On official allowances (updated)

A quick political update as we go into the long weekend. The Inquirer editorial looks at the implications of the baranggay election. In his blog, Jove Francisco covers the (unexpected) return of Sec. Ermita:

Ermita denied he’s battling it out with Puno or that may samaan sila ng luob…but he gave a very meaningful line during his presscon today about the payola issue.

PDI’s Mike Ubac asked Ermita’s reaction about the admission of a local government group that they were the ones who distributed the cash gifts inside the palace and then followed it up by asking if he will allow such a thing to happen, kung siya ang tatanungin.

Ermita said “By golly, definitely not!” and then added “Alam ninyo naman na ako ay nasa loob lamang ng opisina ko nuong pumutok iyan!”

And during the ambush interview portion of the presser, Ermita even said “Basta hindi lang ako maging intrigero…(laughed again)”… some observers say, malinaw na parinig ito sa kung sino mang “kaaway niya”.

Another factor that bolstered suspicions that there is friction between these two cabinet officials is the fact that Ermita and Puno released opposing statements today about the possible presidential appointees in the vacant posts at the COMELEC.

Puno supposedly confirmed that the shortlist of names came from the Executive Secretary’s office and that it was released 2 weeks ago.

Ermita denied this saying that based on the process they follow “it is impossible!”.

Amidst the difference of pronouncements, both of them also declared that they are not fighting and are actually long time pals.

But the reported rift, though already denied by all parties concerned, is revealing a much bigger picture.

The bigger picture that the “on going” tension between the two largest member parties of the coalition (LAKAS and KAMPI) is still very much “happening”…a power play that has been happening since the start of the 2007 elections (Remember this? Just go back to past blog posts).

Puno, who is from KAMPI, is said to be the main man behind efforts to solidify the alliance of Erap and PGMA.

Ermita, on the other hand is a known LAKAS stalwart who traces his ascent to power from his links with FVR and JDV.

Thing is, both FVR and JDV have been at odds with the President after the following political developments, including the ZTE broadband deal, the Payola issue and the Erap pardon.

(So hindi lang ang opposition ang nagkakagulo as a result of the pardon, even the administration is problematic… coalition wise, for many other reasons. This aside from “the CHAVIT SINGSON problem” that palace sources say is also making the heads of many administration officials ache, kakaisip paano ito malulunasan o “mapipigilan”.)

BUT, despite all these, Ermita was quick to herald that everything’s a-okay within the coalition.

He even made a prediction that FVR will not forge an alliance with the opposition, because FVR “hates destab”.

And another interesting thing that happened today was…Ermita’s move to defend PGMA’s decision to pardon Erap.

A move that may well be different from that of his former boss–FVR… but, as some observers say, is quite logical for officials who have “been in politics for a long time.

Ermita’s parting words today:
“Huwag kayo niniwala masyado sa rumor, hindi tutoo yan, I am still around, hahahaha…”

You have to see the report and hear the way he laughed after declaring he’s still around, masasabi ninyong “napaka lutong” ng kaniyang halakhak.

Manuel Buencamino looks at the ability of the president’s supporters to rationalize their continued support.

On to the long weekend’s readings.

One of my favorite political autobiographies is Jose E. Romero’s Not So Long Ago: A Chronicle Of My Life, Times, & Contemporaries published in 1977 by Alemar-Phoenix. To my mind, it’s about as honest as any politician’s account of his life can be expected to be. Romero, who was a congressman, assemblyman, majority floor leader, Constitutional Convention delegate, and then Secretary of Education and sugar lobbyist, covered political events in which he played a part from 1925-1946 (it seems he died before he could complete his memoirs).

His memoirs helps explain how government officials went from living within their means to trying to supplement salaries that failed to keep up with inflation or the requirements of their jobs:

I entered Congress just when the great economic depression of the thirties began to be felt, and the first thing we did was to reduce salaries and expenditures by 10%. Congressmen’s salaries then were fixed at P600 a month, P7,200 per annum, and in our time there were no extras or allowances whatsoever. The reduction in our salaries of 10% amounted to P60 per month, and this was applied to all government employees, so that teachers who were getting P50 a month got a cut of P5 a month. It pleases me now to recall in what good spirit this sacrifice was made by all. Because we did not resort to deficit spending, the prices of everything, especially rice and other foodstuffs, remained low, so that no hardships were felt, especially by the poor. There was no complaint or discontent because everybody sacrificed equally. At that time the national budget was only about 100 million pesos. It is a mere pittance compared to the budget these days, but of course our population has increased tremendously and then the peso today is worth far less than it was then. The national debt was also around 100 million dollars, again a mere pittance compared to our present national debt. Our reserves in gold bullion and dollar deposits were more than 100% of the currency in circulation, and the peso was sound. In fact, when about that time the dollar was devalued, the American government had to pay us the difference between the value of our deposits and the devalued dollar.

This account by Romero brings up one (harmful) change over the years, which is that government salaries for officials that hold a great deal of responsibility, have shrunk while the salaries of the rank-and-file, on the other hand, remain all right. The gap between a congressman’s salary and that of a government director is almost negligible, while the gap in responsibilities remains vast. To compensate, all sorts of allowances have to be created which supplements the take home pay, but does not address the need to offer salaries commensurate with what’s expected of an official.

In this blog, a reader kindly calculated, more precisely, modern-day approximations of the value of various prewar official salaries (based on official figures I provided) to an extent that exceeded my own attempt at a computation of the value of the President’s salary over time.

Of course if you were to add up the various allowances members of Congress are entitled to, their salaries are fairly generous but the problem is that it involves quite a bit of accounting sleight-of-hand, which corrodes accountability. Romero’s memoirs points out the precise point when congressmen decided they have to find ways to boost their salaries. In his book, he wrote of the situation the last Congress of the Commonwealth faced, in 1945:

The members of Congress, like most other citizens, had lost most of what they had. When President Osmena came from the U.S., the best gifts that he could give to members of Congress was a khaki shirt, a pair of khaki trousers, and a pair of shoes. Most of the members of Congress attended sessions in this attire, and it almost looked as if this was the uniform of the lawmakers. To compound the problems of the members of Congress and everybody else, inflation was rampant. Even sugar was lacking and was selling at five times the usual price.

We had to commute between the House of Representatives and the houses where we were living in cargo trucks hastily converted for the use of passengers and we had to pay a very high fare. In order to alleviate the situation of the members of Congress who were getting no more than the six hundred pesos per month provided for in the Constitution, President Osmena, in the use of his emergency powers, authorized the Auditor-General’s Office to make advances to the members of Congress to enable them to meet the cost of living in Manila during the sessions. This was the principal reason afterward for the approval of the much criticized Back Pay Law.

At the end of the sessions, the Auditor-General was pressing for payment of the advances made under the authority given by President Osmena. Their term of office was expiring. The solution was found in the payment of Back Pay to the members of Congress for salaries due them during the war. This move was bitterly criticized by the public, and the question became an issue in the succeeding elections and caused the defeat of many members of Congress in their bid for reelection.

Taking an objective view of the situation, however, this form of relief for the lawmakers was almost a necessity. The amount involved was only a little, over P20,000 for every member of Congress, and the payment made was only once. Of this amount each legislator had already received some P8,000 in advances. It was simply impossible for the lawmakers to live in Manila at six hundred pesos a month with the inflation then rampant. Had the lawmakers at that time less respect for the Constitution, and had they then discovered the magic formula of the allowances, they could have solved their problem by making payments to themselves, not in the relatively small amount of P20,000 but ten times as much, as succeeding legislators were to get -and not only once, but every year.

Many of the members of Congress were defeated in the election that followed on this issue of back pay, but later members of Congress were to be reelected again and again after paying themselves much more in the form of allowances than the legislators of 1945 paid themselves in the form of back pay. This may mean either that our electorate have already become cynical and callous or that the greater fund available for election expenses is more effective to win votes than as an issue against the beneficiaries of these objectionable payments. Had the lawmakers in 1945 voted themselves two hundred thousand pesos yearly instead of twenty thousand pesos once, perhaps not so many of them would have been defeated. But then the temper of the people at the time was not propitious for such disregard of the proprieties, and there might have been violent demonstrations. Cynicism crept in slowly but steadily and, later, the voters ceased to mind anymore what in 1945 not only would have been fatal issues but might also have triggered violent reactions.

So the moral of the tale is things haven’t always been the way they are, but that things can change pretty swiftly and then gain their own momentum.

Incidentally, I had a meaty exchange with a reader about the prewar gold reserves of the Philippines. The reader emailed me this query, which I reproduce in full:

Dear Manolo,

I’ll go direct to the point. Please help me unravel a mystery that has not only aroused my curiosity but baffled me as well. With your considerable reputation as a historical sleuth, I’m confident you can solve or otherwise clear this up. Whatever will be the outcome will make for a good thriller. Of that I’m sure.

