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61% of jeepneys, 72% of vans now consolidated — LTFRB 

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE LAND Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) on Thursday said 61% of jeepneys and 72% of passenger vans are already consolidated, which will allow them, regardless if modernized or traditional, to ply roads until end-December. 

For PUJs (public utility jeepneys) based on our data, out of the 158,000 target nationwide units, 61% are already consolidated,LTFRB Technical Division Head Joel de Jesus Bolano said in a press briefing. 

For UVEs (utility van express units), out of 19,000 units nationwide, 72% of the units were already consolidated,he added.  

Earlier this week, LTFRB issued Memorandum Circular 2023-013 which allowed the provisional authority of public utility vehicles to be extended until Dec. 31, as long as the individual operators are able to join an existing consolidated entity on or before June 30. 

The consolidation, a part of the Public Utility Vehicle Modernization program, aims to bring together single operators and drivers as one legal entity to help facilitate the transition to modern transport units.  

Public transport drivers and operators have been resisting the shift, citing the cost of new vehicles. 

Operators who fail to consolidate by June 30 will lose their provisional authority. 

Mr. Bolano also assured the public that contingency measures are being planned to avoid a potentialtransportation crisisafter June 30. 

The board will have another board meeting next week to discuss the details on the contingency measures,he said.  

Mr. Bolano also stressed that the industry consolidation does not automatically mean an immediate phase out of old vehicles.   

The consolidation is the first step. Once they are consolidated, they will operate their unit whether modernized or traditional until December and then another policy guideline will be issued on the next component of the PUV modernization,he added.  

To date, Mr. Bolano said the LTFRB has recorded over 5,300 modernized jeepneys across the country. Justine Irish D. Tabile

Divorce bill hurdles House panel 

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

A HOUSE panel on Thursday approved bills legalizing divorce and recognizing church annulments in the Philippines.

The House population and family relations committee passed in principle measures that would allow married couples to divorce and to recognize church annulments, declaration of nullity, and dissolution of marriages. 

Albay Rep. Edcel C. Lagman, author of one of the proposed bills, noted that the Philippines and Vatican City, which has a population of about 800 who are mostly priests and nuns, are the only remaining states that have not legalized divorce.  

Absolute divorce is not for everybody. The overwhelming majority of Filipino married couples have happy and enduring relationships… (but it is) urgently necessary in exceptional cases for couples in inordinately toxic and irreparably dysfunctional marriages, particularly the wives who are abused or abandoned,Mr. Lagman said in his sponsorship speech.  

Davao Del Norte Rep. Pantaleon D. Alvarez, author of another of the proposed bills, said that compatibility is not something easy and best discovered at the start of a relationship,and that the current system requires them to spend a fortune and ruin each other in front of a judge applying a cold and uncaring law.”  

The panel also approved bills seeking for civil recognition of church annulments, declaration of nullity, and dissolution of marriages.  

Enacting the measure into law removes the burden of undergoing the civil annulment process,TINGOG Party-list Rep. Jude A. Acidre, who authored the bills, told the committee.  

Mr. Lagman was assigned to head the technical working group that would craft a substitute bill consolidating the different bills. Mr. Acidre proposed that measures seeking to recognize civil effects of church annulment will be considered separately from the bills proposing an absolute divorce. Beatriz Marie D. Cruz 

PHL to begin exporting durian to China in March  

BW FILE PHOTO/

THE PHILIPPINES will start shipping durian to China next month, according to Malacañang. 

An initial volume of 7,500 metric tons of durian is ready to be sent to China in March, the Presidential Communications Office (PCO) said in a statement, citing the Department of Agriculture – Bureau of Plant Industry. 

The initial shipments will be sourced from 59 farmers or producers, covering some 400 hectares of land, the Palace said. 

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.s visit to Beijing in January opened the door for more Philippine fruit exports to Beijing,the PCO claimed. 

