“The Dead Flame”: reflections for the weekend

Here is a video that encapsulates it all: the precise instant that Romanian dictator Nicolai Ceausescu lost control of his people.

The title of my entry is taken from the title of one of my favorite chapters in one of my favorite books,“Shah of Shahs” (Ryszard Kapuscinski).

And this is my favorite passage from that chapter, a useful reflection as we look back to 1986 and 2001, and ponder what we want to happen in the days, weeks, months, years to come:

Revolution must be distinguished from revolt, coup d’etat, palace takeover. A coup or a palace takeover may be planned, but a revolution -never. Its outbreak, the hour of that outbreak, takes everyone, even those who have been striving for it, unawares. They stand amazed at the spontaneity that appears suddenly and destroys everything in its path. It demolishes so ruthlessly that in the end it may annihilate the ideals that called it into being.

It is a mistaken assumption that nations wronged by history (and they are in the majority) live with the constant thought of revolution, that they see it as the simplest solution. Every revolution is a drama, and humanity instinctively avoids dramatic situations. Even if we find ourselves in such a situation we look feverishly for a way out, we seek calm and, most often, the commonplace. This is why revolutions never last long. They are a last resort, and if people turn to revolution it is only because long experience has taught them there is no other solution. All other attempts, all other means have failed.* Every revolution is preceded by a state of general exhaustion and takes place against a backdrop of unleashed aggressiveness. Authority cannot put up with a nation that gets on its nerves; the nation cannot tolerate an authority an authority it has come to hate. Authority has squandered all its credibility and has empty hands, the nation has lost the final scrap of patience and makes a fist. A climate of tension and increasing oppressiveness prevails. We start to fall into a psychosis of terror. The discharge is coming. We feel it.

As for the technique of the struggle, history knows two kinds of revolution. The first is revolution by assault, the second revolution by siege. All the future fortune, the success, of a revolution by assault is decided by the reach of the first blow. Strike and seize as much ground as possible! This is important because such a revolution, while the most violent, is also the most superficial. The adversary has been defeated, but in retreating he has preserved a part of his forces. He will counter-attack and force the victor to withdraw. Thus, the more far-reaching the first blow, the greater the area that can be saved in spite of later concessions. In a revolution by assault, the first phase is the most radical. The subsequent phases are a slow but incessant withdrawal to the point at which the two sides, the rebelling and the rebelled-against, reach the final compromise. A revolution by siege is different; here the first strike is usually weak and we can hardly surmise that it forebodes a cataclysm. But events soon gather speed and become dramatic. More and more people take part. The walls behind which authority has been sheltering crack and then burst. The success of a revolution by siege depends on the determination of the rebels, on their will power and endurance. One more day! One more push! In the end, the gates yield, the crowd breaks in and celebrates its triumph.

It is authority that provokes revolution. Certainly, it does not do so consciously. Yet its style of life and way of ruling finally become a provocation. This occurs when a feeling of impunity takes root among the elite: We are allowed anything, we can do anything. This is a delusion, but it rests on a certain rational foundation. For a while, it does indeed look as if they can do whatever they want. Scandal after scandal and illegality after illegality go unpunished. The people remain silent, patient, wary. They are afraid and do not yet feel their own strength. At the same time, they keep a detailed account of the wrongs, which at one particular moment are to be added up. The choice of that moment is the greatest riddle known to history. Why did it happen on that day, and not on another? Why did this event, and not some other, bring it about? After all, the government was indulging in even worse excesses only yesterday, and there was no reaction at all. “What have I done?” asks the ruler, at a loss. “What has possessed them all of a sudden?” This is what he has done: He has abused the patience of the people. But where is the limit of that patience? How can it be defined? If the answer can be determined at all, it will be different in each case. The only certain thing is that rulers who know that such a limit exists and know how to respect it can count on holding power for a long time. But there are few such rulers.

So was 1986 a Revolution by Siege and 2001 a Revolution by Assault? And the fate of the President lies in her hands, not in those of her critics. Something to ponder. I’ll give you a couple of concrete examples of what I mean.

In the case of Manuel Gaite, his wife has, understandably (and even justifiably) enough pleaded for fairness because of the public criticisms of her husband’s behavior. But we ought to consider how much of the outrageous arrows of fortune now sticking out of her husband, is due to those who have accepted Jun Lozada’s statesments as Gospel truth, and how much are due to Gaite’s own statetements -and that of the Palace. Gaite’s defense is a simple one: he is a good soldier, but a foot soldier may be the first to fall, as Fr. Joaquin Bernas points out in Shielding the President; and a soldier, even if good, fighting to what end? As History Unfolding points out, an official may fight well but not for worthy goals. Even the good soldier defense, as Torn & Frayed pointed out, insults the intelligence.

For this reason and many others (he surely had a hand in drafting some of the most noxious executive issuances of our time), while I sympathize with Mrs. Gaite and I think Gaite himself tries to be a good person, I am unsympathetic to where this has all led him.

In his testimony before the Senate, and indeed, on the basis of the administration officials who testified, one thing they didn’t shirk was that they tried to prevent Lozada from appearing before the Senate. Gaite admitted the Palace’s objective was to facilitate Lozada’s leaving the country until the Senate could wrap up the ZTE hearings. A recent Inquirer summed it up as a confession of conspiracy. What the administration tried to dodge was the allegation of abduction.