The mystery concerns what I call our national treasure consisting of some 20 tons of gold bars. This represents our country’s entire gold reserve at the time and quite possibly the total output of all the gold mines operating in the Philippines. The fabled Yamashita treasure, which in all likelihood is just a figment of the imagination, seems like loose change compared to the enormous value of this real-life treasure which may exceed 20 billion U.S. dollars using the current price of gold per kilo.

When Bataan, Corrigedor, Manila and the rest of the Philippines were about to fall to the Japanese in 1942, all the gold bars were removed from the Central bank located then at the port area in Manila and ferried by a navy vessel to Corrigedor. The precious cargo was loaded onboard the U.S. submarine U.S.S. Trout. On February 22, 1942, it left Corrigedor for Guam. Also aboard were President Manuel L. Quezon, his family and a few, select members of his wartime cabinet. President Quezon and his party, however, landed at Cagayan de Oro and then motored to the highlands of Bukidnon where they were flown to Australia. From there, they went to America where President Quezon lived in exile until his death at Lake Saranac in New York in 1944. So much has been written about the harrowing and exciting escapes of Pres. Quezon and General Douglas MacArthur from the “Rock” fortress, the latter by PT boat. Both were highly-secret naval operations to save the two from eventual capture by the enemy. But little, if none at all, is known about the enormous cargo of gold which President Quezon obviously brought with him. It seems this was the bigger secret, and it is not far-fetched to think that the Japanese were also after it.

The gold bars reached Guam and were transferred to the heavy Cruiser USS Michigan which sailed on to San Francisco where they were finally off-loaded at the wharf there. This is where my story ends, and the mystery begins.

Where did the shipment go from San Francisco? Were the 20 tons of gold all brought to Fort Knox where gold bullions such as these are generally known to be stored for safe-keeping or somewhere else in the United States? Assuming that they were indeed kept at Fort Knox, what happened to them after the war? Were they ever returned to the Philippines? If so, when and by what means?

There should be a paper trail in this secret odyssey of our national treasure. The Central Bank should or ought to know the whole story. The time has come to tell this in its entirety. Whether by design or plain oversight, we’ve been kept in the dark for close to 63 years.

History abhors a mystery. So do I and, of course, you. I will be vastly relieved if this story has a happy ending; that our national treasure is intact afterall and has not been lost or stolen.

Kindly take over where I left off at the wharf in San Francisco and finish the whole drama to its conclusive ending whatever that may be: either good or one more national disgrace.

Very truly yours,

FERNANDO A. ALMEDA, JR.
President
Surigaonon Heritage Center
Parola Boulevard, Surigao City

My response was as follows:

Thank you for your letter.

The disposition of the Philippine Treasury (its transfer from Manila to Corregidor, and the transfer of a large portion of it to the United States) was accomplished by a committee presided over by Chief Justice Jose Abad Santos (in his capacity as Secretary of Justice and Finance in the War Cabinet) and included Manuel Roxas. Treasury certificates and paper currency were burned after being itemized and notarized in a list. Coinage was dumped in the sea (where some of it was salvaged by the japanese, the majority of the coinage, however, being salvaged by the US Navy after the war).

President Quezon did not leave on the same submarine on which the Philippine bullion reserves was transported. The submarine you mentioned, the USS Trout, was not the submarine he traveled on, the USS Swordfish. Neither did Philippine officials leave on the same date as the shipment of Philippine gold reserves to the USA.

You will find desciptions of this process in the published biography of Chief Justice Jose Abad Santos by Justice Ramon Aquino:

Part of Abad Santos’s work on Corregidor as secretary of finance was the custody and disbursement of government funds. With [Vice President] Sergio Osmena, [Philippine Army Chief of Staff] Basilio Valdes, Jr., [Colonel] Manuel Nieto, and members of the American High Commissioner’s staff, he checked the gold bullions and silver coins deposited in Corregidor. He supervised the shipment of these by submarine to the United States. He superintended the burning of about forty million pesos in paper bills.

Justice Aquino’s sources are the Philippines Free Press February 17, 1951 and Carlos P. Romulo’s I saw the Philippines fall.

Indeed in most histories of this period the transfer of government funds from Manila to Corregidor and then to the USA is mentioned, and the care with which this was done, noted. As early as 1942, in the book Serpent of the Seas, by Commander Harley Cope, USN, you will find this (pp.222-225):

Another of our asiatic submarines had a unique assignment. Lieutenant Commander Frank W. “Mike” Fenno was given the job of evacuating the precious metal belonging to the Treasury of the Philippines and the banks from the Islands before the Japanese got their hands on it. This tall, sloping shouldered ex-captain of a champion Naval Academy baseball team -and who pitched our Asiatic Submarine baseball team to a Fleet victory when I was out there in the s-40- had been currently bringing in ammunition for the anti-aircraft guns on Corregidor. The shells were als worth their weight in gold.

The Japanese knew of course that there was a large amount of gold stored on Corregidor and in the bank vaults of Manila. Needless to say they were most desirous to obtain it. Efforts to prevent the Japanese from getting the gold were under way immediately after the war begun. American and Filipino stevedores worked day and night collecting metals, currency and securities belonging to the Philippine Commonwealth, to banks and mines and individuals.

On the night of February 4th, Captain Ferino brought his submarine into the harbor on the south hook of Corregidor, unloaded his precious cargo of much-needed anti-aircraft ammunition and took on gold and silver. Before the morning’s early light could expose the submarineto the eyes of Japanese patrolling planes it had slid out of the harbor and remained submerged during the day. After nightfall it was again alongside the dock and ton after ton of gold and silver was loaded aboard. This task was completed about 4 a.m. -too late to carry out the next assignment. The next night the submarine kept a rendesvous with an auxiliary vessel carrying the securities that were to be evacuated.

Mr. Woodbury Willoughby, former financial adviser to Mr. Francis B. Sayre, Philippine [High] Commissioner, to whom the Navy gave much credit for collecting the wealth of the Philippines, was on the auxiliary vessel and described the submarine’s appearance in the dark.

‘When nightfall came,’ related Mr. Willoughby, ‘the auxiliary vessel sailed from Corregidor to the rendezvous with her load of securities. The submarine did not make her appearance immediately. But, after a while, the dark hulk of the submarine pushed through the surface.

‘It took about 20 minutes to transfer the securities. Then Commander Fenno made a remark I’ll never forget. His crew had gone below and he was standing by the conning tower preparatory to giving the order to submerge. ‘Any passengers?’ hr asked cheerfully. Any of us would have been glad to get aboard that submarine but it was not for us to leave. We had to tell him no.’

During the long trip from Manila to Pearl Harbor several Japanese ships came within range of the American submarine and Captain Fenno lost no time in sending them to the bottom. The mere presence of tons of gold aboard could not keep my good friend ‘Mike’ out of a fight.

On March 20 Commander Fenno was awared the Distinguished [Navy] Cross for his entire crew of six officers and sixty-four men received Silver Stars for the feat of spiriting out a vast treasure of gold and silver from Corregidor right under the nose of the Japanese forces, and then sinking three of their ships.

Incidentally you will note that the Swordfish was commanded by Capt. Chester Smith, and that it left Corregidor Feb. 19, nearly two weeks after the departure of the bullion.

The circumstances surrounding the transfer of the Treasury are documented in The Sixth Annual Report of the United States High Commission to the Philippine Island to the President and Congress of the United States, Covering the Fiscal Year July 1, 1941 to June 30, 1942 Washington D.C., October 20, 1942 (pp. 48 to 58 chronicles this in extreme detail; the relevant portion as per your inquiry follows):

(pp.57-58)

“BULLION AND CURRENCY HELD BY COMMONWEALTH GOVERNMENT ON CORREGIDOR

“In addition to the valuables taken to Corregidor by the Office of the High Commissioner, a large amount of gold, silver, and paper currency was held there by the Commonwealth Government and was never turned over to the Office of the High Commissioner for safekeeping. Ther gold and sliver, which served as currency reserves, were on Corregidor, in the Philippine Treasury Reservations on that Island, before the war started. The gold comrpised 269 bars with an indicated weight of 1,343,493.95 grams and was derived from the melting of $805,410 face value of United States gold coins held by the Commonwealth Government at the time of the devaluation of the dollar in 1933. The silver was in the form of 1-peso coins an aggregate face value of P16,422.000. There were several small pieces of gold and silver in addition to the above. All of the gold and a large amount of 1-peso coins were loaded under the supervision of Commonwealth officials, headed by Vice President Osmena, and ere sent to the United States as ballast on the same submarine which carried the gold held by the High Commissioner.

