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DoTr to increase penalties for airport slot misuse

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said it will increase the penalties on airlines that “misuse” their airport takeoff and landing slots in a bid to decongest Ninoy Aquino International Airport, (NAIA) the country’s main gateway.

In a statement, the DoTr said in a new joint memorandum circular that regulators will penalize airlines that fail to use their slots or reserve slots for the purpose of denying competitors the use of those slots.

It said the penalties include denial of slot precedence for airlines that operate services without corresponding timeslots and loss of priority in future slot allocations for misuse or inefficient use of slots.

JMC 2019-01, the DoTr said, was signed by the Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA), the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), and the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB).

The Timeslot Committee has been authorized to review the slot coordinator’s findings on airlines’ slot performance. The coordinaor is also empowered to initiate disciplinary action against airlines.

“Landing at an airport is a privilege,” Transport Secretary Arthur P. Tugade said in the statement. “To intentionally disregard the value of these airport slots is unethical, and an aggravation to the current state of congestion at NAIA. We have to recognize the domino effects of slot misuse, which ultimately result in massive inconvenience to our air passengers.”

The DoTr said NAIA handled 45 million passengers in 2018, up 23%.

PHL’s resiliency projects not fairly distributed — WB

THE World Bank said the government needs to adopt a new method for estimating disaster damage that goes beyond asset losses, because the current approach tends to highlight the value of projects in or near the National Capital Region (NCR).

In its “Lifelines: The Resilient Infrastructure Opportunity” report, the World Bank said: “the most important interventions will take place in the Manila area if asset losses are the main measure of disaster impacts.”

“Assessments of national risk and identification of critical infrastructure need to account for multiple policy objectives and therefore, use a set of metrics that goes beyond asset losses,” it added.

The World Bank noted that the Philippines was able to save more than $1 billion because of natural systems that protect the coastlines against flood and storm surges. It said that nature-based solutions for flood protection reduce the need for hard infrastructure such as dikes.

“In the Philippines, mangroves, reefs and other natural system prevent more than $1 billion in annual disaster losses,” the bank said.

Other countries that benefit from the protection provided by reefs are Cuba, Indonesia, Malaysia and Mexico, the World Bank said, noting that these countries save an estimated $400 million each from flood damage annually.

The World Bank also noted the importance of service providers having contingency plans in case of power interruptions.

“In the Philippines, after a typhoon, water tankers (have been) contracted to ensure service continuity despite infrastructure damage.”

The World Bank said it is necessary for resilience measures to be fairly distributed across populations and backed by metrics based on socioeconomic impacts on the affected population.

In a separate statement, World Bank Group President David Malpass said, “Resilient infrastructure is not about roads or power plants alone. It is about the people, the households and the communities for whom this quality infrastructure is a lifeline to better education and better livelihoods.” — Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

JICA still has 900B yen to fund rail expansion in Philippines

THE Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) said 900 billion yen worth of funding remains unreleased from allocations to support the development of the Philippine railway system.

“Just (in) the railway sector… we project to commit about 1.3 trillion yen for railway project. In total, actually, we have only committed about 400 billion yen, so far, so at least for the railway sector, 900 billion yen (will go towards completing) the ongoing railway projects,” Kiyo Kawabuchi, senior representative of JICA, said during a briefing on Thursday.

Currently, JICA is funding various railway projects with a total of 595 billion yen in loan funding, including the unreleased portions of the loans.

These include the first tranche of the Metro Manila Subway Project to be operational by 2025, the North-South Commuter railway (NSCR) Project, the first tranche of its Extension project to be completed by 2022, Rehabilitation of the Metro Rail Transit Line- 3 (MRT-3) to be completed by 2022, the Light Rail Transit Line 1 (LRT-1) Cavite Extension Project due for completion by 2021, and the LRT-2 East Extension Project due for completion by 2020.

The Department of Transportation (DoTr) said the projects will expand the country’s railway lines to about 244 kilometers from the current 79 kilometers.

These projects are some of the transport interventions listed in the JICA 2014 Road Map for Transport Infrastructure Development for Metro Manila, which was adopted by the government. The road map also includes the improvement of the country’s roads, expressways, and traffic management as priorities to decongest traffic, and to fuel economic activity.

On a follow up survey in 2017, JICA said that the Build, Build, Build program of the government could help address the P3.5 billion lost to road congestion.

