• 6 AUGUST - *1907 - Gen. Macario Sakay, one of the Filipino military leaders who had continued fighting the imperialist United States invaders eight years into the P...
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Treading on troubled waters EDITORIAL 12/14/2010

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Treading on troubled waters

EDITORIAL
Click to enlarge
12/14/2010
No Philippine military officer is expected to publicly go against a decision made by his Commander in Chief, in this case, Noynoy Aquino, when he openly directed his Justice secretary, Leila de Lima, to withdraw the case against the 43 health workers, dubbed by the media as the “Morong 43.” Neither are the Armed Forces officers and the Philippine National Police officials willingly go public against Noynoy and Malacañang when they say he is open to the grant of amnesty for all political prisoners. For them to do so would translate to their being placed in the freezer, with no promotions in rank, as well as choice command posts, expected for years.

But just because they all state that they will obey the chain of command, hardly means they are happy about such orders and enjoy a high morale today — after such decisions from the Malacañang tenant.

As far as the military is concerned, it arrested the 43 health workers during a raid, armed with a court order from a judge, and allegedly caught them in bomb-making training, apart from their having been in illegal possession of firearms. Whether the claims of innocence of the 43 health workers are true, or conversely, the military’s claims of its having made the arrest following the so-called “rules of engagement” are true, it is better for the courts to decide..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com1.html

Weak leadership FRONTLINE Ninez Cacho-Olivares 12/14/2010

Weak leadership

FRONTLINE
Ninez Cacho-Olivares
12/14/2010
It wasn’t in the national interest to bow to China by toeing its line to have foreign governments boycott the Nobel Peace Prize awarding ceremony, on account of some five Filipino drug mules who have been meted the death sentence. It was weak Philippine leadership that was more behind the boycott.

China is unlike, say, the Muslim countries, where the convicts in death row can easily be set free by its ruling monarchs, or the relatives of the victims’ accepting blood money in return for the Filipinos’ freedom.

Hate Gloria Arroyo all one wants, but the fact remains that it was under her presidency that she personally talked with Muslim leaders to set free detained Filipinos in death row jails in their countries.
Noynoy in his six months of the presidency hardly took notice of the thousands of detained Filipinos, abused OFWs, rape victims and other offenders, but suddenly has a bleeding heart for five Filipino drug mules, in whose freedom rests our national interest — so he falsely claims..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com2.html

In Cancun climate talks, India enjoys place in sun FEATURE 12/14/2010

In Cancun climate talks, India enjoys place in sun

FEATURE

12/14/2010
CANCUN — India has emerged as a new global power on climate change, with major nations voicing praise — and surprise — at New Delhi’s agile diplomacy that helped produce a deal in Cancun, Mexico.

Jairam Ramesh, India’s outspoken environment minister, was instrumental in breaking a deadlock over how to verify nations’ climate actions and, for the first time, said that his country would consider a binding deal in the future.

Ramesh told reporters in the Caribbean beach resort that India needed to change with the times as it seeks a greater global role and the world inches toward a new comprehensive agreement on fighting climate change.
“India is moving ahead. India is being progressive. It can only attain global leadership by expanding its negotiating space,” Ramesh said. “A negotiating position must evolve over time.”

Ramesh faced criticism at home, with the political opposition and some environmental activists accusing him of selling out India’s position to please the United States, which has warming relations with New Delhi..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com3.html

Of ORs and Christmas NO HOLDS BARRED Armida Siguion-Reyna 12/14/2010

Of ORs and Christmas

NO HOLDS BARRED
Armida Siguion-Reyna
12/14/2010
Ten days to go before Christmas, and most everyone is going crazy with what to get for family and friends. It’s less stressful when one just gives out money, but cash gifts outside of rightfully earned bonuses and 13th month pay make the season so materialistic, I’d really rather plan and shop for gifts for people I love and hold dear to my heart.

Some people are easy to gift, because it takes little to make them happy. My brother, the Senate President, for instance, loves paksiw na bangus garlic and peppercorns and onions and ginger all in, with ampalaya, so year in and year out, that’s just about what I give him and wala naman siyang kasawa-sawa.

