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Dec. 26, Jan. 2 declared holidays in gov’t agencies, courts

DEC. 26 and Jan. 2, 2018 have been declared as additional holidays for government agencies under the Executive department through Memorandum Circular (MC) No. 37 signed by Executive Secretary Salvador C. Medialdea on Dec. 13 and issued yesterday. In line with the Malacañang memo, Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno also issued an authorization yesterday suspending work in all courts nationwide during those two days. MC 37 said the work suspension is intended “to give the employees of the government full opportunity to celebrate the holidays with their families and loved ones.” — Rosemarie A. Zamora

Philippines’ Garcia and Biado chase World 9-Ball glory

By Ted Lerner
WPA Press Officer

DOHA, QATAR — After a day of intense pool drama mostly played at the highest levels of the sport, the 2017 World 9-ball Championship has come down to just four players remaining. And what a final four it promises to be.

In one semifinal, Taiwan’s newest pool playing super hero, 22-year-old Wu Kun Lin, will take on Filipino veteran Carlo Biado, who at 34 years old seems more ready than ever to ascend to the mountain top.

In the other semifinal sits another Filipino, Roland Garcia, who once studied at the foot of the legendary Efren Reyes and has, this week, been showcasing similar magician-like skills. The 36-year-old Garcia will square up against pool’s new wunderkind in 18-year-old Albanian Klenti Kaci.

Both semifinals will be race to 11, alternate break and will be played concurrently at 10 a.m. Doha time (GMT +3) at the Al Arabi Sports Club. The finals will be a race to 13, alternate break and will begin at 2 p.m. Doha time.

Not only did Wednesday’s action ensure that pool will have a brand new, first time champion come Thursday evening, but it also proved that old axiom that seems to be a common occurrence in pool; once you think you’ve seen it all, something else quickly comes along to prove you wrong.

In this case, unfortunately, that something else had absolutely nothing to do with pool skills played out on the blue pitch. The incident in question happened right at the start of the quarterfinals on Wednesday. Biado had come off a grueling test against fellow Filipino Jeffrey Ignacio, outlasting his younger compatriot 11-7 to advance to the final 8. After a 90 minute rest, Biado sat in his chair waiting for his opponent, China’s Liu Haitao, who had earlier stormed back from a 10-8 deficit to win his final 16 match, 11-10 against Taiwan’s Ko Ping Chung. The veteran Liu, however, was nowhere to be found.

As it turned out, Liu had gone back to his nearby hotel between sessions for a bit of a rest and had likely forgotten to wake up in time. Tournament officials at the hotel were able to roust Liu and put him in a van to try and beat the clock, where rules stated that players get a 15 minute grace period to show up for a match. But Liu arrived at the Al Arabi Sports Club 10 minutes past the grace period and found himself disqualified. A shell shocked Liu couldn’t believe what had just happened, and neither could Biado, who was awarded the match by an 11-0 score line without firing in a single ball.

Whether the lack of a match in the quarterfinals will help or hurt the Filipino is anyone’s guess. Certainly, however, Biado is well positioned to finally ascend to the mountain top of the sport after over 15 years of taking his lumps in all corners of the globe. For many years he was seen as this super talented nice guy who kept banging on the door of success, but without much luck. But in 2015 Biado started to crack the door open, especially when he came within a few racks of winning the World 10-ball championship against Taiwan’s Ko Pin Yi. Then earlier this year, Biado achieved his biggest success to date when he captured a coveted gold medal at the World Games in Poland. The Filipino is clearly not afraid to win and win big, and Thursday could see him finally grab pool’s ultimate prize.

Biado will first have to match wits with rising Taiwanese star Wu Kun Lin. The 22-year-old has quietly been making a name for himself this year amongst the stacked talent field that is Taiwanese professional pool. Several months back he traveled to the US and reached the semi-finals in the World Pool Series in New York. On Wednesday, Wu proved himself by first crushing defending champion Albin Ouschan, 11–3. He then poured it on against fellow Taiwanese Hsieh Chia Chen, winning handily, 11–7.

