minds.
Corona despite the circus was not even disbarred.  Detention for GMA does not equal a guilty verdict.
Corona despite the circus was not even disbarred. Detention for GMA does not equal a guilty verdict.
When charges against Gloria  do not stick , Noynoy himself is talking about reopening the case. Do you ever hear of any president anywhere trying to reopen wounds already closed by their country’s legal system? And doing it by focusing on a personality? Gloria being guilty is Noynoy’s validation. His meal ticket. Four years into her successor’s term, she is like her tokayo and she “survives” . I said before I do not believe she is Little Miss Tuffet but it  has come to the point that I have to Rod Tidwell. Noynoy and Noytards, if GMA essentially is the embodiment of all that is evil and you are committed in your fight against corruption: Show Me The Convictions.

" Do I *look* like I need a psychological evaluation? " Commander Krill from Under Siege
” Do I *look* like I need a psychological evaluation? “
Commander Krill from Under Siege
The Palace feels they should not be blamed for the PDAF stink. It was only an unconstitutional loophole that they invented and then exploited.  What’s next? Do not blame Dr.Frakenstein for his creature?? Then again to accept blame is to tell the world you are responsible for something. Noynoy painted Gloria as the Joker to the Filipino voters so they could see him as Batman. Noynoy does not have enough Batman in him to be Batman without Gloria. Noynoy was nobody when his mom was alive. Let alone a presidential contender. Noynoy is quick to tell you about miracles that are not even true. So don’t expect him to own up to  fiscal sleight of hand even if it is true.
Please note: Yes I saw wrong spelling of Malacanang in the picture.  I got it straight from the Phil Star article that I quoted.

Gogs

Gogs is such a fanatical yellow zombie that he is beginning to resemble an overweight Tweety Bird. It is his belief that the Aquinos, ABS CBN and Conrado De Quiros versions of the truth should be appended to the Book of Revalations. His TV viewing consists solely of noontime variety shows. Has a "Basta pinoy Da best " tattoo on his forearm. He also is a ghost writer for K The Kris Aquino Magazine. Brags endlessly to his imaginary friends that he saw Hagibis in 1979.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Katie Hopkins’ Anti-Islamic Tweets: Is she more than just seeking attention?

June 1, 2014
by Impaler Triumphant
Filipinos won’t have a problem with eating pig fat-laced chocolate, but Muslims do.
pic01
So Cadbury had to recall their products when outrage sparked on pig DNA found in their chocolates. To Katie this isn’t a problem. She had a good time riling up the jihadis despite being called a racist.
Mind also that not all Muslims are Malaysian, and not all Malaysians are Muslims. So how could she then be racist? Is Islam even a race?
pic02
So she poked fun at the same religious group who declared jihad on Pepsi. So what?
pic03
A Muslim mother lamented that they do not know how are they going to cleanse themselves and thus she fears hell from their moon god Allah.
That Muslim woman should save her grief because actually, being bad has nothing to do with what she eats. This isn’t about religious beliefs. This is about moral accountability on a personal level. You’re not bad just because you ate pork, ate in McDonald’s, or went off your diet.
Being bad has a lot to do whether you put anybody else in misery.
If you stuffed your kabit’s bed with taxpayer moneyslit throats of animals and letting them slowly die, and slacked off too much with your studies and yet begging your mother to give you an iPad while she’s working in the Middle East, then you are a bad person. And you should feel bad.
Think about it. You may be what you eat, but does pork specifically “weaken” the morality of anyone? Or even their intellect? Is there even a research that reveals mental retardation due to pork eating? There’s risk of neural degeneration from halal beef–Mad Cow disease. There’s also risk of getting kuru from eating human flesh. But bacon, lechon and chicharon?
If pig DNA does make someone go weak, then why? Surely there is a better explanation than Allahu Akbar and “Don’t you DARE criticize Islam!”
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Katie may have been screaming for attention like Kris Aquino, but when somebody repeatedly makes tweets bashing jihadis (in effect butthurt Muslims as well), does that discredit WHY she and Britain First hate Muslims?

Impaler Triumphant

You can't treat people like shit because your religion says to, then expect them to love you.