Others take to gift-giving naturally, or have fortunately have come up with a present only they make. Like my daughter-in-law Bibeth Orteza, who has been giving bottled Spicy Tuyo in Olive Oil for 19 years now, using a recipe she’s perfected through the years. My grandson Rafa relates how, growing up, he and his older sister Aya would realize Christmas was nigh soon as they’d smell tuyo permeating the household..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com4.html

‘They’ are out to get him AN OUTSIDERS VIEW Ken Fuller 12/14/2010

‘They’ are out to get him

AN OUTSIDERS VIEW
Ken Fuller
12/14/2010
Most of us have seen at least one of those movies (usually American) where the protagonist, having stumbled across some top-level conspiracy, is forced underground as “they” (shadowy forces deployed by the state) are, until the final minutes, out to get him. Examples would be Three Days of the Condor (1975) and Enemy of the State (1998). Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, must know how those protagonists feel.

Some of the “revelations” that have surfaced in the 250,000 secret US documents disseminated to selected newspapers by WikiLeaks are not exactly news. For example, Bank of England governor Mervyn King apparently thinks UK Prime Minister David Cameron and his Finance Secretary George Osborne are political lightweights, lacking depth. President Obama, we learn, shares this view of Cameron. And — shock! horror! — it turns out that Prince Andrew, second son of the current British monarch, is a foulmouthed boor who thinks the Serious Fraud Office and investigative journalists do British business a disservice by sniffing around for evidence of corporate corruption..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com5.html

Was VP Binay misled? C.R.O.S.S.R.O.A.D.S Jonathan De la Cruz 12/14/2010

Was VP Binay misled?

C.R.O.S.S.R.O.A.D.S
Jonathan De la Cruz
12/14/2010
This is the question being asked by members of the Philippine Association of International Counselors for Education (Paice), some of whom have been the object of illegal searches and even detention by authorities. The latest such illegal action was even undertaken by a team from the so-called Task Force on Illegal Recruitment (TFIR) that was apparently able to convince Vice President Jojo Binay to support its arrest and detention of two British nationals and five fellow staff members of NSN, an educational and immigration documentation and consultancy provider, based in Makati. It appears that the seven were held on charges of illegal recruitment for providing “consultancy services” to nursing graduates who wanted to take advantage of the provisions of the United Kingdom’s Tier4 Category rules (study and work program under the UK Borders and Immigration Rules) allowing the entry of foreign graduates of nursing to pursue further studies in accredited UK schools with a view to qualifying them for full time work and even immigration to the country after. Under this program, the applicants are provided student visas but are allowed under the same initiative to work part time while studying..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com6.html

Kurdish ‘self-determination’ call sparks Iraqi ire focus 12/14/2010

Kurdish ‘self-determination’ call sparks Iraqi ire

focus

12/14/2010
BAGHDAD — Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani’s recent call for self-determination for his people has drawn the ire of the country’s Sunni and Shiite Arab leaders, who argue that it presages a break-up of Iraq.

“The right of self-determination is something that concerns people living under occupation, but this is not the case for Kurdistan, which has a special status in Iraq,” said Alia Nusayaf, an MP with the Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc.

“It makes me wonder if the Kurds asked for federalism (in Iraq’s constitution) to first form a region and then to separate from Iraq.”

Barzani said at the opening of a week-long congress of his Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) on Saturday that self-determination was “a right.” He said it would be presented at the meeting “to be studied and discussed.”

His comments mark the first time Barzani has officially presented the issue to the KDP’s congress, with the proposal set for a vote during the meeting..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101214com7.html

Noy slams Nobel boycott critics By Aytch S. de la Cruz and Michaela P. del Callar 12/14/2010

SAYS HE IS BOSS, NOT THE PEOPLE, IN MAKING DECISIONS FOR RP

Noy slams Nobel boycott critics

By Aytch S. de la Cruz and Michaela P. del Callar 12/14/2010

Forget his inaugural claim that the Filipinos are his boss. They aren’t and never were, as President Aquino yesterday made it clear that it is not the call of the people — referring to his critics who flailed him for bowing to China’s call for a boycott of the Nobel Peace Prize awards, which stemmed from the Nobel organizers giving jailed Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobao the Nobel prize — but his, as it is he who decides for the country — not the Filipino people.

Aquino yesterday blasted various human rights groups that keep criticizing his judgment to kowtow to China on the issue of the Nobel Peace Prize boycott, saying “it is not their call to make decisions” for the country but his.

Aquino reiterated that his move to boycott the is part of his administration’s efforts to repair the strained relations it had with China after the Aug. 23 hostage crisis in Manila and to spare the lives of five Filipinos that have been dealt the death sentence in Beijing for drug-related charges.

