10
Oct

Impeachment as a game, 2

In a previous post, I have stated that in the current set up, impeachment has become a game. This month, we have another example of how a constitutional process is turned into a trivial game.

Out of the blue and out of nowhere, Atty. Roberto Pulido (former lawyer of Magdalo soldiers) filed a 3-page impeachment complaint against Gloria Arroyo. The said complaint was immediately endorsed by Edgar San Luis, a congressman from Laguna. Based on a Supreme Court decision, such endorsement meant that the impeachment process is deemed initiated, and thus, no other complaint can be entertained. What happened last Friday was almost similar to what Oliver Lozano and Rodante Marcoleta did in 2005.

Immediately after filing, rumors that the complaint was a ploy concocted at the Fortress by the Pasig. Even the pro-Arroyo Senator Miriam Santiago thinks this complaint is filed to preempt the opposition from filing a more substantive complaint. Pulido is now hard-pressed on defending himself, though unfortunately he sounds like Lozano.

The problem with Pulido is that he filed a weak complaint, the same problem that the Lozano 2005 complaint had, which led to the junking. Do not wonder when the House does the same to Pulido’s complaint. Why didn’t he coordinate with any opposition congressman?

Anyway, many have already questioned the credibility of this year’s complaint, so the coaches devised another strategy – have it endorsed by an opposition congressman. But that’s a tall order, but is there anything that money can’t buy today? Hence, allegations of bribery are no longer surprising. What gives more credence to the allegations?

1. The alleged briber, Francis Ver (related to Fabian Ver of martial law fame), is deputy secretary-general of KAMPI, Arroyo’s party.
2. KAMPI President and Interior Secretary Ronnie Puno denied that bribery happened, and duly sacked Ver anyway.
3. If Ver is acting on his own, where will he get the money if his bribery attempt succeeded?
4. Unlike Romy Neri, several congressmen attested that they, too, were offered bribes (use some salt – all of them were opposition members, so this might be a conspiracy).

Should we expect the same thing next year till 2010?

9
Oct

Annoyance of the Week – Tacky Billboards

How I wish I had a photo, but since it was always night time and I was on the bus, I couldn’t.

Anyway, along the Camp Aguinaldo stretch of the north bound lane of EDSA, I always pass by two huge screens. On good days, both screens display ads; on not-so-good days, they both have static displays. To be honest, I don’t find the ads attractive and impressive. They are just two Powerpoint slides, one a static text slide, and the other a slide with video.

What’s so annoying about these screens?

One: one version of the static ad says ‘Multimedia display’.

Two: another version of the static ad says ‘Home are the fallen heroes’, with a buttefly emerging from a hand on one side, and a picture of a coffin on the other. Below everything is the text ‘Advertise here [phone number]’. How tacky can you get.

Also, as a filler, sometimes the ad goes like this: Support your AFP, advertise here. You know, there’s an implied statement there: if you don’t advertise here, you are a destabilizer.

9
Oct

Apple faces war on two fronts

Apple is currently facing a battle on two fronts, all brought about by making its two latest products as closed systems.

When iPhone was announced, Steve Jobs said a lot of things, leaving people to set high expectations on the device. As they say, the devil is in the details, and when the details and launch date neared, expectations are either whetted or disappointed.

One pitfall of Apple is that they chose to lock the iPhone to a single carrier. But probably the biggest mistake is to make iPhone a closed system. Many were anticipating about the possible things that can be done with an iPhone, only to get themselves disappointed. No third-party software, carrier-locked units, problematic activation system (at first).

In a single stroke, Apple has managed to change the rules of the game. And to enforce the new rules, Apple has released an update that has turned some iPhones into bricks, unlocked and not. Ambulance chasers are now looking for clients for a class suit. It can get ugly.

Learning from its mistakes, Apple introduced iPod touch, an iPhone less the phone capabilities. And this time, they used an encryption system to prevent access to the file system. Yes, Apple has learned all right.

Two giants in their own fields are ready to join the fray.

Nokia, one of the largest mobile phone manufacturers, fired the first shot, taking advantage of the negative perception of iPhone’s closed system by introducing the “Open to anything” initiative. Leveraging on the S60 UI platform, Nokia touts that its mobile phones are open, allowing anyone to develop applications for its mobile phones. Now, if Nokia pushes its buttons right, this is a market opportunity.

