(Please retrieve the link for me. I'm too lazy to do it. Thanks.)
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 01:27:00 07/14/2009
Filed Under: Antonio Trillanes IV
Please allow me to respond to Ramon Tulfo’s personal attacks against Sen. Antonio F. Trillanes IV. (Inquirer, 7/7/09)
1. Many cars. Trillanes never owned any luxury vehicles when he was in the military. Trillanes’ only vehicle when he was with the Navy was a second-hand Nissan Terrano, which he sold in 2007 to finance his campaign. The fact is, in 2003, an ill-gotten wealth case relating to the alleged vehicles was dismissed because the documents the CIDG submitted in support of its allegation were found to be spurious: the vehicles were supposedly registered under his name in 1900!
2. House in exclusive village. Trillanes does not own a house in an exclusive village. And he did not own a house at all when he was still with the Navy. He and his family used to live at his wife’s quarters at the PMA in Baguio City. Trillanes, however, recently acquired a vacant lot (300 sq m) also at the Town and Country Homes under Pag-Ibig’s Home Financing II Program. You can verify these claims with the Register of Deeds of Rizal and Pag-Ibig.
3. Tiff with Dutchman and wife. The couple referred to, Anastacia Santarin and Adrian de Jager, have been locked in a dispute with a certain Estelita Pabalan over a vacant lot (there was no house) in Novaliches since 1999. The property was leased by Trillanes—who did not know of the dispute—as parking lot for his mother’s rent-a-van business in early 2003. Sometime in March 2003, Santarin and De Jager forced their way into the premises, shoved the caretaker out and refused to leave. When Trillanes was informed of the incident, he went to talk to Santarin. He never met De Jager. Due to the couple’s refusal to leave, Trillanes reported the matter to the barangay chair. That was the extent of his participation in this matter.
A few days later, Pabalan and the caretaker reported the matter to the police. When they came to investigate, the policemen were attacked by De Jager with a knife. The policemen arrested De Jager and charged him in court with attempted homicide. He was jailed because of this and not because of anything that Trillanes did. In fact, Trillanes had no involvement whatsoever in either the land dispute case or De Jager’s criminal case. Court records bear this out.
After the Oakwood incident, this couple tried to cut a deal with the government by offering themselves as witnesses against Trillanes in exchange for a favorable ruling in the land dispute. Fortunately, the police and/or prosecutors found their claim to be dubious and incredible. The couple later filed a case against Trillanes before the Ombudsman but the case was dismissed for lack of merit.
4. Abusive behavior. Tulfo claims that Trillanes was abusive when he was a mere Navy lieutenant and that Trillanes was a “problem detainee as [he] always quarreled with [his] jailers.”
Apart from Tulfo and the De Jager couple with their bogus and recycled claims, we are not aware of anyone who claims to have been victimized by Trillanes’ so-called abuses.
—REYNALDO B. ROBLES,
legal counsel of Sen. Antonio F. Trillanes IV,
Chan Robles & Associates Law Firm,
Suite 2205-B, 22nd Floor,
Philippine Stock Exchange Centre,
Tektite East Tower, Exchange Road,
Ortigas Center, Pasig City
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Solons not prosecutors; PR men not journalists
CRITIC'S CRITIC
Mentong Laurel
2/14-20/2011
This is the second salvo of our four times a week column critiquing critics from all branches of media, as well as from all other sectors of society. This means that anyone and everyone who criticizes may be criticized here, including yours truly, whose opinions you can lambast to your heart's delight, which my editor will certainly find space for.
Before we proceed, let me first acknowledge the great help we are getting from former Rep. Willy Villarama who sends us a daily dose of headlines and columns from at least nine major mainstream and smaller cross current newspapers, such as the PDI, PhilStar, Manila Bulletin, Tribune, Malaya, Manila Standard Today, Manila Times, BusinessWorld, and Business Mirror. Willy started collating these articles for his own analysis and named this compilation, "Ka Willing Willie Balita." Its Feb. 10 issue is what I'm using for this week's reviews.