During the state visit, Manila and Beijing agreed on a list of phytosanitary requirements for the export of fresh durians from the Philippines to China. 

The $2.09 billion in purchase intentions for Philippine fruit exports secured by the Marcos administration also covers coconut and bananas, among others,the Palace said.  

At least four companies had expressed their intention to purchase more Philippine tropical fruit products, especially durian,it said, citing Mr. Marcos.   

Cavendish bananas and other fresh fruits have boosted the Philippinesagricultural exports to China.  

The Davao region in southern Philippines produces 78% of the Philippinestotal durian harvest, based on government data.  

In 2021, Chinas total durian imports from Thailand amounted to $4 billion, more than triple the total Philippine agricultural exports to China in the same period,the PCO said. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

Prioritize people in building smart cities — city mayors

REUTERS

Intelligent cities may be intertwined with the concepts of data, interconnectivity, and digitalization, but people occupy front and center of these.  

“It’s about improving their lives the most efficient possible way,” said Maria Josefina “Joy” G. Belmonte, mayor of Quezon City.  

The Quezon City government has rolled out a market one-stop shop within its E-Services Portal, which allows vendors to reserve and pay rent for a public market stall.  

“[It’s] like the way one would select and pay for seats at a movie theater,” Ms. Belmonte said at the Liveable Cities Philippines forum on Wednesday.   

“Hawkers are also registered, which provides the city with data to craft sustainable programs for street vendors,” she added.  

Quezon City residents who are not capable of navigating online systems, meanwhile, can seek assistance from government personnel stationed at the 74 e-services kiosks around the city.  

Over half (56%) of the world’s population live in cities today. This proportion is expected to reach around 66% by 2050. According to the World Bank, building cities that “work” and are green, resilient, and inclusive require intensive policy coordination and investment choices.    

Insights gained from data can be used to plan a city’s development and manage its assets and resources, said Ma. Celeste Dy-Donato, professional services director of Geodata Systems Technologies, Inc., which provides smart mapping and spatial analytics solutions.   

“Becoming an intelligent city is not done overnight, but I believe everyone is in different stages of this already,” she said.  

She noted that the common traits of every intelligent community are forward-thinking leadership, data-driven decision-making, real-time awareness, collaboration across departments, and civic engagements.  

“Data is what fuels an intelligent community,” Ms. Donato said, adding that “pooled intelligence enables successful operations.”  

Civic engagement is likewise very important, she noted.  

“When this happens, the community becomes another source of useful information to inform decisions.”    

Alfredo B. Benitez, mayor of Bacolod City in Western Visayas, said that cost is the major hurdle of cities aspiring to become intelligent communities.  

Bacolod City is leveraging public-private partnerships (PPP) to “at least front-end some of the costs, and eventually pay them over time,” he noted.  

He also said an intelligent city is the way to go when it comes to ease of doing business. 

“We are known as the City of Smiles. We want to have an environment where people feel good,” Mr. Benitez said. “We will be accepting a PPP proposal with just one proponent handling all of our requirements for an intelligent city.” — Patricia B. Mirasol

DLSU Lady Spikers out to defy odds with mentor Noel Orcullo

DE LA SALLE takes on the University of Santo Tomas on Sunday, fielding an intact core. — THE UAAP

ALL eyes may be on reigning champion National University (NU) but De La Salle University (DLSU) is out to defy the odds and unleash a title run of its own after a runner-up finish last season — with interim coach Noel Orcullo calling the shots this time.

Albeit only serving on an interim basis in lieu of head coach Ramil de Jesus, Mr. Orcullo vows his readiness to steer the ship right for the Lady Spikers in a tough bid to get the job done in UAAP Season 85 women’s volleyball tournament unfurling this weekend at the Mall of Asia Arena.

It’s the first UAAP coaching stint for Mr. Orcullo, who has been the long-time deputy of Mr. De Jesus that authored De La Salle’s 11 titles and seven runner-up finishes in 24 seasons.