Wu’s silky smooth stroke and dead-eyed potting ability make him a serious threat in any match he enters and his showdown with Biado promises to be tight. Biado, however, certainly has the edge in terms of experience.

Garcia is less well known than Biado but those who follow pool know the special talent and promise that the 36-year-old has always possessed. Garcia hails from the same region of the Philippines as the legend Reyes, and in fact learned the game as a kid by hanging around with the Hall of Famer. At one point about 12 years ago, Garcia was considered a protégé of Efren and had the one of a kind pool skills to wow any audience.

Like many Filipinos, Garcia had long concentrated on the money game circuit, but it’s only in the last three years that he has turned his attention to serious tournament play. He also moved to Pattaya, Thailand where he works as a pro at the Megabreak pool hall. These changes have brought Garcia’s rare skills to the fore, and he has started to climb the ladder of tournament success.

This week in Doha, Garcia has lit up the arena in breathtaking style. He came into his round of 16 match against Taiwan’s Ko today an underdog, but he blew past the former world champion as if Ko didn’t even exist, winning 11-8.

In the quarters Garcia met up with Venezuelan-Jordanian Jalal Yousef. The veteran Yousef was having his best ever world championship and came into the match clearly in the zone, having just disposed of China’s Dang Jinhu, 11-7. But Garcia’s was in even more rarefied territory and tore through Yousef like a hot knife through butter, winning the match 11-4 and claiming a spot in the semi-finals.

Garcia will have to maintain his incredible pace on Thursday for he is up against a player in Kaci who appears absolutely unstoppable. The 18-year-old Albanian’s superb skills and seemingly impenetrable armor were on full display again today in his two matches. Kaci first dismantled Canada’s John Morra, 11-6. He then faced off with one of the young surprises of the event, the 23 year Maung Maung from Myanmar.

Thoughts on double vodka

Filipinos had been so enamored of Justin Trudeau that they don’t realize he’s just an empty suit. An empty suit lined by shiny but inherently dangerous or discriminatory policies. One of his more vacuous positions attacks people of faith and religions, which he defends by saying he adheres to science. That science being based on fact, is objective, and gives the truest account of reality.

Now I say vacuous because no serious modern thinker, from Kant to Schopenhauer to Wittgenstein to Popper ever questioned the notion that science cannot grasp all of reality, that our senses and realms of experience have such limitations that anyone could but acknowledge that the whole range of what is truly real is out there and yet for which no human is capable of knowing, let alone experiencing.

While it may or may not open up to admitting notions of God’s existence (depending on your inclinations), nevertheless, the point here is that to rely merely on science, while condescending towards religion and faith as mere superstition, is positively medieval.

This is not even to mention that science, what is there and provable, is itself — sadly — open to politics and ideologies. Like climate change, for example. But that’s a whole other discussion.

Speaking of Schopenhauer, I was part of a forum where the participants (mostly lawyers) kept reveling in the obscurity of their writing. Yes, you got that right: they were actually celebrating the fact that they were trained by their university to write in heavy pseudo-profound long-winded prose that nobody else could understand.

I could never understand the idiocy of that practice.

If they had a teacher (and, accepting the assumption, a great teacher) that would write in such a way is unfortunate. It doesn’t detract from the quality of his intellect but it does sadly indicate a blimp on his ability to communicate. And for students to then copy that sad trait is not the most intelligent thing to do.

Where does Schopenhauer come in? Well, aside from having one of the deepest minds in millennia, he was also a great writer. And he wrote this:

“Obscurity and vagueness of expression are at all times and everywhere a very bad sign. In 99 cases out of a hundred they arise from vagueness of thought, which, in its turn, is almost always fundamentally discordant, inconsistent, and therefore wrong. When a right thought springs up in the mind it strives after clearness of expression, and it soon attains it, for clear thought easily finds its appropriate expression. A man who is capable of thinking can express himself at all times in clear, comprehensible, and unambiguous words. Those writers who construct difficult, obscure, involved, and ambiguous phrases most certainly do not rightly know what it is they wish to say: they have only a dull consciousness of it, which is still struggling to put itself into thought; they also often wish to conceal from themselves and other people that in reality they have nothing to say. Like Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel, they wish to appear to know what they do not know, to think what they do not think, and to say what they do not say.”

