Monday, October 22

WILL HypocriSHE RESIGN?

TO LIGHT A FIRE!


16-071022


For now, I doubt it very much. It would be strangely out of character for her to do so whether out of a sense of delicadeza, remorse or because of the still not so widespread public outrage against the widely perceived corruption and hypocrisy in the highest levels of her administration's officialdom. The immediately following reprints of recent Philippine newspaper opinion columns and editorials reflect such a dire situation.


Public opinion though certainly very much against her these days, there is still not enough quantum of public INDIGNATION. Perhaps the recent bomb-caused carnage at a Makati City mall has temporarily diverted our people's attention.


But the most significant and apparent reason for such a lack of public outrage stems from the fact that a good number of our people DO NOT TRUST any of our politicians who might return to power in the event she is booted out.


I myself have ambivalent feelings about such reasoning.


But it is certainly a legitimate concern for all of us to avoid a situation where she and her already fattened coterie of corrupt officials and political loyalists will be suddenly replaced by extremely lean and hungry but even more rapacious crocodiles.


And so, extremely difficult and improbable as it may sound, many of our people wish the following developments will happen soon enough.


  1. Morally honest, credible and young or not so young civil society leaders will surface and constitute the leadership of a genuine Moral Revolution, to bring radical reform in government and in private industry as well. For there can be no corruption in government, if private industry leaders continue to initiate and/or collaborate with the usual practices of BAIHAI and SELLO. Our government almost always BUYS enormously HIGH priced sweetheart deals, but SELLS ridiculously LOW priced giveaways. In fact, many of our corrupt government agencies have had and still have at their helm, top executives who had distinguished themselves in private industry. Some of them have also been prominent leaders among Catholic laypeople's organizations. Apparently however the moorings of their moral integrity were not so solid. And so they too succumbed to the peer pressure from their habitually corrupt colleagues and biggest BOSS. Or they themselves could not resist the succulent first fruits of their own BAIHAI and SELLO thieveries.


  1. The Catholic Church hierarchy too must have their own parallel reform agenda! Otherwise and as is, the Church will not have sufficient credibility nor the supernatural wherewithal to guide secular society in the latter's own moral regeneration.

    We must clamor for and support such initiatives. To start with, now that the usual Malacañang ploy of hosting so-called send-off banquets with bagmen and bagwomen milling around to distribute huge cash “gifts”, has been unmistakably perceived as occasions of large-scale bribery, the present Malacañang agency for so-called Religious Affairs, should be TOTALLY BANNED from participation in any manner whatsoever, whether before, during or after any church function, meeting, synod, and other canonical occasions for priests, bishops and cardinals. For it is a wellknown fact that in the past, these bagmen and bagwomen may not have resorted to conspicuous paperbags, nonetheless the brown envelopes that deceptively contained official papers and not official CURRENCY, were equally insidious gimmicks and occasions of sin or inducements for SILENCE when the time for appropriate pastoral indignation would arise.


Most importantly however, none of these two wellsprings of moral and spiritual reform would be worth a spit if these will be developed out of mainly secular or even patriotic motives. Or even if a spontaneous but shallow spiritual motivation enters into the picture. For experience teaches us that WITHOUT a real and regular prayer-based spirituality, and supernatural motivation, reform movements fade as fast as goody-good intentions


And so last Sunday's opinion columns of the Reverend Fathers Jerry Orbos, SVD and Jesus V. Fernandez, S.J. on the subject of prayer, which are reproduced hereunder must be divinely providential. And I still remember the period of the midsixties when the numerous overnight converts among us graduates of the Cursillos de Cristianidad, soon reverted to what we ourselves mockingly referred to as: “As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be”. In short, ningas cogon!


Similarly, the ZENIT News report of last Sunday's commentary on the Gospel by the Vatican's resident preacher, Reverend Father Raniero Cantalamessa, OFM (Capuchin) contained the following statements: “St. Augustine teaches that the essence of prayer is desire. If the desire for God is constant, so also is prayer. But if there is no interior desire, then you can howl as much as you want—to God you are mute”( www.zenit.org)


Providentially again it seems, ZENIT News reported last week on October 18 that the Archbishop of Dublin, Ireland spoke before the United Nations on the topic of Human Development, wherein he focused on Popularom Progressio, the encyclical of Pope Paul VI. Thus he stressed that “It is NOT possible to talk about human develoment without talking about spiritual development and the person's RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD” (www.zenit.org)


And so unless enough of us Catholics and other Christians take to heart what we learned long ago in our Catechism classes about the basics of our Faith, and thus embrace a genuine regimen of prayer, self-sacrifice, and regular recourse to the Sacraments in order to maintain a sincere personal relationship with our God, any proposal for a so-called moral regeneration will only breed an even greater cynicism and corruption among ourselves-- whether in or out of government.


For there is no other Way, nor Life, nor Truth except in Jesus Christ, the true God and true Man who proclaimed Himself as such for our sake and for our emulation, some 2,000 years ago.



GOD’S WORD TODAY

By Jesus V. Fernandez, S.J.
The Philippine Star

Sunday, October 21, 2007


Bored at Mass



If you ask a group in what place they are most bored, the answer might be surprising: “Church”. Church was the answer of 29 out of 100 people surveyed on a TV show. As a priest, this troubled me. I began looking out at the faces of people at Sunday Mass, wondering which are the bored ones? How could I be a better instrument of the Lord in sharing the depth and joy of my belief in Him. Discussing this situation with my friends, they thought that it was due to a lack of personal prayer, which is the foundation of the liturgy. If both priest and people are faithful to their daily prayer, the Sunday liturgy will become more meaningful. Let us re-examine what prayer is all about and how we can make it an essential part of our lives. Let us share with you some preachers’ thoughts.

Jesus has just shared a parable about the unjust judge and the persevering widow. The word is so simple and yet so profound, “the need to pray continually and never lost heart.” How can we do this? First: a deep belief and trust in God. God is our most trusted companion. He will watch our coming and going not only in our daily activity but also as we move closer to him. Or at times, drift away from Him, whether we are aware of it or not. How can we become more aware and more sensitive to Him?

Second: Set aside the time and place for prayer. We must get away for a time each day from the business of making a living. Then we can return aware of His presence with us. Have a private place we can retreat to and be with God on a more intimate basis. Pray with others at times — with our family, friends or prayer groups — and be rejuvenated. Third: Be aware to whom we are praying. And not simply “to whom it may concern”. We pray to God our Father, through Jesus, aided by the Holy Spirit. Even as we pray alone, we are never alone in prayer, for we are praying with the help of the Trinity, who are with us before, during and after prayer. Fourth: Listen to the Sacred Scriptures. All Scripture is inspired by God. When with faith we recognize that in Sacred Scriptures God does indeed speak to us, we should respectfully and humbly listen with openness and readiness, not only with our ears but also with our hearts.

Fifth: Avoid obstacles that usually discourage a personal prayer life. Sometimes we feel that God is delaying in giving us an answer. Be patient and persevere. Like all things that may be new, it takes time to get used to it, and patience is not our best quality. Don’t lose heart. Don’t grade yourself. God is the only judge. He will supply what is lacking. Becoming a prayerful person is a lifelong journey. And the more we realize how much we need God’s help, the more we pray each day continually, and His strength never to lose heart.