Another, and related, example is this: Lozada passport turned over to court. I’ve heard it said that when the passport was produced, the faces of the lawyers from the Solicitor-General’s office fell. The whole problem with the passport, apparently, was that a stamp showing Lozada had gone through immigration upon his arrival would have demolished the claim of an abduction. The problem was, no lower-level person from the Bureau of Immigration wanted to be a party to order to stamp the passport: it would have required a lower-level bureaucrat to stake his name and reputation on saying he’d stamped the passport when Lozada arrived, when no immigration official did. This implies that these bureaucrats didn’t think it was worth their while to take the heat for their bosses -and the surrendering of the passport to the court by a lower-level security person is a similar refusal to further take the heat for the bosses.

Let me refer, once more, to my Thursday column, Minimum and maximum, which tries to distinguish between two courts: of public opinion and of the law. Each has their proper place and they are not, much as the Palace insists, mutually exclusive: but each has its proper place and both are being actively resorted to (most recently: Lozada files kidnap, murder raps vs Razon, Atienza, et al ). Last Tuesday on my show my lawyer guest pointed out that Lozada’s testimony before the Senate is significant, in that it can be used to impeach him in court cases; therefore his assertions can actually fortify or weaken cases related to him or to officials in the courts.

Meanwhile let me state for the record that whatever my own preferences may be, I do not think a consensus for People Power exists, yet; or that there is even a widespread demand for the President’s resignation, yet: because there is no consensus on what should come afterwards. I find it heartening that people from all sides are making efforts to encourage arriving at a consensus.

But I do think three things have happened: first, more people are open to either option, and second, that the President faces a significant erosion in the constituency she fairly successfully claimed to represent from 2001 to the present: big business, the entrepreneurial class, include the Filipino-Chinese merchant class, professionals, and the provinces, and the majority of the hierarchy of the Catholic Church. Why this has taken place, now, is best clarified by Manuel Buencamino in his column, Everyone has a limit.

At the Mass in La Salle Greenhills on Sunday, I saw a classmate and good friend of Mike Arroyo. I teased him, took his picture with my cell phone, and told him, “I’m going to ‘MMS’ this photo to your friends Mike and Gloria.” He replied, “I already waved my middle finger at them when I passed the security cameras at the gate.”
I saw a nun from the Assumption College, Gloria Arroyo’s alma mater and bastion of support. My daughter commented, “Look, dad, there’s a lonely Assumption nun. Are they breaking ranks?”
I laughed and texted Manuel Quezon III about the apparition and he texted back, “She is not alone.”
Everyone has his limits. I suppose that’s what Gloria’s bishops meant when they said there is some good in everyone, including unrepentant liars, bribers, cheaters, plunderers, kidnappers and murderers.

Third, even among those still unprepared to consider resignation or People Power, there is also a growing number of people who have reached the conclusion that the President does not intend to step down in 2010, but they are still digesting the implications of this realization.

As Amando Doronila points out in Mounting outrage, little momentum :

Although there are signs of increasing public outrage over the NBN scandal, a higher state of outrage is needed to send huge numbers of people to the streets. The military is watching the size of the crowd before it makes a move either to remain loyal to the commander in chief or withdraw support, like it did in 2001, when the general staff dumped Estrada.

And yet, as Mon Casiple suggests,

Malacañang is scrambling for the initiative. Mobilization by friendly LGU units are being planned, sprinkled by a few pro-GMA NGOs and church personalities. A media offensive has been launched — against Lozada, JDV, the opposition, and even against Vice-President Noli de Castro. The de Castro media attack seeks to prevent a possible de Castro defection that can fundamentally undermine GMA’s chances of survival.

And so, for betting men, the Asia Sentinel (in Philippines + Scandal = Life Goes On , which resembles Doronila’s views) is right in saying the advantage remains with the administration. For some, the old arguments still hold water, as shown by A Simple Life. See also …got my life back….

But if it is unable to turn the tide before Holy Week, then what? Let’s return to Mon Casiple:

If it is not able to regain the initiative in the coming days, then the momentum for people power may not be denied and a GMA resignation will be the only outcome, either to preempt people power or as a consequence of one. The key institutions to watch are the Catholic church, big business, military, the Cabinet, and the ruling coalition. All these are watching closely the rise of the people’s movement and are making their decisions on an hour-by-hour basis.

The political crisis may be resolved in a matter of days or weeks; failure to do so will create a sustained and debilitating crisis for the rest of the year.

Ricky Carandang pretty much sees the same challenge facing the administration: having created problems for itself, how does it turn the tables on its critics? In a suitably short period of time, too. See what reporter Jove Francisco has to say, too, about the way old strategies don’t work as effectively, anymore. See pine for pine for another example. But blog@AWB Holdings doesn’t think that trotting out the President’s Assumption friends really helps.

There is only so much we can do. But of the things we can do -consulting with people, fostering consensus, but also, recognizing our own limits and what we will do if those limits are going to be crossed by possible events- let’s do them.

There is another broad consensus that I think exists: that the problems are deep, and yes, systemic, and this means once we take a step in a particular direction, we have to ask ourselves if we are prepared to live with events unfolding to their logical conclusion. Which, of course, includes the risk of unintended consequences, too.

