Archive for December, 2006

My life in comics and cartoons

Friday, December 22nd, 2006

Lazy
ManagerThese cartoons represent my state of mind right now.
Kim and I are in the thick of preparations for moving out of this house and into another one. We’re moving! The daily travel to the office has taken its toll and me and I really have to live closer to QC.
—-
So it’s three days to Christmas and I haven’t wrapped a single gift for anyone.
It’s funny how the Christmas season just crept up on me. I haven’t had the chance to walk around Ayala to see the lights, or to visit even one single church to see the traditional Belens. I haven’t eaten puto bungbong, or a single bibingka. I haven’t een heard Gary Valenciano croon ‘Pasko na, Sinta ko’ over the radio.
In the next two days I will be panicking to get gifts for my inaanaks. The good old standbys await: children’s books. Two years ago I got toys for my godchildren and less than an hour after they tore off the gift wrap, they were bored with the toys and left them on the floor and whoosh! they were off to play with something else: the boxes of the other presents they received.
When I was a kid, the best toy I ever received for Christmas apart from the Parisian doll I got (I loved her so much - she was so beautiful! She had a long, flowing walking dress that was a tartan green and ivory.  I called her ‘Claudine’ only being six years old, I spelled her name ‘ClOudine’) was this wiggly, pull-along caterpillar with big, googgly eyes.

Mater_and_lightning

‘Cars’ is my favorite cartoon movie of the year. My favorite character is the old, rusty tow truck Mater, Lightning McQueen’s best friend. I’ve seen the movie like five times on DVD, and I haven’t grown tired of it yet. It’s not hilarious, but it’s funny-comfortable, and it  makes me miss my friends. I am reminded of my college friends Nova and Elias and all the silly and stupid and hilarious (but at the time I suppose all of of us were thinking we were being serious) conversations. We hadn’t an idea yet what sort of lives we were going to have, and everything revolved around presswork for the Philippine Collegian’s weekly issues (because we were all together, because we were doing something meaningful, because it was a time when we felt most creative and productive and there was no money involved at all. )
Ft061217
‘FoxTrot’ is one of my favorite cartoon strips. The three Fox children drive me nuts, Peter, Paige and Jason. Especially Jason the geek and his pet iguana Quincy.
Earlier this year I bought a Foxtrot desk calendar, and every day when I flip the dates there’s a cartoon that makes me either guffaw or at least smile. This strip makes me wish that I had more siblings (I love my sister Majalla and I’m so lucky to have her for an ate, but I it also would’ve been great if we both had an older brother who would take us to, say, Enchanted Kingdom every time we feel like going nuts and buy us all the Yellow Can Pizza we could eat.

—-

Pb_day2 ‘Pugad Baboy’ was my dad’s favorite comic strip. I don’t know where all the Pugad Baboy books we bought for him as gifts have gone. I haven’t seen them around the house for the longest time. Knowing my father, he must’ve loaned them to our neighbors’ kids whom he was always trying to encourage to like books.

After he died in September 2003, it was never the same reading the strip. My dad loved dogs, and sometimes he would pretend that his dogs (Misty and Bruno) could talk like Polgas. We used to laugh hearing him have his conversations with Misty. Misty was also very smart (she died in 2004), and it always did look like she understood everything Papa said: she would prick her ears and cock her head at a questioning angle and look at Papa like if she could, she would tell him "You’re being silly!"

Kitty_1
It’s proof that I’ve become more flexible and relaxed that I’ve grown to like Hello Kitty.

This Hello Kitty is pink - I like the original red one. Hello Kitty and Hello Mimi.

I can’t explain it, but I just woke up one day liking Hello Kitty and I went to the Sanrio shop to get a small button with her on it. I haven’t gone crazy and gotten anything else, because I always fight the urge to buy.

The Sanrio mascot I always liked was Tuxedo Sam the penguin. Because he was a penguin. Hello Kitty I thought was way too cute, and hence way too corny.

Now? Well, I’ve been wearing more colors now apart from blue and grey - I can wear pale yellow and pale pink, so that should indicate that I’m more flexible and I can take cuteness in inanimate, non-live objects now.

Three days to Christmas and all I want is for Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to be ousted from office.

