Archive for December, 2005

Surviving Hong Kong

Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

At last!Access to internet and email. Freak. Hindi uso dito ang dial-up o DSL. Everyone’s so high-tech that Wi-fi is the only way to go. I feel so Third World, harhar. Right now I’m in the Hong Kong Central Library right in front of Victoria Park, using the free computer and internet services (It’s like I’ve just died and gone to heaven — this place is so beautiful. Like a big light-brown slab of creamy Swiss chocolate molded into a building. The floors are carpeted wall-to-wall; theres’ the graceful yet efficient combined use of articifical and natural lighting; there are actually potted trees by every pillar; and there are so many books. I checked their system and lists on line. Jeez. And this is a public library!)

Anyways, before I continue ranting about this big and beautiful piece of architecture and its contents, what the heck am I doing in Hong anyways?

It’s the 6th Ministerial Conference of the World Trade Organization (WTO), and it’s being held in this former British protectorate. The delegation led by the International League of People’s Struggles (ILPS), BAYAN and Resist! Network opposed to the WTO has been here since the 10th.

II have so many stories to tell and write about, and I simply don’t know where to begin. My brain is filled to overflowing, and like a computer that’s simply too full of memory, I’ve been close to crashing from the weight of words, impressions and feelings that I haven’t been able to express in the last five days.

Maybe I should start with the more mundane and banal things — the artificialities that still, however, fascinate my still, somehow, sometimes, naive nature.

Hong Kong. It’s heaven if you like shopping.

The stars don’t show up in the Hong Kong night sky. They are blinded and effaced by the seemingly even brighter lights coming from the massive billboards and gargantuan television screens atop and on the very facade of buildings in the downtown commercial district.

It’s hard to focus on just one thing- one is in a perpetual state of distarction because of the myriad of colors and sizes and shapes and textures of various…consumer products.

Its capitalism gone mad. The endless, shameless and mindless flood of products not necessary, not valuable and not essential to a person’s survival or evolution into a complete and worthy individual fill blocks and blocks of stores and warehouses. Glitter and glam, shiny, sparkly, sparky, bright and light. It’s like a sugarrush for the eyes, and after a while, one feels slightly sick, wanting to run for cover and isolation.

What does it say about me, this way of reacting to such overpowering consumerism? I am realizing things about my self and how I really view the world and people

People here in Hong Kong are like werewolves. They take on the shape and image of normalcy in the daytime, but at night, they transform into different beings in the nighttime.

Have to end this for the meantime.

Fashion conscious

Friday, December 2nd, 2005

Gap Ensemble I don’t own any Tommy Hilfiger shirts, and I don’t think I ever will want to buy one (unless I get it from the ukay-ukay at P50 max) and the same goes for the the following brands: Gap; K-Swiss and  Calvin Klein. The local manufacturers (sub-contractors, they’re called) of these brands are notorious for violating labor laws.

But let’Tommyhs focus on Tommy Hilfiger.

Before daybreak yesterday, regular workers of Maxglory Apparel Incorporated launched their strike against the company, the Philippine subcontractor of Tommy Hilfiger.

The factory, located along Km. 47, Barangay Pulo, Cabuyao in  Laguna, is owned Chinese- Filipino Ulysses Young. The company also manufacturs and  exports shirt products , besides TF, for Ralph Lauren, Quicksilver, American Eagle, Walt Disney and Paxsan.

Polo Maxglory Apparel Employees Independent Union president Leonardo Lavega says that the management’s refusal to negotiate in the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) and the company’s illegal closure pushed the workers to go on strike. Maxglory workers, mostly women, receive P194.75 (or US$3.61) a day, way below the reclassified P259.00 (or US$4.80) wage set by the Regional Tripartite Wage Board-Bureau of Labor Relations-Region IVA (RTPWB-RIV-A).

Maxglory workers have given more than 10 years of their life to the company, but up to now their rights have not been recognized and the firm continues to violate minimum wage laws. instead of responding to the just and legal demands of the workers, the management closed shop and fired all the workers.