The problem with Nokia is that touchscreen is its Achilles heel. Remember Nokia 7710? Nokia started Series 90 as Symbian touchscreen UI, only that 7710 is way ahead of its time, technologically and market speaking. Series 90 is dead, so is 7710. (Speaking of 7710, my 7710 is dead, literally. It won’t power on anymore. The unit is now a brick, after almost two years.)

Now, Apple is content releasing new iPod models, leaving behind old models to dust. Microsoft made a gesture that not only warmed the hearts of old Zune users, it also showed the world how Apple treats its old iPod users.

Microsoft recently released new generations of Zune with new features, and (I’m not sure if this was a product of forward-thinking) old Zunes will get the same features as the new Zunes via software update. Yes, Microsoft shows the right way to treat loyal customers – you do not leave them behind.

(As an owner of a 30GB iPod video, this gesture by Microsoft was touching – no pun intended. Good thing I got this iPod free, otherwise, I would be seething with resentment over the new iPod releases.)

While no iPhone nor iPod killers, Nokia and Microsoft are showing Apple what could have been. In the end, at least we know we have a choice.

To Apple: it should be not just about profit. Treat your customers right, and profit will follow. Learn from your mistakes.

To Nokia and Microsoft (and other Apple competitors): just do it.

8
Oct

Corruption right within the Fortress?

Better late than never.

Palace staff pocketed P455,000 from PCSO?

MANILA, Philippines — She received a check for P460,000 as donation but received only P5,000. Where did the rest of the money go?

Malacañang wanted to know as well, and on Friday it ordered an investigation into a complaint of a woman who claimed that the liaison officer in the Office of the Presidential Adviser for Religious Affairs had given her P5,000 to help her ailing daughter out of a check that amounted to P460,000.

Normita Bernadez said a P460,000-check had been issued in her name but she received only P5,000.

Bernadez said Gladys Bayuga, a liaison officer of the Palace’s religious affairs office, had asked her to cash the check.

She said that from the start, Bayuga had told her that through the presidential office she would get P5,000 in medical assistance for her adopted daughter, 19-year-old Marisol Igme, who was suffering from a tumor in her nose.

When Bernadez cashed the check at a branch of government-owned Land Bank of the Philippines on Solano Street near Malacañang, she was surprised to find out that it amounted to P460,000 and it was made out to her name.

“Hindi ako naghahabol na maging akin ‘yong pera” [“I did not try to get the money”], Bernadez said after a meeting with Undersecretary Fatima Valdez, presidential adviser for religious affairs.

She said she just wanted to find out what happened to the rest of the P455,000.

In a statement, Valdez said she had ordered an investigation and summoned Bayuga “to appear before this office to answer the complaint.”

“This is to give both parties a chance to tell their side of the story,” she said. “After the investigation, we will submit our findings to the Office of the Executive Secretary.”

Bernadez had aired her complaint in a television news program.

On Friday, she went to the Palace to see Valdez and to tell her story. She was accompanied by her adopted daughter Marisol, who wore a cap and sat quietly while her surrogate mother spoke to reporters.

The 48-year-old Bernadez, who is from the Pansol area of Quezon City, explained that she had adopted Marisol, her husband’s niece who was orphaned when she was 2 years old.

‘Good and helpful’

Bernadez, who has four other children, said she had been going around seeking financial help after Marisol was diagnosed with cancer in April.

She said she heard about Bayuga from the mother of another cancer patient. She that that sometime in May or June she was finally able to contact Bayuga, whom she described as a good and helpful person.

She said Bayuga informed her that she would be getting P5,000 in medical assistance.

“I was happy because that money would help in the radiation treatment for Marisol,” Bernadez told reporters.

She said that when she was asked to accompany Bayuga to cash the check, she signed the voucher and was surprised to discover that the check was made out to her name and that it was for P460,000.

She said Bayuga told her that the rest of the money would be given to other patients in need.

Bernadez recalled that another woman was with them and that she was made to cash a check for P200,000.