 

Camera Obscura

Saturday, December 16th, 2006

Fotohobby_camera_obscura
I’m in a quandary — I don’t know whether it’s a good or  bad thing that Justice secretary Raul Gonzales keeps attacking everyone who issues even the slightest criticism against the Macapagal-Arroyo administration. It’s a bad thing because, gad, the man has gone beyond the twist and it makes positively ill to read or hear his statements : first, he accuses Makati judge Benjamin Pozon of pleasing leftists and communists because the man refuses to release convicted rapist US Marine Daniel Smith to the custody of the US Embassy. Now, he’s lambasting the leadership of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines of destabilizing the government! He even goes on to ask (I’m choking with indignation as I type this) "What is it that the government did that is bad?" 
WHAAAAAAAT?!!!
But then on the other hand, because of his statements of this stripe (tripe, tripe, tripe!) , more and more people are becoming incensed against the government and, aghast and agitated, they also grow weary and just want to pull the plug on the administration.
Raul Gonzales is destabilizing his own government. By attacking the CBCP, he’s made sure that whatever remains of the church leadership’s patience and tolerance for Macapagal-Arroyo will go down the drain (I don’t know why, but every time I think of Raul Gonzalez and Norberto Gonzales, my metaphors center around toilets and drains).
I don’t think it’s just his kidney that’s in a terrible state, honestly.
—-
I told my mom and my sister about this…incident I was involved in over a week ago. I won’t write how they reacted; but I’ll let you employ your imagination and think up scenarios.
It was around 10 pm and I was waiting for a jeep to Philcoa in front of the HOR gates with another Anakpawis staffer. I saw a small flatbed truck drive out of the parking lot near the police station some 40 meters across the road. The truck makes a u-turn, and proceeds to drive towards us and as it reaches the spot where we’re standing, stops. 
The driver, a man plain looking but not exactly ugly, leans over his grinning companion, looks at me,raises a finger, points it directly at me and says with slow  emphasis - ‘Ikaw.’
Then they drive off.
—-
Abra Rep. Luis Bersamin and his driver were gunned down earlier this evening on their way to a wedding in Mt. Carmel. Holy crap. That’s a shock. Four days ago, Pasig Rep. Dudut Jaworski’s car exploded when a bomb placed under it blew up. What the heck is this?!
Whoever the perpetrators are (o, baka sisihin na naman ang mga leftists. You shut yer trap, Norberto Gonzales, you lousy excuse for a national security adviser. At least Jose Almonte had a brain.),I’m willing to bet that they’re taking advantage of the almost complete inability of the national government and its police and intelligence authorities to conduct genuine investigations that will yield scientific, authentic  results.

For the sake of Rep. Bersamin and his security aide’s families, we hope that the PNP immediately discover who the perpetrators are and bring them to justice (Unless tatratuhin nila ang kaso ng pagpatay sa kongresman na ito kung paano nila tratuhin ang 802 na kaso ng pagpaslang sa mga aktibista at human rights advocates).

—-

Norberto Gonzales wants the label ‘communist’ slapped on progressive and militant party-lists and their lawmakers as a warning to soldiers and the police so they know whom to watch for in the coming election period.

It’s like saying a target sign should be tatooed on the foreheads of members and leaders of Anakpawis, Bayan Muna and Gabriela Women’s Party whom this %^$#^%*& government keeps insisting are communist organizations (ano ba! Ang tatanga ninyo! Ang kulet! Sinabi nang hindi komunista ang mga party-list namen! Ni hindi nga national democratic organizations ang mga ya-aan!!!!!)

To be called a communist in this country is to be walking dead person. 

As a warning to soldiers and police: This here man/woman is a communist because he/she supports AP, BM, GWP. You go on ahead and kill her/him.