Which makes me utterly miss Pope Benedict XVI. A genius with great clarity of mind, he is a master writer as well. Get his Truth and Tolerance to read during the Christmas holiday break.

Clarity of mind, unfortunately, is not something that one can say of liberals. Their positions on immigration, poverty alleviation, and same sex “marriage” leave a lot to be desired, reason-wise.

Writer Matt Walsh puts one particular strain of progressive “logic” this way:

“Men are scum; Men are dangerous; Women are better; Men can be women; Let men in the women’s room; Also don’t carry a gun; Only police can do that; Police are racist lunatics. Are you confused yet?”

Of course, even some religious folk are not immune from fuzzy thinking.

Remember the RH Law Supreme Court case? All that mystifying arguments piled against RA 10354 because of “abortifacients” and “the right to life,” when the real and true issue was government subsidization of contraceptives? Aside from the IRR, it should have never become an issue in the first place. That it was a complete waste of time can be seen in the fact that when religious folk want to complain about alleged abortifacients, the law they run to for protection is — you guessed it — none other than RA 10354.

But I guess none takes the cake (or steak) from the feminists.

A Phd candidate from Penn State alleges that eating meat promotes “male hegemony,” “aggressiveness,” the “patriarchy” and male toxicity.

Of which, all I can say is: have my steak well done, with ketchup on the side!

Will be taking a break, so see you all in 2018.

For now — not happy holidays but — a Jesus Christ filled Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

 

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

facebook.com/jemy.gatdula

Twitter @jemygatdula

Mining and natural disasters

Environmental activists claim that the planet is going into a deepening death spiral with more and more people either killed or displaced by natural disasters that occur around the world.

The method and counting of deaths and displacement, however, is deceptive.

Whether flood or drought, torrential rain or foul weather, these are all counted as “proof” of the “deteriorating situation of the global environment.”

A more objective assessment of the effects of natural disasters is to get data of global temperatures, especially the lower tropospheric temperature (LTT) and sea surface temperature (SST) that are collected by satellites 24/7, and not just the land surface temperature that are collected by various meteorological agencies of many countries.

Another approach is to get the ratio of casualties over X number of people. I found one piece of data that precisely answers the question, “Are there more deaths and displacement in the world today compared to 40, 50, or 100 years ago?”

Based on the chart above, the answer to the question is no.

Assuming that the frequency of strong storms or of an El Niño is rising now compared to hundreds or thousands of years ago, the number of casualties have declined because (1) people now live and work inside stronger structures, and (2) better preparations have been made, thanks to modern forecasting models and communications technology.

Mining in particular is often blamed for big landslides and soil or mountain erosions.

While it is true that some irresponsible mining companies are to blame and must be held accountable — the same way that there are irresponsible construction companies and irresponsible logging and fishing companies — it is also true that landslides occur simply because of the volume of rainfall and flashfloods that come, not because of any mining and quarrying in a particular area.

To further control irresponsible mining, non-environmental regulations have been tightened further to squeeze mining companies to become “responsible” to the communities.

The more complicated ones are mining taxes, royalties, regulatory fees, and mandatory community projects on top of taxes, royalties and fees.

And the Duterte government’s tax reform program has raised the mining excise tax from 2% to 4% of revenues. This excise tax is on top of corporate income tax, VAT, withholding tax, documentary stamp tax, etc.

Perhaps a better option that should have been done was to raise the mining excise tax from 2% to 10%, then abolish some mandatory expenditures and programs, like any or some of these: Annual Environmental Protection & Enhancement Program (EPEP), Social Development and Management Program (SDMP), Community Development program, Environmental Work program (EWP), Safety and health program, and others.