St. Teresa’s analogy to the garden as an instruction in persistence in personal prayer is particularly appropriate to today’s readings. She writes about the one who begins to pray as if we were in a garden which has poor soil and is full of weeds. God prepares the soil, uproots the weeds and sets out good plants, but the garden must still be watered — and that is the purpose of prayer. She describes four ways the plants can be watered. First, the water can be laboriously drawn from the well, and that is the only option open to the beginner. This requires that you keep your senses collected in solitude, to meditate. The second way, analogous to using a water wheel in watering your garden is the Prayer of Quiet where the will alone is occupied in love, but this is not possible for beginners. Thus the need for persistence. A stream or brook that waters the ground much better is a gift from God, but still must be directed by the gardener. This and the fourth kind of prayer, analogous to a thorough drenching by heavy rain which requires no labor on the part of the gardener, is a very advanced form of prayer and a gift from God. Reading St. Teresa’s own accounts assures us that persistence is not only required by the widow before an unjust judge, but from us all.

29th S in O.T.: Lk 18, 1-8



MOMENTS
Until when?

By Fr. Jerry Orbos
The Philippine Daily Inquirer
Last updated 03:25am (Mla time) 10/21/2007

MANILA, Philippines -- The story is told about a lawyer and a doctor who were courting the same woman. One day, the lawyer had to be away on a trip for a week. To make sure that he will not be at a disadvantage while he was gone, he sent her seven apples with a note: “An apple a day keeps the doctor away.”

* * *

In today’s Gospel (Lk. 18, 1-8), Jesus reminds us about the necessity of unceasing prayer. Yes, a prayer each day keeps the adversary away. How regular is your prayer life? How tenacious and how persistent are you in your prayer? The Lord reminds us today to pray, to pray always and to pray without ceasing.

* * *

“Act as if everything depended upon you, and pray as if everything depended upon God.” Has there been an instance in your life when all you could do was just to really pray? Have you ever experienced utter helplessness, and all you could do was to surrender everything in God’s hands? We don’t have to go through desperate moments to pray that way. May we learn to be more trusting in God and more hopeful in our prayer day by day.

* * *

Until when should we pray? There are people who have stopped praying because they claim their prayers are not answered anyway, or because they cannot stand the delay. True prayer is surrendering everything to God’s will, including the timetable.

* * *

Instead of praying, “Lord, I want it, and I want it now,” we should learn to pray, “Lord, I want it, but according to your will, according to your plan, according to your wisdom, and in your own sweet time. Amen.”

* * *

Human as we are, we only see what immediately lies before us. Let us not forget that there is a “big picture,” and that God, because He is God, sees not only the micro and the macro of everything. It is not easy to surrender everything to God in prayer. Often, because of lack of trust or because of impatience, we do things according to our own will and according to our own time frame; and, more often than not, we find ourselves in more complications and in deeper trouble than when we first started. May we not have too many regrets later in life, may we not say to ourselves: “If only I obeyed, if only I really listened to God …”

* * *

When we look at what is happening in the world and in our country today, where evil seems to thrive and triumph, we can’t help but ask and sigh: “Until when, oh Lord?” In our desperation, we may have even asked: “Lord, are you still there?” Why is it that the plundering, and the lying, and the cheating go on and on and there seems to be no end in sight? We take consolation in the words of today’s Gospel: “Will not God then secure the rights of His chosen ones who call out to Him day and night? Will He be slow to answer them? I tell you, He will see to it that justice is done for them speedily.” So, if we want change to come, let us organize day and night continuous vigils. Let us pray as a people and as a nation unceasingly!

* * *

Until when will evil triumph? Until we learn to let go of our comfort zones and safety zones, no change will ever come, and thus we help, knowingly or unknowingly, perpetuate the people who speak, act and live out evil in our midst. There is a time for the safety pin, which is a pin that bends so as not to prick or hurt; but there is also a time for the safety pin to become “straightforward and not allow itself to be used for silencing or shutting up the truth.”

* * *

Today is World Mission Sunday. I am writing this column from South Korea where I spent four years—1984-1988—as a missionary. It is our turn now to share our faith with the world, to dialogue with other faiths and cultures, and discover our commonalities rather than the things or issues that divide us. Yes, let us all do our share in pursuing our mission for God’s kingdom, worldwide and creation-wide.

* * *

Last night, I and other Filipino pilgrims experienced “unceasing prayer” at a prayer vigil in a mountain with the Korean visionary, Julia Kim, and some 1,500 Koreans. Also present were pilgrims from the United States, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan, Hong Kong and Australia. The Mass was presided by Bishop James Chang from Malaysia with 10 priests concelebrating. The autumn climate in Korea nowadays is pleasant. However, the climate in the Korean church toward the Naju phenomenon is not that pleasant yet; that’s why, all the more is needed unceasing prayer.

* * *

Remember: God answers prayers not “according to the availability of funds.” But according to His goodness and wisdom. Let us all be rest assured that God knows what is best for us. All the more reason for us to trust. And remember, in everything that happens, there is a reason, and there is a mission.

* * *

The CFM Solo Parents invites you to an Advent Recollection on Nov. 12, 2007, from 8 a.m. to 12 nn at Janssen Hall, Christ the King Seminary, 1101 E. Rodriguez Ave., Quezon City. Registration starts at 7:30 a.m. Topic: “Wholeness and Holiness” by Fr. Glenn Gomez, SVD.

* * *

Bantay Matanda invites you to a lay forum on “Ethics in Caring for Dementia Patients” at Janssen Hall on Oct. 27 at 8 a.m. Please call 3732262 or 09174167849 for inquiries.

* * *

A moment with the Lord:

Lord, help me to believe and proclaim “until then!” instead of doubting and asking “until when?” Amen.


Open suggestions to the President


A LAW EACH DAY (KEEPS TROUBLE AWAY)

By Jose C. Sison

The Philippine Daily Inquirer
Monday, October 22, 2007


Despite vehement denials and explanations, the alleged briberies in the ZTE broadband deal and the recent distribution of P200,000 to P500,000 “cash gifts” right inside the Palace cannot be said to be pure fabrications hatched by people with motives to destabilize this regime. The disclosures and declarations are detailed enough to inspire belief and elicit certain admissions from those implicated. If these are made in a legal proceeding, it can be said that “probable cause” already exists. This means that unless they are satisfactorily rebutted and plausibly explained, there are already sufficient grounds to engender a well founded belief that something wrong or illegal happened here.

It is definitely wrong for the Chairman of the Comelec that has no say or connection at all with the NBN project to be meeting and playing golf several times with the officials of the project proponents whether in Wack-Wack or in China. More suspiciously wrong is the presence of the President’s husband in one of those meetings, accidentally or not. To the great majority of Filipinos, these meetings are nothing more or nothing less than backroom negotiations to corner the multi-million dollar deal. Hence the claim that they were purely socials, looks so absurd, ridiculous and an insult to the intelligence of the Filipinos, more so because the threat to test its truthfulness in court has not materialized up to now.