Without Mr. De Jesus this time, who is expected to return in the second round, Mr. Orcullo faces a tall order though he already got a glimpse of it when he called the shots for De La Salle in the inaugural Shakey’ Super League (SSL) Collegiate Pre-Season Tournament last year.

The Lady Spikers, once again, settled for second place behind champion NU in SSL — making it an extra motivation to complete an unfinished business at last.

De La Salle takes on Santo Tomas University on Sunday, fielding an intact core led by Jolina Dela Cruz, Thea Gagate, Fifi Sharma, Leila Cruz and Justine Jazareno with rookie Angel Canino. Spiker Alleiah Malaluan is out for now due to a minor knee injury. — John Bryan Ulanday

Cebu CC takes overall Seniors lead; Cangolf two behind

CEBU — Playing under the radar, Cebu Country Club (CCC) on Thursday pooled a second round 140 points built around the four-over-par 76 worth 50 points of Jufil Sato, to take the overall lead in the Philippine Airlines Interclub Seniors championship at the Club Filipino de Cebu layout in Danao.

Former pro Carl Almario marked his seniors debut with 49 points, and Cebu CC, playing in the lower Founders Division, counted the 41 of Kyu Ok On for a 290 total, now two points ahead of Canlubang, which remained on top of the centerpiece Championship division race after amassing 133 despite calling on skipper Tony Olives to play.

Zaldy Villa fired 48 points, Rene Unson accounted for 44 and Abe Avena contributed 41 as the defending champion Sugar Barons played well enough to keep its repeat bid alive even after Tommy Manotoc went home hours before the first round on Wednesday because of a family emergency.

Luisita thus gained ground on Cangolf after shooting a 137 for 283, with Ronnie Littaua shooting 47 and old reliable Rodel Mangulabnan 46 that went with Benjie Sumulong’s 44.

Third round action will still be at Club Filipino, an unpredictable up-and-down course with sleek greens where Cebu CC will now be grouped with players from Canlubang, Luisita and Manila Southwoods—1, 2 and 3 in the premier race.

“We didn’t play really well today,” Luisita non-playing captain Jeric Hechanova said. “With Tommy (Manotoc) out for Canlubang, it’s now a very wide-open race. Four teams now have a chance with Cebu CC joining the fight.”

Southwoods also threw its hat in the ring after a day-best 139 in the Championship flight even with spearhead Jun Jun Plana sitting it out for the second straight day.

“(Mr.) Plana playing the last two rounds certainly gives Southwoods two solid teams,” Mr. Hechanova went on.

Theody Pascual, Joseph Tambunting and Thirdy Escaño are the others suiting up for the Carmona-based squad in the final 36 holes.

Meanwhile, Riviera Golf zoomed to second in the Founders division after a 126 led by the 50 points of Kyung Young-kho for 267, one point ahead of Orchard, which tallied 127 built around the 45 points of Luis Sajorda.

The annual event, considered the country’s unofficial national team championship, was shelved for two years due to the coronavirus pandemic, and the 74th staging of the event is supported by platinum sponsors ABS-CBN Global, Asian Journal, Airbus, and NUSTAR Resort and Casino.

Gold sponsors include Radio Mindanao Network, Mastercard, Primax, University of Mindanao Broadcasting Network, PLDT/Smart, and Konsulta MD.

Joining the event as silver sponsors are Philippine National Bank (PNB), Biocostech, and VISA.

Minor sponsors are Bollore Logistics, Manila Standard, Tanduay Brands International, and Asia Brewery while donors are Department of Tourism, Ogawa, Newport World Resorts, Rolls Royce, and Boeing.