“It Is believed that the Philippine paper money in the Treasury reservation was brought to Corregidor by the Commonwealth officials who accompanied President Quezon when he was evacuated from Manila. It appears from the records supplied by the Commowealth government that there was, early in Jaunary 1942, P78,261,825 in Philippine paper currency of various denominations held by the Commonwealth in its vaults on the Treasury reservation. This was subsequently increased by P19,900,000 clearing house funds, as noted above, making a total of P98,161,825.

“Twenty million pesos, all in Philippine Treasury certificates of P500 denomination, are reported to have been burned on January 19 and 20, 1942, on Corregidor by a committee designated by the President of the Philippines [footnote 17: The committee consisted of Messrs. Sergio Osmena, Vice President of the Philippines, Jose Abad Santos, Acting Secretary of Finance; E.D. Hester, Economic Adviser of the High Commissioner; and Col. H.F. Smith, United States Army). On January 21, 1942, it is reported that P500,000 were withdrawn from the Treasury Reservation and placed at the disposal of Mr. S.D. Canceran, special disbursing officer, Office of the President of the Philippines, to be disbursed by him for the purpose of paying of salaries and wages of officers, employees, and laborers of the Government, and for such other purposes as might legally be authorized. A message received from Corregidor in April [1942] indicates that prior to the capitulation of the fortress P50,097,925 in Philippine paper currency which was in the Treasury vaults was destroyed as well as P1,000,000 which was in a safe of the former Office of the President of the Philippines at Fort Mills, Corregidor.”

On pp. 118-119 the same report gives a full accounting of Philippine government funds in the United States; the gold is listed on a table on p. 118, in US dollars, at $1,360,621.08 and on p. 119:

“Currency Reserves in the United States. -When the Philippines are reoccupied it will almost certainly be necessary to adopt a new currency system. The Commonwealth government will be fortunate in having at its disposal for this purpose ample reserves now held in the United States. There were on deposit on June 30, 1942, in the United States Treasury $133,813,902.59, representing reserves of the Philippine currency. In addition, there was a small amount ($355,831.44) of currency reserves onm deposit with a private bank in the United States and the United States Treasury is holding for the Commonwealth gold bullion valued at $1,360,621.08 [footnote 40: This gold was brought to the United States by submarine after the war with Japan started as described in the section of the report entitled”Program for the safekeeping of currency, gold, securities, and other valuables.” Its value has been computed at $35 an ounce. See pp. 46-57 of this report]. The total of these items is well in excess of the largest circulation of currency that there ever was in the Philippines. As has been noted earlier in this report, ther greatest circulation of which we have record was P200,445,432, equivalent to $100,222,716, on September 30, 1941.

“The Commonwealth Government also has in storage in the United States a large number of silver 1 peso coins which were brought to the United States by submarine after the war started (see p. 57 above) After reoccupation of the Philippines it will be possible either to reissue these coins or melt and remint them.”

As for the disposition of government funds from 1942-45, the relevant executive issuances are in Executive Orders of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Manila, Bureau of Printing 1945

I hope this answers your quiery to your satisfaction. There was no mystery surrounding the transfer of treasury funds as they were the currency reserves of the country. It was against the value of this gold that emergency wartime currency was issued by the guerrillas.

In response to the above, I was highly gratified to receive the following response:

Thank you likewise for your very kind, comprehensive and scholarly reply to my query. I’m completely satisfied that we have a happy ending here. Obviously, those were the times (perhaps just a golden memory) when public servants can be trusted with million of pesos of the people’s money.

You’re absolutely right. President Quezon and party did not leave onboard the submarine USS Trout but the USS Swordfish. I assumed that he did so because the date of his departure was Feb. 22, 1942, about the same as the ETD of USS Trout. That’s what I got for dealing with scanty and segmented data. Sorry.

There’s no mystery about the great wartime of our national treasure NOW. That’s because you’ve cleared that. How many students of history know what you’ve just narrated? I’m not sure if this event was discussed at all in our history classes with the length and clarity you just did which has amply justified my description of you as a historical sleuth. And what about the technical documents and process by which the gold reserve and other funds were removed from the Central Bank and our country. That certainly is something we didn’t know before.

Now we know better. Thanks to you. The lesson here seems to be: We should study our history more thoroughly and seriously. We can’t simply rely on you and a few other scholars to do so for us.

Your narrative was gripping, accurate and thrilling — and worth the reading. I said that earlier. I’m not disappointed that the whole episode had a happy ending. And I’m relieved.

Highest esteem.

Fernando A. Almeda Jr.

As was I, as I didn’t know the answer in full until Atty. Almeda made me look into it. On a final note, the compensation given to the Philippines due to the devaluation of the US dollar, which Romero mentioned in the first extract in this entry, was officially quantified in the High Commissioner’s report quoted in turn, above.

Unfortunately, in my response I failed to attach an interesting extract from the War Diary of Gen. Basilio Valdes, Chief of Staff of the Philippine Army and member of the War Cabinet. Here’s his entry for February 3, 1942:

February 3, 1942 – Tuesday

Nothing unusual during the day. At 10 p.m. I was already in bed when the phone rang. It was the Chief Justice telling me to get dressed as we had to go to the vault, to perform a secret and delicate mission. I dressed hurriedly met them at the entrance of the Malinta tunnel and we proceeded by car for the vault. The guards were surprised at our unannounced visit. A few minutes after we arrived, Commander Parker U.S Navy and some men with two station wagons arrived followed closely to the Staff of the U.S. High Commissioner. We worked incessantly all night. The work was performed with military proficiency, no noise, no conversations. We finished our mission at 4:30 a.m. What a relief! I returned home very tired and exhausted. I forgot to mention that at 7 p.m. Colonel Roxas, Colonel Nieto, Colonel Marron, Major Romulo, General Drake and myself went to the SS Legaspi for dinner – and what a dinner. We ate like wolves.

I was happy to receive a letter from Tito and one from Colonel Quimbo. Tito sent me 5 boxes of good tonic.

Additional documents I’ve encountered, concerning the disposition of currency notes, can be gleaned from the papers of Andres Soriano, Acting Treasurer of the Philippines and then Secretary of Finance in the War Cabinet. They trace the story of Soriano’s appointment, and accounting done on the run, literally.

First, a letter of appointment.

Malacanan Palace
Manila

Corregidor
February 19, 1942

Sir:

By virtue of the authority vested in me under the Constitution and laws of the Philippines, you are hereby appointed, ad interim, Treasurer of the Philippines.

(sgd.) Manuel L. Quezon

Mr. Andres Soriano
Corregidor

Next, a mission order:

Malacanan Palace
Manila

March 2, 1942

My dear Major Soriano:

You are hereby appointed Member of my War Cabinet without portfolio.

You will please proceed to Cebu where you will meet with the other members of my cabinet to take part in the deliberations of public matters that might come before it and to carry out other missions that I have entrusted to you. After you have completed your work in Cebu you will please proceed to Mindanao where you will be my Special Representative before General Sharpe. In matters affecting Civil Government in all the provinces of Mindanao except Surigao, I am designating you as my Special Delegate to act for me if and when prompt action may be absolutely necessary.

You will please discuss the civil matters with Mr. Guingona whom I have designated as the representative of the Department of the Interior to exercise the old functions of said department over provincial and municipal governments. However, during your stay in Mindanao, Commissioner Guingona shall discuss with you matters policy to be adopted in the Mindanao provinces, excepting the province of Surigao, and whenever there is a perfect agreement between you two and General Sharpe offers no objection thereto, such policies as may have thus been agreed upon, will be carried out as if they have received the specific approval of the President.

I hereby also authorize you to receive from the Manager of the Philippine National Bank and/or the Currency Committee in Cebu, all the funds that be required by the USAFFE in Mindanao as well as the provinces therein with the exception of Surigao.

You are also authorized to require the engraving of the necessary plates for the currency to be printed in Mindanao.

Sincerely yours,

(sgd.) Manuel L. Quezon

Next, a letter of introduction, to accomplish the mission order:

Malacanan Palace
Manila

March 1, 1942

My dear General Sharp:

Major Sorianowho was on the front has been appointed by me, with the knowledge and consent of General MacArthur, Treasurer of the Philippines, and I have made him member of my War Cabinet. I am sending him to Mindanao as my special delegate and representative to discuss with you and Mr. Guingona, and the other provincial authorities of Mindanao, the problems that exist there. Major Soriano has been given authority to act in my behalf. He will carry with him the funds that the USAFFE may need as well as the provincial and municipal governments in amounts that Cebu has already been able to print.