“Really the vision anchors on the statement of the President which is to deliver a more comfortable life to the Filipinos…. What part of it? The transport part because you may have livelihood opportunities, you may have education opportunities, you may have health services, but if these government services are not within reach of the people in a convenient manner then it somehow reduces the benefits or the value of all these government services,” Timothy John R. Batan, DoTr undersecretary for railways, said during the briefing.

“There is a basket of solutions. Rail plays a major role in that basket… and what we have really been pushing together with… our implementation partners and our development partners is to find the appropriate role of rail in that basket because really the objective is not to build rail for building’s sake. The objective is for us to achieve a certain level of convenience, predictability,” he added. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Sugar industry pushing for faster release of dev’t funding

THE Confederation of Sugar Producers (CONFED) said it will seek revisions to the implementing rules and regulations of the Sugar Industry Development Act (SIDA) to make project approvals faster.

Which will leave sugar development projects with a greatly reduced 2020 budget of P67 million, from P500 million in 2019.

“I think (we will seek a) review of the SIDA IRR to streamline the process in order to fast-track the projects,” Raymond V. Montinola, spokesperson of CONFED, told reporters.

“We cannot feel the impact of the program now… Some are also frustrated by the slow pace of approval especially when giving out the funding,” he said.

He said applications do not go ahead due to the slowness of the process of orders to re-submit requirements.

He also said the sugar development budget might fall to P67 million in 2020 from P500 million in 2019. Mr. Montinola said the industry plans to appeal to Congress to increase the allocation to about P1 billion.

“They are trying to re-negotiate the program to increase it to P1 billion… with Congress… mostly (for) scholarships, socialized lending,” he said. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

China could build 30 ‘Belt and Road’ nuclear reactors by 2030

SHANGHAI — China could build as many as 30 overseas nuclear reactors through its involvement in the “Belt and Road” initiative over the next decade, a senior industry official told a meeting of China’s political advisory body this week.

Wang Shoujun, a standing committee member of the China People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), told delegates on Wednesday that China needed to take full advantage of the opportunities provided by “Belt and Road” and give more financial and policy support to its nuclear sector.

“‘Going out’ with nuclear power has already become a state strategy, and nuclear exports will help optimize our export trade and free up domestic high-end manufacturing capacity,” he was quoted as saying in a report on the CPPCC’s official website.

He said China needed to improve research and development, localize the production of key nuclear components, and grow both the domestic and foreign nuclear markets to give full play to the country’s “comprehensive advantages” in costs and technology.

Mr. Wang, also the former chairman of the state-owned China National Nuclear Corp. (CNNC), said “Belt and Road” nuclear projects could earn Chinese firms as much as 1 trillion yuan ($145.52 billion) by 2030, according to more details of his speech published by BJX.com.cn, a Chinese power industry news portal.

He said 41 “Belt and Road” nations already had nuclear power programs or were planning to develop them, and China only needed to secure a 20% market share to create five million new jobs in the sector, according to the news portal.

CPPCC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

China is in the middle of a reactor-building program it hoped would serve as a shop window to promote its homegrown designs and technologies overseas, especially its own third-generation reactor design known as Hualong One.

But the pace of construction at home has slowed down amid technological problems and delays at some key projects, as well as a suspension of new approvals that lasted over three years.

Mr. Wang, according to BJX.com.cn, said there was currently overcapacity among local nuclear manufacturers, but the domestic market value for nuclear equipment could reach more than 48 billion yuan a year within two years. He didn’t say how much it was worth currently. — Reuters

China plastics packaging firm signs industrial zone lease in Panabo City

A CHINESE plastic packaging company has signed a location agreement with an industrial zone operator in Panabo City, Davao del Norte, the industrial zone’s operator said.

Damosa Land Inc. said Davao Zhenzhi Corp. “leased a 2,000 square meter warehouse for plastic processing at the Anflo Industrial Estate in Panabo City, Davao del Norte.

“Their products are plastic packaging for agriproduce like bananas,” Damosa Land, which signed the agreement Wednesday, said.

The company becomes the 12th locator in the industrial zone.

Earlier, Japanese company Packwell Inc. also signed a lease agreement with the company for a packaging plant.

Arturo M. Milan, Davao City Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said representatives of both locators are attending the Davao Investment Conference.