The advantage of this option is that government will collect more money since many people always argue that mining firms don’t pay enough taxes. Then government through the national and local government agencies should do those community projects that mining firms are currently forced and coerced to spend on top of various taxes and fees they pay.

So to prepare the locals from natural disasters like annual flash floods, government should build huge and stable drainage, ensure robust riprap structures on hills and cliffs to control erosion and landslides.

It remains a question of course if government officials and legislators will really do this once they hold the money. After all, giving away freebies and endless subsidies is often seen as more “politically productive” than building long-term infrastructures to communities.

Mining and natural disasters

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is President of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member-institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia.

minimalgovernment@gmail.com.

Finance dep’t sees inflation as manageable

THE Department of Finance said inflation will remain at manageable levels over the short term, after food prices decelerated in November.

“Core inflation of 3.3% suggests that in the foreseeable short-term, inflation will be manageable,” Finance Undersecretary Gil S. Beltran said in an economic bulletin yesterday.

The rise in prices of widely used consumer goods and services eased to 3.3% in November from a peak of 3.5% in October, but was still higher than the year-earlier 2.5%.

Core inflation strips out volatile items like food to arrive at a better picture of the long-term inflation trend.

Food inflation slowed to 3.3% in November from 3.8% in October and 3.5% a year earlier.

Consumer price index inflation averaged 3.2% in the 11 months to November, in line with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) forecast, and within its two to 4% target band.

Mr. Beltran said the stable prices of food might offset the faster increases in the prices of fuel and power rates for the month.

“Adequate supply of goods from higher production will further dampen inflation rises in the future. This will likewise temper the rise in interest rates despite the ongoing Fed tightening,” Mr. Beltran said.

The Federal Open Market Committee raised its benchmark rates by 25 basis points late Wednesday, which was widely expected by the market, and represented the third policy tightening this year.

BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. has said that the Fed rate hike was factored into the central bank’s economic outlook. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

George shows off skill, juggles emotions in Indiana return

LOS ANGELES — Russell Westbrook recorded his ninth triple double of the season and Paul George made a successful return to Indiana as the Oklahoma City Thunder edged the Pacers, 100-95, on Wednesday.

The four-time all-star George was booed loudly whenever he touched the ball in his first return to the Bankers Life Fieldhouse arena since being traded five months ago.

But George’s return went off without a hitch as he scored 12 points and backed up Westbrook’s 10-point, 17-rebound and 12-assist performance in front of the hostile crowd of 17,900.

George was traded to Oklahoma City in exchange for Victor Oladipo and Domantas Sabonis after he told the Pacers he didn’t plan to re-sign with the club at the end of this NBA season.

“He had incredible poise,” Thunder coach Billy Donovan said of George. “He didn’t shoot well, but I thought his defence was critical.”

George knew the environment would be a physical and mental test.

“I’m glad the circus is over with and now everybody can move on,” George said. “I’m not sure what they (fans) wanted me to be, a circus act or some kind of show.

“I played my hardest. I thought I took what the city is about and that’s being blue collar.”

Steven Adams scored 23 points on 11-of-16 shooting and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the Thunder.

The Thunder improved to 13-14 on the season as they registered their first two-game season sweep of Indiana since 2012-2013 and snapped the Pacers’ four-game winning streak.

Oladipo led the Pacers with 19 points, but had a rough shooting night, going nine of 26 from the floor.

Bojan Bogdanovic added 15 for the Pacers and Thaddeus Young had 11 points, 10 rebounds and seven steals.

Elsewhere, Kyrie Irving returned from a one-game injury absence and scored 33 points as the Boston Celtics shot a season-high 59.5% from the floor en route to a 124-118 win over Denver.

“That was the only way we were going to win tonight, the way we were guarding and rebounding,” said coach Brad Stevens of the strong shooting performance.