In order to avoid the need of sending for funds from Cebu, Major Soriano is going to see if he can have some plates made in Cebu for Mindanao so that emergency currency may be printed in some place in Mindanao. I do not consider wise to have Mindanao, or in fact any part of the Philippines, depend upon any other province which might be occupied at any moment.

Sincerely yours,

(sgd.) Manuel L. Quezon

P.S. I am taking the liberty of sending you a copy of the letter which General Jones wrote to General Sutherland regarding Major Soriano’s services in the filed, one copy og which letter having been given to me by General Sutherland himself.

MLQ

Additional authorizations:

Malacanan Palace
Manila

March 8, 1942

My dear Major Soriano:

I hereby authorize you to appoint the men that will constitute the Currency Committee for the provinces of Mindanao. If it should become necessary for military reasons to have this committee sit in Lanao, you are also authorized to issue the necessary order to this effect including the power to make transfer from one province to another of the officials that you may choose and appoint as chairman and members of this committee.

Sincerely yours,

(sgd.) Manuel L. Quezon

Major Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

And a receipt from the source:

Received from the Philippine National Bank, Cebu Branch, two (2) galvanized iron lock boxes said to contain TWO MILLION TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND PESOS as follows:

Box. No. 4
Denomination      Amount Total
P20                         P750,000
P125,000              P775,000

Box No. 5
Denomination              Amount Total
P20                                P1,250,000
P5        175,000           P1,425,000

Total ———————————-P2,200,000

This represents the proceeds of my draft of this date for the same amount drawn on the Treasurer of the Commonwealth of the Philippines.

Cebu City, March 10, 1942

Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

A treasurer’s report:

The Commonwealth of the Philippines
Province of Misamis Oriental
Office of the Treasurer
Cagayan, Phil.
March 15, 1942

Major Andres Soriano,
Treasurer of the Commonwealth of the Philippines,
Cagayan (now at), Misamis Oriental.

Dear Sir:-

I compliance with your verbal request, I have the honor to inform you of the following approximate distribution of the currency notes which I have received to-day from you, viz:

Province of Misamis Oriental —————————-P200,000.00
“” Bukidnon—————————————P300,000.00
“” Lanao——————————————-P300,000.00
“” Occidental Misamis————————-P300,000.00
“” Surigao—————————————-P300,000.00
“”Cotobato—————————————P300,000.00
Koronandal Valley, Gen. Santos———————-P50,000.00
Gen. Vachon’s Division———————————-P300,000.00
General Fort’s Division———————————-P160,000.00

Very respectfully,

(sgd.) Ubaldo D. Laya
Provincial Treasurer

Use of delegated authority:

DANSALAN, LANAO
BY THE SPECIAL DELEGATE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 1

Appointing the Currency Committee for the Provinces of Mindanao

By virtue of the authority granted me by His Excellency, the President of the Philippines, on March 8, 1942, I hereby appoint the following to constitute the Currency Committee for the Provinces of Mindanao: Honorable Teopisto Guingona, Commissioner for Mindanao and Sulu, Chairman; Mr. Ubaldo D. Laya, Provincial Treasurer of Misamis Oriental, Member; and Mr. F. Atagaban, Provincial Auditor of Lanao, Member.

This Committee shall sit in Dansalan, Lanao, but is authorized to transfer its offices to any other place as may be agreed upon by them.

For this purpose, Treasurer Laya is hereby directed to reside in Dansalan, retaining, however, his status as Provincial Treasurer of Misamis Oriental. He shall accordingly make arrangements for his Assistant to discharge the duties of Provincial Treasurer of that province.

Done in the Municipality of Dansalan, this sixteenth day of March, in the year of Our Lord, nineteen hundred forty-two, and of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, the seventh.

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
Special Delegate of His Excellency,
the President, and Treasurer of the Philippines

Then, additional supporting documentation:

Counterpart No. 1

I hereby acknowledge to have this 24th day of March, 1942, received from Major Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, the sum of TWENTY EIGHT THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED SIXTY THREE AND 30/100 (P28,663.30) PESOS, Philippine Currency, to be used by me as Special Disbursing Officer of the Office of His Excellency, The President of the Philippines.

(sgd) Serapio D. Canceran
Special Disb. Office
Office of the President.

Note-
This recepit consists of five counterparts, each of which serves as original.

Followed by:

Counterpart No. 2

Del Monte, Bukidnon,
March 24, 1942

I hereby acknowledge to have this 24th day of March, 1942, received from Major Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, the sum of ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND AND NO/100 (P100,000.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency, to be used by me as Disbursing Officer for His Excellency, The President of the Philippines.

(sgd.) Manuel Nieto
Lieutenant-Colonel

Note-
This receipt consists of five (5) counterparts, each of which serves as original.

More supporting documents:

Counterpart No. 2

I hereby certify to have this 24th day of March, 1942, received from Mr. Serapio D. Canceran, Special Disbursing Officer, Office of the President, the sum of FIVE HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED SIXTY THREE AND NO/100 (P528,663.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency.

(sgd.) Major Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

Note-

The above receipt consists of five (5) counterparts, each of which serves as original.

More documentation:

Counterpart No. 3

I hereby certify to have this 24th day of March, 1942, received from Col. Nieto the sum of ONE MILLION ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND AND NO/100 (P1,100,000.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency, which was the same sum received by said Col. Nieto from The Honorable, The Acting Secretary of Finance, Hon. Jose Abad Santos.

(sgd.) Major Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

Note-

The above sum has been included with the funds contained in Box No. AA-1 (now footlocker with padlock) deposited for safekeeping temporarily in Del Monte, Bukidnon, in care of Lt. Col Paul S. Beard to be finally deposited in the new vault being constructed now at Dansalan, Lanao, care of Commissioner Teopisto Guingona.

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
This recepit consists of six counterparts, each of which serves as original.

An acknowledgment receipt:

United States Army Forces in the Far East
Headquarters, Mindanao Force
Bukidnon, PhilippinesMarch 24, 1942

Counterpart No. 4.

I hereby acknowledge that I have received from Major Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, the following:

  1. A box (foot-locker with padlock) bearing black sencil numbers B-41 on the sides and B-41 on the top:

Denomination      Total Number Value
P50.0040,000      P2,000,000.00

  1. A box (foot-locker with padlock) bearing black stencil numbers B-52 on the sides and B-56 on the top:

Denomination      Total Number Value
P50.0040,000      P2,000,000.00

  1. A box (foot-locker with padlock) marked AA-1 on top and sides:

Denomination      Total Number Value
(as per list enclosed in box)P1,500,000.00

  1. A box bearing black stencil numbers B-56 on the sides and B-64 on the top:

Denomination      Total Number Value
P50.0040,000      P2,000,000.00

Contents of above four boxes were not checked or counted at time of storage, the control and accountability remaining with the Commonwealth Government, and not in any manner passing to the credit of the United States Government or any of its officers, and being held only for safekeeping until such time as the vault now under construction at Dansalan, Lanao, will be ready, at which time, the funds and responsibility will be transferred to Commissioner Teopisto Guingona, who is authorized to accept responsibility as custodian of the Commonwealth Government, thereby terminating entirely all responsibility of Col. Paul S. Beard, F.D., U.S.A. At no time will the contents of said boxes be used by anyone except by express authority of His Excellency, The President, Manuel L. Quezon, or Colonel Manuel Roxas, or Major Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, or their successors in office. The keys of the temporary depository will be held by Colonel Beard and Commissioner Guingona and are to be turned over to their successors should either be transferred to other posts, which will terminate their responsibility entirely.

This receipt consists of six counterparts, each of which serves as original.

Dated at Del Monte, Bukidnon, this 24th Day of March, 1942.

(sgd.) Paul S. Beard
Lt.-Col., F.D.,
U.S.A.

The above agreement accepted for the Commonwealth Government of the Philippines, dated at Del Monte, Bukidnon, this 24th Day of March, 1942.