I spent five years as media staff of the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) and a writer/radio commentator for the Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR), and through the years I’ve met with workers of subcontractors of high fashion/garment companies.

Kung gaano kaganda ang mga damit na kanilang tinatahi, ganun kapangit ang kalagayan nila sa kumpanya.

Kung gaano kamahal ang mga produktong kanilang ginagawa kapag binenta na sa pandaigdigang pamilihan (o sa mga shops sa Ayala at sa Ayala Alabang, sa mga counters ng Rustan’s at Powerplant), ganun naman kababa ang kanilang sahod na tinatanggap.

In the US and Europe, political and labor activists demand that the  Gap, Tommy Hilfiger, Lee, Levi’s jeans corporations take action against the ruthless unfair labor practices of in the garment sweatshops in the Third World. Hilfiger, Land’s End, Guess, Abercrombie&Fitch, Timberland, XOXO etc always put up plants in the Third World to take full and relentless advantage of the low wage policies in these countries.

Each thread, stitch, button and lining of the clothes of these companies is the product extreme exploitation. These clothes, even as they make the wearer appear more attractive, more confident and spangkingly fashionable are DIRTY all the same.

Sweats Fashion_crimes Dirty because they were created under conditions of exploitation and oppression.

Dirty because they are symbols of inequality and the appalling, immoral gap between the rich and the poor; the exploited and the decadent, apathetic rich.

Dirty because they stand for lives and lifestyles devoted to shameless, self-serving pleasure, indifferent to the bitter and harsh realities that confront the rest of humanity all over the world.

Trivia - just what is a "sweatshop” and what does the word mean? The term originated in the 19th century to describe a subcontracting system in which a middleman’s profit was the difference between the amount received for a contract and the amount paid to workers subcontracted for manual labor. Workers at that time were paid so little that the small profits of the middlemen were said to have been "sweated” from the workers who toiled in the most primitive and unsanitary conditions

In Europe, the campaign against the unfair labor practices in the sweatshops is called "Clean Clothes Campaign." It’s mostly an information campaign targetting the youth and the young adults to be more aware of the conditions under which their trendy clothes, shoes and even underwear and hair accessories are made.

Labor activists — and many of them are in their early teens and twenties — picket and petition malls and shops to stop importing, buying or selling clothes with bad labor practice record. They coordinate with activists in the US where the main offices of the business heads of the fashion industry headliners are located, and there they also hold rallies and demonstrations on front of the factories and in the fashion district. They also lobby Congress, hound the media and hold info dissemination activities to expose the dirt in the clothes and fashion industry.    

In the Philippines, as of 2001 (the time I left KMU for Bayan Muna), workers in Levi’s local contractors were getting  P90-P130 a day. Calvin Klein which charges  about P400 for the skimpiest panty or thong, pay Philippine workers P120/daily.

Work conditions are also inhumane and substandard. Poor ventilation - the seamstresses breathe hot air and tiny cloth particles day in and day out. Many of them have respiratory problems, and are prone to arthritis because for almost 11 hours daily they hunch over sewing machines like an army of Quasimodos and the companies deny any knowledge of ergonomics. Often the elevators are on the blink, and workers are forced to lug bales and bales of folded, finished clothes from the production floor down to the warehouse.

Fact: The average sweatshop worker earns only 1 to 2 percent of the final sale price of a garment sold in the US. This is according to the labor group SweatShop Watch.

"A sweatshop is a workplace that violates the law and where workers are subject to:

* Extreme exploitation, including the absence of a living wage or long work hours,
* Poor working conditions, such as health and safety hazards,
* Arbitrary discipline, such as verbal or physical abuse, or
* Fear and intimidation when they speak out, organize, or attempt to form a union."

How’s that for the high price of fashion?!

Nike, Inc., the world’s largest retailer of athletic shoes, a few years back came under increasing criticism over working conditions in its factories in Asia. Labor and human rights groups  reported physical and verbal abuse of workers, hazardous working conditions, pennies per hour wages, and anti-union efforts throughout Indonesia, China, and Vietnam, where Nike employs over 350,000 workers.Nike’s treatment of its workers stands in stark contrast to its record breaking  profit records.

