Futile end games to every Yellow problem
    (Herman  Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 07-22-2015 WED)
    It's a feeling of exasperation when one takes stock of this  country's trajectory--from its elections to its foreign policy, its economic  realities, and so on.
    Elections here are a proven farce with its election body and  its automated election system completely discredited.  Yet the freak show goes on.
    Its major foreign policy pursuit is mired in a hopeless  conundrum: UP Maritime Affairs Director Jay Batongbacal recently wrote that the  UN arbitral tribunal may still rule in favor of China despite the latter's  absence, a disaster as much as any hoped for win that will never yield any  compliance even for a hundred years.
    The Philippine "No Dialogue with China" crowd believed it had  struck on a very powerful argument in the international stage when it raised  the "island building" issue against China.   But brought to wider attention by US and French-reared geopoliticist  Peter Lee's July 18 article on Asia Times ("Okinotorishima-ization:  South China Sea arbitration case enters middle game") on the Okinotorishima  rock features near Taiwan and mainland China, visible during high tide and  built up by Japan into a huge facility with a lighthouse, four-story  structures, etc.,  and the basis of their argument becomes flimsy at best.  Google the word and  you'll see the huge Japanese "island," which these rabble-rousers are silent  on.
    At the conclusion of the lengthy article and to point out  the futility of it all, Lee referred to our Iranian-Filipino colleague, Ateneo  political science professor Richard Javad Heydarian, as "the leading defender  of the Philippine strategy in the Western media, (who) endeavored to manage  expectations if the Philippines does not prevail in the arbitration case… or  prevails and the PRC disregards the ruling…" I texted to Richard that Lee  apparently does not read enough of what he has written as I know that Richard  has been calling on BS Aquino to start engaging in dialogue with China.
    Richard texted back to me, "Actually even in my TV  interviews on GMA and CNN, I emphasized on the  need to have diplomatic engagement and on The Diplomat (an Australian  foreign policy-military magazine) they have asked me to analyze the downside of  pure confrontation with China.  But  there's a lot of negative reaction from the hardliners here when I talk about  engagement…"
    The hardliners he's referring to include the likes of the so-called  West Philippine Sea Coalition and big mainstream papers, including the Inquirer,  working non-stop to muffle broadminded discussion that could break the  "information gulag," which they obviously would like to fence  the Filipino public in.
    But broadminded and visionary discussions calling for  productive engagement with China and promising multiple bounties from such actions  are eliciting positive responses.  To our  last column ("Thailand gets trains; RP, bases"), we received this text from a  former multiple-term congressman: "Tnx.  Quarreling  with China deprives us of opportunities to link up the whole country by rail.  Huhuhu…"
    Of course, we also get our share of brickbats and name-calling  (like "Fifth Columnist"… hahaha) from the hardliners who can articulate no more  than such Neanderthal grunts.
    The defense alliance of Filipino anti-China and Amboy crowds  hoping to rope in to backstop their offensives against China are facing rough  seas at home.  The US, though still the  world's largest military, is cutting back its forces by 40,000 troops and its  budget by $90 billion, both of which do not augur well for its "Asia Pivot."
    Meanwhile, Japan's Shinzo Abe government that is leading the  "reinterpretation" of that country's Constitution to allow its military to join  other allied armed forces (like those of the US and Philippines) is being  opposed by 66 percent of the Japanese people (represented by a hundred thousand  who protested before the Diet's deliberations).
    Back home, Philippine mainstream media and a premier survey  group are hyping the "lowest hunger rate" in a decade, which uncannily comes  just before presidential election year, hoping to gloss over the country's  continued dependence on food importation to complete its food requirements, its  agricultural sector still trapped in marginal productivity, or its institutions  for agricultural development wallowing in corruption.
    What they won't say is that the Philippines continues to be  trapped in "austerity programs," as evinced by the real 50 percent under- and  unemployment rate for the past 30 years after the International Monetary Fund's  structural adjustments saw millions leave for jobs abroad--this much Greece shall  begin to see in the years ahead.
    The Filipino nation is made to hope that the unending cycle  of problems, among the many others that cannot fit here, can be solved in the  next presidential elections.  But the  same old personality game of oligarchy-endorsed, media moguls cum US embassy-  nurtured candidates are still in it while the political parties are the wagging  tail to the celebrity candidate and not the other way around as it should be in  a genuine democracy.  And, to top it all,  a foreign-controlled, non-transparent, graft-ridden election company and its machines  are still usurping the electoral process.
    Smartmatic was disqualified twice by the Commission on  Elections' briefly reigning, straight and honest Bids and Awards Committee,  headed by Helen Flores.  But the Right  Honorable Lord Mark Malloch Brown, newly-minted British full owner of  Smartmatic (whom the US-based LaRouche movement calls the "guru of color  revolutions" and finance predator George Soros' associate), arrives in Manila,  sups with BS Aquino in Malacañang, and a week later Ms. Flores is removed, with  Smartmatic getting the contracts for 170,000 Smartmatic voting machines.  Where does this end?  Only Noytards will pretend not to know what  this end game will be.
    (Listen  to Sulô ng Pilipino, 1098 AM, dwAD, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.;  watch GNN Talk News TV with HTL on Destiny Cable Channel 8, SkyCable Channel 213, and  www.gnntv-asia.com, Saturday, 8 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m.; search Talk News TV and date of  showing on YouTube;  visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 0917-8658664)
 
 
 
 
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