More illicit is the distribution of those scandalously big amounts of cash inside the palace of a country where 70 percent of the people still live below poverty level. The revelation is so shocking as to leave Malacañang people running like headless chicken initially denying that there was such dole outs only to admit it later on but disclaim any knowledge or participation in it or any idea of where the funds came from. No one from the palace was allegedly even around when the bags of money were handed out. A lot of finger-pointing was simply going on. The worst part is that when the denials and finger-pointing do not seem to work, some palace lackeys and cabinet members have the gull to tell us that such cash distribution has been the practice for several years and are considered normal. With such kind of officials running our country, our politics has indeed become morally bankrupt.

But why is there no public outrage of EDSA proportions to these discouraging, revolting and nauseating wrongdoings and flimsy official justifications or explanations?

First and foremost because the opposition and those salivating for power immediately gives people the creeps that they are birds of the same feather, vultures of the same kind and politicians of the same breed that would just perpetuate the vicious cycle of bad governance we have been suffering for a long time now. Just glancing at them is enough to send a chilling effect. They “have been there and done that”, relished what they did, and thus would do it again and again. Removing those in power now through another people power revolution will just repeat the vicious cycle. People power fatigue has caught up on us.

Second and more important, Filipinos as Christians still believe in the inherent goodness of every human being. Many people, including myself still hang on to that thin thread of belief that the president is innately not that kind of person who would tolerate or actively participate in the perpetration of those reprehensible acts; that somehow she is over and above those crooked and dishonest practices happening around her except that with the tremendous burdens and overwhelming problems of the presidency, she could not really keep track of and preempt the moves and actions of her over eager lieutenants who see “destabilization” in every turn of events.

Unfortunately that thin thread of faith and trust is getting thinner and is about to reach the breaking point because of the President’s own acts or omissions. They indicate subtle attempts to suppress the truth or failure to take steps for the truth to come out.

The last minute cancellation of the ZTE contract apparently to forestall further inquiry into the anomalies surrounding it and the subsequent resort to the use of executive privilege when the inquiry remains unabated, have not strengthened that trust at all. On the contrary these moves further eroded the people’s faith in the president as they impliedly confirm the rottenness of the transaction and the president’s possible involvement in it. Invoking executive privilege to prevent Neri from elaborating on his testimony that he informed her of Abalos bribe offer and her reaction or inaction to it, speak volumes about her role in the deal.

The same is true of the recent cash giveaways at the palace. Initially, there was outright denial of the incident; that it never happened. When Congressman Cuenco confirmed it, the palace remained in a denial mode and told the people that Cuenco was merely joking. But when Pampanga Governor Panlilio showed media the P500,000 bundle of cash he received at the Malacañang meeting and Bulacan Governor Mendoza corroborated him, the palace minions like Bunye and Puno sang an entirely different tune. Bunye confirmed that some gift giving occurred but as early as the day after it happened, the President already asked PAGC to investigate them. Puno on the other hand pointed to Congress as the source of funds. Certainly this chain of events does not paint a good picture of the president.

The ball is now entirely in the President’s hands. If she does not want to resign and I agree with her that she should not resign for the sake of the presidency and our democratic institutions. But she should first, refrain from using the executive privilege and allow Neri to finish his testimony on the ZTE controversy before the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee; or second, asks her allies in the Lower House not to kill the impeachment complaint filed based on technicalities and sheer numerical superiority so that truth will come out as San Luis wants it; third create an independent panel composed of well respected and highly credible individuals from the private sector to investigate the Malacañang early Christmas gift-giving.

If the President heeds these friendly suggestions she will certainly restore the people’s faith and trust in the government and enable her to move on smoothly up to the end of her term leaving a brighter and lasting legacy. Otherwise, the horizon really looks bleak.

E-mail us at jcson@pldtdsl.net



EDITORIAL
Madness

The Philippine Daily Inquirer
Last updated 02:20am (Mla time) 10/20/2007


MANILA, Philippines -- It would seem that madness reigns in the highest councils of government. From the unraveling of the National Broadband Network (NBN) project to its (still developing) aftermath, the nation has been treated to the incredible spectacle of the country’s highest officials stumbling from one dumb decision to another disastrous mistake, compounding the overpricing of a contract with a series of bribe attempts, sometimes to persons who were most unlikely to just quietly pocket the payoffs.

The madness began when some smart operators in President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s administration thought they could hoodwink the Filipino people into accepting a contract to build the NBN at a cost of $329 million, double its actual cost by some estimates, although the same project could have been built at no cost to the government.

To get Romulo Neri, then director general of the National Economic and Development Authority, to drop his objection to having the project built with a loan from the Chinese government, instead of a build-operate-transfer scheme as President Arroyo had originally insisted, then-Chair Benjamin Abalos of the Commission on Elections allegedly offered to give him P200 million. (Abalos was said to be the broker between the government and the Chinese company, ZTE Corp.) And to make businessman Jose de Venecia III give up his own bid to bag the project, Abalos allegedly offered him $10 million. If those mind-boggling sums look unreasonably high to many people, it is probably because, in the past, bribes of such magnitudes were reserved for presidents.

Just as crazy (or was it?) was Malacañang’s response to the invitation extended by the Senate for Neri to testify. It gave him the green light to implicate Abalos but stopped him from revealing what the President did after he disclosed to her the bribe offer. But while Neri’s disclosure to the Senate put Abalos in deeper trouble, Neri’s silence about the President only made her look complicit as far as the ZTE deal was concerned and derelict in her duty to enforce the law.

As soon as talk started about impeaching the President, her allies and subalterns moved swiftly to vaccinate her with a weak complaint. But where they sought to introduce method, only madness surfaced. For who but a fool or a desperate soul would seek out the Anakpawis party-list group’s Rep. Crispin Beltran, an outspoken if not a bitter critic of the administration, to dangle P2 million in exchange for his endorsement of the flawed impeachment complaint? But that was exactly what the second highest official of the President’s own party Kampi did.

And who but the most cynical or stupid of political operatives would not think twice before distributing cash, ranging from P200,000 to P500,000, to more than 200 congressmen, governors and mayors inside Malacañang? Considering the big number of officials gathered there that day, that was an open invitation to be exposed publicly. And they pushed their luck some more by including on the list of recipients the likes of Pampanga Gov. Ed Panlilio, a priest who ran on an anti-corruption platform.

Trying to extricate the Palace from the payoff scandal, Local Government Secretary Ronaldo Puno first claimed that the money must have come from an association of local officials, which the group immediately denied. Next, he said it came from Speaker Jose de Venecia, prompting the latter to complain that “para tayong ginagago,” meaning Puno was trying to make a fool of everyone.

But it is not just Puno doing that. Taking everyone for a fool has been the underlying assumption of Malacañang’s strategy in responding to the NBN mess. And its latest move is no different: It ordered the Presidential Anti-Graft Commission (PAGC) to investigate the cash gift-giving inside the Palace.

When it was last heard from, the PAGC declared that it couldn’t find any evidence to support Neri’s bribery charge against Abalos. It was able to reach that conclusion after a “quiet investigation” in which neither the accused nor the accuser was asked about the incident. Only a national leadership that believes that Filipinos are incapable of rational thought would think they would find any PAGC findings credible, including one that would say Panlilio and the congressmen who confessed planted the money in those envelopes or bags.