Letran and LPU eye a share of the NCAA lead in meeting Mapua and San Sebastian respectively

COLEGIO San Juan de Letran Lady Knights — NCAA/SYNERGY-GMA

Games Today
(San Andres Complex)
9 a.m. — SSC-R vs LPU (M/W)
2 p.m. — Mapua vs Letran (W/M)

COLEGIO San Juan De Letran and Lyceum of the Philippines University (LPU) eye a piece of the lead as the they face dangerous Mapua University  and San Sebastian College-Recoletos (SSC-R), respectively, today (Feb. 24) in NCAA Season 98 women’s volleyball at the San Andres Complex.

The Lady Knights hurdled the San Beda Red Spikers 25-20, 25-23, 28-26, while the Lady Pirates outlasted the Mapua Lady Cardinals, 25-20, 16-25, 21-25, 25-22, 15-5, both last Sunday to open their Final Four quest on a bright note.

A win for Letran in its 2 p.m. duel with Mapua (0-1) and LPU in its 12 p.m. encounter with SSC-R (0-1) would send either one or both straight to the lead pack comprising of defending champion College of St. Benilde, University of Perpetual Help and Arellano University — all possessing pristine 2-0 cards.

“Our goal is to make the Final Four,” said Letran coach Michael Inoferio, who boasts an almost intact roster.

Daisy Melendres was the Lady Knights’ shinning armor as she unloaded a solid 15-point performance she laced with five kill blocks that anchored their almost impenetrable net defense.

For LPU, Johna Denise Dolorito presided over the onslaught with 16 points while Janeth Tulang waxed poetic with her attacking game and scattered 14 hits.

Also delivering for the Lady Pirates in their opening game were Jewel Therese Maligmat, Zonxi Jane Dahab and Joan Doguna, who chipped in 14, 13 and 11 points, respectively. — Joey Villar

UST Tigers secure commitments from two big men in Amsali, Una

PHILIPPINE STAR FILE PHOTO

UNIVERSITY of Santo Tomas (UST), under returning mentor Pido Jarencio, has secured the commitments of two formidable big men to begin its initial phase to a successful rebuild in the UAAP.

Rhayyan Amsali from San Beda and James Una of San Sebastian yesterday met with UST brass led by Mr. Jarencio, consultant Bonnie Tan and team manager Waiyip Chong.

The 6-foot-4 forward Mr. Amsali and 6-foot-5 bruiser Mr. Una will serve a year of residency before being eligible in Season 87. They will both have three playing years left with the Growling Tigers.

Mr. Amsali, 22, is coming back from a religious hiatus after playing for San Beda in the NCAA.

A former member of the National University dynasty in the UAAP juniors, Mr. Amsali suited up as a rookie with the San Beda Red Lions and averaged solid numbers of 5.1 points and 3.3 rebounds in only 15 minutes of action.

Mr. Una, for his part, also came off a freshman campaign in the Golden Stages with averages of 3.9 points and 3.6 rebounds.

They will join a young UST core led by incoming junior Nic Cabañero, who topped the UAAP Season 85 scoring with average of 17.62 points.

UST then finished at the bottom of the league with a dismal 1-13 card, which Mr. Jarencio is hoping to turn around this Season 86 in a bid to end a 17-year UAAP title drought.

It was Mr. Jarencio who steered UST to its last UAAP title in 2006 that also marked his coaching debut. — John Bryan Ulanday

Gov’t gives green light to independent regulator for English game

LONDON — A seismic shake-up of the governance of English soccer including the creation on an independent regulator for the elite game will move closer with the publication of a wide-ranging Government white paper on Thursday.

The long-awaited paper, which has received cross-party support, comes in response to 10 strategic recommendations from a Fan-Led Review of Football Governance chaired by former sports minister Tracey Crouch in 2021.

Once made law, the Government says the independent regulator would have statutory powers to license and sanction clubs, oversee the financial sustainability of the game and prevent unscrupulous owners buying clubs.

It would also have the power to prevent English clubs joining breakaway competitions such as the European Super League which six Premier League clubs signaled their intent to join in 2021 before abandoning plans after a fans’ backlash.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the proposals would “safeguard the beautiful game for generations to come”.