“My interest has to be first with the Filipinos. I think nobody will begrudge me if we consider other nationalities as (being a) secondary interest. I did swear to an oath to defend and safeguard all Filipinos everywhere. I prioritized the Philippines. If that is a sin then I am willing to commit that sin over and over again,” Aquino told reporters in a chance interview at Malacañang..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20101214hed1.html

Palace eyes PCGG as option vs Gloria By Aytch S. de la Cruz 12/14/2010

Palace eyes PCGG as option vs Gloria

By Aytch S. de la Cruz 12/14/2010

To go around legal tangles plaguing the half-baked Philippine Truth Commission (PTC), after the Supreme Court thumbed down Executive Order (EO) 1 that created it, the Palace is now considering tapping the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) created by former President Corazon Aquino, the current President’s mother, to lodge graft cases against former President Arroyo.

Graft and corruption allegations against Arroyo can be investigated by the PCGG as an option to pursue cases against the previous administration, Aquino’s adviser for special concerns, Magdangal Elma, who previously worked as chief legal counsel for his mother, said.

In a four-page document given to reporters detailing his recommendations, Elma said the PCGG may take up prospective functions of the Philippine Truth Commission (PTC) after the Supreme Court struck down EO1, creating the body, on grounds that it violated the equal protection clause granted by the 1987 Constitution.

“The PCGG was charged with the task of assisting former President Aquino not only in the recovery of ill-gotten or unexplained wealth accumulated by former President (Ferdinand Marcos), his immediate family, relatives, subordinates, and close associates but also in the investigation of such cases of graft and corruption as the President may assign to the Commission from time to time and to prevent a repetition of the same in the future,” Elma cited in his proposal, putting great emphasis on the last phrase of the sentence..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20101214hed2.html

Morong 43’s burden to prove military abuses — Palace By Aytch S. de la Cruz 12/14/2010

Morong 43’s burden to prove military abuses — Palace

By Aytch S. de la Cruz 12/14/2010

Malacañang yesterday made an assumption that the burden is on the part of the 43 health workers who are reportedly bent on pursuing rights abuse charges against the military after President Aquino ordered the Department of Justice (DoJ) to withdraw the information against them last week.

Aquino, in a chance interview with reporters, stated that the challenge is up to the health workers concerned, known as the Morong 43, to prove that there was indeed a malicious intent when the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and some Philippine National Police (PNP) personnel served the defective warrants against them last February.

The Chief Executive earlier noted that the AFP and PNP officers who were involved in that incident have already explained to him that they were just performing their functions during that time.

“I assume that they (AFP) believe — they also had PNP personnel with them — that they were correct in serving the warrant. So, I guess, the intention to violate the laws was not clear.”.... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20101214hed3.html

Bicam passes budget, transparency junked By Angie M. Rosales 12/14/2010

Bicam passes budget, transparency junked

By Angie M. Rosales 12/14/2010

The Senate last night ratified the P1.645 trillion national budget for next year, with the two Houses of Congress among those receiving the biggest increases by as much as P935 million via budget insertions.

Opposition members in the bicameral committee com-plained of a lack of trans-parency, saying that the majority merely asked them to sign and pass the budget without any discussions among the bicam members.

The judiciary, which had been pressing for at least a P3 billion increase, has been appropriated with P13.6 billion which was the amount recommended by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM).

Judges have been protesting the budget cut for the judiciary, saying that their allowances and pay since 2007 have not been paid as yet.

But their protests fell on Malacañang’s deaf ears.

“We again would emphasize that we have basically followed the President’s budget. This is the first budget of President Aquino and we are making this approval in the hope that the present administration would carry out the programs as outlined in their budget..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20101214hed4.html

Agra think tank: Malacañang attacks on SC to erode trust in justice system By Benjamin B. Pulta 12/14/2010

Agra think tank: Malacañang attacks on SC to erode trust in justice system

By Benjamin B. Pulta 12/14/2010

A private lawyers’ group that serves as a think tank which is headed by former Acting Justice Secretary Alberto Agra has cautioned Malacañang against “waging war” on the Supreme Court (SC).