Our first item is from the Manila Times column of "DR." Dante Ang entitled, "Legislators are not prosecutors." Many long periods had gone before solons got into extended inquisitions of resource persons ostensibly in aid of legislation but quite often in aid of re-election. However, I clearly don't see the present efforts of Senators Juan Ponce-Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada, and Antonio Trillanes IV as anything but a serious pursuit of a truth that has bothered the nation's consciousness ever since the Jan. 2001 power grab called Edsa Dos, where Ang figured significantly as a PR spin master for Gloria Arroyo and the Yellow forces. Angie Reyes was pivotal in the power grab, too; hence, the perceived special treatments he got, including the "pabaons" and the very rare series of four juicy Cabinet positions.
Can PR Men be Journalists?
Solons indeed should not be prosecutors, but reading "DR." Dante Ang's piece provokes the question: Can PR men be journalists? Many journalists moonlight as some sort of media adviser, consultant, ghost writer and/or special operator to various concerns, from business organizations to politicians. But is this ethical at all?
Moreover, despite "DR." Dante Ang's lofty title, from a Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila doctorate he obtained in 2005 (which by the way is now under scrutiny by Education authorities; a matter that's also being investigated by our colleague who goes by the alias, "Oliver"), dyed-in-the-wool, hard line journalists still flinch upon seeing the PR man heading a supposed journalism school that bears his name. But it seems Mr. Ang is in "good" company.
Another prominent member of his ilk, Teddy "Boy" Locsin, a superb writer whose journalistic wit is much sought after, acting as speechwriter to all the presidents who have sat in Malacanang since Edsa I, is also a class unto himself. Teflon seems to cover everything he does despite the apparent conflicts-of-interest. Why, Locsin has even parlayed his journalistic fame to a congressional seat.
Comfort the Discomfit
Not to be outdone, Dante Ang has parlayed his PR skils into multifarious business spin-offs, too, especially during the Arroyo era, when his influence helped him acquire the Manila Times, as well as a bank chairmanship and a Cabinet post on OFWs, among many other things.
Journalists are supposed to "discomfit the comfortable and comfort the discomfited." Yet Dante Ang has always been with the comfortably powerful; and maybe just like Angie Reyes, the time will soon come when the murky doings of other Arroyo factotums will come to light.
So can be a PR man rightfully claim to be a journalist? Only when he spends 90 percent of his time as a journalist--not as a PR man.
To Die with Honor
Meanwhile, the Feb. 10 edition of BusinessWorld had Solita Monsod's "Dying with Honor" on Angelo Reyes, likening Angie's gun-to-the-heart suicide to the Japanese warrior's ritual knife-to-the-gut self kill (plunging a short blade into the gut left to right) to show one's courage and sacrifice, not only to face death, but enduring the pain of disembowelment and slow death.
Frankly, the parallel was badly drawn. Angie Reyes' suicide was a cop-out that created a giant hole in the AFP corruption puzzle that was already being pieced together as the Senate hearings, as so many other wiser columnists such as Dick Pascual of The Philippine Star observed. But for Solita Monsod, Angie Reyes is a hero; whereas all I can see is that he cut the road of the investigations that would have led to the possible mastermind of it all--Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (a doll of which Monsod seems to keep in her closet).
As I mentioned, Federico "Dick" Pascual's "Postscript" had a more insightful and powerful take on the issue. Entitled, "Reyes lost his chance to prove his innocence," one section in his lengthy column reads: "BANTAY SALAKAY? Not everybody, however, would agree. While a few may welcome a momentary pause in the investigation, the bigger majority tired of government corruption would want to see through the cleansing process. I share the view that Reyes' death will not, and should not, put sudden closure to the revolting revelations of how millions had been routinely stolen by the Caesars of the armed service. It is ironic that the Armed Forces is enshrined in the Declaration of Principles in the Constitution (Article II, Section 3) as the "protector of the people and the State."
Witness the massive thievery at the top echelons! While we condole with the family of the general, we should not allow his death--or that of others who might follow his violent exit -- to cut short the investigations and the prosecution of the guilty parties.
Dreams should Never Die
I will end this week's Critic's Critics with the column of the Three Stooges of Gloria Arroyo in media today. Rigoberto "Bobbie" Tiglao's "Outlook" entitled "Our dreams will never die," referring to the slogan of the RAM (Reform the AFP Movement) of the Col. Greg Honasan and company in its early years against the Cory Aquino government, attempts to shift the focus of the Reyes suicide imbroglio away from the corruption under Gloria to what he insinuates is the desire of militarists to grab power. Coming from another media hatchet man of the Edsa Dos power grabber, this is certainly laughable.