“Despite the success of the sport both at home and abroad, we know that there are real challenges which threaten the stability of clubs both big and small,” he said in a statement from the Department for Culture Media and Sport on Wednesday.

“These bold new plans will put fans back at the heart of football and protect the rich heritage and traditions of our much-loved clubs.”

The Premier League, which has argued against the need for an independent regulator, said the white paper was a “significant moment” for English football, while the Football Association welcomed the commitment to improve the ‘financial sustainability and governance of professional clubs’.

LICENSING SYSTEM
Among the powers of the independent regulator would be to implement a licensing system from the Premier League down to the National League (fifth tier), requiring clubs to demonstrate sound financial business models before being allowed to compete.

Fans would also have a greater say in the running of clubs, including any sale or relocation of the stadium, changes to club names and badges and even the colors of home kits.

Although the Premier League, launched in 1992, has been an unprecedented financial success, lower down the English pyramid the situation has been grim.

Sixty-four clubs entered administration in that period with Bury and Macclesfield going out of business and former English champions Derby County on the brink of liquidation last year.

Reacting to the publication of the white paper, Derby owner David Clowes said: “Derby County stared extinction in the face for far too long. We believe it is essential our supporters — and every other football fan — are given the strongest possible voice and backing if that helps ensure no other club is threatened in the same way.”

Highlighting the need for action, the Government says combined net debt of Premier League and Championship clubs reached £5.9 billion ($7.1 billion) by the end of the 2020-21 season.

Crouch hailed the launch of the white paper a “big day for football” while Kevin Miles, Chief Executive of the Football Supporters Association, said: “The Football Supporters Association engaged in the fan-led review from day one and we warmly welcome the historic commitment from the Government to introduce an independent regulator of English football.”

The Government will now begin the process of engagement and further consultation with selected stakeholders including the Premier League on the key reforms set out in its white paper.

The Premier League said it recognized the case for change in football governance and would carefully consider the Government’s plan for England to become the “first major nation to make football a government-regulated industry”.

It insists it has taken action to address issues raised in the Fan-Led Review and that £1.6 billion is being reinvested down the pyramid over the next three seasons.

“We will now work constructively with stakeholders to ensure that the proposed Government regulator does not lead to any unintended consequences that could affect the Premier League’s position as the most-watched football league in the world, reduce its competitiveness or put the unrivaled levels of funding we provide at risk,” the Premier League said.

The Government says the independent regulator would have targeted powers as a “last resort” to facilitate agreement on the redistribution of funds. — Reuters

Patrick Beverley

Patrick Beverley has always had a chip on his shoulder. No matter the circumstance, he has always had something to pull out of his bag of slights, perceived or otherwise, to serve as motivation for him to do his best. The mindset was there when he played for two high schools while growing up in Chicago, there when he suited up for the Diamondbacks in college, there when he had to go overseas after being cut by the Heat — which acquired him from the Lakers — prior to the start of the 2009-10 regular campaign, and there again the next season when he had no room in a roster that included new arrival LeBron James.

It was, therefore, no surprise to see Beverley circle the two remaining regular season matches of the Bulls against the Lakers on his calendar. The latter dealt him earlier this month, and after being bought out by the Magic, he set out to ink a contract with his hometown National Basketball Association franchise. And, lo and behold, he took no time underscoring his intent to “knock [the purple and gold] out of the playoffs.”

It’s no secret that Beverley has a predisposition to hold grudges against those he deemed to have done him wrong. For instance, he still gets worked up for games against the Clippers, and there remains no love lost between him and Chris Paul. Of course, he somehow also managed to set aside his enmity against James and Russell Westbrook when the Lakers took him in at the start of the season. Which is to say nothing is etched in stone, even for him.