Eventually, she said, Bayuga gave her P5,000 in cash, as promised.

Bernadez said she continued to look for financial help for Marisol, who needs three cycles of chemotheraphy. One cycle of treatment costs P50,000.

She added that Bayuga sent her a text message Thursday when her complaint was aired on TV.

She said the text message stated, “Bakit ginawa mo sa akin ito?” [“Why did you do this to me?”]

Bernadez said she simply wanted to know what happened to the rest of the money.

As far as I know, Bayuga is now missing. Note the ironies of this case. Corruption in the Office of Religious Affairs, Fortress by the Pasig?

8
Oct

Impeachment as a game

It seems that Gloria Arroyo’s term is cursed. Every year since 2005, she faced impeachment attempts, though all of them were squashed with much fanfare. She has proven time and again that impeachment is just a numbers game, despite the strength of evidence presented by complainants. (Yes, the impeachment process is just one of the institutional casualties that this regime will leave by 2010 – assuming that she will step down by then, ha.)

The degradation of trust on the impeachment process began, ironically, in 2001, when the Estrada impeachment trial was held hostage by the prosecutors (who walked out of the proceedings and then Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr doing nothing to call them back). After the euphoria of EDSA 2/power grab (whatever you call it), the Filipino people have realized that taking shortcuts won’t work. And scheming politicians also learned a lesson, ironically from the so-called Craven 11: impeachment is just a numbers game. And these scheming politicians learned this lesson by heart, and now impeachment is just that – a game.

The impeachment game begins with an impeachment complaint (about a page or two, using newspaper clippings as evidence) being filed at the House, preferably by some quack lawyer, and endorsed (preferably immediately) by a congressman (preferably from the majority) who would issue platitudes for endorsing such complaint (like, “I just want to get the truth” etc). Then, the House Justice committee counts sheep deliberate on the form (if it came from a reliable operator, ie. quack) and substance (read: who will give more money). Depending on the grease deliberations, a committee report recommending the acceptance or rejection of the complaint is sent to the plenary. After a new round of camera/photo opp and more yakety-yak, (depending on the numbers) the report is either accepted or rejected.

Now, another impeachment complaint is filed and endorsed immediately. The cast of characters is changed: we now have a lawyer who formerly represented some Magdalo soldiers (mostly connected with the Army, if I am not mistaken) as complainant, and another congressman as endorser. The lawyer, by the way, also filed an ethics complaint against the current Speaker of the House. The congressman is a relative newbie. And this early, the administration is confident that this too shall pass. It also felt aggrieved by allegations that the new complaint was just an ‘impeach-me’ antic.

Anyway, as much as I want Arroyo impeached, the chances for such is much closer to nil than in 2005. With the impeachment reduced to a game, and with Arroyo having the numbers at the Lower House, pardon me if I am very much skeptical of the process. Now, if Arroyo pushes the wrong buttons, I might reconsider. Like, pulling the rug off the Speaker’s feet. Or, a strong clamor from all parts of the society (in your dreams).

Yes, the process is broken, and it needs to be fixed.

(Next: suggestions on fixing the problem. Hopefully.)

7
Oct

Enrile: Diva senator that needs some spanking

I think all of you should forget Desperate Housewives and Jon Stewart and instead concentrate on this.

Enrile sends college student shaking in fear

By AUREA CALICA

The Philippine Star

The demeanor of Sen. Juan Ponce-Enrile during a hearing at the Senate on Friday sent one student who went to watch the proceedings trembling in fear.

Mark Jemel Galez, 19, a broadcast journalism student of La Salle-Dasmariñas, Cavite, drew the ire of Enrile for taking photos of the senator using his handy video camera.

Enrile got peeved and asked the student: “Who are you? Why are you taking my picture? Come here.”

Galez went a bit closer to Enrile to explain but his voice was too soft to be heard by the crowd. Enrile later reportedly told him “to get out of this room.”

Enrile said people should not be taking photographs without permission. The student went to his seat but immediately went out when signaled to do so.

The senator went on with his tirades, saying, “My face is ugly enough I don’t want it to be seen in pictures.”

After the hearing, Enrile approached the fellow students of Galez and told them that “if something happens to me, you will all be responsible.”