In his own words, "In all these, the RAM and the Magdalo's dream--which could be our nightmare--certainly hasn't died: grabbing power." But isn't that precisely what his lord Madame and master Gloria Arroyo did in Jan. 2001, onto which he took a ride to gain his dreams of a Cabinet rank, an ambassadorship, and probably a sinecure today? It's a case of "the pot calling the kettle black."
(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; TNT with HTL, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., on GNN, Destiny Cable Channel 8, on "The Roots of RP's Systemic Corruption" with Mang Naro Lualhati, Atty. "Batas" Mauricio, and Butch Junia; visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
Mentong Laurel
2/14-20/2011
This is the second salvo of our four times a week column critiquing critics from all branches of media, as well as from all other sectors of society. This means that anyone and everyone who criticizes may be criticized here, including yours truly, whose opinions you can lambast to your heart's delight, which my editor will certainly find space for.
Before we proceed, let me first acknowledge the great help we are getting from former Rep. Willy Villarama who sends us a daily dose of headlines and columns from at least nine major mainstream and smaller cross current newspapers, such as the PDI, PhilStar, Manila Bulletin, Tribune, Malaya, Manila Standard Today, Manila Times, BusinessWorld, and Business Mirror. Willy started collating these articles for his own analysis and named this compilation, "Ka Willing Willie Balita." Its Feb. 10 issue is what I'm using for this week's reviews.
Our first item is from the Manila Times column of "DR." Dante Ang entitled, "Legislators are not prosecutors." Many long periods had gone before solons got into extended inquisitions of resource persons ostensibly in aid of legislation but quite often in aid of re-election. However, I clearly don't see the present efforts of Senators Juan Ponce-Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada, and Antonio Trillanes IV as anything but a serious pursuit of a truth that has bothered the nation's consciousness ever since the Jan. 2001 power grab called Edsa Dos, where Ang figured significantly as a PR spin master for Gloria Arroyo and the Yellow forces. Angie Reyes was pivotal in the power grab, too; hence, the perceived special treatments he got, including the "pabaons" and the very rare series of four juicy Cabinet positions.
Can PR Men be Journalists?
Solons indeed should not be prosecutors, but reading "DR." Dante Ang's piece provokes the question: Can PR men be journalists? Many journalists moonlight as some sort of media adviser, consultant, ghost writer and/or special operator to various concerns, from business organizations to politicians. But is this ethical at all?
Moreover, despite "DR." Dante Ang's lofty title, from a Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila doctorate he obtained in 2005 (which by the way is now under scrutiny by Education authorities; a matter that's also being investigated by our colleague who goes by the alias, "Oliver"), dyed-in-the-wool, hard line journalists still flinch upon seeing the PR man heading a supposed journalism school that bears his name. But it seems Mr. Ang is in "good" company.
Another prominent member of his ilk, Teddy "Boy" Locsin, a superb writer whose journalistic wit is much sought after, acting as speechwriter to all the presidents who have sat in Malacanang since Edsa I, is also a class unto himself. Teflon seems to cover everything he does despite the apparent conflicts-of-interest. Why, Locsin has even parlayed his journalistic fame to a congressional seat.
Comfort the Discomfit
Not to be outdone, Dante Ang has parlayed his PR skils into multifarious business spin-offs, too, especially during the Arroyo era, when his influence helped him acquire the Manila Times, as well as a bank chairmanship and a Cabinet post on OFWs, among many other things.
Journalists are supposed to "discomfit the comfortable and comfort the discomfited." Yet Dante Ang has always been with the comfortably powerful; and maybe just like Angie Reyes, the time will soon come when the murky doings of other Arroyo factotums will come to light.
So can be a PR man rightfully claim to be a journalist? Only when he spends 90 percent of his time as a journalist--not as a PR man.
To Die with Honor
Meanwhile, the Feb. 10 edition of BusinessWorld had Solita Monsod's "Dying with Honor" on Angelo Reyes, likening Angie's gun-to-the-heart suicide to the Japanese warrior's ritual knife-to-the-gut self kill (plunging a short blade into the gut left to right) to show one's courage and sacrifice, not only to face death, but enduring the pain of disembowelment and slow death.