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

(handwritten notation & signature) Approved, Manuel L. Quezon

Additional records of transfers:

(vertical inscription: Per letter of President Quezon to Philippine National Bank, Cebu Branch, dated March 1, 1942)

Counterpart No. 5

THROUGH THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK

Exchange for P1,000,000.00 Del Monte, Bukidnon
March 26, 1942

——At sight—— of this First of Exchange (Second Unpaid) pay to the order of PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK CEBU BRANCH—–the sum of PESOS ONE MILLION ONLY—-

Value received and charge the same account of

To THE TREASURER OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF THE PHILIPPINES, Manila

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

And more:

(vertical inscription: Per letter of President Quezon to Philippine National Bank, Cebu Branch, dated March 1, 1942)

Counterpart No. 6

THROUGH THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK

Exchange for P1,000,000.00 Del Monte, Bukidnon
March 26, 1942

——At sight—— of this Second Exchange (First Unpaid) pay to the order of PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK CEBU BRANCH—–the sum of PESOS ONE MILLION ONLY—-

Value received and charge the same account of

To THE TREASURER OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF THE PHILIPPINES, Manila

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

And yet more:

(vertical inscription: Per letter of President Quezon to Philippine National Bank, Cebu Branch, dated March 1, 1942)

Counterpart No. 7

THROUGH THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK

Exchange for P2,000,000.00 Del Monte, Bukidnon
March 26, 1942

——At sight—— of this First of Exchange (Second Unpaid) pay to the order of PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK CEBU BRANCH—–the sum of PESOS TWO MILLION ONLY—-

Value received and charge the same account of

To THE TREASURER OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF THE PHILIPPINES, Manila

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

And another:

(vertical inscription: Per letter of President Quezon to Philippine National Bank, Cebu Branch, dated March 1, 1942)

Counterpart No. 8

THROUGH THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK

Exchange for P2,000,000.00 Del Monte, Bukidnon
March 26, 1942

——At sight—— of this Second of Exchange (First Unpaid) pay to the order of PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK CEBU BRANCH—–the sum of PESOS TWO MILLION ONLY—-

Value received and charge the same account of

To THE TREASURER OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF THE PHILIPPINES, Manila

(sgd.) Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

Additional instructions:

Commonwealth Government of the Philippine Islands
Office of the Treasurer
In the Field
Del Monte, Bukidnon, P.I.
March 24, 1942.

This is to certify that, in the event the military situation indicates that the Commonwealth Government funds, deposited for safekeeping with Colonel Paul S. Beard, F.D., U.S.A., and Commissioner of Mindanao, Teopisto Guingona, are in danger of being captured by the enemy, the Commanding General. Mindanao Force, may order destruction, by a Committee of Three who will certify that the funds have been destroyed by them personally.

(sgd.) Major Andres Soriano
Treasurer of the Philippines

1 Copy for Major Soriano
1 Copy for Colonel Beard
1 Copy for Commanding General, Mindanao Force

(handwritten notation and signature) Approved, Manuel L. Quezon

A promotion:

March 26, 1942

Sir: You are hereby appointed Secretary of Finance, ad interim, and member of my War Cabinet. You may turn over all the records of the National Treasury to Colonel Manuel Roxas, Secretary to the President, who has been instructed by me to take the necessary steps for the proper administration of the affairs of that office.

Respectfully,

(sgd.) Manuel L. Quezon

Major Andres Soriano
Del Monte, Bukidnon

Then, submission of documents to the auditing office:

Commonwealth of the Philippines
General Auditing Office
Manila

Jaime Hernandez
Auditor General

1617 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C., May 21, 1942

Hon. Andres Soriano,
Secretary of Finance,
Washington, D.C.

Sir:

This will acknowledge receipt from you of copies of the following official documents:

  1. Counterpart No. 5 of receipt dated March 24, 1942, at Del Monte, Bukidnon, signed by Paul S. Beard, Lt. Col., F.D., U.S.A., from Maj. Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, for four boxes containing P7,500,000.00. Approved by Pres. Quezon.
  2. Certificate dated March 24, 1942, at Del Monte, Bukidnon, signed by Maj. Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, and approved by Pres. Quezon, authorizing destruction by a Committee of three, government funds deposited for safekeeping with Col. Paul S. Beard, F.D., U.S.A., and Commissioner of Mindanao, Teopisto Guingona.
  3. Counterparts Nos. 5 and 6, dated March 26, 1942, at Del Monte, Bukidnon, signed by Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, Exchange for P2,000,000.00 to Treasurer of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Manila, thru the Philippine National Bank.
  4. Counterparts No. 7 and 8, dated March 26, 1942, at Del Monte, Bukidnon, signed by Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, Exchange for P1,000,000.00 to Treasurer of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Manila, thru the Philippine National Bank.
  5. Counterpart No. 4 of receipt dated March 24, 1942, signed by Maj. Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, for the amount of P1,100,000.00 from Col. Nieto.
  6. Counterpart No. 3 of receipt dated March 24, 1942, signed by Maj. Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines, for the amount of P528,663.00 from Serapio D. Canceran, Special Disbursing Officer, Office of the President.
  7. Counterpart No. 2 of receipt dated March 24, 1942, signed by Serapio D. Canceran, Special Disbursing Officer, Office of the President, for P28,662.30, from Maj. Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines.
  8. Counterpart No. 2 of receipt dated March 24, 1942, signed by Lt. Col. Manuel Nieto, Disbursing Officer, Office of the President, for P100,000.00, from Maj. Andres Soriano, Treasurer of the Philippines.
  9. Memorandum Report of S.G. Miranda, Acting Manager, Philippine National Bank, Cebu, dated at Cebu City om February 28, 1942.
  10. Letter of Andres Soriano, Secretary of Finance, to the Manager, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Melbourne, dated April 2, 1942, re transfer of $500,000.00 from the Chase National Bank to the National City Bank of New York.
  11. Letter of Andres Soriano, Secretary of Finance, to the Manager, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Melbourne, dated April 6, 1942, re transfer of $400,000.00 from the National City Bank of New York to the Chase National Bank.
  12. Letter of Andres Soriano, Secretary of Finance, to the Manager, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Melbourne, dated April 16, 1942, re amount of $15,000.00 to be operated by Maj. Joseph McMicking.

Respectfully

(sgd.) Jaime Hernandez
Auditor General

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Manuel L. Quezon III.

259 thoughts on “On official allowances (updated)

  1. Interesting question?

    Is there such a thing as natural law? The basis for “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal…… endowed with certain inalienable (natural)rights…

    Or is it simply a figment of our fertile imaginations.

    The Philippines is not a Christian country. It is a country where the people are predominantly Christians (Catholics).

    Or are we a product of millions of years of physiological and psychological evolutionary development?

    Neo-Liberal economic philosophy is based on the quantification and commoditization of higher brain functions (rationality) interacting and controling lower brain functions (greed and fear)all centered on the price is right.

    Natural law, man’s law and moral law. What is the source? Ah, the root of the word religion – the source????

    Or is it the higest form of genetic evolution determined by natural selection as espoused by Dawkins.

    The same as the neo-cons who are neo-marxists in character?

    The dialectical relationship between the U.S. military and the Philippine military. Is the Philippine military establsihment simply subordinate to the U.S. military
    command?

  2. Rego/Bencard,

    You have a very shallow interpretation of democracy. For me what I believe is that democratic process is that people elect officials as their representative. Instead of making decisions as a whole they put their trust thru this elected officials, e.g. president, congressmen, etc. So it is not necessary that this elected people do as they please and do only what they like or do decisions only “by numbers”. They have to make decisions with due diligence and responsibility if they have respect for the people. In a way they should function as if they are always thinking that they are serving the people not themselves. The numbers you are talking about comes later only after deliberations and convincing here and there and not thru numbers game only.

  3. ronin, we haven’t backed our currency with gold for ages. my only experience with this was being toured by central bank people in the mint of the bsp, in quezon city. that is where our gold is refined. it’s an amazing thing to watch, tremendous security (among the government institutions i admire most is the bangko sentral, completely professional and dedicated people, not least because they have their own salary scale which is pretty generous, and so they can devote their careers to government service, high morale characterizes them). apparently, in the ramos administration, the central bank monopoly on buying and refining gold was abolished, but still, there was a long line of small scale gold panners with their nuggets, who were waiting to have their gold sorted and weighed, then bought, by the government. this is what the bsp then melts into bullion as part of the national reserves. i’d think checking the bsp website would reveal some facts on this, as would the statistical yearbook of the government (which, alas, i don’t have a copy of).

  4. ronin, here are some studies. as i don’t have the means to do so, we have to find someone with access to the academic papers listed below to get us copies: my hunch is, the actual gold reserves in 1945-1946 (which should amount to what was moved to the usa for safekeeping in 1942) would be mentioned:

    http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract;jsessionid=032C91EA297958ED5ED7843A1E0F9ED2.tomcat1?fromPage=online&aid=173540

    Also, from here is the ff:

    http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2794.htm

    “Increased foreign capital inflows made the Philippine stock market among the top performers in East Asia during 2006. Similarly, the Philippine peso appreciated about 7.5% to the U.S. dollar, making it among East Asia’s best performing currencies in 2005-2006. The Philippines maintained reserves of foreign exchange and gold of $22.97 billion, adequate for 4.3 months of goods and services imports and equivalent to 2.5 times foreign debts maturing over the next 12 months.”