Jaylen Brown added 26 points and Aron Baynes had 17 as the Celtics overcame a career-high 36 points by Nuggets guard Gary Harris and 28 by Jamal Murray.

Denver, finishing a six-game road trip, were missing three key players with injuries, Paul Millsap (wrist), Nikola Jokic (ankle) and Will Barton (back).

In New Orleans, DeMarcus Cousins nailed a clutch three pointer from the left side with 22 seconds remaining as the New Orleans Pelicans powered past the Milwaukee Bucks, 115-108.

Cousins scored a team-high 26 points and Anthony Davis chipped in 25.

The Pelicans trailed 94-87 early in the fourth quarter but outscored the Bucks 28-14 in the final 10 minutes.

Cousins added 13 boards and Davis tallied 10 rebounds. E’Twaun Moore had 21 points for New Orleans.

Greek forward Giannis Antetokounmpo led Milwaukee with a game-high 32 points. — AFP

Motherhood statements

By Menchu Aquino Sarmiento, Contributor

THE RAMONA DIAZ documentary Motherland: Bayang Ina Mo, about the Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Sta. Cruz, Manila, has been a long time coming to the Philippines, Diaz’s own motherland. Meanwhile, it has been winning awards in international film festivals worldwide, including the 2017 Sundance World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award for Commanding Vision. Diaz points out that the film fest crowd is self-selecting but Motherland is actually readily available through the American Public Broadcasting System’s educational POV platform with a lesson plan and study guide for Grades 9 to 12. There has been blowback from the US Bible Belt. One imagines how a broader Filipino audience might react.

Diaz is better known in the Philippines for her 2003 documentary Imelda. During the Q&A after a rare Philippine public screening of Motherland, one man in the audience remarked that Filipino men should take more responsibility for reproductive health by using condoms or getting vasectomies. That may be wishful thinking as most of the fathers in the film were unable to even be responsible for themselves or their families, being jobless and poorly educated. The women may not be up to it either. There were several scenes of young mothers gingerly handling IUDs, then politely declining their insertion, or backing out right at the operating room doors for a more permanent tubal ligation. They seemed less fazed at the prospect of more mouths to feed and perpetuating their family history of insurmountable poverty. The film’s sympathetic yet unflinching depictions of the irrational dissonance between healthy sexuality and social control made us laugh and weep.

A woman lumad leader told us of how in public hospitals and lying-in centers, women like her were often doubly marginalized and discriminated against, first by poverty, then by ethnicity. She decried the recently enacted punitive rules which forbade traditional midwives or hilot to deliver their babies at home. “For the lumad and katutubo, women’s bodies are sacred,” she plaintively declared.

A seasoned female OB-GYN gently affirmed that all women’s bodies are sacred. She explained that the new rules on delivery in accredited medical facilities are intended to protect mothers against complications during delivery. The Millennium Development Goal which the Philippines signed on to was to lower maternal mortality rates (MMR) to 52 per 100,000 births. We aren’t even close, as the Philippine MMR averages 162. Thus the Fabella hospital statistics on the whiteboard show fewer babies than mothers in the ward.

Not that the Fabella Hospital team are slackers. They are dedicated professionals with an average job term of 25 years. They work under daunting conditions: 60 to 100 deliveries a day; two mothers to a bed in poorly ventilated wards; not enough incubators for preemies which means conscripting the parents as human incubators in the delightful innovation known as KMC (Kangaroo Mother Care). The World Health Organization (WHO) recognizes Fabella as a role model hospital “for its essential newborn care programs, which have been proven to reduce infant morbidity and mortality.” The good doctora who had reassured the woman lumad leader also announced to the audience that implants are free at the Friendly Care clinics, and reminded us that reproductive health encompasses so much more than just pregnancy. Diaz’s co-emcee Red Tani of the Filipino Free Thinkers echoed this, adding that we must also advocate for reproductive health justice as well as RH rights — another of the many types of justice and rights more evident in the breach than in their implementation or observation.