Frankly, the parallel was badly drawn. Angie Reyes' suicide was a cop-out that created a giant hole in the AFP corruption puzzle that was already being pieced together as the Senate hearings, as so many other wiser columnists such as Dick Pascual of The Philippine Star observed. But for Solita Monsod, Angie Reyes is a hero; whereas all I can see is that he cut the road of the investigations that would have led to the possible mastermind of it all--Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (a doll of which Monsod seems to keep in her closet).
As I mentioned, Federico "Dick" Pascual's "Postscript" had a more insightful and powerful take on the issue. Entitled, "Reyes lost his chance to prove his innocence," one section in his lengthy column reads: "BANTAY SALAKAY? Not everybody, however, would agree. While a few may welcome a momentary pause in the investigation, the bigger majority tired of government corruption would want to see through the cleansing process. I share the view that Reyes' death will not, and should not, put sudden closure to the revolting revelations of how millions had been routinely stolen by the Caesars of the armed service. It is ironic that the Armed Forces is enshrined in the Declaration of Principles in the Constitution (Article II, Section 3) as the "protector of the people and the State."
Witness the massive thievery at the top echelons! While we condole with the family of the general, we should not allow his death--or that of others who might follow his violent exit -- to cut short the investigations and the prosecution of the guilty parties.
Dreams should Never Die
I will end this week's Critic's Critics with the column of the Three Stooges of Gloria Arroyo in media today. Rigoberto "Bobbie" Tiglao's "Outlook" entitled "Our dreams will never die," referring to the slogan of the RAM (Reform the AFP Movement) of the Col. Greg Honasan and company in its early years against the Cory Aquino government, attempts to shift the focus of the Reyes suicide imbroglio away from the corruption under Gloria to what he insinuates is the desire of militarists to grab power. Coming from another media hatchet man of the Edsa Dos power grabber, this is certainly laughable.
In his own words, "In all these, the RAM and the Magdalo's dream--which could be our nightmare--certainly hasn't died: grabbing power." But isn't that precisely what his lord Madame and master Gloria Arroyo did in Jan. 2001, onto which he took a ride to gain his dreams of a Cabinet rank, an ambassadorship, and probably a sinecure today? It's a case of "the pot calling the kettle black."
(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; TNT with HTL, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., on GNN, Destiny Cable Channel 8, on "The Roots of RP's Systemic Corruption" with Mang Naro Lualhati, Atty. "Batas" Mauricio, and Butch Junia; visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
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Monday, February 14, 2011
Behind 'closed doors' hide the rats
DIE HARD III
Herman Tiu Laurel
2/14/2011
Fidel V. Ramos speaks with a twisted tongue and heart; he would make the weak brave and heroic, and the self-sacrificing and courageous a villain. FVR is twisting certain quarters’ perception of events by hurling aspersions on those pursuing the truth in the Senate hearings on widespread corruption in the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines).
Some RAM (Reform the Armed Forces Movement) veterans, such as Col. Proceso Maligalig, even fault underclassman Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV for the suicide of Angelo Reyes, claiming that the senator’s alleged “shaming” of the late general did him in. But shouldn’t Reyes have spilled all the beans earlier to spare himself of any and all shame?
Why such crap coming from them? Are they fearful that their past relations to these “pabaon,” “pasalubong,” and “conversion” practices may be uncovered, as some retired officers credit this top Yellow general for the introduction of this corrupt system?
My previous column placed the onus of the systemic corruption within Philippine society and the AFP on both the ruling class and the principal foreign power. Through their financial, monetary, foreign, media and political policies, they set the parameters for this country’s governance and shape society in their perverted image.
Hence, an extreme concentration of wealth in the hands of a few powerful families (or oligarchs) tied to the foreign power’s coattails continues. Together, they systematically impoverish the nation by, first of all, ensuring that government institutions give out ridiculously low salaries to mendicant officials who will be perpetually addicted to graft and corruption as an “unofficial” means of attaining a modicum of fine living.
Because of this, officials from every branch of government have rackets to augment their ridiculously low incomes. Supreme Court justices, for example, are accused of raiding the Judiciary Development Fund (much like a former Chief Justice) or selling case decisions (often involving land disputes); while Comelec syndicates abound; and the Department of Budget and Management releases funds only after percentages are deducted, ad nausea.