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Let me close with another illuminating passage from the same chapter from the same book I quoted at the beginning of this entry:

The Shah’s reflex was typical of all despots: Strike first and suppress, then think it over: What next? First, display muscle, make a show of strength, and later perhaps demonstrate you also have a brain. Despotic authority attaches great importance to being considered strong, and much less to bering admired for its wisdom. Besides, what does wisdom mean to a despot? It means skill in the use of power. The wise despot know when and how to strike. This continual display of power is necessary because, at root, any dictatorship appeals to the lowest instincts of the governed: fear, aggressiveness towards one’s neighbors, bootlicking. Terror most effectively excites such instincts, and fear of strength is the wellspring of terror.

A despot believes that man is an abject creature. Abject people fill his court and populate his environment. A terrorized society will behave like an unthinking, submissive mob for a long time. Feeding it is enough to make it obey. Provided with amusements, it’s happy. The rather small arsenal of political tricks has not changed in millennia. Thus, we have all the amateurs in politics, all the ones convinced they would know how to govern if only they had the authority. Yet surprising things can also happen. Here is a well-fed and well-entertained crowd that stops obeying. It begins to demand something more than entertainment. It wants freedom, it demands justice. The despot is stunned. He doesn’t know how to see a man in all his fullness and glory. In the end such a man threatens dictatorship, he is its enemy. So it gathers its strength and destroys him.

Although dictatorship despises the people, it takes pains to win its recognition. In spite of being lawless -or rather, because it is lawless- it strives for the appearance of legality. On this point it is exceedingly touchy, morbidly oversensitive. Moreover, it suffers from a feeling (however deeply hidden) of inferiority. So it spares no pains to demonstrate to itself and others the popular approval it enjoys. Even if this support is a mere charade, it feels satisfying. So what if it’s only an appearance? The world of dictatorship is full of appearances…

…The most difficult thing to do while living in a palace is to imagine a different life -for instance, your own life, but outside of and minus the palace. Toward the end, the ruler finds people willing to help him out. Many lives, regrettably, can be lost at such moments. The problem of honor in politics. Take de Gaulle -a man of honor. He lost a referendum, tidied up his desk, and left the palace, never to return. He wanted to govern only under the condition that the majority accept him. The moment the majority refused him their trust, he left. But how many are like him? The others will cry, but they won’t move; they’ll torment the nation, but they won’t budge. Thrown out one door, they sneak in through another; kicked down the stairs, they begin to crawl back up. They will excuse themselves, bow and scrape, lie and simper, provided they can stay -or provided they can return. They will hold out their hands -Look, no blood on them. But the very fact of having to show those hands covers them with the deepest shame. They will turn their pockets inside out -Look, there’s not much there. But the very fact of exposing their pockets -how humiliating! The Shah, when he left the palace, was crying. At the airport he was crying again. Later he explained in interviews how much money he had, and that it was less than people thought.

This passage suggests many things; among them, the solid logic behind Atty. Raul Pangalanan’s arguments against The arguments for inaction.

And how’s this for action: First Gentleman leaves for Hong Kong–airport sources: Lawyer clueless but says not evading NBN probes.

Yesterday I texted some people I know outside Manila what they think, re: Lozada. Responses:

Bacolod:

hati rin kmi d2, sa ofc (provl gov’t) we biliv some facts bt questns are many like dat of what he dnt tel snce it s a big questn y now lg xa went out to d open… Protectn 2 life yes, but we cnt say 100% we biliv him…

Also from Bacolod:

They all believe him. But they are also disgusted with his investigators. Nobody I know trust that the Opposition want change -they just want their turn. The big change is they all hate GMA now but no tipping point. [The politicians are] discombobulated. They don’t know how to read the situation now. Even Bacolod’s notorious GMA lapdog Monico Puentevella who has managed to be close to all Presidents since Cory has signed a resolution against GMA which means He’s also paving the way for the next power “just in case.”

A student journalist at La Salle Bacolod:

Do u believe in Jun Lozada’s statements? 1000 Lasallian students. [survey results] 73% YES. 9% NO. 18% undecided.

From Naga City:

Save for some ppld identified wid Dato Arroyo phoning in radio programs, public sentiment is overwhelmingly wid Jun Lozada by a mile. Metro Naga chamber of commerce broke ranks wid PCCI and issued a statement supporting Lozada. Ateneo de Naga and Univ Sta. Isabel leading regl signature campaigning asking GMA to step down./ Ders a big protest event slated tom. da prolonged rains -for more than a wk now- notwithstanding

From Cebu City:

I think most people from Cebu are indifferent when comes to politics. But people do consider him credible. As a business person, most policies of the present administration are skewed towards favored businessmen. Regulatory Capture of Government Agencies is so obvious. Get rid all the nasty people hostaging the president. She’s good but helpless.

Also from a Cebu City friend currently traveling:

Met up w/friend (f. 32, married, filchi, alabang) n BKK, she says ppl back home don’t care anymore -the’ll see see what comes.My sister (f.41.single) joked “Who’s he” but says she was in NAIA with him the other night. Before I left Cebu, my thought my thought was: is this guy for real? is he honest? we all sort of presume that BigBoy is also BadBoy but really do we want yet another popular uprising? I suppose the general sentiment is… there’s a lack of it. people are getting apathetic again -at least marcos babies like us.