An NGO worker observed that the film was anthropological. The world of Filipinos so poor and disempowered that they cannot afford modest medical fees equivalent to a low-end cell phone or even jeepney fare, is far removed from the relatively comfortable middle-class lifestyle of your film festivalgoer, or of the development workers and medical professionals who are well-represented at the Motherland screenings.

Diaz’s film-making style is “immersive.” The subject largely tells the story. Admittedly it is not an entirely objective telling, being mediated by the filmmaker’s own experiences. Her inclinations did inform the cutting of the film.

Another female OB-GYN waxed nostalgic about her residency at the Philippine General Hospital maternity ward, which virtually replicates the Fabella Hospital albeit slightly scaled down.

“Our government officials should watch this film,” she said with a sense of urgency, as the so-called pro-lifers are appealing the recent SC decision lifting the ban on 51 hormonal contraceptives. “They should bring it to the Senate, and make Sen. Tito Sotto watch it.”

GBPC sees possible impact on operation with PECO franchise quandary

GLOBAL BUSINESS Power Corp. (GBPC), the largest energy producer in Iloilo City, is bracing for the possible impact on its operations should Congress decide not to renew distributor Panay Electric Company’s (PECO) franchise, which is due to expire in 2019. “Of course we will be affected. It’s a sensitive issue that we hope that Congress will be able to resolve soon,” GBPC President Jaime T. Azurin told the local media during a thanksgiving party at Richmonde Hotel Iloilo on Dec. 12. Mr. Azurin said the proposal for the local government to take over the power distribution in Iloilo City should Congress disapprove PECO’s franchise renewal would be a particularly challenging situation. — Louine Hope U. Conserva

Dirt poor

By Noel Vera

Video
Mudbound
Directed by Dees Rees

DEES REES’s Mudbound (2017), adapted from the novel by Hillary Jordan, tells the story of two families — one white the other black — scratching out a living on the Mississippi Delta. Two soldiers come home, one a white officer (captain of a bomber crew), the other a black officer (sergeant and tank commander).

The film has its problems. Rees uses voice-overs to convey inner meditations, a valid enough approach until the umpteenth time you hear them musing Terence Malick-style and you wonder if perhaps the film could have done without; the thoughts are lyrically written but a touch too explicit where a little mystery might have helped draw us in.

This is only Rees’s fourth feature — her first was a documentary on her grandmother, her second a fictionalized autobiography, her third a biopic of singer Bessie Smith — and already you notice two things: 1.) she apparently dislikes repeating herself, not just on subject matter but form and genre, and 2.) she has extended the scope of her work each time by leaps and bounds.

Mudbound is easily her most intimidatingly intricate project yet; two families made up of seven major characters over what seems like the space of five or six years (from 1939 to after World War 2), the setting ranging everywhere from Southern farmland to the skies above Germany — a sprawling ambitious narrative that needs a sure touch, a deft touch, a touch Rees doesn’t quite possess at this moment.

A more serious flaw: I have not read Jordan’s novel and I am not sure if this comes from the source or was imposed on the material by Rees and co-writer Virgil Williams, but while the white family’s troubles are dwarfed by those of the black (this is the Jim Crow South after all), there’s more complexity to the portrayal of the white characters, more ambiguity and shading. Front and center in the drama are the two handsomest: Laura (Carey Mulligan) and Jamie (Garrett Hedlund).

Laura quietly states that she’s a virgin; all the more shocking when she’s married and brought from a comfortable middle class neighborhood to the muddy terrain of Mississippi. We’re constantly inside Laura’s skin; we feel her flinch in horror at the poverty surrounding her, at the cruelty meted out to tenant farmers black and white; we empathize with her angry insistence in hauling in her piano from the rain (they had just arrived at their little shack of a home) — the only “civilized” object in that godforsaken landscape (Jane Campion’s The Piano much?). As Mulligan plays her, she’s a pale palimpsest on which soil and wind and the men in her life leave their mark.