Mr. Milan said half of the 600 delegates are foreigners. Twelve of them are ambassadors and six of them are from the European Union.

He added that the entry of foreign investors is an indication of the demand for industrial zones.

“Industrial zones are important for both local and foreign companies to get attracted,” he added. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

President signs four laws extending various broadcast franchises

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte signed laws renewing the franchises of four broadcasting companies, including El Shaddai’s Delta Broadcasting System, Inc. (DBS) and Ultrasonic Broadcasting System, Inc. (UBSI), which is owned by the SYSU Group of Companies, a food importer and distributor, officials said.

Mr. Duterte signed on April 17 Republic Act (RA) No. 11303 renewing for another 25 years the franchise granted to DBS “to establish, maintain, and operate radio and television broadcasting stations” in the country.

He also signed RA 11301 for the renewal of the UBSI franchise.

Other franchises renewed on April 17 include Filipinas Broadcasting Network, Inc. or FBN (RA 11300) and Peñafrancia Broadcasting Corp. or PBN (RA 111302).

DBS, which is owned by El Shaddai leader Mariano Z. Velarde, is based in Makati City. The company has been operating DWXI 1314 kHz AM, a radio station, since 1981. It also runs the television station DBS TV Channel 35.

UBSI operates at least 10 Energy FM radio stations, with operations in Davao City, Cebu City, Naga City in Camarines Sur, and Dagupan before expanding to Metro Manila in 2003.

FBN is a provincial network, which opened its first station DZGE-AM in Naga City in the 1960s, and followed by DZRC-AM in Legazpi City. The company, which was organized by the late Bicol Rep. Edmund B. Cea, also opened several radio stations outside the Bicol region.

PBN, formerly affiliated with TV5 Network, is a Bicol-based radio/television media network.

Their franchises, according to the law, takes effect for a period of 25 years “unless sooner revoked and cancelled.”

A franchise will be deemed “ipso facto revoked in the event the grantee fails to operate for two years.”

The grantees’ responsibilities include providing free of charge “adequate public service time which is reasonable and sufficient to enable the government, through the broadcasting stations or facilities of the grantee[s], to reach pertinent populations… on important public issues and relay important public announcements and warnings concerning public emergencies and calamities, as necessity, urgency, or law may require.”

They should also “promote audience sensibility and empowerment… and not use [their] stations or facilities for the broadcasting of obscene or indecent language, speech, acts or scenes; or for the dissemination of deliberately false information or willful misrepresentation, to the detriment of the public interest; or to incite, encourage or assist in subversive or treasonable acts.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

Bank investments in tech not yet seen driving significant revenue growth

NEW YORK — The $1 trillion invested by traditional banks globally over the past three years to improve their technology has not yet delivered the revenue growth that had been expected, according to an Accenture report released on Thursday.

The consultancy analyzed more than 160 of the largest retail and commercial banks in 21 countries to determine whether those making the most progress on technology were achieving better financial performance.

It found that banks that had advanced the most on digital were the most profitable and highly valuable, but that the higher profitability was driven by having reduced costs rather than revenue growth.

Banks had hoped that by creating better digital products and experiences for customers they would have achieved the same fast user and revenue growth as new tech-savvy competitors or large technology firms, Alan McIntyre, a senior managing director at Accenture and head of its global banking practice, said in an interview.

“Having a good digital offering is not enough to move customers,” McIntyre said. “If it doesn’t change, the industry is going to end up looking more like a utility.”

The study comes as incumbent banks continue to dedicate vast amounts of funding to overhaul their old technology systems and offer more digital services to customers.

Banks are seeking to meet the higher expectations of customers who have grown accustomed to the user-friendly products and services offered by consumer technology companies and new financial services entrants.

Accenture did not discount investments in technology, but noted that reducing costs was only the first step banks needed to make to become more competitive in the changing landscape.

The move to digital is likely to reduce banks’ income from fees, such as those customers pay for advice or transactions, according to the report.

It recommends that moving forward banks focus on making more income from taking risks linked with running the balance sheet, such as interest rate and credit, or by creating new revenue streams in areas not in their traditional domain. — Reuters

Of blood and pyramids

Another round of investment scams and household robbery syndicates plagues the land. Over the past weeks, friends from the south and central, colleagues in the capital tell of tales of unfulfilled promises and disappearing funds. Some with savings and retirement money, a few with excess and those who borrowed, but all united by the need for channels to make returns exponentially and the want for material riches beyond the usual lotto dreams. Is it the entrepreneurial spirit within us, the gambling culture that permeates our society, or the laziness or boredom of everyday work?