From Davao City:

So far, people believe him and his testimony… Pero as far as suportng anodr edsa, dats anodr story. I belv they wud want 2 w8 4 2010. No ppl powr dis tym… Prblm s corrupt s so widespread that ppl hv bcm cncal on d mattr… Evn d senators ond way or odr s nvolvd.

South Cotabato, according to the Davao City texter,

N so cotab2, d sentiment s mor ntense re anti gma coz its a known opositn area.

In Manila, a student from UST has this to say:

Still lookng 4 a concrete thing to do besides rally. Mabe if we start pressuring congressmen to support impeachment now. Itll giv anyone intrsted somthng to do.

Many of dem talk re hs crdblty n hw d whol plan 2 covr up only incrsd prcption dat he’s saying d truth, bt many r also dsenchantd w/ d hrings. F u ask me, d real ish brot abt b d series of NBN probes is being muddld by focus n prsonalties (lozada’s crdbtly, neri’s conscience, abalos’ guilt, gma’s involvmnt). Mnwyl, no 1. evn d opp s movng fast 2 fx d dysfnctional govt procurmnt 2 prvnt such deals frm hpening agn. Dat’s y ppol get tyrd of it ol n tune out

Congres or any poltcian is always undr d comand of pblic presure. Bt pols cnt feel that presure, bec media coverge is muddld, ppol just tune out. F media focuses n d real issues, ppol wil spil on d streets nt (jst) to chnge govt bt to presure it to initiate chnges. When ths starts n media covrs frm an ishus prspctv, a virtuous cycle wil begin, more powrful thn any powr brker. That kind of media advocacy hs bn sucesful in Africa, Europ n evn in US.

D real ishus r d dysfunctions in govt, thos dat Neri hs bn lamentng in hs polecon lectures. No one wants cheatng, bt no one is pushng… for elections effciency. No wnts coruption, bt no one is pushng to chnge d govt procurnmnt systm. no one is keeping govt audts in check (unles they cn use it for poltcal blakmail). D ishus r nt poverty. Povrty s an efect of our systemic problems, w/c is y that shud be our focus, nt ppol. Bec whoevr sits in gov’t r accidntal to do problem. Corruption cn always prospr in a systm left unchckd.

And from a lawyer:

Funny u shld ask, I was discusing it wid an ofcmate ystrdy, he said at first he was riveted by d whole thing but lately wid d idiots in d legislature grandstanding (galit lang dawbec dey werent in on it) he has gotten tired and tuned it out. Sad, and maybe dats d point of dis admin, 2 make pipol so sick as 2 turn apathetic as a way 2 cope.

And I.T. person:

Most people i talk to believe him, they see no ulterior motive for what he is doing.

As for the blogosphere, yugatech on how wiretapping’s getting cheaper; missingpoints on comparing Lozada to Singson. Bayan ni Kabayan on trying to understand Joker Arroyo. The Venom Speaks suggests we all make a self-check first.

Update, 2 am Saturday: noise barrages have caught the imagination of students! Check out video in Life’s precious moments don’t have value, unless they are shared. , and photos in *dawnskee* and rheavargas and I’m becoming tired… , as well as descriptions in spread YOUR wings and catch ME as i fall 🙂 and Fly and forever dance and Me, Myself, and I… and des’ Site and the ME behind the I and “my crazy little place is just around the corner”

And more statements, first from the UP Law Faculty and Students and then:

To a fellow economist and former colleague, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo statement from economists of the Ateneo de Manila University

We are outraged by the revelations made by Engr. Rodolfo Noel Lozada Jr. at the Philippine Senate Blue Ribbon hearings last 8 February 2008 about the overpriced Zhong Xing Telecommunication Equipment Company-National Broadband Network (ZTE-NBN) project. The project has no clear public rationale in the first place. We are dismayed by the revelations of Mr. Lozada that former Commission on Election Chairman Benjamin Abalos Sr., with the alleged involvement of First Gentleman Jose Miguel Arroyo, ordered the inclusion in the proposed project a large amount of kickbacks, amounting to as much as 130 million US dollars (or more than 5.2 billion pesos), enough money to remove the yearly public school classroom backlog, or purchase 5.8 million sacks of NFA rice, or alternatively secure the basic needs of about 29,000 poor families for a year. Simply put, a lot is being sacrificed for the greed of the few.

We are angered by the continuing attempt to cover up the anomalous circumstances surrounding the project, including the supposed kidnapping of Mr. Lozada to keep him from testifying in the Senate. We demand that government remove the cloak of Executive Order 464 and the invocation of executive privilege to allow public officials that have knowledge on the transaction to publicly testify on the circumstances of the deal. We demand the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) to release records of the meetings that allowed the contract to be processed. Because of the nature of the work of the NEDA in national economic planning to promote national development and public welfare (and not for private or individual interests), these minutes are public records. We want Secretary Romulo Neri, an Ateneo high school alumnus and supposed staunch advocate of reforms to eradicate transactional politics and oligarchic dominance in the country, to reveal all that he knows about the matter. Efficiency and equity demand no less.