The old saying could be true: Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad. With so much madness sprouting all over Malacañang, it looks as if the gods have been busy planting the seeds of its destruction.




EDITORIAL
Resist

The Philippine Daily Inquirer
Last updated 03:13am (Mla time) 10/21/2007


MANILA, Philippines -- Outrage and a sense of helplessness are the handmaidens of terrorism. For the nine who died and whom the nation mourns, there was an explosion, then nothingness. For the scores who were injured, there was an explosion, then darkness, then panic and a stampede. For everyone—for those directly affected and for a stunned and horrified nation—there is the reckoning, the demand for an explanation—and action.

Mass murder boggles the mind, and in the quest to make sense of a senseless act, authorities and the public demand not just answers (to which we are all entitled) but, at times, even scapegoats (which only compounds the tragedy). The public’s current unease can only get worse, as long as the public doesn’t know who perpetrated last Friday’s “Glorietta bombing.” The 24-hour mark passed, yesterday, with no one claiming responsibility for the dastardly act. All the public has, so far, is a troubling possibility: that a C-4 explosive, or at least some of its sophisticated components, may have been part of the bomb that was detonated.

Acts of terrorism can have one of two possible objectives in mind. The first is to force a government or a people to bow to the will of a minority. The second is to bring a government or society to its knees, by shattering public confidence in the authorities, and sowing division within society.

It didn’t help at all that the initial behavior of President Macapagal-Arroyo in reaction to the tragedy has compounded the public’s anxieties and uncertainties. She expended as much energy in issuing warnings to “destabilizers” as she did in condemning the bombing. At Camp Crame, she told police officials to “coordinate and cooperate with Church leaders,” a nonsensical directive, which only makes sense if seen from the perspective of cheap politics.

To be sure, one of the many horrifying aspects of this tragedy is that the list of potential suspects is extensive, ranging from Islamic terrorists to the military and to communist rebels. However, even the government itself has been put forward as a possible culprit, and what makes this significant is that such a scenario has crossed the minds of ordinary citizens, not just the usual critics of the government (though some of them, too, have been quick to assign blame to the administration).

It pains us to say this, but this harsh, cruel reality must be confronted by the administration. It is a terrible indictment of the credibility of government that the public considers its high officials among the suspects in such a ruthless crime. This means that our government must move heaven and earth to mount a credible, transparent investigation, even as it must protect the public from more terrorism amid perceptions that it may now be facing its enemies in a bloody end game or that its hand is being forced by radicals within its own ranks.

As analyst Ramon Casiple has said, only “succeeding incidents will create the patterns that make clear a decisive political—albeit extra-constitutional—strategy. Whatever happens, we have entered the final stretch of the political crisis.”

We therefore add our voice to all those that condemn this act of terror and call for sobriety and calm. But we also believe that we must steel ourselves, individually and collectively, to vanquish apathy. The calls for unity at this time are not ritual statements, they indicate a pressing need that must be addressed. What we cannot afford, at this point, is an uncritical, unthinking and unseeing posture toward what is at stake for us all as a nation.

The way forward begins with our leadership on all sides of the political aisle, committing to a timely and unflinching investigation of the circumstances surrounding the blast. We must welcome foreign expert assistance. We must insist on the full disclosure of information and on the utmost professionalism of our country’s police, military and civilian bureaucracy.

We are a people both compassionate and brave. We are a people who have faced mortal danger in the pursuit of peace, freedom and democracy. These are the non-negotiables. Each of us, and together, must take this time to vow that peace remains our ideal, freedom remains our defining cause, and democracy remains, as always, the sole means by which we confront, and overcome, national challenges.


SEPARATE OPINION
A flagrant and arrogant scandal

By Isagani Cruz
The Philippine Daily Inquirer
Last updated 03:34am (Mla time) 10/21/2007


MANILA, Philippines -- On Oct. 11, 2007, a scandal of mammoth proportions and unmatched in the dark history of corruption in the Philippines was perpetrated at a breakfast meeting in Malacañang. It was called by no less than the official resident of the misnamed Palace of the People—President Macapagal-Arroyo.

The guests headed by Speaker Jose de Venecia included mostly members of the House of Representatives, some 190 of them from the Rainbow Coalition. They were asked to support Ms Arroyo’s sham impeachment (to prevent a valid attempt that would be barred for the rest of the year), and they speedily agreed. Their hostess then reportedly withdrew, and the real purpose of the meeting began. This was the distribution of gift bags containing cold cash for the favored recipients.

The cash gifts, euphemistically called Christmas bonuses or financial assistance, varied in amounts from P500,000 for the important figures to P200,000 to P50,000 for the minor ones. The beneficiaries included selected provincial governors and city mayors, presumably to maintain or court their admiration for the incumbent President.

As expected, Malacañang disowned any part in the scandal but, as also expected, nobody believed it. It has so lost all credibility that the people now accept, almost as an automatic reaction, not what Ms Arroyo says but its exact opposite. The Cabinet members also pleaded, but only pro forma, ignorance of the atrocity committed on their own grounds.

Practically all of the guests denied having received the presents or at least sought to describe them as honest tokens of appreciation or intended benefits for their constituents. One of them described the cash doles as simply customary although he later said he was just joking. But one provincial governor was far from jovial and took the offering seriously as a violation of law that needed to be exposed and punished.

This was Gov. Ed Panlilio of Pampanga, the same province of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, with whom the priest does not share political persuasions or moral convictions. He said he innocently received a gift bag but was surprised to find that it contained P500,000 in crisp P1,000 bills. He instructed his finance officer to keep it intact in the provincial safe, and then he announced to the media the unwelcome gratuity.

As it turned out, some of his colleagues had also received similar thoughtfulness (another euphemism), but refused to be named, much less to identify the gracious giver, as if that were an impenetrable secret.

News of the scandal headlined in the Inquirer the following day raised public outrage and even disbelief. Not that it could not be committed by the present administration, given its shameful record of prevarication, but over the openness and insolence of its commission. It seemed as if Malacañang did not care how the people would react to this latest plunder of public funds that re-echoed that cynical and devil-may-care attitude of “What are we in power for?” pronounced decades ago by an also insensitive regime.

The provenance of the public funds must obviously be Malacañang as the venue if not the principal culprit itself of the offense. But their accountability must remain a mystery unless earnest inquiries are made to unravel it. The money that was squandered was received anonymously without acknowledging receipts to support the transactions before the Commission on Audit. Or if the fortune was private, who was the billionaire who distributed it, and why?

Can the disbursements for questionably public purposes and the non-identification of the recipients (who will not pay income taxes for the unreported earnings) be simply approved by the financial watchdog of the government? Would not this kind of maneuver impair the doctrine of separation of powers through the machination of money to undermine the independence of Congress and even the Judiciary?

I am saddened that the protest against this most flagrant and arrogant scandal has not received much support from the people who seem to have resigned themselves to the abuses of this government. Even as the dictatorship of Marcos continued for all of 13 meek years but finally exploded in the fury of Edsa I, the administration of President Arroyo is no less detestable and also deserves the thunder of our rage.