“Attacks on the judiciary can result in two distinct yet related undesirable consequences. First, the criticism will prevent judges from remaining insulated from the personal and political consequences of making an unpopular decision, thus placing judicial independence at risk,” the group, Forensic Law and Policy Strategies Inc. (Forensic Solutions) said, adding that “imprudent and cavalier criticism against the courts, particularly the Supreme Court, is a serious threat to the independence of the judiciary. Making statements that bring discredit to the Court smacks of arrogance and disrespect.”

Justice chief Leila de Lima and Solicitor General Anselmo Cadiz imputed politics behind the ruling of the high court striking down President Aquino’s EO1, with De Lima commenting that the political investment made
by the previous president on the high court justices is paying off, while Cadiz said the decision stemmed from the justices’ political gratitude to former President Gloria Arroyo..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20101214hed5.html

Senate OKs Jinggoy’s bill on DH’s salary rise 12/14/2010

Senate OKs Jinggoy’s bill on DH’s salary rise

12/14/2010
The Senate yesterday approved on third and final reading Senate Bill 78 which will increase the minimum wage of house helpers or “kasambahays” and will provide them with additional benefits.

Introduced by Senate President Pro Tempore Jinggoy Estrada, Senate Bill 78, otherwise known as the “Act of Providing for Additional Benefits and Protection to House Helpers,” requires employers to pay a minimum wage of at least P2,500 to house helpers within Metro Manila, at least P2,000 for those in chartered cities and first class municipalities, and at least P1,500 for those working in third class municipalities.

Under the measure, Estrada said employers are mandated to shoulder the premiums for their house helpers’ benefits in the Social Security System (SSS), Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth), Home Development Mutual Fund or PagIBIG and the Employees Compensation Commission (ECC).

Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, for his part, said that it was “high time that kasambahays are given the recognition that they duly deserve..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20101214hed6.html

Pirates seize 24 Filipino crew on board cargo ship By Michaela P. del Callar 12/14/2010

Pirates seize 24 Filipino crew on board cargo ship

By Michaela P. del Callar 12/14/2010

Another batch of 24 Filipino crewmen of a Liberian-owned bulk cargo vessel were seized by pirates in the Indian Ocean over the weekend, the European Union Naval Force said yesterday.

They were taken hostage on the same day when 19 Filipino seamen of a Greek vessel, who were held captives for seven months off Somali waters, were freed.

“In the early hours of Dec. 11, the MV Renuar was pirated in the Indian Ocean, approximately 1,050 nautical miles east of the Somali coastal village of Eyl and a distance of 550 nautical miles from the coast of India,” the EUNAVFOR said on its Web site.

From 82, the number of Filipino hostages in Somalia has gone up to 106.

The attack was launched from two attack skiffs, supported by a mother ship, with pirates firing small arms and rocket propelled grenades at the merchant vessel..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/nation/20101214nat1.html

All bark, no bite EDITORIAL 12/13/2010

Monday, December 13, 2010

All bark, no bite

EDITORIAL
Click to enlarge
12/13/2010
The results of Transparency International (TI)’s recent Global Corruption Barometer report revealed more than the already unflattering figures on Noynoy’s ascendancy to power that is supposedly based on the eradication of corruption anchored on the tenet “Kung walang corrupt, walang mahirap” (No corruption, no poverty).

Already reported was that 48 percent of Filipino respondents of the survey that TI stated was the most extensive survey done yet globally on corruption, considered the government ineffective in the fight against corruption.

The survey was undertaken by pollster Gallup International covering mostly 1,000 respondents and was conducted between June 1 and Sept. 30, which was the period well into the Aquino administration that started July 1.

In Asia-Pacific, the median was 44 percent believing their government ineffective against corruption and the Philippines was one of seven countries above the average..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101213com1.html

Needed: A thinking cap FRONTLINE Ninez Cacho-Olivares 12/13/2010

Needed: A thinking cap

FRONTLINE
Ninez Cacho-Olivares
12/13/2010
Obviously trying to save face after issuing a veiled threat to have the Chief Justice impeached by his allies over the high court’s ruling on the unconstitutionality of Executive Order 1 (EO 1), and where reactions from his congressional allies all pointed to their being clueless about any impeachment moves against CJ Renato Corona, along with their saying that such a ground is not valid, there went Noynoy Aquino, informing reporters that he is not thinking of supporting any move to impeach Corona and that instead, he prefers to dialog with the justices.

He also went to great pains to clarify to reporters that it was not he who had started the impeachment talk against Corona, insisting that he had received calls from his allies in Congress about their plan to impeach a Supreme Court (SC) justice — but not Corona.