—-
Albumart
Camera Obscura is one of my favorite bands. It’s indie, the members are from Glasgow (like Belle and Sebastian), and they sound so completely  80s. I have my friend Chi Brotonel to thank - he’s the one who loaded my MP3 with a lot of Camera Obscura’s songs. I like the way they’re hippy and happy and sad melancholy all at the same time.
Camera
I’m not aggressive when it comes to music. I like what I already like, I listen to mostly the same music and the same groups and solo artists over and over. Chi’s the first friend who ever made me sit and up and pay attention to other music — he introduced me to bands and groups whose albums were mostly stowed away in the alternative section of the CD stores. In Hong Kong, we went and hung out in HMV for hours and end. Chi is a regular professor when it comes to alternative music (he’s a drummer for their band ‘The Sinister Left.’  Yeah, it sounds sinister and makes the Left look sinister, but to them, well, they actually consider themselves somewhat leftist in their political and social views, right Chi?).
Some of the albums and artists In have in my MP3 courtesy of Chi: The Doves; Cat Power; Editors, Giant Drag, Hem, The Duke Spirit, The Sunshine Underground, Throwing Muses.
Like, who the heck…?
But I enjoy their songs, and I’m grateful to Chi for introducing them to me. I like learning about new things (not necessarily politics. In fact there’s really nothing new to learn about it, especially Philippine politics. Things just get worse and worse. Permutations of the same themes, only the themes, if they were colors, would be constantly changing from different shades of gray, to muddy brown, to pitch black) and liking new things (I can now tolerate wearing shirts with prints! That is such a development for me).

Big prayer rally tomorrow. I pray for the same things over and over and over again.

Inchworm day

Friday, December 15th, 2006

FirCaterpillar_1st time in years that I wCaterpillar_2ent to see the UPCaterpillar3 Lantern Parade, and then they cancel  it.   
Caterpillar_4Aaaargh. But at least it was because the UP administration was freaked– they were afraid of the protests that UP students and the militant student groups were prepared and eager to launch against the UP Board of Regents’ determination to impose an insanely high tuition fee increase. Also, it’s been months since the Philippine Collegian came out, and it’s a scandal of immense proportions.

I don’t care what non-activists say, but I do think that it is the activists and the lively youth and student activist movement in UP that still make it different from other state colleges and private universities and learning institutions. It’s the activist tradition of UP that makes it, let’s say, more interesting, more intriguing. The atmosphere (or illusion?) of academic freedom, and the attitude of independence and ‘diskarte’ that students have.

Kaso nga, as the years go by and the plans of commercialization proceed, UP education also continues to deteriorate. The national government also refuses to pour more funds into state colleges and universities like UP. Poor but talented, intelligent and deserving students find it more and more difficult to get into UP not because they can’t pass  the UPCAT, but because they cannot afford the tuition and miscellaneous fees (nevermind the bogus scholarship program of STFAP).

Haay. Oh well, kung ano’t-ano man, am still proud of having gone to UP. It remains (pasintabi na lang sa mga taga Ateneo, La Salle o UST), the best school in the Philippines (kasi maganda ang campus, hahahaha).

So the lantern parade was canceled. I was so disappointed. But at least something good came out of it — I got pictures of a cute inchworm caterpillar that dropped from the trees and onto Kim’s hair. It was the first time that I’ve seen inchworms for real, as different from, say, the inchworms in Sesame Street. It was really cute and had a lovely, warm green color. After we took the pictures, I took him back out and put him on the leaves of the lower branches of a Kalamansi tree.

——

The color of the season

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

Eragon
Am reading Christopher Paolini’s ‘Eragon.’
Yes, yes, am making sure I finish it before the film version begins showing. I want to be able to compare and contrast. I’m also looking forward to watching Jeremy Irons.
Eragon’s plot is interesting - bloodier than Harry Potter, violent like The Lord of the Rings trilogy,  and I like the way the dragon Saphira (and dragons in general) has a personality, a character which makes her much more than just a large, flying lizard that can spew fire.
I cannot say that I like the language though. It is somewhat…wooden and contrived, and there’s awkwardness in some of the descriptions. I have to continually remind myself that it was written by a 15 year old; or at least Paolini started writing it when he was 15.
(But for a 15-year old writer, he’s not bad. I also have the sequel ‘Eldest.’ I wonder if he’s a better writer the second time around).
—–
The other night I went with Kim to Shangri-la. We took the MRT from Cubao. Apparently, women and men are segregated and made to take separate cars. Kim didn’t want to leave me, and as he couldn’t get into the for-women-only cars, he took me with me to the for-men cars.
It was a scary experience, one that I don’t want to go through again.
Men pushed and pushed against each other trying to get into the cars, and if it weren’t for Kim I would’ve been completely crushed. The train was packed with people — workers on their way to and from work with their heavy backpacks; yuppies trying to keep their shirts from getting too sweaty and creased; students carefully cradling their 3G mobile phones (and probably sick with worry that the phones would get snatched).
—-
Interesting political developments all around. So who says people power is dead and that everyone’s already sick and tired of protests?
The very threat of Filipinos taking to the streets by the hundreds of thousands has made the proponents of charter change via constituent assembly backpedalling and making excuses for their arrogant behavior. Speaker Jose de Venecia’s already prominent ears must have turned red when the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) and the El Shaddai made their strongly-worded statements against Con-Ass.
It doesn’t matter that they outnumber the Minority, the Majority in the House cannot stand up to the greater numbers outside Congress, sickened and disgusted by how the Majority and the House leadership led by JDV conducted themselves and twisted the House rules to suit their agenda.
It’s amusing in a disgusting sort of way the way these congressmen and women try to justify their abuse of power by saying that it is all for the Filipino people. They keep saying that amending the charter will be for the good of the nation, ensuring that the country moves forward, and that government leaders will no longer be saddled with a backward constitution that hampers their goals for the country.
Somebody please hand me a barf bag.
After the way they handled this issue, bullying their way towards the establishment of a unicameral constituent assembly, how can they continue to say they have the interest of the nation at heart? Are these the leaders who will guide the Philippines towards moral recovery, economic progress and political maturity?! 