    Unfortunately, I no longer have a subscription to JSTOR (unless another kind reader will subsidize one for me) but this article indicates another possible source of information:

    http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0030-851X(194812)21%3A4%3C360%3ACBITP%3E2.0.CO%3B2-Q

  5. Can anyone answer why it is the Treasury Department (Executive Department) in the U.S.(fiscal authorities) that handle the physical money printing and minting of Gold coins and not their Central Bank. Fort Knox is under the Treasury and not the Federal Reserve. They have a Treasurer and a Secretary of the Treasury.

    Also the Secret Service under the Treasury Department who protects the President of the U.S. also are the Federal agents who run after dollar counterfeiters.

    Not the C.I.A. not the F.B.I but the so called secret service.

    Can anyone say why we have a different situation?

  6. mano po bencard,

    i said almost, i didnt actually call dodong that did i, it was meant to be funny not demeaning, to me u dont call people twerps unless ur sure u can beat them in the ring. take it easy on the viagra lolo

  7. The FUSION of GLORIA and ERAP

    Manny Villar for President

    Jinggoy Estrada for Vice President

    The dream team to be supported by Pro Gloria and Pro Erap forces in 2010.

    Belated Trick or treat!

  8. “Whatever dodong’s position is, he has to make it clear. I had the impression earlier that he’s only trying to make “pilosopo” everytime, seems disoriented, and despises the “Filipino.”
    Sometimes I wanted to rename him “Uncle Sam Sadam.””

    Mano po Bencard,

    This is the complete text. If you read it properly and not cut and paste parts of it you’ll get the whole context. It basically expresses my “irritation” to the way he was making his comments before, popping in, popping out, as if just to mock people, look at the old threads.
    If your interpretation of the “RULE OF LAW” is cut and paste it and USE IT AS YOU SEE FIT then you are not a CREDIBLE lawyer at all, you’re a fake one, maybe good for making NOTARY PUBLIC outside the city hall or street lawyer. Thats why you have to leave the country heh? You got bored of being a NOTARY PUBLIC here huh? Can’t hack it here?
    Sheesh… Talking to old retired, has beens is impossible!!!

  9. why are these people here have problem with that. perhaps they should consider living in cuba, iran syria, or north korea, assuming they will be accepted there. – bencard

    Mano Po Bencard,

    Who do you think you are? You’re not even part of the OFWs contributing to the country! Why should you matter at all? Before making any “I’M SUPERIOR THAN YOU” or “YOU TWERP” comments be sure you have the built, the brawn, and the guts to back it up. You know i was thinkng about you the whole time I was in the gym this afternoon? It really makes me sick how some weak people try to appear strong.

  10. BENCARD. TO TOP IT OFF, YOU’RE NOT EVEN A FILIPINO CITIZEN! YOU’RE A BROWN MONKEY TRYING SO HARD BUT STILL LOOKS LIKE A SECOND RATE COPYCAT AMERICAN! DISGUSTING!

    I’m taking a break from all this for a while since I cannot stomach people who are a disgrace to their own race!!!

  11. Contrast it mob people power. It exist only in Manila. – dodong

    dodong,

    I have been an activist in my younger years. I did not want to sit idly by and tolerate incompetence, corruption, and brazen abuse of human rights. I have fought for what I believed in since I was in college (no to tuition fee hikes), I was in the EDSA 1 and EDSA 2, if I’m in the country when there is another call for People Power I will probably join them. If theres any other talent that I’m good at other than selling is gathering people together and lead them to action. I have no regrets, this is the way I was trained, to act and not just to critique.

    Though I admit, I’m getting too old for this, and there’s a creeping thought at the back of my mind that maybe you are making sense. Another reason is, I have a family now, and I don’t want them to suffer the consequences if there are…

  12. The Equalizer: my nominee for Time Person of the Year (since you already nominated Palparan) is Justice Secretary Gonzalez.. If ever there was a Secretary of Justice who was accused of Bribery, (giving some of his own money before the election), in the news all the time with his foot in his mouth, still can not be fired or ask to resign his position by the President..I don’t know what he really got, his brains seem not having the semblance of justice at all…

  13. ramrod, if you check the meaning of the word, “twerp” it is someone insignificant who acts or talk cockily, or judges people, with no authority and self-righteously. it has nothing to do with prowess in the ring or a bar room. you claim and hold yourself to be “an officer and a gentleman”, or used to be. as such you know that the measure of a person in civilized society is not the ability to physically beat the brains out of another. your gratuitous, patronizing way of making fun of my age does not go unnoticed. i don’t appreciate it. you may be younger and a better shot than me but not necessarily wiser, regardless of your homespun philosophies and homilies, and personal account of achievements.

    now you are saying your thought of changing dodong’s name to “sam saddam” was supposed to be a “joke”. would it matter to you if i tell you that my use of the term “twerp” was also a joke but just happened to fit the context of what i was commenting on? concerning the word “ignoramus”, i said there’s no such thing as “unconvicted criminal” UNLESS the one using the terms is a “clueless ignoramus”. did i say anyone here is an ignoramus?

    btw, since you are speculating that i’m using viagra because of my “age”, past middle-age men are not the only ones who can use viagra. ask any doctor.

  14. ramrod, before you gloat, my response to your recent posts is awaiting moderation. maybe after that, one of us will be banned from this blog.

  15. bokyo, etc. neither rego nor i ever say that “numbers” are the be-all or end-all of democracy. what we clearly said, or implied, is that numbers are an essential PART of democracy. now, if sometimes this part of democracy is subverted by “fraud” or ‘cheating”, we can go after the perpetrators, if we have proof, and bring them to justice, then nullify the result. but there is a process – a due process which is also a part of democracy that we have to follow and abide by.

  16. OLD GeeZER

    Blame blame blame the poor Pinoys……..Your posts humor me but solve nothing.

    You get a kick out of dispensing gospel truths about our democracy .Is America any better?

  17. ramrod,

    one very distinguished fellow once said that getting older does not really means getting smarter, but having the advantage of valuable experience. And experience used for good intentions can do a lot of good. That fellow by the way is a Philanthropist.

    Myself is very close to collecting “old age pensions”, but judging from how I was labeled in this site as “childish” and sometimes “ignorant of the law”, maybe that words of wisdom are not true to all,but instead some of us just get even worse, as the brains deteriorate to the point that we think being old give us the right to be “right” but for all we know it is alzheimer or senility setting in. This perhaps happening just to me, because someone will again tell me to speak for myself.

    But I can also, thru my experience say the same is happening to most older Public Officials as we have observed how they become more of a liability than asset for the Government. There is Raul Gonzalez, who I suspect is suffering from some form of neurological disorder as he gets older. Also Ms Miriam Santiago, who being a senator can not stop for a second to think, before “slanging” her way to ridicule. Think about Senator Enrile, observe he becomes dumber as he gets older, and you can also include Joker Arroyo, once the champion of Human Rights, widely respected, he now is the anathema of himself. Well, getting old sometimes is fun, and I’m enjoying it, worries is getting less and about that ED medication, my doc prefers Levitra, lesser side effects than Viagra and works just as well. hehehe

  18. “You have a very shallow interpretation of democracy. For me what I believe is that democratic process is that people elect officials as their representative. Instead of making decisions as a whole they put their trust thru this elected officials, e.g. president, congressmen, etc. So it is not necessary that this elected people do as they please and do only what they like or do decisions only “by numbers”. They have to make decisions with due diligence and responsibility if they have respect for the people. In a way they should function as if they are always thinking that they are serving the people not themselves. The numbers you are talking about comes later only after deliberations and convincing here and there and not thru numbers game only”

    ———————————————————

    Bokyo,

    Of course! I have no problem with your definition. I believe your definition is indeed the essence of real democracry. Thats how its SHOULD BE. But you said it your self the numbers comes later. You can not really take out the rule of numbers in a democracy. So like it or not it all boils down to the rule of numbers.

    Come to think of it. What is it in the definition that is under our control? Definitely not the conviction of these congressmen, not their behavior or misbehaviour. Its only our VOTE thats is very much under our control. Other than than we can only shell out our best hope and try to influence their decision the best that we can. But whatever the collecive results of their action or decision, we just have to deal with.

    So the most proactive approach I believe it to is really to go our respective districts and passionately campaign fo the right candidates. Or even just relative and freinds. But then the “right” candidates for us may not be the right candidates for others. So dito papasok uli and rule of numbers.

    The other proactive approach is to put a “recall system” that Dodong is suggesting here. Im actually very surprised that we have an existing recall for local officials and the impeachment for president whiel nonone for congressman and senators.

    Then there was the institionalizing of people power that Manolo is suggesting and is being pointed out by CVJ.

    Magagaganda idea ang lahat ng eto.

    Pero kung papansisinin mo, all these good ideas really boils down to rule of numbers.