Some reporters who went to talk to Galez said the student seemed so nervous that he was shaking.

He was also obviously embarrassed because many people witnessed the incident, which ironically, occurred during the hearing of the budget of the Commission on Human Rights.

During a recent hearing on the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement, businessman and special envoy Donald Dee also received a tongue-lashing from Enrile for supposedly being pushy and “threatening” in his defense of the accord.

Enrile told Dee to “get the hell out of here” if he would continue to compel senators to approve the JPEPA.

Aside from Enrile, Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago is also known for her strictness in holding hearings.

She said she would cite for contempt anybody caught with his cellular phone on during hearings.

The senator once lost her cool because people kept on going in and out of a room where she was holding a hearing on the budget of one department.

Santiago said she did not like getting distracted by people and Senate staff “acting like senators” and disrespecting ongoing proceedings.

(Jhay Rocas, the student’s a school mate of yours.)

Mr. Enrile must be forgetting something. While he is a senator, he is supposed to serve the people, not make them cower in fear just because he was peeved. As they say in Filipino, tumandang walang pinagkatandaan; or tumatandang paurong.

He doesn’t want to be seen in pictures? Heh. He should have not run and instead hide his “ugly” (his own word) face.

I call on Mr. Enrile to apologize to the student, who was doing nothing wrong. Your action is uncalled for and unbecoming of a senator of the Republic. Your action smacks of arrogance that is misplaced. You are first and foremost a public servant, senator second. How dare you, Mr. Enrile!

I call on every Filipino to condemn Enrile’s actions. I call on every Filipino to take Enrile to task. I call on every Filipino to demand an apology from Enrile for his arrogant actions against his fellow Filipino, a tax payer who pays Enrile’s salary and pork barrel.

PS: If you have time, please blog about this, about your sentiment about Enrile’s action. Spread the word.

5
Oct

Another card to cancel

It seems I have another card to cancel. Wee.

Yesterday, I got my BPI credit card bill. Do you know how much I owe them?

Yes, five gazillion pesos. Actually, four pesos and thirty-five centavos, to be exact.

So I called BPI Express Phone to ask if it is possible to just add this amount to next month’s bill (since they are going to charge me for the annual anyway this month).

The phone banker said no, you have to pay it on or before the due date, otherwise you will be charged interest and you will be considered in default.

What gets my goat is that the jeepney fare to be incurred just to pay the freaking bill is greater than the bill itself.

So now that makes two cancelled cards. Two more left.

PS: I will have my revenge. Sometimes, when you pay in banks, the teller will ask you if you want to pay the exact amount or not. For example, if your bill is 469.35 and you pay 500, you can choose to pay the exact amount or pay 500 in full. So, for this bill, I’ll pay five pesos and ask for change. Heh.

5
Oct

Remember them?

Today, I want to recall and wonder what happened to the following cast of characters for the show called Philippine politics.

1. Acsa Ramirez – Remember her? The Landbank cashier who blew the whistle on a tax diversion scam? The one who was presented by Gloria Arroyo as a SUSPECT? The one who was cleared by the Ombudsman? Gloria Arroyo did apologize, but the damage has been done. I think Ms. Ramirez represents all the whistleblowers of the current dispensation.

2. Ricardo Manapat – Remember him? He was then head of the National Archives. He hogged the limelight when presidential candidate Fernando Poe Jr.’s citizenship was questioned before the Comelec and the Supreme Court. He was used as a witness by the lawyers Fornier (who seems to have a penchant for having “non-Filipino” candidates disqualified) to prove that Poe was an American. Then, three staff members of the Archives showed up, claiming that Manapat had ordered them to forge documents to prove Poe’s American citizenship. The Senate investigated the issue, and recommended the filing of charges against Manapat. Nothing has been heard about him and his case ever since. Almost like Garci.

3. Rashma Hali – Remember her? Her name surfaced during the 2004 elections and the Hello, Garci controversy (in this transcript, her name was mentioned). She was supposed to be the opposition’s witness that cheating occured, but the Arroyo regime instead charged Poe lawyers of kidnapping Hali. Nothing has been heard of the kidnapping case. Nothing has been heard about her, either.