Jamie, like Laura, is a constant witness to the film’s swerves and twists; he’s the first to really notice Ronsel (Jason Mitchell) not as a black man wearing a uniform (an affront to most Southern gentlemen), but a former soldier unsure of his footing in the alien world he’s landed on. Jamie and Laura develop a tentative attraction, but it’s Jamie’s budding friendship with Ronsel that matters — two men wary at first, then comfortable enough to share vulnerabilities, finally willing to lay one’s life (or more) for the other.

We see through Ronsel’s eyes almost as often as we see through Jamie’s — the difference is where Jamie gazes at a subtle palette of hues, Ronsel squints at dramatic black and white, white being the more threatening color. It’s not the actor’s fault; Mitchell, Florence (Mary J. Bilge) his mother, and Hap (Rob Morgan) his father pose against the desolate landscape more like monuments to endurance and suffering than flawed human beings. They wear their nobility lightly about their shoulders, but fail to really come to life.

That said, it is odd that the most egregious example of undercharacterization happens to be Henry, Laura’s husband. As incarnated by Jason Clarke he’s more lump than a man, oblivious of everything including his wife’s pain and his brother’s flickering attraction for her, and so inert he has to be shunted out of town to allow the more dramatic scenes to take place (at least it feels that way).

Jonathan Banks doesn’t play Henry’s Pappy with any more nuance than Clarke does Henry, yet the actor that burned a hole in the small screen in shows like Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul — though I really first noticed him in Wiseguy — can’t help but make Pappy a charismatic if cartoonish monster, like the wizened version of Dennis Hopper in an episode of The Twilight Zone.

All of which seems strangely irrelevant towards film’s end, when narrative strands have fully unraveled and the different people blindly following have tangled — some fatally — with each other. Mudbound ends in melodrama but not quite cheap melodrama; you do develop feelings for the characters, even the ones wrapped in virtuous garb, and you do feel compelled to learn of their respective fates. It is a powerful film when all is said and done, and Rees does show skill in weaving the strands into a strong unslippable noose. If I’m left more moved than admiring — well I’m reminded of another World War 2 film done by a woman, Janice O’Hara’s Sundalong Kanin (Rice Soldiers): she had the opportunity and only limited time and she struck; better a flawed work done in haste and the heat of passion (she must have reasoned) than a cold lifeless piece of unfinished perfection — at least that’s how it played out in this case.

Argentina’s Farmesa to set up plant in PHL

AN Argentinian food processing company is planning to establish a seaweeds processing plant in the Philippines, according to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

In a statement, the DTI said Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez recently met with Farmesa International Group head Agustin Perez to discuss how the company can expand its sourcing of local seaweeds. The meeting took place on the sidelines of the 11th Ministerial Conference of the World Trade Organization in Buenos Aires.

Mr. Lopez in a message to reporters said Farmesa’s investment in the seaweeds processing plant would be worth around P300 million.

“The availability of raw materials plus the strategic location of the country factored highly in the country’s evaluation,” Mr. Lopez said.

“They currently had to source seaweeds from several Asian countries and bring it to Argentina for processing. Now they can focus their sourcing in the Philippines and do the processing right in the country,” he added.

Farmesa is an Argentinian company that develops and manufactures ingredients and specialties for the food industry. Its products, such as emulsifiers, antioxidants, textured soy protein, are mostly derived from soya, carrageenan and other natural sources.

The DTI quoted Farmesa’s Mr. Perez as saying the Philippines would be its first manufacturing operations outside of Argentina.

“Aside from the big potential of sourcing seaweeds, (Mr. Perez) finds the Philippines business environment stable and the economy very dynamic,” the DTI said.

Farmesa is already registered under the Philippines Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) last August 2016, for processing seaweeds into alkaline-treated chips or semi-refined carrageenan for export purposes at the Light Industry & Science Park IV in Malvar, Batangas.

PEZA Director General Charito B. Plaza told BusinessWorld in a text message said there are many areas in Visayas and Mindanao where Farmesa can establish a seaweeds processing plant.