  19. bencard,

    I’ll give you the honor. You need this blog more than I do as I can go join my friends in the streets anytime the need will arise and again see history in the making.

    You are oblivious to what is actually happening here and you don’t matter at all. You are no loss to us as you don’t even have a vote. And dying in your bed maybe months from now, you’ll have realized you lived your life in vain…

    I feel sorry for the the likes of you, selfish old men, thinking only of themselves…Adios…

  20. and bencard,

    I am not an officer and a gentleman. I left that life a long time ago… Now I’m just someone who can actually beat the brains out of anyone (within my weight range of course). But I don’t mean you, I don’t want you to put any other meaning to this, I’m just someone who believes in keeping fit.

  21. Old GeeZer:

    Ramrod is 100% correct.Come back here and fight your last hurrah!

    Very easy to do “Monday morning quarterbacking” while you are safely 12,000 miles away from the battlefield!

  22. “Pero kung papansisinin mo, all these good ideas really boils down to rule of numbers.” – rego

    Unfortunately so, the “powers that be have the numbers” just like Marcos controlled the COMELEC before, but the groundswell of “disgust” built up into a critical mass eventually and the rest is history. But people grow old and tired of fighting, then here comes this administration, the reaction is more like “here we go again?” But then again, there is a younger generation…

    Adios Rego, I will miss exchanging thoughts with you, I think I will be in Wisconsin next year as we have a mill in Wisconsin Rapids. Are you too far away from there?

  23. Very far Ramrod. But sure, exchanging thoughs with you is very much welcome. I really wish you can drop by NYC . You know, just put a face on those on the nickname and ideas.

  24. “Pero kung papansisinin mo, all these good ideas really boils down to rule of numbers.” – rego

    Hindi siguro.

    Kahit siguro mag-isa ang sinuman kung kaya niyang kumbinsihin ang nakakarami o lahat, yun ang mahalaga. Kung gagawa ang isang ito ng desisyon na later on ay sasangayunan ng lahat dahil in the end it makes sense at mapapatunayang matibay at tatagal ng habang panahon. Di importante ang bilang ng nakakarami lagi. Isa pa huwag sana tayong lagi na lang pinagtutuunan kung sino ang nasa kapangyarihan o kung sino ang dapat manalo, lagi sana natin isaisip ang pagiging parehas at pagrespeto sa ating katungali kahit na sa anumang larangan. Sa panahon ngayon lalo na sa congress bastusan na talaga eh.

  25. ramrod, yes, i don’t matter at all but that has nothing to do with my living abroad. i am a filipino citizen and as rego says, i can vote (so are cvj and abe margallo,etc., i think). about the only one i can say matter in this blog is manolo who gives us this forum and tolerate people like us. so you had, and can, always march on the streets. good for you, and i hope the next time the result will be to your satisfaction instead of regretting it. death? all people die, including you. no one in this world will get out alive. and it’s not up to you or anyone else. you talk as though you are completely satisfied with your own life, but if i may speculate based on your comments, you are not “happy” with life in the philippines now. then again, to each his own. taxes? my wife and i own some properties there for which we pay taxes, and i think they are not “peanuts” by philippine standard. btw, i really don’t care how strong, fit or “brave” you are. to me that has nothing to do with the price of rice.

    vic, even people old in age can be “childish” or “ignorant” in the way they talk, rationalize, or think. the proof of the pie is in the eating. if one thinks your way of thinking or talking is “stupid”, you are so in his perception. and there’s nothing you can do about that but try to show the soundness of your thinking or discourse.

    equalizer, you’re talking to me? i think i am one of the first, if not the first, one who have used the term “old geezer” in response to a poster who called me “boy” ( i know, i know the connotation of “boy” in the southern states). now it reminds of einstein’s theory of relativity. every person born in this world is always older than somebody else(lol).

  26. Old GeeZer:

    Let’s push through the proposed nomination of Gloria Arroyo,Ronnie Puno and Joseph Estrada for the Nobel Peace Prize for 2008.

    It’s a distinct possiblity for them to win this coveted award.

    “By negotiating the The Presidential Pardon For Erap , and subsequently following it up with the quick pardon after six (6) weeks from the conviction of Erap by the Sandigan Bayan, Arroyo,Estrada and Puno have made substantial contributions to a historic process through which peace and cooperation can replace a bitter political feud and possibly a dangerous civil war and hate among Filipinos.”

    Hell,if we can’t win the Olympics Gold medals,we can have at least have the Nobel Peace Prize.Don’t you think?

  27. Can anyone answer why it is the Treasury Department (Executive Department) in the U.S.(fiscal authorities) that handle the physical money printing and minting of Gold coins and not their Central Bank. Fort Knox is under the Treasury and not the Federal Reserve. They have a Treasurer and a Secretary of the Treasury.

    Also the Secret Service under the Treasury Department who protects the President of the U.S. also are the Federal agents who run after dollar counterfeiters.

    Not the C.I.A. not the F.B.I but the so called secret service.

    Can anyone say why we have a different situation?

    In accordance with a provision in the 1987 Constitution, President Fidel V. Ramos signed into law Republic Act No. 7653, the New Central Bank Act, on 14 June 1993, This was the law provided for the independence of the Central Bank as monetary authority. It took effect on July 3, 1993.

    Did I mention that it was the recommendation of the IMF-CB Banking Survey Commission? Presidential Decree in 1973 made Central Bank the monetary authority. The 1987 Constitution adopted the same provisions.

  28. “They the best of us, & they were the worst of us.”

    Joseph Estrada:“On September 12, 2007, the Sandiganbayan finally gave its decision, finding Joseph Estrada not guilty on his perjury case and guilty of plunder “beyond reasonable doubt.” He was sentenced to Reclusión perpetua.”(Wikipedia)

    Ferdinand Marcos:“Many despised Ferdinand Marcos’ regime, his silencing the free press, his dictatorial control, the imprisonment, torture, murder and disappearance of thousands and his shameless plunder of the nation’s treasury.”(Wikipedia)

    How will history judge Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo?

  29. Congress is national. Congressmen are the highest local government officials elected by the local people. They can be made accountable anytime by recall. – d0d0ng

    D0d0ng, that’s not how Rego meant to use the word and you know it. He meant ‘nationally elected’. If you’re saying that we should get to the congressmen first (via recall) before getting at Gloria Arroyo, then that becomes another delaying tactic. Anyway, as you said in your next post which i agree with:

    If we look at what we do have in discussion in short time, there are opportunities that opposition can do better without taking any option off the table. – d0d0ng November 3rd, 2007 at 6:57 am

    That’s why the option of people power should not be taken off the table.

    I’m not saying the opposition should not look into the idea though since your suggestion may have merit in the case of vulnerable congressmen, but i have a hunch that getting incumbents to switch sides might be easier.

    Ramrod, have a good break but don’t let Bencard or D0d0ng get to you. That’s just how Fil-Ams speak. I’ve learned to adjust myself to their tone.

  30. NPC:MANGLING OF PRESS FREEDOM MURAL

    One of the crimes of dictatorships is defacing works of art.

    In Afghanistan, the Taliban began each day with prayer and then one morning blasted ancient Buddhist statues along the silk route with artillery and painted over all the human figures in the artwork that was still in their national museum.

    But things of this nature are now happening right here!

    What does it say about the Philippines?

  31. “Ramrod, have a good break but don’t let Bencard or D0d0ng get to you. That’s just how Fil-Ams speak. I’ve learned to adjust myself to their tone.”

    cjv, I observed that too, except for rego, who is quite reasonable, most fil-ams stick to one another and just look at the pattern of their comments, one and the same and selectively will quote other’s comment where they can conveniently rebut or refute instead of taking the whole context of the comments, just as lawyery as you can get, and sometimes or most of the times the presiding judge or jury don’t like this type of arguments and may slant the case against the council favor just because of that reason. I observed many judges admonished many lawyers, defense and prosecutors for being selective, selective just like our Judiciary.

  32. The Equalizer : What does it say about the Philippines?

    It’s clear that we are under a dictatorship. Again, as in the ZTE NBN signing, this mural was unveiled in the presence of the midget.

  33. ROY MABASA & company
    National Press Club(?)

    The Defacing of The Press Freedom Mural in NPC

    “The Law Concerning Art Preservation and Artists’ Rights” in America states that no person, with the exception of the artist, has a right to deface or alter a work of fine art.

    ”Droit morale,” a legal concept meaning ”moral rights” is the cornerstone of the law. In this case, ‘droit morale’ is the concept that art work is more than a commercial product.

    An artist’s reputation and career is dependent upon the works of art he or she creates. Each work of art has the artist’s signature on it, literally and figuratively.