Putsa. Alam kaya ng mga celebrity endorsers ng mga mamahaling sapatos at damit na ito ang kalagayan ng mga gumagawa ng mga suot nila?!

Gad, we can only hope that local fashion brands such as Bench, Sari-Sari, Kamiseta, Kashieca, Bayo, Folded&Hung, the stores of Tina Maristela-Ocampo etc pay their workers and mananahis well. (A neighbor of mine, Ate Beth, used to work for Anonymous as a sales clerk. She said that Ms. Ocampo was a genuine lady, but the husband Ricco, was like the creature from the black lagoon the way he talked to and handled store employees. The man is alleged to be a potty mouth.) Those big billboards they have in Ortigas and Makati should be torn down if they abuse their workers. Dapat talaga magkaroon ng anti-sweatshop movement dito sa Pilipinas!

Countries like the Philippines with their puppet governments rely on loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or the World Bank to fund their economic development programs kuno. These loans come with conditions that require them to make drastic changes to their economy and social programs that impact their most vulnerable populations. (Hence the walang kamatayang Charter Change agenda, and the parade of bogus economic programs Philippines 2000, etc etc. Leche). These are all steps to attract foreign investors and TNCs  to distribute their production to the poorer countries> Eto namang mga TNCs, kasama na yung mga fashion-based corporations (na super mega global din naman!) have their clothes manufactured in countries with the lowest labor costs and weakest regulations.

How does this affect garment workers dun sa mga mother companies  and the host countries (more like slave countries) ng mga fashion TNCs?

• Workers lose their jobs when factories move to other countries in search of lower labor costs or weaker regulations.
• Wages and working conditions are driven down all around the world because of the competition in the global economy. This system pits countries against each other as they compete to make clothes for U.S. consumers.
• Workers’ rights to speak up and resist exploitation or organize a union are weakened because clothing companies can easily close shop and move elsewhere to avoid workers’ demands.

Iisa lang talaga ang kalagayan ng mga manggagawa sa buong daigdig. Kaya iisa rin ang kasagutan sa kanilang mga suliranin. Syempre, Karl Marx said it first: "Workers, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains!" #

Bsib Postscript:  Para sa mga fans ng Body ShopBsi

Body Shop International has long been touted as a premier socially responsible business. Kaya nga nasabi ko minsan, on one of those days when I felt wistful about not being a girly-girl, sa Body Shop ako bibili (kung may pera, o kung may magtanong kung anong gusto kong regalo).

But I read an investigative feature by Jon Entine,Business With A Soul: A Reeaxamination of What Counts in Business Ethics, and it revealed a huge ethical gap between BSI’s marketing image and its actual practices. This deception - conscious or not - is pervasive: the company owners stole The Body Shop name and marketing concept, fabricated key elements of the company myth, misrepresented its charitable contributions and fair trade programs and has been beset by employee morale and franchise problems.

More shocking, its "natural" products are filled with petrochemical colorings, fragrances, preservatives and base ingredients such as mineral oil and petrolatum.

AAAAAAAGH! Mga nalilinlang, gumising na kayo!

Leaving the Ivory Tower

Thursday, December 1st, 2005

The Movement is home to so many creative and brilliant minds. Those who criticize the Left know almost next to nothing about how life is in the Kilusan, and the different kinds of people who contribute to its strengthening and continuous development.

Rabble rowsers, war freaks. Gad, how I hate those libelous labels! The most ignorant and reactionary in the ruling classes slap those labels on activists, and using all the resources available to them, denigrate and demonize the image of activists — as if activists were a brutish, unthinking lot who know nothing but to hold rallies and burn effigies of fascists and dictators  in front of the US embassy or at the foot of Mendiola.