Our sharpest weapon against the present dictatorship is our freedom of expression by which we can proclaim our peaceful resistance to our imminent but stoppable holocaust. We should always bear in mind that the real power in the truly democratic society belongs not to the leaders who govern it, whether wisely or not. As an inherent human right recognized by our Constitution, that power belongs to us, the ordinary citizens like you and me—the governed.

The obvious leader in this endeavor is the media, the newspapers, television, radio and other modes of communication that should articulate the desperate yearning of our people for a government released from the avarice for power and stolen wealth and dedicated only to the pursuit of the common weal. I hope the other organs of information—and of enlightened criticism—will join the Inquirer in our campaign for this achievable ideal.



WITH DUE RESPECT
Watershed in good governance

By Artemio V. Panganiban
The Philippine Daily Inquirer
Last updated 03:36am (Mla time) 10/21/2007


MANILA, Philippines -- February next year will be a watershed not only in the reformation of our electoral system but also in the battle for transparency and accountability; in short, in good governance. Come Feb. 2, 2008, the chairs of the Commission on Elections, the Commission on Audit, and the Civil Service Commission will be due for replacements. Just as important, the chief of staff (COS) of the Armed Forces of the Philippines will retire on Feb. 9, 2008.

Commissions on Audit and Civil Service. In two previous columns, I stressed the need for transparency and public participation in the selection process for the new Comelec leadership. This time, I am calling for the same degree of transparency and vigilance in the appointment of the new leaders of the COA, CSC and AFP.

Like the Comelec, the COA and the CSC are essential democratic institutions. The Constitution safeguards their integrity and independence by detailing the qualifications of their chairs and members, ensuring their fiscal independence, guaranteeing their tenure, and enumerating their “power, authority and duty” which cannot be usurped, diminished or altered by any entity, not even by the president, the legislature or the judiciary.

An independent and courageous COA chair will assure transparency and accountability in the expenditure and use of government funds and property in all public offices. A vigilant and no-nonsense COA head is indispensable in preventing and exposing graft and corruption. COA reports constitute vital evidence in the prosecution of grafters and plunderers.

On the other hand, a nonpartisan and capable CSC chief will assure the continuation of essential public services, despite the worst machinations of the political leadership. In many countries like the United Kingdom and Japan, the civil service is so entrenched and so dependable that no political leader dares to ignore or defy its recommendations and regulations.

The incumbents, Guillermo N. Carague of the COA and Karina Constantino David of the CSC, have performed their jobs quietly and competently, befitting the dignity and importance of their offices. Their successors should do no less.

Choosing the military’s top gun. Given that authoritarian rule is possible only with the support of a compliant military, the appointment process for the successor of Gen. Hermogenes Esperon Jr., who will retire on Feb. 9, 2008, must likewise be conducted with utmost transparency. Openness is even more pressing in this instance because, unlike the heads of the Comelec, the COA and the CSC, the tour of duty of the AFP COS can be extended by President Macapagal-Arroyo.

True, the president is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. However, the Constitution mandates the AFP to be the “protector of the people,” and not the guarantor of the whims of the chief executive. The choice of a new AFP chief of staff, or in the alternative, the extension of the tour of duty of General Esperon, can signal the purity (or impurity) of GMA’s intentions during her remaining term, and beyond.

Credible officials for constitutional offices. Despite the ad nauseam criticisms hurled at the 1987 “Aquino Constitution,” still and all, at least one bright spot must be conceded: it has preserved enduring institutions, like the Comelec, the COA, and the CSC (as well as the Ombudsman and the Commission on Human Rights), that are calibrated to fulfill the Preamble’s noblest dream to “build a just and humane society” and to secure “the blessings of independence and democracy under the rule of law…”

To fulfill this dream, what we need are visionary men and women who will lead these sacred institutions. Between now and February 2008 are three months that should be used in assuring that only the best and the brightest, the brave and the untainted are installed in these offices, and in the highest position in our military establishment.

Of course, GMA is the key player in this effort. By agreeing to a transparent appointing process and, thereafter, by naming only the best and the brightest who pass the test of public scrutiny, she would rise above partisan wrangling and pave the way for her democratic legacy.

To accord GMA an unobstructed opportunity to ponder on this heritage, it may be prudent for all those who care—especially those in the media, the Church, the non-government groups, the academe—to grant GMA some breathing space and to critically collaborate with her in this effort to strengthen our democratic institutions through a transparent and participatory process of filling these vital vacancies with men and women of vision, gravitas and integrity.

Last chance at good governance. Who knows, GMA may yet surprise her harshest critics by naming outstanding citizens to lead the Comelec, the COA, the CSC and the AFP come February next year. Thereafter, she would still have enough time—about two and a half more years—to turn the tide of pessimism in her leadership, and to be remembered for a legacy of economic development in the most vibrant democracy in all of Asia.

However, if she fails our people’s expectations during the next three months and makes appointments that are calibrated solely to protect herself and to extend her hold on power, I think she will sink so deeply in self-gratification that even the patient people of goodwill—those of us who now are still willing to give her a last chance at good governance—will lose all hope in her redemption.

* * *



GMA to continue sliding to 2010 cliff?
POSTSCRIPT By Federico D. Pascual Jr.
The Philippine Daily Inquirer

Sunday, October 21, 2007


MORAL VACUUM: Unless President Gloria Arroyo is able to take immediately the moral high ground, she might just continue sliding downhill all the way to the cliff by 2010.

Her big problem is how to snatch back moral ascendancy, tame obstructionism, unite the country, and lead as a President should.

Every time a scandal rocks her administration, she tries arresting the erosion of her credibility by ordering the same tired investigation — to no avail.

The moral leadership vacuum is sucking all types of crusaders and pretenders. Seeing the paralysis, even Speaker Jose de Venecia has made it known that he was drawing up a moral renaissance program or something.

Other forces, including military adventurers, might be tempted to rush into the vacuum.

* * *

BREAKING BARRIER: Is the presidency of Gloria Arroyo doomed despite the glowing statistics she recites to convince the toiling masses that life has improved through her deft handling of the economy?

As we said in an earlier Postscript (Oct. 16), however, it seems nobody listens to the President anymore.

That is a basic problem. Until the communication barrier is broken, it may be futile for the President to send any message of reform and unity.

But how does she break down that obstacle to her convincing the public that she is clean and can be trusted?

* * *

CUT IT OFF: Let me recall my Postscript of June 14, 2005, that may be relevant to the issues. I asked then what Ms Arroyo, hobbled by criticism, can do to salvage her presidency and save the country.

A hint of an answer comes from Christ saying in Mark 9:43, 45-47:

43 And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched:

45 And if thy foot offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter halt into life, than having two feet to be cast into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched:

47 And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire:

* * *

DRASTIC MOVES: For starters, may I then suggest a few things to cut off:

President Arroyo should resign immediately from her posts, honorary or otherwise, in political parties and leave them alone. She should shun active partisanship.

She should stop giving politicians financial assistance. She should not allow any partisan group to meet in Malacañang. Neither should she attend a political meeting outside even as a guest.

The constitutional one-term limit of the President is supposed to ensure her focusing on the job — instead of harboring partisan biases or maneuvering for a followup term.