Well, what can Noynoy do when caught at a lie, of not to spin another lie, especially since his allies in Congress went on the record to deny that there was such a plan to impeach Corona? Then too, why did he wait so long to clarify the matter?

He insisted that while he did not start that talk, he stuck to his claim that he had received calls from his allies about an impeachment plan against another SC magistrate, whom he failed to identify..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101213com2.html

Phones are a feminist issue in Bangladesh FEATURE 12/13/2010

Phones are a feminist issue in Bangladesh

FEATURE

12/13/2010
DHAKA — Dressed in a colorful sari, clutching boxes of herbal tea in one hand and a battered old Nokia mobile phone in the other, Monowara Talukder doesn’t look like the average business executive.

But in just six years, Talukder has built an international herbal tea empire in Bangladesh that employs 1,500 female farmers, wins orders from major Western health food chains, and has a turnover of 44 million taka ($625,000).

She was among the first people to sign up for a mobile phone when they arrived in the country in 1997. The costs were high, but the 48-year-old mother of four says she has never regretted the investment.

“My mobile phone has helped so much with the business — it is absolutely crucial for distribution and marketing,” Talukder told AFP over a cup of her signature Tulsi, or Holy Basil, tea in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka.

“I don’t have an office or showroom so people just ring me on the mobile to place orders. I now have my products in all 64 districts of Bangladesh and get orders from buyers in Australia, Kuwait and Nepal.”.... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101213com3.html

Pell-mell Peace Nobel DIE HARD III Herman Tiu Laurel 12/13/2010

Pell-mell Peace Nobel

DIE HARD III
Herman Tiu Laurel
12/13/2010
Pell-mell: jumbled, helter-skelter, confused; that’s what the Nobel Peace prize has become. A third party observer such as the India Daily perceived this so clearly when its correspondent filed a report in response to the nomination of Liu Xiaobo for the Nobel Peace Prize with the headline, “Beijing denounces Nobel for Liu Xiaobo, after Obama, Gore, isn’t the Nobel Prize a joke?”

One definitely couldn’t get such a clear assessment of the Peace Prize from Western societies and media. I was almost ready to add the West’s minion states like the Philippines among those with the view skewed toward the West until the PeNoy government surprised us for once by doing the right thing, by joining the boycott of the Nobel Peace award to the questionable Liu Xiaobo.

From another third party point of view, Yoichi Shimatsu, former editor of the Japan Times Weekly in Tokyo, comes this objective summary of Liu Xiaobo’s history: “Liu Xiaobo’s personal link with Norway started during his days as a visiting scholar to the University of Oslo in 1988... Back in those dark days of the Cold War, there weren’t many Chinese in Scandinavia, so Liu was a rare commodity — a scholar from Beijing who loathed Beijing. Whether Liu became a Nato asset is a matter of top-secret classification. Oslo’s repeated inquiries about him through two decades, the Western media’s patronage, and the Nobel selection over other Chinese dissidents indicate some sort of special bond. Whatever the hidden details of his foreign involvements, Liu’s Peace Prize is serving as the bugle call for Nato’s global crusade against so-called “tyranny.”

“The fact that an open warmonger heads the Nobel Peace Committee has completely discredited what was once the world’s most prestigious Peace Prize. That honor is now just another weapon in the arsenal of the Great Powers mobilizing to reassert their authority over their former colonial domain. The goal of the West is not democracy and human rights; what its leaders really desire is domination and warfare. The intentions are clear. Thus we must each prepare, in our different ways, for the coming bloodshed.”

The Indian and Japanese media can be relied on to be more level-headed about the issues given their experiences with Western imperialism and persistent nationalist pride, unlike many in Philippine media and human rights NGOs who genuflect before the journalism and human rights foundations as well as foreign funding agencies for their scholarships and whatnot.

This dubious award of the Nobel Peace prize to Liu Xiaobo was preceded by two of the same equally dubious awards to Obama in 2009, when the newly-elected US president had just taken steps to expand the American and Nato war in Afghanistan; and before that in 2007 to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and Al Gore for their advocacy of the “man-made global warming” theory and restrictions on industrialization, which have subsequently been put under serious disrepute by IPCC’s own admissions of prediction errors, precipitated by an e-mail scandal unearthed by an IPCC scientist (not by WikiLeaks) revealing climate date manipulation to suit global warming theories. But these are not the only controversies.