In any case, Beverley’s change of address has prompted him to add to his list of enemies. He’s not even hiding the fact. If anything, he’s proud of it, using his podcast to declare his target to ensure that the Lakers get another early vacation. Whether he will succeed in doing so is subject to debate. His numbers have been far from glowing of late; his stint in La-La Land coincided with the worst Player Efficiency Rating of his career. On thing’s clear, though: He won’t stop believing in himself.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

US Government has been dancing around UFOs for 75 years

ALBERT ANTONY-UNSPLASH

THE SPECTACLE of the US military shooting down three unidentified objects in the space of a week has opened the door to baseless speculations and conspiracy theories, thanks in part to the government’s contradictory messaging, which has toggled between genuine alarm and casual dismissal.

Sadly, this looks a lot like what happened 75 years ago, when sightings of what became known as unidentified flying objects, or UFOs, led to a media circus that undermined legitimate inquiry into what is now known simply as unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAP.

This legacy of hype and fraud is with us today. That’s unfortunate, given that more recent sightings — many recorded by decorated combat pilots — prompted Congress to pass legislation that seeks to get to the bottom of the mystery. Doing so will require that we avoid the rank silliness and deliberate obfuscation that defined our first major engagement with the issue.

Though sightings of unexplained aerial phenomena date back centuries, our collective obsession with flying saucers, aliens, “little green men,” and other now-familiar tropes arguably began on June 24, 1947, when Kenneth Arnold, a businessman and pilot, spotted nine objects flying at unfathomable speed near Mount Rainier in Washington.

Arnold dutifully reported these to aviation officials. When pressed to describe the movement of the curious craft, he likened it to “a saucer skipping across the water.” This initial report went out across the news wires. Bored reporters eager to make something of the story ran with it, inventing details along the way.

In a few days, journalists had turned Arnold’s movement metaphor into something more material: a “flying saucer.” Arnold complained to veteran journalist Edward Murrow that newspapers had “misunderstood and misquoted me,” but to no avail. The idea of a flying saucer immediately captured the nation’s imagination, sparking a flood of alleged sightings.

Popular culture wasn’t far behind. One month later, country singers Chester and Lester Buchanan issued the first song celebrating the phenomenon: “(When You See) Those Flying Saucers.” Others followed. In “Two Little Men in a Flying Saucer,” Ella Fitzgerald crooned about aliens with “little green antennas” who find Earth decidedly wanting and conclude: “It’s too peculiar here.”

Hollywood did its part, too, with several films about alien visitors , most of which featured flying saucers. Sometimes their occupants came in peace (Klaatu, the noble protagonist of The Day the Earth Stood Still). But for the most part, alien visitors had a bone to pick with humans (for example, The Thing from Another World and the classic Earth vs. The Flying Saucers).

Retailers sold flying saucer wind-up toys, flying saucer kids’ pajamas, and other artifacts testifying to our collective obsession with aliens. All of this went hand-in-hand with thousands of alleged sightings of flying saucers, or what the Air Force increasingly referred to as UFOs.

Government representatives found the collective obsession with UFOs deeply frustrating. In public, they dismissed the reports, arguing that ordinary citizens, their imaginations inflamed, had mistaken weather balloons, jet planes, and meteorites for extraterrestrial craft.

Yet in private, high-ranking officials acknowledged that some sightings, particularly those reported by military pilots and radar, could not be so easily dismissed. In the fall of 1947, General Nathan Twining, then head of the Air Force Materiel Command, authored a memo on the subject. Reviewing classified data, he concluded that “the phenomena is something real and not visionary or fictitious.”

By “phenomena,” Twining was referring to craft that moved at extraordinary speeds and displayed “extreme rates of climb, maneuverability (particularly in roll), and motion…” These aerial vehicles, he reported, generally left no trail and rarely made any noise. They behaved in ways that defied conventional explanations.

Twining, who would go on to become chief of staff for the US Air Force and eventually chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was extremely circumspect in his assessment. Notably, he did not speculate about extraterrestrials and instead worried that a foreign nation could be responsible.

