Cobbling Street Signs

9 02 2010

“What would the Ten Commandments  have looked like if Moses  had run them through …Congress,”  the  late President Ronald Reagan  once wondered..  Wonder no more.  Listen  instead  to  Rep. Mark Cojuangco.
 
”We’re only good at changing the names of  streets and schools. These  are  what the   House proudly  claims as it’s accomplishments,“ the Pangasinan  representative  wailed . Congress  adjourned Wednesday. “Crucial bills are left rotting…Shouldn’t  we…finally vote and decide on them?”
 Congressman  Cojuangco underestimates  his  colleagues’s  capacity – or appetites.   They  have more skills than  just  cobbling   new signboards for  streets and schools.

Congressmen  are  no slouch  at  burning  tax  money.  They appropriated, for  themselves   P13-million pork barrel slabs  each last  year.. They’ll  have more this election year.  Watch   when  the final General  Approriations Act  surfaces..   
 
At  Malacanang’s behest, congressmen embedded P19.6 billion in “one-liners” into the Department of Public Works & Highways’ budget  last year.. Another P11.6 billion  was   stashed into  the Transport & Communication department budget.  Buckle  up for  repeated  plunder.
 
Led  by the  President and  First  Gentleman, 28  cash-flush congressmen sallied into New York’s  Le Cirque Restaurant and Vann’s  Steakhouse. None has been held to account, despite  Speaker Prospero Nograles’ August  20  pledge : Each would foot the bill  personally.

Congress  has  demonstrated  it’s mettle as  “Laundromat”.  Remember  World Bank’s   probe into  a major cartel   that  colluded in  rigging bids for a   $150-million  national roads  project? 

After a four year probe, the Bank  blacklisted  seven firms. Three were  Filipino companies:  EC De Luna Construction Corp., CM  Pancho Construction, and Cavite Ideal Construction.  

In less than a week’s  time, the   House committee on public works and highways  “cleared” the firms.   The  House  probers  were  either  whiz kids  or  crooks. Take your pick.

“Laundromat” patterns  emerged in  scams like  Northrail,  “Joc-Joc’s  fertilizer , Macapagal Boulevard, etc.  “It could be probably be shown by facts    and figures, that  there is no distinctly native …criminal class except  Congress,”  Mark Twain  wrote in 1897.

The Lower House proved adept at derailing repeated impeachment bids, lodged against the President or allies, like Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez.

Farther back, pro-Joseph  Estrada  congressmen  sprang Luzviminda Tancangco, over at the Commission on Elections.  On a budget of  P1.2 billion,  she  awarded a P6.5 billion contract for election IDs.  This Voters’ Registration project disenfranchised thousands.   Rep. Ronaldo Zamora and pro-Erap solons absented themselves on the crucial vote.

Presidential candidate Gilberto “Gibo” Teodoro  never  refers to his quarter-backing  Eduardo  Cojuangco’s “Brat  Pack”  in impeaching  Chief  justice Hilario  Davide.

The  Davide court ruled that coconut levies were public funds, not crony loot. The court clipped Marcos  booty in Swiss banks. Dogged resistance by citizens and church groups stopped the “Pack”. But  not before  “Gibo” &  Co. dragged the country to the  brink of  a constitutional crisis.  
 
Ombudsman Aniano  Desierto was,  the late Senator Lorenzo  Tanada stressed,  consumed only by  Desierto’s interests.   But “even emperors have straw  sandalled relatives”,  noted Viewpoint (Inquirer 10/20/05).  “In history’s lottery,  Merceditas  Gutierrez  was the  First Gentleman’s  classmate..” 
 
A straw-sandalled Ombudsman squelched, or froze, key cases, depending on Palace interests,  Philippine Human Development Report 2009 notes. These ranged from the Mega Pacific election computer case to World Bank’s crack down on highway bid collusion.  In November, pro-Arroyo  congressmen spiked, an impeachment charge, against Gutierrez.   

Gutierrez  term ends in 2012.   She’ll  be handed  a slew of accusations  when constitutional immunity for President Arroyo (and de-facto immunity for the First Gentleman) ends noon of June 30, 2010.  Or will she still be Ombudsman?

“There’s talk the Palace wants to replace Ombudsman Gutierrez”,  Newsbreak’s Aries Rufo reports. That way, “the new appointee would have a fresh term of  seven years.”

Is that how long the regime foresees the need  “to cover its flanks”?    What’s clear for now  is “the  Constitution protects aliens, drunks and congressmen,” as  Will Rogers once joked.
 