So we’re looking forward to a Christmas season marked by protests. Deck the halls with banners and streamers, falalala-la, lalalala! Red, after all, is the official Christmas color.
—-
Tv
Been watching episodes of Numb3rs. I’ve missed Rob Morrow.
I wonder if all those mathematical computations and algorithms that Charlie Eppes comes up with to solve crimes and murders could really apply in real life. In the series, he solves homicides  and massacres and pinpoints not only the perpetrators, but how exactly they performed the killings to the minute they fired the guns.
Isn’t there a Charlie Eppes-type who can help the human rights  groups solve the 798 political and extra-judicial killings since Macapagal-Arroyo came to power?

—-

Congress of Labor Organizations national chairman Timoteo
Aranjuez has made the accusation that Ka Bel had first-hand knowledge as to why two labor leaders were killed 16 years ago. 

A report came out in the front page of the Manila Standard Today broadsheet titled
‘Lawmaker knew about Rights Day murders’ today, December 11, wherein Aranjuez
is quoted as saying that knew about the murders because the killings were
reportedly carried out by the New People’s Army. Aranjuez also asserted
that the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) labor
center which Beltran helped found and led as national charmain from 1986-2002
is a front for the NPA.

Ka Bel says he
doesn’t know why Aranjuez is bringing up these accusations yet again; but he has an inkling that it has to do with the over-all campaign of the
Macapagal-Arroyo administration to demonize progressive people’s organizations
and militant groups. Aranjuez is the secretary-general of the Partido Demokratiko
Sosyalista ng Pilipinas (PDSP) which is known to be a pro-Arroyo group. The
PDSP is also headed by national security adviser Norberto Gonzales who also
continues to foam at the mouth slandering the activist lawmakers of Anakpawis,
Bayan Muna and Gabriela Women’s Party.

Neither Ka Bel nor KMU have anything to do with the murder
of Edilberto Federico and Ernesto Gonzales. The PDSP is using this 16-year old
unsolved murders against Ka Bel and the
campaign for his release. This has
Norberto Gonzales’ hands all over this. Gonzales leads is notorious for making false accusations against the
leaders of progressive and militant groups. Gonzales should also be made
responsible for the continuing spate of political and extra-judicial killings
against human rights advocates and members of progressive mass
organizations. 

The KMU has never advocated the assassination of leaders or
members of rival labor groups, even those who have committed serious crimes
against the workers by cooperating with employers and capitalists and the Department of Labor in undermining
the trade union and human rights of workers. Neither is the KMU a front for the
NPA. Nakakasawa na ngang marinig  yang mga ganyang akusasyon, oh well.

 Aranjuez, ka Bel’s fellow
veteran of the labor movement, shouldn’t allow himself to be used by the
Macapagal-Arroyo government in its campaign of political repression directed
against progressive leaders and the sectors they represent. If only for the
sake of his previous involvement in the genuine and militant labor movement, he
should not let himself be a pawn in this demonization that directly results to
the murder of activists.

Four dogs

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

ThesePoof are  our four dogs - Poofy  (dog of my life and mom of  the other  doggies herFunnye),  Funnyboy, Galliard, and Milkpot. My life would  be less happy without them,especially  Poofy who hGallias been with me since  1999.   