We abhor the habit of this administration of forging secret deals and engaging in non-transparent processes in developing and contracting large infrastructure projects, especially foreign donor-funded programs, contrary to the tenets of good governance. We call on friends and colleagues in the government, especially the alumni of our university, and other sectors to help ferret out the truth about other alleged irregular deals entered into by corrupt public officials, including the fertilizer scam, the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority book scam and the North Rail project.

We urge our fellow economist, alumna, and former Ateneo colleague, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, to fully explain and account for all the anomalies under her administration to prevent our country from plunging into another political and economic crisis. Indeed, we are dismayed that Mrs. Arroyo has not exercised the vast powers and resources available to the Presidency to ensure that large-scale corruption in the government is not only blocked but also punished, and that these irregularities have only increased political instability and uncertainty in the country. We are also offended that the Presidency has instead utilized these vast powers and resources to turn its back from servicing the public and contribute to the advancement of private greed, including the Machiavellian buying of congressmen, governors, and everybody else that get its way. And sadly, these abuses have eroded the meaning and legitimacy of the Presidency. If she fails to fully account and explain the anomalies and corrupt practices in her administration, the most honorable thing she can do is to resign from the Presidency.

Finally, we publicly pledge to heed the Catholic Bishops’ call to communal action by supporting the activities that would promote transparency, accountability, and good governance, and we call on our fellow social scientists and academics to support this advocacy. We pledge to make our voices heard by committing to various ways of peaceful and non-violent political mobilization.

— Signatures —

Fernando T. Aldaba
Cristina M. Bautista
Germelino M. Bautista
Edsel L. Beja, Jr.
Diana U. del Rosario
Luis F. Dumlao
Cielito F. Habito
Leonardo A. Lanzona
Joseph Anthony Y. Lim
Romelia I. Neri
Ellen H. Palanca
Malou A. Perez
Joselito T. Sescon
Tara Sia-Go
Patrick Gerard C. Simon-King
Rosalina P. Tan
Philip Arnold P. Tuaño

Avatar
Manuel L. Quezon III.

357 thoughts on ““The Dead Flame”: reflections for the weekend

  1. ramrod: have you seen the link already?.. i posted it yet it says it’s still awaiting for moderation. Yes, i’m currently a student of the university taking up Political Economy.

  2. raine,
    Not yet. MLQ3 needs to unblock it or something, perhaps later. Whats the difference between political economy and economy per se? you still talk about gdp, per capita income, imports/exports, etc. right?

  3. ramrod: the course actually seeks to integrate the realm of politics and economics (as well as other disciplines of study)in the study of the national and global issues that affect us. Basically, it provides the essential political and economical tools for examining change and development brought about by globalization. Yes, we stil do talk about the micro and macroeconomic concepts and integrate it with the political theories and issues of today.

  4. The biggest problem the country finds itself in is the mistaken perception which forms the philosophical basis for people who should know better is the mistaken perception that just a corner away from being a first world society.

    Philosophy is simply our individual perception of reality.

    A third world society perceiving itself to be close to being first world.

    The enitre basis for Neri’s oligarchic rants were taken from the Joe Almonte’s thesis of the backwardness of the Philippine economy traced directly to the oligarchy. Their policy solution was a simply insane idea.

    Forget macroeconomics and concentrate on the third wave of societal development, the digital revolution. Leapfrog over agro-industrial economic development and exports of human resource as we can import whatever we need in the age of global economic integration. They tragically missed one startegic fact. Macroeconmics (fiscal and monetary policy.)

    The last 20 years of the gloabl move to integrate economies was preceeded by the globalization of financial markets. Financial capitalism. However this was contingent on economies having sound and sustainable macroeconomic fundamentals.

    That was baqsed on the presumption of having sound state institutions already in place. The last ten years saw crisis after crisis in emerging markets all caused by financial blowouts. The same thing is now happening in the U.S.and Europe to a lesser degree.

    Countries who coupled their financial markets with the dollar now have very challenging times ahead.

    The countries that had not coupled their financial markets and econmies with the U.S. have been growing like gangbusters.

    Added to this the end of the era of easy oil to one of tough oil has put pressures on commodity markets due to the emergence of developing economies with huge domestic markets which in turn is driving food prices higher from demand for food and fuel.

    All of a sudden the leap frogging policies of the government togeher with the liberalization of everything to break the hold of the oligarchs is proving to be insane. In effect Neri and Co. wanted Mr. Market to destroy the oligarchic hold on the Philippine Economy.

    However they did not realize that Mr. Market is actually a paper tiger and when it gets into trouble will run to Big Daddy. (The State)

    All of a sudden S&P who makes their money from the people they rate told the Philippine government – your tax base remains fundamentaly small. The government was also told that they had not been building the physical infrastructure needed to solve the physical bottlenecks of the physical economy.

    But the Neri boys were still enamored in the microsector of IT. Hence the attempt to bring the governmentinto the IT age.

    Just recently the President had to talk to Vietnam to try to get guarantees that they would continue to reserve a portion of their rice for us. Their economy is growing and so is their consumption. All over Asia consumption of staples are growing.

    The Philippines today is the worlds biggest rice importer. Guess what will happen to rice prices in the next few years. There is a move to wean Pinoys from rice to potatoes and camote.