* * *

PARTISAN DOLES: The President should order a no-nonsense audit of Malacañang disbursements that could be construed as political doles or aid.

She should report in three months the audit findings and explain any disbursement found tainted with political color. If errors in judgment had been made, she should admit the error and make corrections within the fiscal year.

Finally, she should sign an order banning forever disbursements of the Office of the President with partisan color. Who decides if a payout is partisan? The auditor.

* * *

ZERO ASSET: Before the year is over, the First Couple may want to give up their material possessions, except the family residence. Their assets could be transferred to a foundation created to take legal possession of everything they own.

The foundation will be bound by an undertaking to reject any donation, contribution or assistance until one year after the President leaves office.

But the foundation will provide for the Arroyo couple’s reasonable upkeep, for the rest of their lives, in keeping with their status.

* * *

ZERO INCOME: The First Couple could also make a vow to reject incomes of any nature during her term. Incomes earned by their erstwhile assets go to the foundation, not to them. The President’s salary can go straight to her favorite charity.

Then the President will be able to declare in her annual statement that she has zero assets (except for the family residence) and zero income.

For one who wants to be a “good president,” Ms Arroyo should find acceptable this arrangement which is almost a vow of poverty.

Anyway, Gloria Arroyo, 60, and her husband, 61, have more than enough to last them three lifetimes. Their children are already established and their future is assured.

* * *

HIS FOUNDATIONS: First Gentleman Jose Miguel Arroyo should not hold office in Malacañang or act as a business/political conduit to the President. He should not practice law or any profession.

The President should declare that her husband has absolutely nothing to do with government or any transaction involving a government agency or any project imbued with public interest.

Government personnel who accommodate the First Gentleman shall suffer severe penalty. Private parties who offer him fees or commissions shall be exposed and blacklisted.

Mr. Arroyo should liquidate before Christmas all his foundations. Meantime, the foundations should stop receiving contributions, gifts and donations in cash or in kind.

* * *

GOOD FAITH: Once the President and her husband take these or comparable measures, she might just succeed in taking the moral high ground.

Properly executed and communicated, these moves might yet convince the people — even her political foes and critics — to grant her good faith and agree to cooperate for the sake of the nation.

Then a focused and nonpartisan Gloria Arroyo, worthy daughter of the late President Diosdado Macapagal, can devote the rest of her term to being a good president.

* * *

ePOSTSCRIPT: Read current and old POSTSCRIPTs at www.manilamail.com. E-mail feedback to manilamail@pacific.net.ph or fdp333@yahoo.com.





Friday, October 19

Tuesday, October 16

Of Bribers and Liars

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Bribery hides behind many masks. Strangers’ gift-giving on special occasions such as Christmas, birthdays and send-off occasions are a few of them. Bribery preys on the natural human reaction to be grateful to gift-givers. Particularly in the Philippines, CORRUPTORS take advantage of this trait because of the well-known utang na loob syndrome prevailing especially among the poor.


Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is now the Philippines’ most notoriously known exploiter of utang na loob, particularly in climbing up the ladder of political power and staying at its topmost rungs.


And so Ms. Arroyo’s congressional lackeys who apparently received and/or distributed the P200,000 to P500,000 bundles of BRIBE MONEY last Thursday, immediately tried to justify themselves after word leaked out about the sordid Congressional-Malacañang affair. They barefacedly referred to it during TV interviews as “Christmas money”, despite the fact that Christmas Day is still more than two months away.


Others called it “a form of help” from their political leaders. Or “remembrance”. Or “send-off gift” (for the boys) whose 2-week congressional break would start the following Monday.


But the contrary facts remain! The enormous (literally and figuratively) “cash gifts” were purportedly for public purposes such as for local “community assistance”. And yet no vouchers were issued or receipts required by the bagmen and bagwomen who did not identify themselves. Nobody came forward to say whose money it was. Or who ordered (but WHO ELSE!?) such a fantastically disordered way of disbursing money, whether it be the people’s or thieves’ money.


Just because he was told that the money could be used for assistance to his poor constituents, Governor Panlilio, a Catholic priest on leave from his sacred ministry, initially and naively (or perhaps HONESTLY), thought that it was NOT IMMORAL for him to have received his P500,000 share of the dole-out, despite the highly suspicious manner of its distribution.


However from now on he should remember to “Beware of GEEKS BEARING GIFTS”!


I sympathize with Governor Panlilio. Moral discernment is relatively much less difficult if one is not personally involved in the moral dilemma faced by recipients of such strange gifts. Governor Panlilio’s example therefore highlights the fact that we who are not materially poor, should have more EMPATHY for our poverty stricken countrymen who accept P500 each from candidates during election campaigns. Five hundred pesos for them would be enough to keep their families away from hunger for at least one week.


But personally for me, Father Panlilio’s priestly example has strengthened my will in pursuing this tedious, unpleasant and perhaps dangerous task of publicly condemning the OBVIOUS corruption, incompetence and immoral ACTUATIONS of our public officials. Hopefully it will also embolden many others to voice their outrage against these odious malpractices among our politicians. AND also hopefully, that it will lead the latter to repentance, reform and RESTITUTION of whatever was stolen, thus obtaining MERCY from the Lord. And so I have not used Christ’s most stinging epithet of “brood of vipers” against them.


Nevertheless His Mystical Body here on earth has long been scourged, crowned with thorns and nailed to the cross of these public officials’ HABITUAL corruption and lies with their pitiful consequences of grinding poverty for tens of millions of our people.


Monday, October 15

Let Not Impunity Prevail!

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NOT EVER in recent memory stretching back to the Marcos dictatorship, has there been such monsters of impunity rearing their ugliest and most shameful display of mass skulduggery – there over breakfast and dinner at Malacañang Palace last Thursday, October 11, 2007.


That day should be remembered as a landmark in the sordid history of shameless official corruption in the Philippines.


Their gross, conscienceless and utterly revolting mockery of our people certainly made those 190 or so BRIBE fattened members of the LOWEST House of Congress and some 50 local government officials, the MOST despicable in the eyes of decent people here and abroad.


But the most morally condemnable and despicable of them all must of course be “Her Smallness” Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. The deviousness of her mendacity last Thursday has no equal whatsoever in the history of wrongdoing emanating from the so-called Palace beside the Pasig River.


And so I should not from hereon ever refer to her as President of the Philippines.


For by comparison, Erap Estrada and even Ferdinand Marcos seem to have had less distorted consciences than “Her Smallness”.


The blunt headlines and reportage (emphasis added) of the Philippines Daily Inquirer the morning after, minced no words and nothing significant was left unmentioned or unclear.


“Palace fixes 190 solons”


JDV (Speaker Jose de Venecia) backs off; 'sham' impeachment rap goes to committee


“BATTLING FOR POLITICAL SURVIVAL for the third time in as many years, President Macapagal Arroyo yesterday summoned loyal congressmen to Malacañang and, in a show of strength using send-off gifts, forced Speaker de Venecia to back off from an impeachment move.