Am  Milkpotat the office , waiting for  Congress to abuse  its authority yet again and unilaterally  declare itself a  constituent assembly. I can think of 2,000 better things to do than amend the Constitution, but it’s evident that not one of them will ever be considered by these rabid Constitution-changers.

——

It’s being reported that Typhoon Reming’s victims now number around 1,000. Many of the residents are still missing and won’t likely be found any time soon as they’ve been buried under mud. Reading the news about the rescue and relief operations makes me feel so sad and weak.

Now GMA has flown to Bicol to distribute goods. Good grief, Charlie Brown! She’s going to feign kindness and compassion again, time to take out the sick bags.

In any case, millions of dollars are now coming in from foreign governments and sympathetic institutions. Let’s all cross our fingers and toes that every single cent of that amount goes towards helping the survivors get back on their feet, and the rehabilitation of the devastated communities.

I wonder if the day will ever come when the Philippines will have a credible and reliable early preparedness system against natural calamities. It isn’t as if we haven’t been visited by super typhoons before.

Philvolcs and the DPWH are blaming the residents that they were warned long before the typhoon came but the residents refused to budge and evacuate. I suppose that’s valid, but the question is this: where could the residents have evacuated to?  Where would they have moved and how would they have done so? Without money, without resources, without access to immediate even if temporary shelter?

It’s a horrible, vicious cycle. People live in poverty and want, the typhoons come, everything is destroyed, relief drives are implemented, and after the communities have been cleared of the debris and the water/mudflow has subsided, life resumes and returns to what passes for normal and the government goes on to resume its neglect of the devastated regions.

Then the typhoons come again.

It’s so frustrating that people’s lives are so…expendable. Life is so worthless under such a government, under such a system where the survival, welfare and hopes for improvement and development of ordinary people are considered but barely, and only in the most token terms.

Sigh. In Africa, there’s an ongoing campaign of genocide, and millions of people are being driven away from them homes, forced to starve slowly. In Columbia, labor leaders continue to be harassed, arrested, murdered in the dead of night or forced to go into exile, never against to return to their families and friends.

This is why I love my dogs. I need to hug their furry bodies and kiss their wet noses and wrestle with them and for a few moments I feel that the world isn’t such a bad place to be.

————

How do I feel about the guilty verdict against US Marine Daniel Smith?

I feel sorry for him. He’s only 21 years old, and with a 40-year sentence, he will be 61 years old by the time he gets out.

Do I believe that he raped Nicole?
I think he made a very stupid mistake.

In the last few months it’s been hard for me to not think that he might, after all, be innocent. That he did have sex with Nicole, but he didn’t intend for it to be rape, that at the time, he thought what was happening was consensual. Stupid stupid stupid.For him it was consensual, that he didn’t force himself on her; but for her it was rape. Because she didn’t want it.

I don’t consider Smith to be a symbol of a US imperialism- I view him more as a young American who made horribly stupid decisions that are now destroying his life. I see him as someone’s son; someone’s friend, a young man who had his life ahead of him, a good looking kid who did stupid, wrong things because he was young and didn’t know any better.

And what makes it worse is that he’s been ordered to pay a pathetic a $2,000 in damages to Nicole. Yun lang pala ang katumbas sa monetary value ng kanyang nagawang krimen. An insultingly small sum. An insult against Nicole, on the one hand; and a infuriatingly measly amount that Smith could say he could just pay to be let off the hook on the other.

Aaargh.Ifeel bad for these two kids (I am, after all, older than both of them) and what they’ve both gone through this entire year. This entire ordeal has been politicized and this could never have  been avoided because of what both their governments do and what kind of relations these two governments have: master and slave; the former the oppressor and the latter a willing accomplice to its own victimization.

—–
Four hours later
So I told my husband how I felt about the Subic Rape case and its resolution, that I felt bad about Smith (wasted youth), and Kim blew his top.
‘He’s a rapist and you feel sorry for him?!!!’
I said that I feel sorry because he’s so young but his life is essentially over.
"But he’s a rapist!"
I said that may be so, but I still can’t help but feel sad that someone so young will now spend the prime years of his life behind bars (and rightly so, and to hell with what the US government says about the provisions in the Visiting Forces Agreement).
I just feel bad about how people’s lives turn out sometimes.