    The other genuis who tried the leap frog technique from backward farming to industrialization was a guy named Mao. We have also a leag frogging expert here in the person of Joe Al. He forgot that it was the industrialization process that multiplied food productivity that created a more equitable society. But that required that the state play a strategic role by strengthening fiscal and monetary policies. But that would mean building up the productive capacities to produce sound fiscal and monetary polcies. The basis for that would still be food surplus. The foundation for currency of all currencies. But that is the basis of macroeconmics.

    Wow Mali!!!!

  5. granting for argument’s sake that gaite tried to dissuade lozada from testifying, isn’t it the consistent position of malacanang for executive officers to resist appearing in the senate, and be abused, disrespected and manipulated by unscrupulous senators “in aid of destabilization”? the experiences of norberto gonzales, camilo sabio, and other cabinet officials do not go unnoticed. i don’t see anything gravely wrong with a co-equal government branch refusing to be a tool for grandstanding by members of another branch. from where i sit, as one lawyer watching the senate proceedings on t.v., i can understand how the “resource persons” from the executive branch could be misused for political “pogi points”.

    i said many times and i say it again, truth does not depend on the number of “believers”. 99.9% of the whole philippine population could believe what lozada, joey devenecia, or even neri were saying, but if the three were telling falsehood, they were still not telling the “truth”. it simply means that 99.9% of filipinos are fools.

    now that the “hero” lozada has formally filed a complaint for “kidnapping” with the doj (with all the fun-fare and glitz of abs-cbn t.v. and other media outlets), it’s time for the doj to conduct a lie detector test on him, in aid of criminal investigation. there is no reason lozada and his camp would, or could, object to that unless his complaint, and all his previous senate testimony concerning it, are false and an LDT would tend to incriminate him. i hope someone from the office of the doj or anyone from malacanang is reading this.

  6. Is this hvrds-comment true? … the leap frogging policies of the government togeher with the liberalization of everything to break the hold of the oligarchs….. I thought that a major complaint (at least by Abe Margallo and cvj against GMA) is that this administration is still working for the interests of the oligarchs (rent-seeking or otherwise).

  7. JOKERS of the Day: Assumptionistas

    “Former high school classmates of President Arroyo at Assumption College rallied around her yesterday amid mounting calls for the Chief Executive to resign.

    “Some people judge her as yabang (haughty), but she just has neck problems. She has a human side and she is deeply hurt by all this name-calling,” said former classmate and now Tourism Assistant Secretary Cynthia Carrion.”

    What neck problem when GMA doesn’t even have a spine?

  8. Bencard, I thought lie detector test results aren’t admissible in court?

    Also, it’s kinda difficult to fool 99.9% of the population–although the admin sure tries. 😀

  9. mike, generally, LDT tests may not be admissible in court but they sure can be used by the law enforcement agencies to help in criminal investigation. as you know, the doj is not a court. please read my past comments on this matter in previous threads.

    difficult to fool, yes. all i’m saying is that falsehood is falsehood no matter how many people ( or angels) believe it is true. cheers.

  10. Gloria’s cabinet, Neri called her “evil”, then Salceda calls her a “bitch” with allies like these she doesn’t need enemies. Whats next?

  11. Pero si Lozada may subpoena na magtestify sa Senado, at kung sin-o man ang mag dissuade sa kanya pareho na palayasin sa hongkong, maykasam pang “bribe money” ay ma-ari ng commit na ng “councelling an individual to break a lawful order” by constitutionally mandated body at para sa manga legal minds as ito seriosong kasalanan lalo nasa manga opisyal mismo ng gobyerno na nagsumpa na sundin daw ANG “RULE OF LAW”

  12. There is a new show show in the US that uses a LDT to determine if a contestant is lying or not. Pretty good show. I just forgot the title.

  13. at kong a LDT nang DOJ si Lozoda at iyon ang basi nang kanilang kaso dahil sa resulta nang Test, pagdating sa Korte, tanong ng Huwes, sa-an ang Evidesiya? Sabi ni Gonzales, yong resulta nang LD puro kasinuggalingan ang asal nitong si Lozada> Sabi nang Huwes..Ikaw Raul, sa-an mo nakuha yong Lisinsya mo sa Recto?

  14. ‘Fox has announced The Moment of Truth, a new game show that will quiz contestants on personal questions and use a lie detector to determine if they’re telling the truth, will premiere on Wednesday, January 23 at 9PM ET/PT.’

    This might be a good show for Kris Aquino. First celebrity contestant is Jun Lozada.

  15. ”Let justice be done though heavens fall.” – Haydee Yorac

    Personally, I have no qualms with the LDT, but I’m not Lozada’s atty. Would be good to try it also on Abalos, Mike Defensor, and Formoso though…

  16. good idea, supremo, para yon’g wowowee crowd ay magkaroon naman ng basehan sa kani-kanilang paniniwala. total, mukhang mahilig naman sa showbiz itong si lozada, eh.

    mang_kiko, para po maintindihan mo, and layunin ng imbestigasion ng doj ay para malaman na maroong ibedensiya ang nagre-reklamo na magpapatunay na WALANG DUDA na may kasalanan ang akusado. kung wala, dismiss ang complaint at hindi na makararating sa korte. ika nga, tapos ang boksing.

  17. re hvrds comments:

    have had some interesting talks with various kinds of businessmen. off hand, some things i’ve picked up:

    1. to deliver socialized medicine to the poorest of the poor, that is, full and free health care, would cost only 8 billion annually.