Oldies will cite the Agrix Marketing of the 1970s and the Panata Foundation in Palawan in the late 1980s as the first of a cyclical pattern of foisted schemes, huge amounts, catastrophic falls, complaints, suits and suicides. I recall the Multitel of Rosario Baladjay, Tibayan and the Mateos of the early 2000s. The Legacy and Aman fiascos are the fairly recent ones that resonate only when mentioned. All these peddled different products and services from agriculture to telecoms, from motorcycles to loans with huge interest payments but with the same ending. Kapa, the latest incarnation, was shrined in ministry but was no different. One does not know the meaning of the word.

Warnings are made. Closures and raids are routine. Recovery is futile and cases are forever. There are no lessons to be learned; there are no souls to be saved.

In the last few days, a kasambahay intentionally fell prey to a dugo-dugo (blood-blood) gang. The couple came home from a long day to find her gone with missing valuables. She was hired a few months ago from a recommendation. Her application documents, including the vaunted NBI clearance, checked out. But now, she could no longer be found. It is a typical story were it not that after some hours, she returned to tell how she answered the landline and was utterly convinced to pry open locked drawers and cabinets with tools that were not even in the apartment.

She brought the watches and jewelry through at least two layers of building security without any alarms. Wasn’t it simpler to just not come back? Police reports followed, complaints lodged against administration, locks changed, and nerves frayed for a breach of trust and confidence that could only have been committed by a member of the household.

An arrest was made. Inquest resulted in detention without bail due to the amounts involved despite the new indexation of the crime of robbery in the Revised Penal Code. She sat through it with eyes wide open and was ready to face the consequences alone. Criminal syndication has acquired a new dimension. Will she escape soon, or will her case be delayed and eventually dismissed because of corruption? Or is her life dispensable the way justice is dispensed? This chapter we will soon know.

Budol-budol, a variant of the criminal operation, continues to be reported on occasion including by first-time tourists relying on the smiles and the English of the locals. Employee fraud of company funds pesters business owners. The government and its constituents are defrauded regularly in many ways imaginable or magical.

In conversations with contractors, the modus operandi for public works, including the sharing and splitting of commissions and margins, remains unchanged. In dialogues with developers, it is not the Citizen’s Charter that runs the business permits of the local governments, it is the graft charter. Notorious in Metro Manila are Parañaque and Pasay. Crimes of such nature are permissive and they build up, resulting in a scam that is mightier than the pyramids of Giza.

Perhaps this explains the identification and adoration by the people with heroes and superheroes in near and distant realms where people fight and die for the good, where there is beauty to truth and reward for honesty. To find a place and space where ideals are meant to be lived, where blood and toil mean something other than racketeering and trickery.

The protection against crime is prudence and caution at the first instance carried a long way forward to transactions and dealings with fellowmen. Everyday vigilance is contracted to CCTV cameras and security guards but the actual deal lies in the approach to prevention that is both science and art, and experience.

But crimes do happen regardless — the random acts, the senseless killings, and the wrong person at the right place or at the right time. The real safeguard against criminality remains an efficient, effective and economical criminal justice system that detects, investigates, tries, punishes, and reforms criminals. The certainty of judgment and the temporal karma are the visible signs and manifestations of a regime of fair and consistent laws that bind us all or none at all.

And then the corruption in justice institutions that stand for governance does not inspire but conspires and makes us despair. Where lies our hope but in get-rich opportunities to whisk us away.

In his own words

Had it not been for that “incident” near the Recto Bank in the West Philippine Sea, the 121st anniversary of Philippine independence would have come and gone like any other holiday whose significance escapes many Filipinos.

Only three days earlier, on June 9, a Chinese militia vessel rammed and sank a Filipino fishing boat, and sped away without making any attempt to rescue the survivors. It further fed outrage over the continuing Chinese assaults on Philippine sovereignty, which this time came in the form of actual violence against defenseless fishermen. It assumed special significance because it occurred practically on the eve of the anniversary of Philippine independence.