Fighting for jobs and justice

Monday, December 4th, 2006

Fort

 

Recently, Malacanang cabinet
Secretary Ricardo Saludo made the assertion that the Macapagal-Arroyo
government’s programs will lift three million more Filipinos from poverty by
2010. He claimed that some 5.5 millions have already been ‘saved’ since Arroyo
came to power in 2001.

  “The economy’s resurgence is
having impact not only on the peso and the stock market, but more important, on
the poor. Last week’s Social Weather Stations survey showed a significant drop
in self-rated poverty (SRP) to 51 percent in September 2006, from 59 percent in
June. SRP in Metro Manila fell to 46 percent (from 54 percent), in the rest of
Luzon to 45 percent (from 59 percent), and in

Mindanao

to 53 percent (from 61 percent).” points for regional data.

 

“Notably too, average SRP under President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo is 57.3 percent, better than under Presidents Aquino
(63.4 percent), Ramos (62.2 percent) and Estrada (59.6 percent). “

  Saludo added that compared to other
administrations, the Arroyo administration has registered the highest annual
average Gross Domestic Product, the lowest inflation rate and the highest rate
of employment and job creation.

  "The

Philippines

has returned to the
robust growth rates of the 1960s last seen during the first (Diosdado)
Macapagal administration," he said.

 The Macapagal-Arroyo administration has
succeeded in making data manipulation and the twisting of economic indicators
and standards into a fine art. Almost only a monthly basis, its economic data
and indicator-gathering agencies change their base levels for measuring
poverty, employment, hunger and costs of living. Hence, the executive is always
prepared with facts and statistics that defy reality while at the same time
promote the administration’s supposed success at battling poverty.

  For all of Malacanang’s attempts to mask its
failure to alleviate poverty, however, the truth still comes out. According to
the Department of Labor and Employment’s Current Labor Statistics (July 2006),
from a 7.4% unemployment rate in October 2005, unemployment increased to 8.2%
in April 2006, meaning more than 300,000 lost their jobs. Unemployment in the
NCR also increased by 14% this April.

 

These percentages do not even reflect the true
number of Filipinos who don’t have jobs. The government always makes new
computations to define employment and unemployment. It doesn’t even include
among the unemployed those who don’t have jobs but are still searching for
employment. Beginning April 2005, through the NSCB Resolution No.15, the
government added availability criterion as one of the factors in the
computation for unemployment. Because of this, one million Filipinos were
automatically removed from the ranks of the unemployed, despite the truth that
at the time of the surveys, they did not have jobs.

While the country’s labor force has reached 33
million, 16 million or almost 50% of them do not belong to the formal labor
market. More than 12 million are actually own-account workers, and more than 4
million are unpaid family workers. It’s also alarming how the number of
part-time workers has increased by 17% in the last year. Part-time workers are
those who have less than 40 paid work hours a week. (+1.962M to total 13.489M
in April 2006). On the other hand, the number of full-time workers fell by 6.6%
or 1.332 million. This 20.078 M in April 2005 to 28.746 M in April 2006.

 

But let’s not just fight economic data with
economic data. Employment indicators alone are not enough to create a full
image of how the economic situation is in the Philippines.  Let’s consider  this simple fact:the
worsening situation of human and civil rights in the country is also a serious
and valid indicator of how backward the country is economically and
politically. There is still a strong protest movement that continues to expose
the worsening poverty in the country and the government lack of genuine
response to alleviate it. There is widespread discontent, the surveys all
reflect this and this discontent and anger is directed against the government’s
failure to enact measures that will give relief to the problems of poverty,
joblessness and hunger.

 

In response, meanwhile, the government has launched a
full-scale war against its legitimate critics and terrorize those who choose to
speak out and denounce the government’s attacks against the well-being of
Filipinos. Among the targets and casualties in this war are workers – one of
the sectors that the Macapagal-Arroyo administration claims to be helping the
most.

Because of this, workers should not hesitate to move to the forefront of the
campaign against political repression even as they fight for higher wages, jobs
and job security.