The inquiries are best laid bare before the public than shoved back to the “Old Boys’ Club,” where that top Yellow general is said to be a major enabler. As a decorated AFP man and West Point grad, this noted trapo is credited with the issuance of “envelopes” during his days as a general while making camp visits and the proliferation of jueteng when he was still chief of the Philippine Constabulary.
The solons definitely knew about the pabaons long before, which we wrote about as early as 2005. Why then did it have to take a Heidi Mendoza, George Rabusa or Antonio Lim to be prodded by Senators Jinggoy Estrada and Trillanes to force the issue out?
Perhaps the silence and now apparent turnaround of some wimpy legislators in the conduct of these public investigations is that many of them are no different from these tainted AFP generals. After all, don’t most of them benefit from “pork barrel,” lobby money, as well as cash-for-privilege speeches cum exposés, and the like?
Those who can’t take the heat can kill themselves, but the truth must out. The overwhelming popular demand is for more open hearings, as the nation now has a rare, historic opportunity to flush out all the shame and to turn over a new leaf.
This popular sentiment is all over and here are parts of an e-mail circulating today that reads “Launch Non-Stop Campaign Against Corruption, Shame The Corrupt, Redeem Our Land,” by Mila D. Aguilar (http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=501011960917&id=588112853):
“I am a jobless widow about to reach 62 years of age, and have nothing to lose but my life… Today, I am hearing calls to ‘moderate’ the investigations, turn the public hearings into closed-door ‘executive sessions,’ and generally, to ‘respect’ the ‘institution’ that is the AFP. I am also getting messages on FB trying to show how hopeless the situation is in many variegated ways. I smell a rat, and the rat is human. It infests not only the AFP, but ALL government offices, almost without exception. It has its tentacles in the private sector. And we all know it. But most of us think the only thing we can do is to do our own little good thing. Or in fact, not do anything at all. This despite the fact that we have already been gifted by God with a Heidi Mendoza and a General Rabusa. Can’t we see a candle — two candles — when they’ve already been lighted?... So in the light of recent developments… let me propose the following:
1. Do not ever consent to stopping the public, open-door hearings on corruption in the AFP, even if on the grounds that these are generated by politicians out for vengeance. It does not matter who or why…
2. What matters about the public open-door hearings is that the guilty are brought to shame, and the not-so-guilty are made to reflect on their own guilt.
3. Public hearings are our only way… to bring our nation to righteousness, by showing all and sundry what distinguishes right from wrong…
4. With our courts in disarray, shame is our only weapon now against misfits, so let us bring them to shame. With no viable legal means left at our disposal... we are constrained to use our culture of hiya, and use it to the hilt.
5. Let us bring the corrupt to shame through (various means)… Let us use our pens wisely…
6. Go to the streets, light a candle, hoot a horn, show that you are against corruption…
7. And most of all… Pray that the guilty will repent, and if they do not… That they will be punished, here and in the hereafter. Pray that the millions will wake up to righteousness… (and) For a final, absolute end to corruption.
Our call is: Oy kurap, tumigil ka! Tama na, sobra na!...”
And with it, I add: Expose the oligarchs, too! That will surely flush out the rats from our system.
(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; TNT with HTL, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., on GNN, Destiny Cable Channel 8, on “The Roots of RP’s Systemic Corruption: The Oligarchy;” visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
Herman Tiu Laurel
2/14/2011
Fidel V. Ramos speaks with a twisted tongue and heart; he would make the weak brave and heroic, and the self-sacrificing and courageous a villain. FVR is twisting certain quarters’ perception of events by hurling aspersions on those pursuing the truth in the Senate hearings on widespread corruption in the AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines).
Some RAM (Reform the Armed Forces Movement) veterans, such as Col. Proceso Maligalig, even fault underclassman Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV for the suicide of Angelo Reyes, claiming that the senator’s alleged “shaming” of the late general did him in. But shouldn’t Reyes have spilled all the beans earlier to spare himself of any and all shame?
Why such crap coming from them? Are they fearful that their past relations to these “pabaon,” “pasalubong,” and “conversion” practices may be uncovered, as some retired officers credit this top Yellow general for the introduction of this corrupt system?