On June 12 itself, President Rodrigo Duterte issued one of his quasi-credible, usually fact-challenged and predictably motherhood statements. He made no reference to the June 9 incident. This time, however, he expressed his hopes for a “truly independent Philippines within our lifetimes.” That declaration acknowledged that the country has not yet reached that desired stage, and was, for that reason, more candid and truthful than his previous June 12 messages.

He was most probably thinking of the country’s continuing state of dependency on its former colonizer, the United States, rather than of China. Despite his often excessive rants against the US, Mr. Duterte is nevertheless right about the country’s continuing US captivity. Seventy-three years after the US finally recognized its independence in 1946, the Philippines is still so tied to the US militarily and economically that it might as well be its political appendage, and is, in fact, one of its most stable cultural outposts.

To the US’ advantage, that hardly recognized reality has become even more elusive for many Filipinos because of Mr. Duterte’s China policy. The June 9 sinking of the Filipino fishing boat F/B Gem-Ver by a Chinese militia vessel has only added to the perception that it is not the US but China that is the country’s imperialist overlord.

That perception has been amply aided by capitalist China’s not being particularly subtle about its use of gunboat diplomacy and economic blackmail to further its expansionist ambitions in this part of the world and elsewhere. In Africa and other parts of Asia, for example, it has used its vast economic power to gain control of the ports and territories of other countries to achieve its strategic aim of replacing the US as the global hegemon of the 21st century.

But Mr. Duterte’s own statements and actions have not helped dispel the view that the Philippines is under the heel of a “China-Duterte dictatorship.”

Among other indicators of his pro-China bias are his repeated refusal to do anything about China’s occupation of the West Philippine Sea, and his turning a blind eye to the influx of hundreds of thousands of Chinese nationals illegally working in the Philippines and displacing Filipino workers.

Since it happened, the President of the Philippines has dismissed the sinking of the F/B Gem-Ver as a minor incident, while his political allies and subalterns in the foreign affairs and defense departments vie with each other in minimizing it, at one point even echoing the Chinese embassy claim that it was just another run-of-the-mill maritime accident despite the fact that the Filipino fishing boat was at anchor and immobile. Mr. Duterte even canceled a belatedly planned special Cabinet meeting last June 17 to discuss the incident.

The usual regime trolls have also suggested that it was staged, and part of another conspiracy by the “yellows” — shorthand for the ineffectual political opposition — to make the regime look bad. Despite the Philippine Navy’s conclusion that it was not an accidental collision but a deliberate maneuver to sink the Filipino fishing boat, the regime insists that the facts about it are not yet in.

Together with the widening perception that independence has not fulfilled the promise of peace and prosperity that would supposedly follow the country’s liberation from Spanish and US colonial rule, the country’s current problems with China have reawakened among some sectors the cynical belief that the Philippines would have been better off as either a permanent US colony or — there’s still an organization that’s campaigning for it — a US state.

But no one, least of all those who fought for it in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, has ever said that prosperity and peace and the national pride that go with them would automatically ensue once independence is achieved.

The key issue is whether the country has indeed become truly independent. But even if the answer is yes, those desires for social, political, cultural, and individual development at the heart of Filipino aspirations during the revolutionary period still have to be fought and worked for.

But if in Africa the old colonial powers — France, Belgium, Italy, Britain — made sure that even after their departure their former colonies would remain poor and tied to their economic and political apron strings, the same, but worse, happened in the Philippines.

The US policy of “training Filipinos for self-government” made sure that it was the descendants of the collaborators with Spain and with the Japanese during World War II, the urban and rural gentry, who would govern after they had formally relinquished sovereignty over the Philippines.

It was the heirs of the Spanish period principalia who assured the US of continuing use of its military bases, who made sure the Parity Amendment to the 1935 Constitution would pass, and signed the Mutual Defense Treaty. During the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo regime, they signed the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), and, during the Benigno Aquino III administration, the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).

That Philippine independence is to this day a sham is, in short, the doing of the ruling elite and dynasties that have monopolized political power in this country since 1946. And Mr. Duterte has himself added to the difficulties of achieving true independence.

Although inveighing against the continuing outrage of Philippine dependency, into an already complex mix of contradictions Mr. Duterte added the volatile Chinese ingredient, which has subjected the country to the additional perils not only of another imperialist power’s imposing its will on it, but also to the possibility of being caught in the middle of a confrontation between that power and the United States.