It is no secret that Philippine laws and institutions of authority governing labor and
workers’ rights do not represent the
interests the Filipino working people. As with many governments around the world that uphold globalization, the
Philippine government under Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo does not consider workers’
rights and welfare an immediate concern. In fact, to the Arroyo government,
workers’ rights – their wages, job
security, benefits and union and human rights – are very expendable. They’re
among the first to go and be violated in the course of employers and
capitalists’ relentless drive for increasing profits, but the government and its agencies do very little to prosecute
and punish capitalists for these
violations.

 

Nov3006_joel_kmuphotos_031

As documented by institutions such as the Center for Trade
Union and Human Rights (CTUHR), PRO-LABOR, The Ecumenical Institute for Labor
Education and Research (EILER) and the University of the Philippines’ School of
Labor relations, the most obvious manifestations of the rise in repression of
workers rights is not only the increasing violence in picketlines or even the
murder of labor leaders and unionists, but the increase in violations against
what should be standard labor rights — - the right to organize, to strike or bargain collectively. The
widespread restrictions on the right to strike, both in the public and private
sectors, push workers outside the law when taking collective action to defend
their interests. The resulting repression is increasingly brutal and, in some instances,
deadly such as in the case of the Hacienda Luisita Massacre.

 

Nov3006_joel_kmuphotos_042

It should also be mentioned , because of the poor and low
observance of even the most basic occupational health and safety standards,
hundreds of workers meet accidents at work, or they themselves become
susceptible to diseases like tuberculosis and pneumonia which in other more
advanced countries have been totally eradicated. During the course of this
two-day conference, it will be revealed just exactly how many suffer because of
violations of OHS and why OHS observance is low. The same way that it will be revealed how
many each year lose their jobs merely
for attempting to form a union, hold certificate elections, and put together a
collective bargaining agreements.

Is fighting for our jobs and our rights as workers removed
from opposing worsening political repression?

 Of course not.

 Especially since the Macapagal-Arroyo government declared
workers who assert their rights as terrorists and economic saboteurs, workers
and active union members have become
definite targets of state repression. Hundreds of thousands in taxpayers money
go towards strengthening regional deployment of police and even military forces
to protect export processing zones where the factories of transnational and
multinational corporations are established. Rallies, demonstrations, and other
forms of collective, democratic expression which workers engage in are
virtually banned and criminalized.

 Violence against workers mainly stems from institutional opposition to the exercise
of labor rights. Union activity in the Philippines is considered by the government and
capitalists to be ‘subversive activity’
because it challenges corporate profits. Particularly targeted are local and
national trade union leaders; but a trend has been seen emerging: almost
automatically targeted are those unionists and labor leaders who denounce human
rights abuses and active in human rights campaigns. Many times, the harassment
and even murder of leaders and rank-and-file unionists coincide not only with
labor negotiations, but during campaigns exposing human rights violations and
political repression.

By all accounts, the Macapagal-Arroyo government has a
gruesome human rights record when it comes to labor. Mercenary forces strongly alleged to be in
cahoots with the military are sent out
in a murderous campaign against trade unionists and political activists. According to reports from local and international
labor advocates, the vast majority of
trade union rights violations including murders are the committed by either the
governments themselves and its armed forces such as the army and police, or its indirect agents.

Independent investigations by cause-oriented groups in their
reports submitted to the Commission on Human Rights, Amnesty International,
the International Labor Organization and
the United Nations all agree that the Armed Forces of the
Philippines cannot be let off the hook and their possible involvement in some of the
killings of activists including unionists and labor leaders cannot be
dismissed. By holding the AFP
accountable, the national government is also then held responsible.

 Most of the people who fall victim to the atrocities of
the military and with the blessing of the government are ordinary men and women trying to do
extraordinary things. The expression of their deeply held convictions,
political ideology or commitment to union ideals and ideals of social justice
and genuine democracy are what makes them
prime targets of government repression. As a result the government through indirect and insidious means ban
unions and associations, and instigate campaigns of harassment, political
killings and ‘disappearances’, arbitrary detention, torture, and murder of
political activists, including activist workers and unionists.

 But why does this consistently worsening state of labor
remain, as it’s called by media practitioners, back-burner news?

Workers should always be conscious that the government
utilizing the media continues to paint a
distorted picture of the neo-liberal policies of globalization which are
imposed on the Philippines through the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), World Bank and the World Trade Organization. They all but ignore the
widespread opposition of the progressive workers and their unions, as well as
the rest of the progressive forces in Philippine society. Even now, as the
Philippine government plays hosts to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN), negligible coverage will be given to the valid issues that impact on
labor because of trade and economic policies and agreements being peddled by
the ASEAN and implemented by its member countries.