Anyways. This is an article about one of the biggest brains in the Kilusan, our own Gani Tapang who chairs AGHAM and is one of the sharpest critics of Meralco. Even as he marches alongside the workers and peasants, he is also thinking  of how the Philippine economy, its science and technology can be improved as soon as the the dark clouds have dissipated and the sun shines on a genuinely free Philippines (ick, slightly cheesy image, I know).

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"Although scientists today were brought into thinking that science is neutral and scientists should keep out of politics and society in general, at some point, they would have to face the fact that their science has a profound effect on the people at large. As Einstein said once, ‘Only when science can be made to truly serve the interests of the people and not of the few can it be truly meaningful.’"

———–

The word "scientist" usually paints the image of a man or woman with wild, unruly hair like Prof. Albert Einstein’s, clad in dirty-white lab coat with chemical burns and wearing Coke-bottle glasses. The adjectives usually attached to the noun are also predictable, usually synonymous with either being a "genius" or a "nerd." Mention Dr. Frankenstein, Dr. Jekyll, and the main characters in movies like "The Crazy Professor" or books like HG Well’s "The Island Of Dr. Moreau" and you quiver at the thought of having them as your science icons.

But are scientists really "crazy"?

"Only in the sense that non-scientific minded people might find it difficult to understand how scientists can stand and even enjoy cooped up inside smelly, smoky laboratories for days neglecting food and hygiene," says Giovanni Alarkon Tapang, 30, MS, Phd in Physics from the University of the Philippines and chairman of the organization Agham or Samahan ng Nagtataguyod ng Agham at Teknolohiya Para sa Sambayanan (Advocates of Science and Technology for the People).

Gani Giovanni - or Gani to colleagues and friends - admits that the classical descriptions and stereotypes of scientists are grounded in reality. According to him, members of the scientific community have some quirks and eccentricities that set them apart from any other social group.

"We get our kicks from mathematical formula and proofs," he admits. "We also don’t give up easily when we’re confronted with seemingly unsolvable problems."

Think of Nobel Prize winner John Nash (A Beautiful Mind) without the schizophrenia. Since 1997, Gani has been an assistant professor at the Instrumentation Physics Laboratory in UP Diliman. He’s written articles for journals, and gone to various conferences all over the country. The subjects of these gatherings are so incomprehensible to the average man or woman that one has to be a Mensa member to understand: "Spatial Resolution in Photon Limited Confocal Optical Microscopy", "Detection Statistics of Ultrafast Twin-Photon Pulses", and "Self-organized Criticality in the Exit Dynamics of Pedestrians Using a Two-Dimensional Cellular Automata."

He shrugs, "Some conferences were fun, others so-so." But then Gani has always been of a scientific turn.

As a child, Gani couldn’t be stopped from tinkering with and dismembering appliances, from the oven, the transistor radio, and one time even the TV set. He just wanted to know "what was inside and how it works."

Scientific exploration

This seems to sum up the spirit of scientific exploration: why things are and how they work. "I suppose curiosity is one of the trademarks of scientists. The urge to know things, if only for the sake of discovering," the UP physics professor explains.

His parents - mother is an optometrist and father an architect - were open-minded and nurtured Gani’s thirst for scientific knowledge. "When I was in the second grade, they got me those Time Life Science books and encyclopedia with glossy pictures. They got the books on installments and finished paying for them when I reached grade four," he says.

By the time Gani was in sixth grade, he had already begun getting bored in his science classes. "Many of the stuff we were being taught I’d already read about; and the books were more up-to-date than the materials the teachers used," he said. Gani would sometimes doodle in his notebooks instead of taking down lessons. The teacher caught him one time, and he didn’t know how to explain why he wasn’t paying much attention. "She probably would’ve thought me a conceited brat," he recalls.

They didn’t really mind that ever so often there would be small fires and even explosions in the house (like when Gani plugged an appliance running on 110 volts into a 220 outlet to find out why the two weren’t compatible). But they did get worried they might one day come home to find the house a total wreck.

Priesthood

But even with his young mind working full-time like the Cartoon Network’s Dexter, Gani never really wanted to go into the sciences. He rattles off career ambitions he considered as a grade-schooler: carpenter, electrician, astronaut, priest.