PEZA is planning to fully utilize aquamarine economic zones in the two regions. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Cars and gigantes: the making of a Pinoy Christmas

FILIPINOS take pride in having the world’s longest observance of the Christmas season, generally stretching from the beginning of the so-called “ber months” (September, October…) and peaking with the Simbang Gabi, the stretch of dawn masses that start on Dec. 16 and culminate on Christmas Eve.

Adding to the color of the season is the first Christmas by Manila Bay Celebration on Dec. 15-17, a project of the Department of Tourism (DoT), the Automobile Association of the Philippines (AAP), the National Auto Club, and the International School of Sustainable Tourism (ISST).

Inspired by the Tournament of Roses of Pasadena, California and the Rio de Janeiro Carnival in Brazil which draw thousands of visitors, Christmas by Manila Bay Celebration opens on Dec. 15 with the Christmas Market at the Fort Santiago, Intramuros which will also showcase a refurbished historical shrine.

The bazaar will be showcasing native delicacies, novelty items and crafts, useful daily items, and Christmas goodies.

The country’s top bamboo ensemble, Banda Kawayan Pilipinas, will serenade the crowd with beloved Filipino carols, while acoustic duo Peter and Vangie will keep shoppers company at night.

An evening mass at the Manila Cathedral Basilica will kick off the traditional nine-day Simbang Gabi.

Pinoy Christmas 2
Vintage Car Association parade

A highlight of the festival on Dec. 17 is the turnover of the gifts by the Tourism and Social Welfare departments for the children of Marawi City, Yolanda victims, Hospicio de San Jose, and children of soldiers who died in Marawi. The gifts will be airlifted to Marawi and Leyte by Philippine Airlines.

This will be followed by a Christmas Parade by the Bay at 4:30 p.m. which will stretch from the Cultural Center of the Philippines Complex to the Quirino Grandstand.

The parade will feature 30 vintage and classic cars from Vintage Cars Philippines, with celebrity race driver Marlon Stockinger riding the AAP float.

Also participating are contingents from the Municipality of Angono, Rizal with their famed “Higantes” giant papier maches puppets, the Municipality of Pulilan, Bulacan which is noted for its kneeling carabaos, and the Province of Negros Occidental which will bring its winning Masskara Festival dancers to the parade.

Adding to the colors and sounds of the season are the Philippine Dragon and Lion Dance Sports Association, the dancing Robots, as well as various marching bands from government agencies, local governments, and private groups.

The event draws to a close with a concert at Fort Santiago in Intramuros.

Hedcor breaks ground on Bineng hydro project

ABOITIZ POWER Corp. on Thursday said its subsidiary recently broke ground for the 19-megawatt (MW) Bineng Combination Hydro project in La Trinidad, Benguet.

In a statement, Hedcor, Inc., which operates and manages run-of-river hydropower plants, construction of the P1.7-billion hydropower project began on Dec. 5. It is expected to be completed in June 2019.

The Bineng Combination Hydro was approved by the municipality of La Trinidad and host barangays Bineng, Alapang, and Alno earlier this year.

The project is expected to generate 62 million kilowatt hours annually.

Pendon Thompson, the indigenous peoples’ (IP) representative of the municipality, said the communities are supportive of the project.

“Hedcor has respected our rights as indigenous people despite the absence of IPRA Law (Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act) before. Since then, Hedcor hydro plants were built on trust. We fully support this Bineng Combination Hydro project which will greatly benefit our community,” he said.

Chris Sangster, AboitizPower executive director, said the company is committed to helping the IP communities “through corporate social responsibility focused on three core areas: education, enterprise development, and the environment.”

Hedcor currently has 22 hydropower plants in the provinces of Benguet, Ilocos Sur, Mt. Province, and Davao. It is now in the process of commissioning its 69-MW Manolo Fortich project in Bukidnon, which will increase its total capacity of 185 MW upon completion.

AboitizPower is the holding company for the Aboitiz Group’s investments in power generation, distribution, and retail electricity services.