 It is then imperative that organized and politicized workers and their unions reach out to the
greatest number of unorganized workers. They should expose the truth that globalization and its
local implementation by the Arroyo administration is geared towards imposing
the destructive and inhumane global hegemony of the transnational corporations
and businesses. Workers and their unions
must exhaust all means and venues to educate and encourage the rest of the working people to stand
against neo-liberal globalization and
its economic and social consequences which exacerbate the already critical
state of employment and poverty in the
Philippines and the rest of the world.

 That is why it has become an urgent task for the trade
unions to educate public opinion on the real issues, further develop their
information networks and unite with other democratic forces to build up such
networks to expose and denounce the anti-social orientation of these economic
and social policies that are being imposed through the IMF, World Bank and the
WTO and implemented by anti-labor, anti-people governments like that of
Macapagal-Arroyo and its institutions.

 

We must constantly remember that united struggle is always
primary and essential because the exploiters and oppressors intensify their
efforts to divide and rule, in order to impose their hegemony, with no regard
for international law and the basic rights and interests of the working people.

 At a time when the biggest financial resources are urgently necessary for education, public health, housing and
other social necessities, it is absolutely unacceptable, unconscionable that the scarce resources are wasted on
foreign debt servicing, graft and corruption, military modernization and the
propaganda machinery of the administration. All these further destabilize social security; and attacks on social
security endanger the over-all
state of the country and the welfare of
the Filipino people.

 Unions and workers should be at the forefront of the struggle for human
rights. After all, throughout the history of the progressive and militant trade
union movement in the Philippines,
many have lost their lives and risked their liberty in their attempts to claim
basic human rights such as freedom of association, the right to organize and
engage in collective bargaining, and the right to free speech. These rights
form the basis of trade union rights all over the world, and this is something
that Filipino workers should always keep in mind. As workers fight for their jobs, their
benefits and their rights to unionize and collectively bargain, they fight for
their very right to live, with decency and with hope. Workers rights are human
rights.

 For workers to join
unions and to strengthen their unity is to begin the process of liberating
themselves from poverty and social
exclusion. Unions serve as their
members’ representative voices as
workers defend and assert their rights and campaign to improve their living and
working conditions. Tracing the history of militant unionism in the Philippines, as
in other countries, the formation of
unions was a reaction against the mechanisms of pauperization, namely low pay, long working hours, child labor and
generally appalling working conditions.

 

Militant unionism has
always been about eradicating poverty. The activities of progressive and
militant labor centers and its allied institutions including This Jobs and
Justice conference affirm this historical, as well as the very present and urgent role of trade unions,
to continue the fight against poverty and to promote social justice not only in
the Philippines but in the world.

 

Unions now more than
ever are an effective tool for workers
to escape poverty, exploitation and the violation of their basic human dignity.
Unionism means organizing collective
bargaining and other forms of negotiations and creative social dialogue and engagement.
There is the ever pressing need to organizing effective trade union
participation in the design and implementation of public policy based on the
priorities of the militant trade union movement and the needs of Filipino workers in general.

Lastly, unionism – militant and genuine unionism- means engaging in the struggle for democratic
governance and over-all respect for human and civil rights which include the
provision of decent employment and
quality public services, with full access for the unemployed, underemployed,
and working poor. All this in close unity with other progressive sectors in
society, the farmers, enlightened professionals and clergy youth and students and urban and rural poor.

 Kim Scipes, a long-time global activist and
sociology teacher in the US, has this to say  on the need for unions in the  fight for rights:

 “….When unions work together, especially as they pull in
allies, they have the ability to transcend the power of an individual
corporation and affect entire industries and, at times, even government
policies. It is this power that gives unions an ability to ensure labor rights,
gain higher wages, better working conditions, increased benefits, and the
like. And it is this power that gives
them an ability to protect their activists as well as the members who follow these activists. Without this power, wages, etc. can only
improve with management acquiescence — and protection for activists is
basically non-existent.”

 Workers must unite to
defend their rights , labor, civil and human. Workers must work with other
sectors of society in defense of collective needs, goals and aspirations. As we
fight for our jobs, we must also fight for justice.#