"The last because my parents wanted me to enroll in a seminary," he says. But before Gani could be delivered to the monks and a life of celibacy, a thick envelope addressed to him arrived. He got accepted to the Philippine Science High School (PSHS or Pisay), arguably the best science school in the country.

In Pisay, students went around making their own notebook computers from scratch, or created their own motherboards. If Scott Adam’s "Dilbert" went to high school in the Philippines, he would’ve gone to Pisay. "Science is the school’s strongest suit, but it also tries for a well-rounded knowledge in its students by encouraging those with a predilection for literature and the arts to join clubs and associations. But mostly, there were a lot of nerds," he says.

Like most Pisay graduates, Gani went on to the University of the Philippines where he signed up to become an applied physics major. His undergraduate thesis was innocuously named "Non-Iterative Treatment of Brillouin-Wigner Perturbation Theory" and his masteral thesis in 1999 was on the much misunderstood "Complete Recovery of Weak Multifrequency Signals." Finally, he got his doctorate of philosophy in physics in 2002 with a dissertation on the popular issue "Noise in the Detection and Processing of Weak Signals: Trade-offs and Benefits."

Lecture on state of science

Gani would’ve most likely joined the ranks of the brilliant young men and women who spent their time on experiments, doing research and attending international symposia on topics less than two percent of the world population would comprehend. A lecture on the state of science in the Philippines hosted by the environmental group Kalikasan at UP Diliman’s College of Science changed all that.

"A lot of S&T advocates went to that lecture, and one of the results of the discussion was the resolution that something should be done to change the comparatively poor state of the S&T in the country," Gani says. "We thought of forming a group that will banner the interest of the sector of scientists, and make S&T more responsive to local needs. Right then and there we united on the argument that this is achievable only if we make S&T serve the people. That’s why ‘S&T for the people’ is the group’s slogan."

But what is the state of science and technology in the country?

Gani shakes his head: "In the Philippines, personal computers with the latest software is already considered hi-tech. That and lasers, and satellite feeds that are only 5 to 10 seconds late. The government wants the people to believe that just because there are computer-programming schools and so-called e-commerce the country’s already advancing in sci-tech. In truth? We’re so backward. We can do the research - we have the most brilliant minds in UP’s College of Science alone - but the experiments that are being conducted in UP labs cannot be replicated on a national scale."

Based on the Technology Index of 1982, the S&T in the Philippines is defined to be -0.1 compared to the United States, the world’s technology leader, which is 100. The technology index is defined as the average of the sum of the number of patents and registration of new designs, technology trade, value added in manufacturing and the export of technology-intensive goods.

The Philippines also ranks low in technological capacity. Reason: An acute shortage in the number of scientists and engineers doing R&D, and of the inadequate resources and budget devoted to it. All these factors translate to the minimal invention patents granted in the Philippines, which likewise indicates little or no economic significance.

"And when it comes to the type of basic technologies-materials technology, precision equipment, energy technologies, information technologies, life technologies and management technologies, we have only what’s known as pre-operative capability," the Agham chair says. "Neither is there significant research and development in the country. There’s a low number of personnel involved in R&D, a lack of adequate research laboratories and facilities, low output of scientific research publications, lack of funding and lack of government support for science education. There’s also a low quality of science and mathematics education in the country. The UP Institute of Science and Mathematics Education itself says that ‘many teachers do not have the content background required to teach the subjects they are teaching.’"

At a disadvantage

According to Gani, students, the budding scientists, technologists and engineers of the country are already at a disadvantage. He says that students find themselves with unqualified teachers, inadequate books, shabby laboratory conditions and the high cost of education.

"Underemployment, misemployment and the lack of available jobs hound college graduates. As professionals, our S&T practitioners receive low salaries and are deprived of the opportunity to improve their skills and hone further their technological knowledge," he adds. "Basic industries such as pulp & paper, cement and steel should be the main beneficiaries of science graduates of a country. But given the absence of such basic industries, and the lack of government interest in truly industrializing the country, our engineers are forced to become mere technicians and supervisors in assembly lines and our scientists and researchers mere teachers at universities."