    2. it is cheaper for hog raisers to import corn from thailand than to bring it in from mindanao. the corn’s cheap and good in mindanao, bringing it to luzon though is less efficient than importing from thailand.

    3. filipinos have taken to growing japanese sweet corn when the japanese themselves are crazy over the indigenous variety of white corn grown in mindanao but now hard to find

    4. we average about 3-5 tons of rice per hectate when our neighbors produce 10-15 tons per hectare. we are at 1940s yields while the rest of the region is in the 21st century; irri has excellent varieties (high-yeld) but farmers get no support (subsidy) to buy the seeds unlike farmers in the region.

    5. massive epidemics in pork growers and government veterinary services aren’t doing anything. problem made worse by unfettered smuggling/importation of hogs, etc.

    6. rice cartels smuggling like crazy, farmers hit all the more. government for political reasons keeps prices low which means farming a losing proposition. a chinese entrepreneur has taken to growing a very fine quality rice and selling it at a premium locally, has encouraged contract growers.

    7. almost unanimously businessmen complain that there are many jobs that remain unfilled because qualified people simply aren’t available (welder shortage; vet shortage; mid-level manager shortage, etc.)

  18. UPn, it appears that there is a consensus across the political spectrum in the Philippines (from Jo Almonte on the Right to Joma Sison on the extreme Left, and those in between) that the Oligarchic elite has been the primary obstacle to our economic development.

    Where they disagree is on the manner of breaking the stranglehold of the oligarchy, with technocrats like Neri favoring a market-oriented approach (at the expense of our Institutions). Neri and company thought that they can outflank the oligarchy, but as the NBN-ZTE deal shows, they were the ones who became its puppets since Gloria Arroyo and the FG took the side of the oligarchs and their political allies. I suppose a lot of that has to do with her illegitimate ascendancy in 2004 which renders Gloria beholden to those who helped her.

  19. bencard, please review the sc decision on executive privilege. it’s quite favorable to the executive branch. at no time did gaite or anyone from cabinet testify they wanted to invoke privilege, which the court said is the president’s to invoke. at no time did the cabinet or other admin officials say they wanted to invoke exec. priv. for lozada, they simply stated they wanted to foil the senate’s making him testify, as legally speaking, they knew they had no grounds to refuse the senate’s summons.

  20. cvj,
    Its really tempting to go against these so called Oligarchs, but some unfortunately we do a lot of business through them…so this is an area where I inhibit myself.
    I remember you talking about this issue last year pa, you didn’t see Neri’s notes per chance?

  21. mlq3,

    ‘2. it is cheaper for hog raisers to import corn from thailand than to bring it in from mindanao. the corn’s cheap and good in mindanao, bringing it to luzon though is less efficient than importing from thailand.’

    Why not build hog farms in Mindanao? Build a meat processing plant beside the farm and then ship the frozen pork to Luzon.

  22. supremo,
    There was a hog farm project in Mindanao – remember the Sumilao issue? SMC has an advanced facility in Vietnam and it was the plan to set up something similar in Cagayan. I hope they found a middle ground with that one.
    With corn production, we actually have good technology backing us up in terms of variety and yield (Monsanto, etc.) but the weakness is in post harvest facilities and of course transport.

  23. Ramrod, unfortunately i haven’t seen Neri’s notes. As Abe Margallo suggested, the ideal would be a Bayanihan Pact where the oligarchs use their resources in the service of the common good as described here:

    http://www.redsherring.blogspot.com/2007/11/in-service-of-common-good.html

    I have this dream that Mar Roxas and Noynoy Aquino, both descendants of oligarchic families, would take the lead in implementing such a pact, if only to atone for the sins of their fathers (or grandfathers). That would allow their class a soft landing by bridging the social divide and unleash the productive capacities of the rest.

  24. Ramrod, unfortunately i haven’t seen Neri’s notes. As Abe Margallo suggested, the ideal would be a Bayanihan Pact where the oligarchs use their resources in the service of the common good as described here:

    http://www.redsherring.blogspot.com/2007/11/in-service-of-common-good.html

    I have this dream that Mar Roxas and Noynoy Aquino, both descendants of oligarchic families, would take the lead in implementing such a pact, if only to atone for the sins of their fathers (or grandfathers). That would allow their class a soft landing by bridging the social divide and unleash the productive capacities of the rest.

  25. “I have this dream that Mar Roxas and Noynoy Aquino, both descendants of oligarchic families, would take the lead in implementing such a pact, if only to atone for the sins of their fathers (or grandfathers). That would allow their class a soft landing by bridging the social divide and unleash the productive capacities of the rest.”

    It would also probably cause their families to hate them. For both reasons, I don’t think it will happen. What we need is somebody from outside the oligarchy to confront them with political power that even they cannot buy off. And to basically give them an ultimatum. That is the only language they will understand. Marcos had that chance, but flubbed it big time.

  26. supremo, i dunno, can only guess from what i was told that the shipping’s the expensive part. i heard something similar when i was in bacolod, it’s cheaper to ship something from singapore than to get it from manila.

  27. ramrod,

    ‘but the weakness is in post harvest facilities and of course transport.’

    Then build the hog farms as close as possible to the corn fields. It’s all about integration.