    The droit morale essentially says the owner of a work of art does not have the right to alter, deface or destroy the work of art.

    The work of art is something that belongs to society as a whole.

  34. If this gets through, then my IP isn’t banned. only my email add or my name. I jz can’t believe Manolo will ban me. I can’t think of any reason why. In any case, I guess this is goodbye. I can bypass his minesweeper if I want to, and a really determined troll will always find a way to get through, but it won’t be jz the same for me.

    I want to stay with my identity in this blog. And failing that, won’t settle for a new one.

    I jz wish Manolo would tell me the reason for my being banned.

  35. A few passages from Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler

    Intelligence is ongoing, individual adaptability. Adaptations that an intelligent species may make in a single generation, other species make over many generations of selective breeding and selective dying. Yet intelligence is demanding. If it is misdirected by accident or by intent, it can foster its own orgies of breeding and dying.

    All struggles are essentially power struggles. Who will rule, who will lead, who will define, refine, confine, design. Who will dominate. All struggles are essentially power struggles, and most are no more intellectual than two rams knocking their heads together.

    Civilization is to groups what intelligence is to individuals. It is a means of combining the intelligence of many to achieve ongoing adaptation. Civilization, like intelligence, may serve well, serve adequately, or fail to serve its adaptive function. When civilization fails to serve, it must disintegrate unless it is acted upon by unifying internal or external forces.

    and my favorite passage of all

    When apparent stability disintegrates, as it must – people tend to give in to fear and depression, to need and greed. When no influence is strong enough to unify people, they divide, they struggle, one against one, group against group. For survival, position, power. They remember old hates and generate new ones. They create chaos and nurture it. They kill and kill and kill. Until they are exhausted and destroyed, conquered by outside forces, or until one of them becomes…

    A leader, most will follow.
    A tyrant, most will fear.

    I’ll be going on a diff path now.

    For a few months, tnx for the space Manolo.

  36. Many here should not get worked up over legal interpretations of events. They have nothing to do with the fight for justice.

    Lawyerly interpretation of events based on laws are only a small part of the equation. Courts are not meant for finding truth and justice.

    They are there simply to interpet laws based on what is presented based on the rules of court and evidence. (Relatively variable based on actual circumstance)

    Morality has no place in the courtroom.

    Case in point: Bush says that the U.S. does not torture and even his appointee for the postion of Justice Secretary refused to declare the act of waterboarding as torture.

    The minute he says so that would open the President of the U.S. , his Vice President for charges of aiding and abetting torture which has already been declared a criminal act. (case precedent)

    So based on the probability that the U.S. government condones and practices torture the President of the U.S. should be charged with a crime. Just like Marcos was. But the probelm is the necessary party in interest the one tortured is no where to be found. I think possible obstruction of justice there. Now whoever says that we have to prove this in a court of law to be credible should get his head examined. He then becomes the epitomy of being a member of the Sith or the people of the lie or the dark side. Nothing to do with legality there.

    The American Jihadist Bocobo should take note.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/02/AR2007110201170.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

    Waterboarding Used to Be a Crime
    By Evan Wallach
    Sunday, November 4, 2007; Page B01

    “As a result of such accounts, a number of Japanese prison-camp officers and guards were convicted of torture that clearly violated the laws of war. They were not the only defendants convicted in such cases. As far back as the U.S. occupation of the Philippines after the 1898 Spanish-American War, U.S. soldiers were court-martialed for using the “water cure” to question Filipino guerrillas.”
    “More recently, waterboarding cases have appeared in U.S. district courts. One was a civil action brought by several Filipinos seeking damages against the estate of former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos. The plaintiffs claimed they had been subjected to torture, including water torture. The court awarded $766 million in damages, noting in its findings that “the plaintiffs experienced human rights violations including, but not limited to . . . the water cure, where a cloth was placed over the detainee’s mouth and nose, and water producing a drowning sensation.”

  37. An analogy on why there has to be prudent checks and limitations on power.

    Applied to the Philippine scene: lawyers who are steeped in traditions of law are limited by the evolving quantity and quality of legal systems.

    Otherwise they show themselves simply to be theoreticains probably schooled and trained in trial law by Grisham, Dick Wolf, and David Kelly. All fictional with no relation to reality.

    From Francis ‘end of history’ Fukuyama….

    America’s Self-Defeating Hegemony
    Francis Fukuyama

    http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/fukuyama4

    “But the fundamental problem remains the lopsided distribution of power in the international system. Any country in the same position as the US, even a democracy, would be tempted to exercise its hegemonic power with less and less restraint. America’s founding fathers were motivated by a similar belief that unchecked power, even when democratically legitimated, could be dangerous, which is why they created a constitutional system of internally separated powers to limit the executive.”

    “Such a system does not exist on a global scale today, which may explain how America got into such trouble. A smoother international distribution of power, even in a global system that is less than fully democratic, would pose fewer temptations to abandon the prudent exercise of power.”

  38. wow.

    manolo, all of these documents were public record? it was a matter of course that Philippine government officials would render a full accounting of monies used?

    wow.

    how far have we fallen.

  39. Manolo, thanks for the response. The task of chronicling Philippine history is indeed not yet finished.

  40. oh, how rude of me. I hope y’all had a good long holiday. 🙂 I made sure I spent mine away from the computer. (okay, from the browser at least.)

    and hey, lolo ben’s not that old, his eldest is about as old as my younger sister ( i’m the eldest. 🙂 ), although my mom’s a lola already.

    ellen tordesillas has about 15-30 days to get her domain renewed. if someone is on a waiting list for it, wala na yun.

    vic, back in Canada, everyone sees a civil service job as one of the best. that’s because the government really does take care of it’s employees. too bad the same isn’t true here.

    ————-

    i don’t know if anyone notices how our discussions here on manolo’s blog have an “ivory tower” quality to it. after all we’re just a bunch of semi-anonymous people making prescriptions on how the country should be run. in essence, this is all just the ranting of angry people at their desks. let’s not turn on each other, at least let’s try not to do so with such… zeal. we’re all just expressing opinions here.

    as for d0d0ng’s idea, i think the electorate really should be more discerning at the polls. while this, to a certain extent, came out in the national races, everyone who votes locally (up to the congressional level), essentially just votes on parochial concerns. (e.g. let’s vote for the Admin candidate, he can bring a lot of pork into our district.) of course, they mistakenly accept that these people they vote in will have interests in synch with their own. more often the case, if they’re not on the “right” side of the current congressman’s fence, they’re gonna get screwed over.

    hence you get the situation that d0d0ng mentioned. the people put these legislators there. until they can actually do something about it (a recall election as provided by law) then maybe these people should suck it up and wait for the next election.

    the problem is, the electorate has such poor memories that come next election, they’ll go for the guy with the flashy ads, the dancing girls, and the people who make gapang with the 500 peso bills.

    so, i ask, where does the responsibility lie now?

  41. vic, back in Canada, everyone sees a civil service job as one of the best. that’s because the government really does take care of it’s employees. too bad the same isn’t true here.

    Also, most of civil service jobs are unionized and have collective bargaining power for their security of tenure and retirement plans and as far as I have observed it is independent of elected politicians except positions at the pleasure of elected politicians. And one very good job is the public teacher, their pension plans assets now just for Ontario Public Teacher Union now has a whopping $60 billions diversified in secure investments.

    Even nurses are getting more on their Hospital Pensions than on government pensions. worth waiting for retirement…

  42. tonio, it surprised me, too, that running around and being bombed, officials were making copies of how they disbursed funds in quintuplicate and then rendering accountings, but yes, they did.

  43. vic:

    yep, my aunt and uncle were like part of the first wave of Filipinos who went to T.O. as nurses, now they’re just hanging at the cottage, taking time off of that to visit a community hospital to help out. awesome, i say.

    mlq3:

    duty, responsibility, honour. qualities sorely needed nowadays.

  44. the problem is, the electorate has such poor memories that come next election, they’ll go for the guy with the flashy ads, the dancing girls, and the people who make gapang with the 500 peso bills.-
    tonio

    Tonio, do you?

  45. Re: “Received from the Philippine National Bank, Cebu Branch, two (2) galvanized iron lock boxes said to contain TWO MILLION TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND PESOS as follows:”

    While today, half a million pesos are distritbuted with no receipts, no paper trail and not even in closed bags…Just utterly incredible that money should be distributed around with no receipt. However you look at it, one can only rightly suspect these bags of cash given away in Malacanang are bribes.

  46. I just sent a postcard to the midget asking for my share of the largesse handed out the the tongressmen.

  47. mlq3,

    I asked my wife to check the Cambridge journal for that article at the the university library. I’ll send you a copy if she can borrow it.

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