“ Envelopes containing cash amounting to between P200,000 and P500,000 were handed out to congressmen at the meeting, along with promises of pork barrel amounting to millions of pesos, hours before administration lawmakers took action in the House of Representatives to protect Ms. Arroyo from being impeached, several lawmakers present at the meeting told the INQUIRER.


WOW! And “wow” once more, but in deep outrage. Thank God however for Governor Ed “Among” Panlilio! He belatedly owned up to receiving P500,000 in cold cash. He now wants to return the money but only if his belated suspicion that it was indeed a bribery attempt will be confirmed by Malacañang's refusal to acknowledge themselves as the money's source. Naive but still honest!


But again, THANK GOD for honest Governor Panlilio and one other Governor who followed his example the following day, TODAY.


“(But) you (other) people, how long

will you harden your hearts?

How long will you delight in deceit

and go in search for falsehood? (Psalm 4:3)



And so I beg all the Bishops and Archbishops of this beleaguered nation to RISE UP with one voice, to condemn such a clearly outrageous flaunting of immorality and hypocrisy. These were HIGH CRIMES, compounded by the mass involvement of public officials with the use of our people's money! It was also sheer BETRAYAL OF PUBLIC TRUST.



LORD, HAVE MERCY ON US!

Thursday, October 11

Faith and Filipino Leaders

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It is quite safe to say that at least 90% of the high ranking officials in the Philippine government who have been embroiled in scandalous controversies over the last 50 years, and more so during these past months, were baptized and reared as Catholics.


To all of them who are still alive especially those who are involved with the bizarre ZTE and JPEPA imbroglios, they should read a recent blog article of Archbishop Oscar V. Cruz. After reading it, I wish all of them will also go through a sincere examination of conscience in the light of our Archbishop’s prophetic insight. The good prelate by the way has authorized me to make good use of his blog articles, for purposes of this website, under our best discretion. Thus, here it is.


Wednesday, October 03, 2007

ZTE, JPEPA, RP-CHINA Agreement

These are truly trying times in the Philippines. These are really shameful days for the Filipinos. The government continues to occupy a distinct place in the honor roll of corruption in the world. The national leadership remains in a dismal level of the negative approval and trust rating registered by the citizens. Meantime, millions of people are denied decent living; the sick die and the elderly cry for lack of basic social services, children of poor families have no opportunity to go to school.

Meantime, the people watch the spectacle of the present administration attempting to make one scandalous deal after another, with foreign governments. With its foreseen dismissal or demise soon, this administration appears to be in a hurry to make money, to satisfy a much bloated ego—at the expense of the country and its people as a matter of course. This is the classic example of the “I” above and over everybody and everything else.

Many municipalities have no electricity even. There are police stations with but one old typewriter each. Most of the country’s public schools do not even have a computer for their students. And there are students who do not even have pencils. And out of nowhere, there is the grand government project of a National Broadband Network courtesy of ZTE. This can only be the grand idea of a visionary with head in the cloud and feet in the air.

Many places are already loaded with their own garbage. Even Metro Manila is having a very hard time disposing its tons of waste. Many provinces are already suffering from the destruction of their environment. Recently, there were rivers in Central Luzon that have been found out and thus declared among the dirtiest in the world. And there is again this government going for broke in the matter of accepting foreign toxic waste through the JPEPA. Again, only a self-proclaimed visionary with much-inflated self-image can conceive such a betrayal of the people and violation of their land.

Many farmers have no farms to till. And even those who are entitled to have their own farmlands are violently driven away from the little place they till—if not meted the penalty of summary execution, such as the beneficiaries of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP). The CARP has become not only hard but also dangerous to actualize. Certain landlords have once more become not only powerful but also harbor hardcore greed. And here comes this government having the RP-CHINA AGREEMENT at heart. It is foreseen to cover not only CARP but even the CARP-able lands. Again, only a visionary without conscience and genuine vision could betray the farmers who have been feeding the people for centuries with their sweat and toil.

ZTE, JPEPA, RP-CHINA Agreement— go away!

+OVCRUZ, DD
3 October 2007



And so why, oh why do our officials today, most of whom are Catholics, NOT SEE anything to apologize for in what Archbishop Cruz and most Filipinos see as terribly shameful. Worse, they even continually boast that considering everything as a whole, this nation should be proud of its supposedly relentless march towards moral and material progress, and true democracy as well!


The answer may be found in another article from ZENIT posted here last October 9 entitled Confession Comeback, wherein Father John Flynn, L.C. quoted Bishop Thomas Wenski of Orlando, Florida who said that “the loss of the sense of sin is the SPIRITUAL CRISIS OF OUR AGE”.


But as far back as 1984, the late great John Paul II recognized this crisis when he initiated a Synod of Bishops to zero in on the Sacrament of Reconciliation (Sacramental Confession), in a global effort “to face the crisis of the sense of sin”.


That crisis still appears to be at its darkest here with us today, particularly among our nation’s Catholic leaders and officials.


Their habitual “intellectual dishonesty”, fueled by a desire to stay by hook or by crook, in or with the established political power structure, while enjoying the corrupting wealth it reaps and the false prestige it brings, inevitably leads to an even more sinister loss of the sense of sin.


For how else can we explain why these officials will deviously and secretly approve, yet publicly defend their approval of a huge OVERPRICE of an UNNECESSARY purchase, ostensibly because the money to pay for the purchase and its hidden pre-paid commission-bribery, will supposedly be lent out by the Supplier-Lender at below market rates of interest?


How else do we explain why soon after canceling this cyberspace boondoggle with its huge bribe-fueled overprice, yet another similar but much bigger boondoggle is being publicly and vigorously endorsed? But this time, with the prior deodorizing assistance of a highflying Catholic Religious priest from academe who also is Board Director of a corporate commercial giant…


How else do we explain why our nation’s spineless negotiators and the President herself, knowingly agreed to enter into a discriminatory, dangerous and unconstitutional Treaty and shamelessly defend it publicly by merely mouthing away its fatal infirmities with its few and shallow advantages?


And can we explain any other way why a congressman could so blithely spout in front of TV cameras motherhood statements about wanting to “look for the truth”, but by means of a deviously and maliciously crafted shallow yet treacherous impeachment complaint?


And why, oh why are our Catholic officials in government who prepared our national budget NOT bothered in conscience by endorsing the expenditure of billions of pesos to prevent life illicitly through condoms and to kill sacred and supernatural soul-infused human embryos through abortifacients? Do they not know or believe the Catholic and Christian article of faith that Christ suffered and died for each and every one such soul-person? And therefore each one of them as they themselves are, is worth MORE THAN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD!


Lord have mercy on us ALL…


I received this timely and appropriate message from friends, courtesy of http://susie1114.com/LiveALife.html. And so I dedicate it to all of us, especially to our Catholic government officials.



What Will Matter


Ready or not,
someday it will all come to an end.


There will be no more sunrises,
no minutes, hours or days.

All the things you collected,
whether treasured or forgotten,
will pass to someone else.

Your wealth,
fame and temporal power
will shrivel to irrelevance.

It will not matter what you owned
or what you were owed.

Your grudges, resentments, frustrations,
and jealousies will finally disappear.


So, too, your hopes, ambitions, plans,
and to-do lists will expire.

The wins and losses
that once seemed so important
will fade away.