The Air Force’s “Project Sign,” begun that same year, studied the phenomena more closely. An initial memorandum — known as the “Estimate of the Situation” — seriously entertained the possibility that at least some of the sightings might be interstellar craft. But leaders of the Air Force didn’t take kindly to this unsettling conclusion. They remanded the memo and ultimately shut down Project Sign, replacing it with “Project Grudge.”

The new initiative was not a dispassionate inquiry, but a deliberate attempt to quell public anxiety. One scholarly account has described it as a “a public relations campaign designed to persuade the public that UFOs constituted nothing unusual or extraordinary.”

While it’s easy to interpret these initiatives as government cover-ups, the reality is far more complicated and interesting. Their implementation reflected a genuine concern that the task of investigating the torrent of sightings would divert precious time and money from countering the more immediate threat posed by the Soviet Union.

Some strategists even feared that the Soviets might be sowing hysteria about UFOs in order to overload the nation’s air defenses. One CIA analyst warned in 1952 that the spate of official and unofficial sightings had overwhelmed the military’s ability to recognize Soviet bombers. “As tension mounts,” the analyst warned, “we will run the increasing risk of false alerts and the even greater danger of falsely identifying the real as phantom.”

Still, not everyone got the memo. In 1952, after ground observers and radar picked up fast-moving mysterious objects over the nation’s capital, Major General John Samford, director of intelligence for the Air Force, held a press conference. He bluntly spoke of “credible observers” reporting “relatively incredible things.”

That same year, a scientific advisor within the CIA warned that “something was going on that must have immediate attention.” He concluded that “sightings of unexplained objects at great altitudes and traveling at high speeds in the vicinity of major US defense installations are of such nature that they are not attributable to natural phenomena or known types of aerial vehicles.”

But such incidents, impossible to explain and posing no obvious threat to the US and its allies, increasingly took a back seat to dealing with the Soviet Union. Through the later 1950s and 1960s, “Project Blue Book,” the successor to Project Grudge, successfully quelled the nation’s obsession with flying saucers. Increasingly, UFOs became a risible punchline, akin to Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster.

Fast forward to the 21st century. In recent years, a growing number of sightings of aircraft defying the laws of physics has belatedly prompted a federal effort to collect and analyze data. But the damage done by Grudge and Bluebook — what the US director of national intelligence recently described as “sociocultural stigmas” — has made that task difficult.

So does the fact that our newfound interest in the subject is taking place against the backdrop of a growing conflict with another rival superpower: China. The risk that Chinese espionage could become entangled with the UAP question is high.

Witness, for example, the confused and contradictory messaging around the three objects shot down last week in the wake of the downing of a Chinese spy balloon. A day after the US Air Force general overseeing North American airspace said he wasn’t ruling out extraterrestrial origins for the UAPs, a White House spokesperson emphasized “There is no, again, no indication of aliens or extra terrestrial activity with these recent takedowns.”

If we are to avoid a repeat of the mistakes of an earlier era, we must avoid both the popular hysteria and hostile indifference that defined our first engagement with the issue. That means both the government and the media must adopt a far more nuanced, transparent approach.

One step in that direction is to acknowledge that there may be things out there that we can’t yet explain but that should be studied with an open mind. If we can pursue that inquiry without succumbing to either skepticism or credulousness, we may finally get to the bottom of the mystery.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

The revolution that wasn’t

BW FILE PHOTO

Throughout its six years in office, the Duterte administration paid scant attention, if at all, to the anniversaries of the 1986 “People Power” or EDSA I “Revolution.”

Only platitudes and motherhood statements emanated from Malacañang Palace during those occasions. It was as if the former President and his minions feared that saying something meaningful could enlighten the mass of the citizenry enough for them to harbor such ideas as that they are the true sovereigns of this country and that government officials serve only at their pleasure. That, after all, is the central lesson of EDSA 1986 — and neither the Duterte regime nor its predecessors were comfortable with it.