And this is where Agham comes in. Gani says that the main unity of Agham members is to promote science and technology that genuinely serves the interest of the Filipino people, especially the poor. "We want to encourage S&T professionals and workers to share their knowledge and expertise through direct community service. You know, come up with basic studies that can help improve the community’s economic well-being. Also, we’re campaigning for the betterment of science and technology in the country through various forms, including, but not limited to research, advocacy, forums, and discussion groups."

Advocacies

Gani explains that Agham’s advocacies are centered on five issues 1) food security and self-sufficiency ("This mainly means developing agricultural productivity and helping farmers"); 2) issues concerning public utilities such as electricity, telecommunications, and information technology; 3) developing scientific and mass culture; 4) campaigning for national industrialization; and 5) environmental protection.

A pretty tall agenda for a fledgling organization - but Gani and fellow sci-teachers are unfazed. "It’s the dreamer in me, in us. We want to make science less alien to the common people, to make it serve an immediate, practical purpose," he points out.

Before he became an advocate of science for the people, Gani says he was fired up by the idea of making scientific discoveries. "But now the real challenge is how to make the discoveries and advances in science more accessible for ordinary people," he says.

"Scientists are not really known for being critical thinkers. They accept cold, hard facts backed by in-depth research, tested in experiments and case studies. The social context of these facts is not really of much interest to them. It’s the ivory tower syndrome, " he says.

Becoming socially-aware was part of Gani’s transformation from a laboratory denizen to activist scientist. When he ran for college representative in 1991which he won by a landslide (there weren’t any other candidates), Gani handled the volunteer corps which was among the University Student Council’s committees in charge of rallies. It was the height of the anti-U.S. bases protests, and demonstrations were frequent.

"I wasn’t an expert on what I was doing, but what I understood about the issue was enough to push me to convince other science students to join the protests," he recalls. "We campaigned on the toxic waste issue and how the bases produce and leave them behind in host countries. We also agitated against the presence of nuclear weapons within the American military installations. I read up on these things so I could explain the issues better."

These days, Agham sponsors educational discussions and workshops on various topics. One day they’re holding a workshop on electronic lay-out, making power-point presentations and putting up websites for people’s groups like Anakbayan and Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap (KADAMAY). The next they’re helping consumer groups like People Opposed to Warrantless Electricity Rates (POWER) compute how much incredible profits the independent power producers (IPPs) and their sister companies through overcharging.

When farmers from Central Luzon and Southern Tagalog launched a campaign against the controversial genetically- modified organisms (GMOs), Agham came up with a comprehensive paper detailing why GMOs are bad for the environment and for people. "We keep wracking our brains on how we can contribute more to people’s campaigns," he explains.

Gani can’t help but take pride in one of Agham’s greatest achievements. During the height of People Power II, Agham managed to mobilize 700 science and math students, academics and professionals from both public and private agencies to join the rallies in EDSA and the historic march to Mendiola to oust former President Joseph Estrada.

Among the most creative posters, websites and text message-networks during that time were put up by Agham members and allies. "Who says nerds aren’t creative?" he says.

Neutrality

If there’s one thing that Gani hates about the scientific mind, it’s the weakness of neutrality. "Many scientists all over the world are too engrossed in their own discoveries," he says. "While they are so responsible when it comes to monitoring developments in the scientific field, they are often neglectful of the social responsibilities that come with their creation. Sure it was scientists who invented the nuclear bomb as well as other weapons of destruction; but it’s the military and their governments who unleashed these horrors on the world. The problem with scientists is that many of us choose to be neutral."

"Although scientists today were brought into thinking that science is neutral and scientists should keep out of politics and society in general, at some point, they would have to face the fact that their science has a profound effect on the people at large. As Einstein said once, ‘Only when science can be made to truly serve the interests of the people and not of the few can it be truly meaningful.’" #