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 A whole book can be written about lessons learned for our nation in this final year of the first decade of the 21st Century. Focusing on the burning issues of the day, the Hocus-PCOS that was premised on the panacea of technology solving the root problems of the country’s electoral politics has taught us probably the most important lesson: Technology does not solve our most basic social and political ills. Watching the current Hocus-PCOS imbroglio, it is clear  that it will take wise human intervention to solve the mess that  technology has brought upon us. It’s a lesson the German Supreme Court  incorporated into its jurisprudence when it banned automation after 10  of years of experimenting with it. A second lesson  that can be gleaned when we witness politicians such as Teddy “Boy”  Locsin go about their official duties is that a Harvard diploma and a  crisp, wry witty English do not guarantee wisdom. Getting the country to  rush headlong to use a system that even the US has experienced to be  easily “hack-able” (search Hack Diebold on YouTube) is going to be the  most memorable, if not dubious, achievement of this scion of a liberal  ideological mouthpiece of the US colonial elite. This achievement stands  at par with the “bad finger” he raised against striking public school  teachers and media during his “eloquent” stint as a spokesman of  President Corazon Aquino. These ironically make him stand out as the  most “Teflon-coated” of the Edsa I and II poster boys. And, to borrow  from modern bio-technology, Teflon can be very poisonous. The next lesson from the just-concluded elections is  that since Philippine society is controlled by a ruling class intent on  perpetuating itself through the use of money, controlled media, civil  society watchdogs, political-bureaucratic allies in government and the  Comelec, and its special ties with the prevailing foreign powers,  genuine democratic elections and governance are virtually impossible. Although it was shown in the 1998 election of President  Joseph Estrada that at certain junctures of our history, the genuine  voice of the people did prevail, the subsequent success of the Edsa II  conspiracy shows that the ruling class, with the complicity of foreign  powers, will brook no moral or legal obstacle to turn the military  against the people’s will. Of course, the same thing is unfolding in  this 2010 presidential election, as we uncover the ruling class using  all means fair and foul. The ongoing congressional  inquiry into the massively-reported fraud in the Hocus-PCOS exercise is  not the only incidence of fraud in the 2010 elections. The cheating  started from Day One when the ruling class and its outgoing puppet  regime deliberately kept the Sword of Damocles of disqualification over  the head of Joseph Estrada, the only candidate of the people. Its  controlled media then fanned this and other negative news about him  without let-up. One letter that circulated on the Web, for instance,  from Cory Finance Secretary Jess Estanislao, who campaigned for the  Yellow dummy, admonished anyone from voting for what he described as a  “convicted criminal” despite the fact that he and his ilk have never  condemned the “criminality” of Gloria Arroyo, which has been proven many  times over by incontrovertible evidence. Astoundingly,  despite Gloria’s many crimes such as the Impsa deal, “Hello Garci,”  ZTE-NBN and many others, she still gets a graceful exit because the  oligarchs, their corporations and their coterie of professional  hirelings enjoyed well over P3 trillion in profits for the past 10 years  while Filipinos sank deeper into poverty — a fact that even Gloria  apologist Joey Salceda blurted out to deflect some of the Makati  Business Club (MBC)’s superficial criticisms of her. Now that the MBC has a new puppet to lead a second  decade of gargantuan profits, we find the two mainstream networks and  newspapers (plus Newsweek) using all means before and during the  campaign ban to boost the stock of their candidate.  All with unlisted  expenses, these included subtle marketing pitches and featurettes such  as the Ayalas’ Cory Swatch launch, civil society’s “I am Ninoy” youth  campaign, the History Channel’s Ninoy retrospective, and many more.  Although not technically illegal, these constitute cheating nonetheless.  These, of course, do not include the Yellows’ other operations such as  the clearly manipulated pre- and post-election surveys. So now comes this question: Did Arroyo and Smartmatic  operators cheat for the Edsa II candidate when Villarroyo started  trailing Estrada? While it can be argued that the deaths of Cory and of  Eraño Manalo probably helped the Edsa II cause, it is also clear that  Erap’s surge inspired a snowballing awe among many voters. Thus, the new Edsa II dummy needed to have a landslide,  perhaps through shaved votes from five other candidates done in an  almost undetectable manner. And as “Hello Garci” was exposed a year  later, this Hocus PCOS still needs some closer investigation. Still, if  cheating in the local level is already smoke, there’s got to be fire  somewhere. Clearly, reforming our electoral system  doesn’t require automation, just separating national from local  elections; going back to manual voting and precinct-level counts; as  well as encoding and transmitting election returns by e-mail to Congress  where it should have enough time to canvass with much-needed accuracy.  In the end, man decides — not the machines. (Tune  in to 1098AM, Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 p.m. to  7 p.m.; Global News Network, Destiny Cable Channel 21, Talk News TV,  Tuesday, 8:15 p.m. to 9 p.m. on “The Philippine Political-Economy  Post-Gloria Arroyo;” also visit http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com) (Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel) Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100528com5.html | 
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29. Alam n'yo kaya na ngayon ang ika-115 na pagdiriwang ng pinakaunang 
labanan ng Himagsikan bago pa man ang pangkalahataang pag-aaklas? Ngayon 
unang lum...
14 years ago

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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