The 1973 award to Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho for the Vietnam peace talks compelled two Nobel Peace Prize panel members’ resignation; they could not agree on the nominees’ qualifications as men of peace. Kissinger is considered by many historians and students of the Vietnam War, and I among them, as a war criminal for the atrocities and murder of four million Vietnamese civilians committed by American forces under his policy direction.

A lesser known awardee in 2008 was former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari who executed the negotiations with Yugoslavia’s Milosevic that were so one-sided for the US and Nato that he was rewarded with a second assignment over Kosovo which ended with the latter’s declaration of independence. Gregory Elich of the Jasenovac Research Institute and adviser to the Korea Truth Commission says Ahtisaari’s Nobel was for services rendered.

In my political-economy classes at PUP up until 2005, I had always discussed the Nobel Peace Prize as a fraud and an instrument of cultural warfare to create icons favorable to Western purposes. I ask why, for example, the ultimate and historical paradigm of peace and peaceful struggle was never awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Isn’t Mahatma Gandhi the world’s undisputed premier exponent of peace? The Nobel Peace Prize had been given out nearly every year since 1901.

I explain to my students that Gandhi could never be a Nobel Peace laureate because he is an anti-imperialist icon. It’s about time all Filipinos learn this basic truth about the Nobel Peace Prize: It is intended mainly to promote the West’s ideal of the “peaceful” man who is on their side. Liu Xiaobo is on their side, yet there is more material on him on the Internet that the Peace Prize panel never touched on.

Whatever the real reason for the PeNoy government’s joining the boycott of the Liu peace award, even it was merely a right mistake taken to obfuscate a real rejection of US imposition on it, we anti-imperialist Filipinos welcome it. When I praised this apparently courageous act on my radio program last Friday night, a yellow butterfly (yes, this is true) fluttered from the window into the room where I was phone-patching. Was it a providential message that there is a hidden hope there somewhere? Wonders, accidents or not, may truly never cease.

(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; watch Politics Today with HTL, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., on Global News Network, Destiny Cable Channel 8; visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com; P.S. – “10 Minutes Lights Out vs Power Plunderers,” 7 to 7:10 p.m., Monday nights)

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101213com4.html

WikiLeaks cables release reshapes diplomatic landscape focus 12/13/2010

WikiLeaks cables release reshapes diplomatic landscape

focus

12/13/2010

PARIS — Was the WikiLeaks cable release a stone thrown into the waters of US diplomacy, causing waves that will eventually calm, or a brick though the window of the State Department, causing irreparable harm?

With only 1,200 of the quarter million stolen US diplomatic telegrams so far released, it is perhaps too early to understand all the repercussions for the sole superpower’s international standing and for current crises.
But it is already possible to see certain diplomatic realignments — some aspects of foreign relations may never be the same again.

One of the early surprises was the revelation of the extent to which Arab fears of a future nuclear-armed Iran have put them on the same page as their traditional foe Israel in pushing for military action against Tehran.
Washington’s inability to keep its secrets secret has seen it lose face with rising rival China, and Beijing has been careful not to let its own guard down, giving a careful response to leaked criticisms of its policy..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101213com5.html

The Truth Pt. 2 HE SAYS Aldrin Cardon 12/13/2010

The Truth Pt. 2

HE SAYS
Aldrin Cardon
12/13/2010
Who was surprised at the recent Supreme Court decision declaring Noynoy’s Truth Commission unconstitutional?

Not I, and I suppose not everyone else who cares for our God-forsaken country.
And maybe not Noynoy, who may have anticipated the worst to come from an SC, whose majority is perceived to remain “friendly” to former President Arroyo, to whom its members owe their seats.

Noynoy had taken a fighting stance against the SC for what he deemed was its late transmittal of the decision, which, in matters of importance to the Palace, was handed down to Malacañang only two days after it came out in the media, a discourteous act in whatever way we view it.

An appeal could also take the same route as the previous SC decision, and would validate the people’s suspicion that Gloria Arroyo, now a “humbled” congressman representing the second district of Pampanga, remains deeply entrenched in power, and is just awaiting the grand comeback said to have been long laid out, but could not yet push as Noynoy remains so popular they fear a big political backlash..... MORE

SourceThe Daily Tribune

URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20101213com6.html

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