My previous column placed the onus of the systemic corruption within Philippine society and the AFP on both the ruling class and the principal foreign power. Through their financial, monetary, foreign, media and political policies, they set the parameters for this country’s governance and shape society in their perverted image.
Hence, an extreme concentration of wealth in the hands of a few powerful families (or oligarchs) tied to the foreign power’s coattails continues. Together, they systematically impoverish the nation by, first of all, ensuring that government institutions give out ridiculously low salaries to mendicant officials who will be perpetually addicted to graft and corruption as an “unofficial” means of attaining a modicum of fine living.
Because of this, officials from every branch of government have rackets to augment their ridiculously low incomes. Supreme Court justices, for example, are accused of raiding the Judiciary Development Fund (much like a former Chief Justice) or selling case decisions (often involving land disputes); while Comelec syndicates abound; and the Department of Budget and Management releases funds only after percentages are deducted, ad nausea.
The inquiries are best laid bare before the public than shoved back to the “Old Boys’ Club,” where that top Yellow general is said to be a major enabler. As a decorated AFP man and West Point grad, this noted trapo is credited with the issuance of “envelopes” during his days as a general while making camp visits and the proliferation of jueteng when he was still chief of the Philippine Constabulary.
The solons definitely knew about the pabaons long before, which we wrote about as early as 2005. Why then did it have to take a Heidi Mendoza, George Rabusa or Antonio Lim to be prodded by Senators Jinggoy Estrada and Trillanes to force the issue out?
Perhaps the silence and now apparent turnaround of some wimpy legislators in the conduct of these public investigations is that many of them are no different from these tainted AFP generals. After all, don’t most of them benefit from “pork barrel,” lobby money, as well as cash-for-privilege speeches cum exposés, and the like?
Those who can’t take the heat can kill themselves, but the truth must out. The overwhelming popular demand is for more open hearings, as the nation now has a rare, historic opportunity to flush out all the shame and to turn over a new leaf.
This popular sentiment is all over and here are parts of an e-mail circulating today that reads “Launch Non-Stop Campaign Against Corruption, Shame The Corrupt, Redeem Our Land,” by Mila D. Aguilar (http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=501011960917&id=588112853):
“I am a jobless widow about to reach 62 years of age, and have nothing to lose but my life… Today, I am hearing calls to ‘moderate’ the investigations, turn the public hearings into closed-door ‘executive sessions,’ and generally, to ‘respect’ the ‘institution’ that is the AFP. I am also getting messages on FB trying to show how hopeless the situation is in many variegated ways. I smell a rat, and the rat is human. It infests not only the AFP, but ALL government offices, almost without exception. It has its tentacles in the private sector. And we all know it. But most of us think the only thing we can do is to do our own little good thing. Or in fact, not do anything at all. This despite the fact that we have already been gifted by God with a Heidi Mendoza and a General Rabusa. Can’t we see a candle — two candles — when they’ve already been lighted?... So in the light of recent developments… let me propose the following:
1. Do not ever consent to stopping the public, open-door hearings on corruption in the AFP, even if on the grounds that these are generated by politicians out for vengeance. It does not matter who or why…
2. What matters about the public open-door hearings is that the guilty are brought to shame, and the not-so-guilty are made to reflect on their own guilt.
3. Public hearings are our only way… to bring our nation to righteousness, by showing all and sundry what distinguishes right from wrong…
4. With our courts in disarray, shame is our only weapon now against misfits, so let us bring them to shame. With no viable legal means left at our disposal... we are constrained to use our culture of hiya, and use it to the hilt.
5. Let us bring the corrupt to shame through (various means)… Let us use our pens wisely…
6. Go to the streets, light a candle, hoot a horn, show that you are against corruption…
7. And most of all… Pray that the guilty will repent, and if they do not… That they will be punished, here and in the hereafter. Pray that the millions will wake up to righteousness… (and) For a final, absolute end to corruption.
Our call is: Oy kurap, tumigil ka! Tama na, sobra na!...”
And with it, I add: Expose the oligarchs, too! That will surely flush out the rats from our system.
(Tune in to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 6 to 7 p.m. on 1098AM; TNT with HTL, Tuesday, 8 to 9 p.m., with replay at 11 p.m., on GNN, Destiny Cable Channel 8, on “The Roots of RP’s Systemic Corruption: The Oligarchy;” visit our blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com)
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