  28. Raine, I’m really hoping Mr. Quezon would miss the symposium because of a certain massive rally happening on the other side of Ortigas Center.

  29. mlq3, that might very well be, but if officials in the executive branch, from atienza to gaite (and private citizen mike defensor) were misled by lozada that he did not want to testify and was afraid to do so, as they claim he told them, then their efforts to “help” him would be understandable in a political context, if not legal. depending on the true nature of the “help” they extended to lozada, they may or may not be legally liable, e.g., if they did it to ensure the personal safety of lozada who allegedly told them that he was afraid for his life.

    again, an LDT test to determine whether lozada is telling the truth concerning his alleged “kidnapping”, and “bribery” will go a long way towards clearing the air, politically as well as legally.

  30. Duckvader,
    Not necessarily. With the obvious inefficiency of our agricultural sector margins must be very low anyway. The rest of the world has gone into sustainability programs, efficiency, environmental and social responsibility, and it has been proven that businesses run this way are more profitable in the long run. These old Oligarchic families just need to upgrade their business policies.

  31. mlq3,

    Got that.
    Why is everything expensive over there compared to the rest of the region? I can call someone in Singapore for 3 cents a minute compared to 13 cents to the Philippines. It must be the golden cable that PLDT uses to connect the Philippines to the rest of the world.

  32. mlq3/supremo,
    Transport or shipping is extremely vital to agricultural products as it really affects the cost structure. Thats why I was excited during that SONA where Farm-to-Market infrastructures were mentioned, seriously taken – its a very big step.
    Just look at the fresh fruit business in Davao, Polomolok, and Bukidnon, they have very efficient systems of farming, world class post harvest facilities (complete with cold storage), even the farm to market transport are climate controlled right down to the port. Of course, their use of high burst threshold packaging material made from the best pulp in Europe 90% virgin fibre assures them that the products will reach the intended destinations in the Middle East, Japan, Europe, and North America in the best market value conditions.
    (the last part was plugging, sorry, hehehe).

  33. Guys, I can’t help but think that going back to the Hello Garci as the biggest object in the goody basket with NBN also thrown in there would make a more justified revolt.

  34. cvj: I know you have mentioned it several times, this :

    descendants of oligarchic families.. would … atone for the sins of their fathers (or grandfathers).

    You never articulated it — why does the child inherit the sin of the father? Does this inheritance-bit go both ways — does the child automatically inherit the beatitudes that the father has earned?

    So is it that you owe the world, or does the world owe you because of your father and your father’s father?

  35. BrianB,

    I posted a link (1:41). Its from a lawyer based in the US. Apparently in 1985 in Wisconsin, there was a “dagdag bawas” incident with fictitious precincts and fake ballots – the whole caboodle. The election results can be nullified or something. Goes to show dagdag bawas is not a monopoly of the Philippines.

  36. supremo, i think the doj, or his assigned deputies (prosecutors), would be asking the questions through an expert LDT scientist or technician, usually with psychology background. if i could, i have a few questions to ask, myself.

  37. supremo, it’s the things that are driving people, even some big businessmen, nuts. from some of them i understand that prior to the even timid liberalization under ramos they were freaking out but then saw that they could not only compete, but could flourish in open competition. for others, though, perish the thought. so they oppose open skies (pal), further opening up telecoms (the top three players), properly bidding out the operation of ports (you know who), and arrange wiping out their debts to government (meralco), and what legitimate businesses face is state-sanctioned smuggling and cartel building (everything from cement, to fuel, to agricultural goods, etc.). the combination of official corruption and simple inefficiency is corrosive: yields are low, which justifies importation, which opens up avenues for smuggling, etc. what manufacturing exists is wiped out and the productive at home jobs evaporate, further feeding the human export machine. think of the industries we have that have fallen by the wayside, from sugar to coconut. some months ago i met someone from mindanao who told me a horrifying story of how the seaweed farming industry in his province has collapsed from a combination of over-taxation by rapacious local governments, cheating by competitors which alienates foreign customers, and the aggressive pirating of local seaweed farmers by indonesia, who pay filipinos to go there set up farms, give them cheap and easy credit, and so, indonesia has grabbed the market from the philippines. rinse, lather, and repeat.

  38. ramrod,

    So it’s been done in Davao. Good! Making the technology available to everyone is the next step. It will get cheap soon enough.

  39. supremo,
    Sadly, MLQ3 is right re competitiveness of local industries. If we look around us and compare how they are done in the Davao plantations you’ll think you went to a different country, much like going into Subic before during Dick’s time.
    How can competitive business thrive in an uneven playing field? Just look at our own paper mills, they are literally dying, imports are cheaper.

  40. supremo: It is a slightly easier problem to analyze with regards telephone calls. That you can call someone in Singapore for 3 cents a minute compared to 13 cents to the Philippines is not with cables nor routers and switches, it is with the billing and the INFAMOUS TAX-COLLECTOR. Long-distance service is a cash-cow to the Philippine treasury. Philippines has higher/Singapore has lower higher tax rate on the calls.

  41. “some months ago i met someone from mindanao who told me a horrifying story of how the seaweed farming industry in his province has collapsed” – mlq3

    So we lost the seaweed industry also? Good thing the biggest market is down – USA, maybe not so big a gain for Indonesia but a loss for us nonetheless.

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