The  wreckage the 14th Congress left is patent.  The Freedom of Information bill, for example, was “one step away from passage but the House of Representatives didn’t deliver,” ABS-CBN Carmela  Fonbuena  reports.

FOI author Rep. Lorenzo Tañada III  (Quezon)  was pessimistic  the House would ratify  the  report,  when  Congress convenes, as  National Board of Canvassers,  after the May elections.

Lower House’s ratification would have taken no more than 30 seconds.  If there was no objection, the floor leader could have  declared it  approved   “But the House leadership  failed  Tanada,” Fonbuena added.  “The session was immediately adjourned because of lack of quorum.”

“(Democracy) will endure until the day Congress discovers it can bribe the public with the public’s money,” Alexis de Tocqueville wrote. Has that day come?

(Email:juanlmercado@gmail.com )

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Filipina worker in Haiti found in supermart rubble

8 02 2010

Port-Au-Prince, HAITI – After three weeks of search and recovery efforts,  the remains of Mary Grace Fabian, an overseas Filipino worker in Haiti, was pulled out of the collapsed Carribean Supermarket February 5, according to Lt. Colonerl Lope Dagoy, commander of the 10th Philippine peacekeeping contingent.  A 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti on January 12.

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TUCP reports a decrease in Filipino nurses seeking US employment

8 02 2010

MANILA – The number of Filipinos that sought to enter America’s nursing profession plunged by 26 percent in 2009, the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) reported Sunday Feb. 7, 2010.

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Colleagues of arrested health workers to file Writ of Habeas Corpus to SC

8 02 2010

MANILA — Dr. Eleanor Jara, a general physician and currently the executive director of the CHD said that contrary to the claims of Col. Aurelio Baladad, commander of the 202nd IB-PA the abducted health and medical professionals were all volunteer of different non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and not by any means, connected with the communist rebels.

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Lacson A.K.A. "Joc-Joc"

8 02 2010

No  court  tried,  let alone convicted,  Senator Panfilo  Lacson  of  having  Presidential Anti-Organized Crime  Task Force  men  rub out  publicist  Salvador “Bubby” Dacer and  driver Emmanuel  Corbito.

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Lethal Cocktail

5 02 2010

“”When  the  well  dries  up,  even  the  fool  saves  water.” This  axiom came to mind  as  forecasts of  El Nino, searing  the country, sent  everyone scrambling . Well,  almost    everybody. 

Of   the  country’s 126  cities,  the most  vulnerable to dry spells  is  Cebu.  How  will  El  Nino affect  a  city  crammed  with migrants, collapsing aquifers, salt contaminated wells and biologically dead rivers?  City Hall  couldn’t  be bothered.

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Roxas, Enriquez Address Worsening Human Rights Crisis in the Philippines

5 02 2010

NEW YORK– About 100 concerned New Yorkers gathered at the Martin Luther King Jr. Labor Center on Saturday, January 30, to listen to Melissa Roxas, the first US citizen under the Obama administration to be subjected to a gross human rights violation in the Philippines, and veteran Philippine human rights activist Marie Hilao-Enriquez, speak about the worsening human rights situation in the Philippines under the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration.

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Mortgage Modification: Bank Bailout by Another Name?

5 02 2010

The big talk in Washington these days is helping homeowners. Unfortunately, what passes for help to homeowners in the Capital might look more like handing out money to banks anywhere else.  The basic story isfairly simple. Tens of million of homeowners are now underwater: they owe more in their mortgage than the value of their home. The reason is that they bought homes at bubble-inflated prices earlier in the decade. Economists and other policy wonks insisted that housing was a great buy, even as home prices got ever more out-of-line with economic fundamentals.

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Filipinos support Dromm’s Appointment to City Council Immigration Committee

5 02 2010

NEW YORK CITY – Rain, wind, and cold weather did not hinder supporters from rallying behind Daniel Dromm at the Jewish Center in Jackson Heights. Dromm held a press conference to announce his latest position as the chair of the New York City Council Immigration Committee.

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Conservative Activism: Alliance of Rogues and Thieves

5 02 2010

Conservative politicians tend to serve business interests, which they have done all these years, and businesspeople tend to be conservative because conservatism itself became a business, a source of profit for these people. Jack Abramoff once referred to them as political entrepreneurs. In its current form, it consisted of peddling right-wing grievances to birds of the same feathers. There was so much money to be made by helping outfits raise money for beleaguered conservatives who were neither beleaguered nor asked for monetary help. Because of their hatred for labor shared by many businessmen, there were anti-union charities and fake anti-union that the problem was to find ways to spend the money.

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