Echoing US Defense Secretary Mike Pompeo’s pledge that his country will fulfill its obligations under the Mutual Defense Treaty, US Ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim implied as much when he said that China’s use of military force against Filipino fisherfolk would compel the US to “defend” the Philippines. The F/B Gem-Ver episode could be the flashpoint of a US-China war in the West Philippine Sea.

In what could be a supreme irony, the war that Mr. Duterte has been saying he wants to avoid by refusing to do or even say anything about Chinese aggression may yet come to be precisely because of his do-nothing policy.

But whether such a war does occur or not, the awful truth is that, besieged by both US determination to defend its dominant role in Philippine economics, politics and culture, and China’s aggressive campaign to establish its own dominance in Asia and the rest of the world, the Philippines and its people will continue to be the hapless victims of the failure of its problematic leadership to, in Mr. Duterte’s own words, make the country “truly independent.” Among dependency’s other costs could be Filipinos’ ending up as collateral damage in a conflict they neither provoked nor wanted.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

Teaching love

The problem here is not the failure to communicate but the refusal to communicate. There are many good reasons to uphold that there is a male-female distinction, that gender is synced with sex, and that marriage is between one man and one woman. Yet those reasons are not being heard.

Perhaps because of a lack of faith that truth is applicable to today’s modern world (whatever “modern” means: every day in our history used to be modern), an incoherent appreciation of truth such that feelings dominate over facts, or even perhaps because of a misplaced form of charity, many institutions that should know better either keep quiet and let dissenting voices have exclusive hold of the public square or, even more troubling, actually join in spreading misinformation themselves.

The issues before us all boil down to freedom and truth leading to the common good.

So the imbalance in the voices being heard is unfair to the greater populace that deserves such common good.

Part of that common good is also transparency of institutions: if parents were persuaded to enroll their children in a university representing itself as upholding certain values or principles, it behooves such universities to actually uphold such values or principles.

If you say you’re a Catholic university, then teach Catholic doctrine.

In any event, the Catholic Church apparently has had enough. Tardy. But better than never.

In the middle of “Pride” month, the Congregation for Catholic Education (CCE) released a document titled “Male and Female He Created Them: Towards a path of dialogue on the question of gender theory in education” to guide Catholic educational institutions on how to deal with an increasingly gender-confused world brought up about by an ever aggressive LGBT lobby.

The document’s rationale is clear: “we are now facing with what might accurately be called an educational crisis, especially in the field of affectivity and sexuality.”

“The problem,” it goes on to say, is not in the distinction between the terms “gender” and “sex,” “which can be interpreted correctly, but in the separation of sex from gender. This separation is at the root of the distinctions proposed between various ‘sexual orientations’ which are no longer defined by the sexual difference between male and female, and can then assume other forms, determined solely by the individual, who is seen as radically autonomous. Further, the concept of gender is seen as dependent upon the subjective mindset of each person, who can choose a gender not corresponding to his or her biological sex, and therefore with the way others see that person (transgenderism).”

This position is not new but merely a reiteration of longstanding and permanent Church teaching on sexuality. Thus, the Catechism of the Catholic Church: “‘Homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered.’ They are contrary to the natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved.”

Also, the “‘sexual orientation’ of a person is not comparable to race, sex, age.” (Some Considerations Concerning the Response to Legislative Proposals on the Non-discrimination of Homosexual Persons; Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith [CDF], 1992)

Having said that, the argument about discrimination is misleading considering that the Bill of Rights and every other law applies equally to all citizens, including members of the LGBT community.

On the other hand, the liberal progressive plea for “diversity and acceptance” would have been believable had not any position contrary to the LGBT lobby been automatically dismissed as medieval.

Finally, love wins? What “love”? To say all “love is valid” is sloppy. No sane person will declare bigamy, adultery, pedophilia, bestiality, or incest as the kind of love that should “win.”

Catholic universities — those owned by the Catholic Church, those run by Catholic missionary orders, or those that represent themselves as loyal to the Catholic teaching — are thus enjoined to reject “ideological reductionism or homologizing relativism by remaining faithful to their own gospel-based identity, in order to transform positively the challenges of their times into opportunities by following the path of listening, reasoning and proposing the Christian vision, while giving witness by their very presence, and by the consistency of their words and deeds.” (CCE, 2019)

Furthermore, it is reminded that “all support should be withdrawn from any organizations which seek to undermine the teaching of the Church, which are ambiguous about it, or which neglect it entirely.” (Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on the Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons; CDF, 1986)

Finally, the laity are reminded of their right (and duty) to report to their Bishop any institution that undermines Church teaching or misleads the faithful.