It won't matter where you came from,
or on what side of the tracks you lived,
at the end.

It won't matter whether you were beautiful or brilliant.

Even your gender and skin color will be irrelevant.

So what will matter?
How will the value of your days be measured?

What will matter is not what you bought,
but what you built;
not what you got,

but what you gave?

What will matter is not your success,
but your significance.

What will matter is not what you learned,
but what you taught.

What will matter is every act of integrity,
compassion,
courage or sacrifice that enriched,
empowered or encouraged others
to emulate your example.


What will matter is not your competence,
but your character.


What will matter is not how many people you knew,
but how many will feel a lasting loss when you're gone.


What will matter is not your memories,
but the memories that live in those who loved you.


What will matter is how long you will be remembered,
by whom and for what.


Living a life that matters doesn't happen by accident.
It's not a matter of circumstance but of choice.


Choose to live a life that matters.

Author Michael Josephson

Thursday, October 4

Faith and Politics

Memorial Feast of St. Francis of Assisi

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There has been a recent upsurge of public interest in the U.S. about the interplay of religion and politics. Last month CNN-TV devoted a 3-hour long series on the subject, with Christiana Amanpour herself as the main commentator/interviewer. And a senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, namely John C. Green has gained a lot of readership with his latest book, The Faith Factor: How Religion Influences American Elections (Praeger).


John Green came to the fairly easy conclusion, among many others, that Presidential re-electionist George W. Bush slimly edged Democratic Senator John Kerry because of the solid support for Bush from Protestant fundamentalists.


Appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court have also been a magnet for religious controversy for many years now, because of speculations that with more pro-life advocates among the Justices, it could lead to the reversal of the long standing Roe vs. Wade Decision, and thus prohibiting early stage abortions.


In the Philippines, the Roman Catholic Faith has never been a significant, much less a decisive factor during elections despite the fact that ever since its first electoral contest some 75 years ago, at least 80% of the voters have been baptized Catholics. In fact I remember Paul Aquino (youngest sibling of national martyr-hero Ninoy Aquino) emphatically telling me when he was the overall campaign manager of the late Ramon Mitra’s unsuccessful presidential bid in 1992, that the Catholic hierarchy’s public endorsement of Mitra would in fact be fatal to their cause!


And I for one believe that any such public endorsement from any religious faith, denomination or group, IF WITHOUT any clear and unmistakable explanation as to its IMPERATIVE and SERIOUS MORAL BASIS, would be undue interference on FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE. I therefore also believe that imperative moral options but limited to serious matters where a wrong choice would directly, seriously and demonstrably violate the natural law, religious freedom or the obvious common good and the like such as fundamental human rights, including even the public condemnation of atrocious moral behavior of public servants, are the instances where religious shepherds have a duty to guide and admonish their respective flocks.


In fact here in the Philippines Catholics somehow expect their Bishops to speak out in condemnation of what they believe is extremely wicked or scandalous moral behavior of important political leaders such as those who triggered the EDSA One and EDSA Two crises.


John the Baptist at the cost of his life spoke out PUBLICLY against Herod’s scandalous and adulterous PRIVATE relationship with his brother’s wife, with the apparent approval of Christ Himself who was then already engaged in His own public preaching. There is therefore all the more reason for Catholic Bishops to speak out against widespread FRAUDULENT and illegal gambling which victimize the poor, especially if perpetrated under the auspices of public servants and/or their relatives. Or to warn the people against habitual lying, stealing and hypocrisy particularly among government officials. And to protest against the plunder of public funds regardless of who are involved. For all these high crimes impoverish the poor even more, and provide not only a lifelong bad example to the youth and future public servants but also encourage other politicians to engage in similarly atrocious behavior affecting the obvious common good.


But the bigger burden of responsibility to live our faith in the public arena and courageously witness to it especially in the fields of economics, public governance and politics which are all closely intertwined, rests on the shoulders of us the lay people. We are and should be its FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE. Religious leaders with their institutions, form the SECOND or AUXILLIARY lines of defense against atrocious public immorality and corruption.


Thus I wish to zero-in on OUR most common MORAL failing especially with respect to our Catholic politicians we have elected to high office. Many of them are lawyers and have their own highly rewarded advocates, defenders, partisan supporters and political partymates, most of whom are graduates of the best Catholic schools or of the top State University, and thus are far-and-away more intellectually gifted than our poor people. It is apparent however, that INTELLECTUAL DISHONESTY and/or INTELLECTUAL INCONSISTENCY are their common habits and weapons to gain and stay in power. And yet the moral virtues of intellectual honesty and consistency antedate even Christianity and Catholicism, as far back or even earlier than Aristotle, Plato, Socrates and Virgil.


For our Catholic politicians and we their partisans are in general NOT AT ALL LESS intellectually dishonest or intellectually inconsistent than Protestant Christians, Buddhists, Jews, Hindus, Muslims or even atheists and agnostics. In short, we the supposed salt of humanity at least here in the Philippines, have grossly failed even if only in the moral and political dimensions. And thus more so if the spiritual and theological aspects are considered. For even if we are not directly involved in doing what is morally wrong or injurious to our citizenry, we are at least indifferent and nonchalant in the face of it.


Moral outrage or pangs of conscience? Nah! In fact it is safe to say that our Asian neighbors none of whom are predominantly Christian, have demonstrated significantly higher standards of morality in government. Shame on us!


Yet we condemned Marcos and Erap and their respective principal partisans and collaborators. But as soon as these were thrown out into the dustbin of history, we stepped into their old shoes and sooner or later became nearly, or just as bad. Or even WORSE!


Thus too we saw former leaders of anti-Marcos freedom fighters, anti-Erap street marchers, some of them Church leaders, priests, nuns, or supposed Marian devotees too quickly and easily migrating with their usual fervid but shortlived loyalties from one disgraced partisan camp to the next politically victorious cabal.


And so I get immediately prickly whenever I hear some seemingly wise political commentator even among my own friends and acquaintances who fall into the prevalent elitist habit of blaming “the poor and uneducated” who rush in droves to vote for traditional (meaning, unscrupulous!) politicians come election time.


This elitist view overlooks the fact that our trapos (dirty rags, in the vernacular) have always had in their deep pockets the rich and powerful, a big banker, a business tycoon, even a high ranking Churchman sometimes, many highly paid lawyers among the biggest law firms, top ranking military and police officers and their allies among other well entrenched powerful politicians. These are their main organizers, propagandists, campaign managers, treasurers and procurers of “guns, goons and gold”. Plus a COMELEC bigwig to boot.


Thus in fact it is the poor, some 80% of our population, who are almost inevitably attracted like moths to these trapos’ false glitter and seeming invincibility. And so the POOR are burned and betrayed, again and again. Victims of slick but dishonest political propaganda, gangsterism, or the lure of a few hundred measly pesos come every election time.


Worse, after every election, it is again the triumphant cabal of rich and powerful trapos and their mercenary partisans who corner and enjoy MOST of the power and financial windfall out of the spoils of political warfare.


So, do we blame the poor, or weep for them? And was it the impoverished yet neglected Lazarus, or the rich but uncaring Dives, who ended up in the fiery depths of HELL?