Parents and students are also well within their rights to demand that Catholic universities teach Catholic doctrine properly. Refusal to do so cannot be unjustly excused as academic freedom, when doing so not only misleads students but also violates truthfulness in representation and compliance with legal contractual obligations that every university is subject to.

Bottom line: “love,” “equality,” and “diversity” are all good. But truth must underline them all.

 

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

jemygatdula@yahoo.com

www.jemygatdula.blogspot.com

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Twitter @jemygatdula

Thoughts on truth and portraits

Sir Winston Churchill, British Prime Minister and writer, painted landscapes rather than portraits. “Because no tree has ever complained about its likeness,” he remarked.

The artist’s greatest challenge is to depict a subject in a particular medium — oil, pastel, charcoal or watercolor on canvas, paper, a carving on wood, an etching on metal or a sculpture in marble. Unlike the stark and accurate objectivity of a digital or film photograph, a painting is a subjective interpretation by the artist. In most cases, his own personality is projected onto and blended with the image. The portrait reveals facets of the painter’s personality together with the likeness of the subject.

In portraiture, the artist is required to capture the expression and character of the subject. When a portrait is commissioned, the painter is often asked to enhance the best features and downplay or erase the irregular flaws. It is, in a sense, the manual equivalent of Photoshop. It is amusing to hear stories about portrait sittings and how the commissioners, subjects, models give the painters a hard time — demands, suggestions, unsolicited remarks on the skill and accuracy of the artist. This practice creates expectations of perfection.

Specific requirements limit and dampen the creative process. Sometimes, the truth is embellished and it becomes an inflated illusion of grandeur, narcissism, and fantasy.

After all, who wants to pay for a portrait that shows one’s real physical limitations and flaws?

The British Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell once remarked to the portraitist of King Charles I’s court, “Mr. Lely, I desire you would use all your skill to paint my picture truly like me, and not flatter me at all; but remark all these roughness, pimples, warts and everything as you see me. Otherwise, I will never pay a farthing for it.”

An art collector once asked the Spanish surrealist Salvador Dali if it was hard to paint a picture. He replied, “No. It’s either easy or impossible.”

The lay observer might wonder, “why do some portraits appear distorted, cubist, or surreal?”

It is the artist’s vision, expression of and statement on life as interpreted on canvas. When people ask why a portrait cannot look exactly like the subject, the stock reply would be, “Take a photograph if you want reality.”

For centuries, artists have painted their variations of still life and landscapes. They are free to expand their expression beyond the limits of representational and figurative art.

The impressionists of the early 20th century (Monet, Manet, Renoir, Degas) were fascinated with light and its effect of nature. They painted wonderful shimmering impressions of landscapes well as glimmering portraits of women, children, and ballerinas. The images appeared as though they were seen through raindrop-splattered windowpanes.

Claude Monet painted the same romantic scenes of the Seine of Paris and Thames in London. He painted the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Rouen in varying stages of daylight and sunset through different seasons. He did the same at his water lily pond with the Japanese bridge in his garden in Giverny.

For the Surrealists, landscape was the favorite metaphor for inner worlds of the mind and imagination. They depicted a dreamlike world “without boundaries between the self and material reality.” The subjective and objective are mingled as in one’s imagination.

Artists depict their own valid facets of truth and reality. It is up to the viewer to relate positively or negatively to the version of the truth.

Here are some quotes on truth. Enlightened individuals wrote these gems.

“Truth is the object of philosophy, but not always of philosophers.” — John Churton Collins (1848–1908), British writer and scholar

La vérité existe. On n’invente que le mensonge.” (Truth exists. Only lies are invented.”) Georges Braque (1882–1963), French Cubist painter

“A truth that’s told with bad intent / Beats all the lies you can invent.” William Blake (1757–1827), English poet, artist, mystic, in Auguries of innocence.

 

Maria Victoria Rufino is an artist, writer and businesswoman. She is president and executive producer of Maverick Productions.

mavrufino@gmail.com