The Marcos Jr. administration is even less likely to note, least of all celebrate, its 37th anniversary this year, since that Feb. 22-25 civilian-military uprising overthrew the Ferdinand Marcos, Sr. dictatorship and forced him and his family into exile in Hawaii, USA.

Consigning it into the limbo of forgetfulness has never been as likely of success than today — but not just because another Marcos is once again in the country’s highest post. It is also because EDSA 1986 has become, particularly for those Filipinos who trust and approve of him most, just another incident in history whose meaning eludes them.

Their overwhelming satisfaction with Marcos Jr. that a recent survey by Social Weather Stations (SWS) found defies understanding. Exactly why someone in history qualifies as a hero is something they haven’t bothered to find out either. They think of Jose Rizal as no more than a playboy who had a girl in every port, or of Gregorio Del Pilar as just another misguided anti-American. As for EDSA 1986, they think it an incident that ended the “Golden Age” that “the best president the Philippines has ever had” made possible.

But what makes celebrating EDSA 1986 less than attractive even for the better informed is that, while often described as a “revolution,” it was hardly that. It did not dismantle or even truly reform the feudal system. The land tenancy anomaly in fact survived it and even emerged stronger than ever. Inviting foreign investments into the country is still the main development strategy of the successors of Marcos Sr. as it has been since 1946; and industrialization has never been seriously contemplated as economic policy.

That “revolution” was no social upheaval either. It did not end the vast inequality, the social injustice, and the poverty that still afflict millions of Filipinos. And the most that it did politically was to replace one wing of the ruling elite with another. It did not replace the dynasties that have monopolized political power in this country for decades, and in fact eventually allowed the representatives of their most backward, bureaucrat-capitalist faction to eventually regain and keep power indefinitely.

But EDSA 1986 was nevertheless a historic moment, though brief, of mass empowerment. After decades of tolerating corrupt and incompetent misgovernment from 1946 onwards, some two million Filipinos braved the guns, the tanks, the helicopter gunships, and the mercenary soldiery of the dictatorship. They had had enough of the arbitrary arrests, the torture, the enforced disappearances and the extrajudicial killings of the regime, and knew that it was time to end the kleptocracy that had brought only dishonor to their country and suffering to its people. It was revolutionary in that sense — and it is for that reason that, while they have never found the words to say it, the ruling dynasts and power elite fear it.

But Duterte is not alone in wanting it and its lessons away, and neither is his successor. Their predecessors were equally focused on getting the people to forget it — and for entirely the same reasons. He was one of the leading figures of EDSA 1986, but the late former President Fidel Ramos repeatedly muted its significance and warned against its repetition supposedly because the political instability it would generate would discourage foreign investments. Joseph Estrada’s removal from office via EDSA II understandably made him, his family, and his allies leery of anything similar, while Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo allegedly contemplated declaring martial law out of fear that an EDSA III could depose her.

He was accused of fomenting a military putsch during the presidency of the late Corazon Aquino. Former Senator — and now Legal Counsel of the son of the President he helped depose — Juan Ponce Enrile quite logically encouraged the Filipino people to remember EDSA I differently instead of discouraging its celebration. Like Ramos, he was one of the 1986 event’s leading figures, and apparently believed that something similar could propel him to power. Rather than admit that what overthrew Marcos Sr. in 1986 was the people’s direct action, he declared at some point when he was eying the Presidency that it was the military that had done the deed.

That claim denies the crucial role of the millions of civilians who massed at EDSA from Feb. 22 to 25. Elements of the military were indeed involved in the uprising, but without the support of a sizable segment of the Filipino people, those rebel units would have been crushed by the superior numbers and firepower of Marcos’ military loyalists. It was unarmed civilians— nuns and priests, students, professionals and other middle-class folk — who faced Marcos’ tanks and prevented Ramos’, Enrile’s and their military cohorts’ annihilation in 1986.

But it could not have happened without the decade-long efforts of Church people, journalists, writers, teachers, students, artists, and many other sectors to provide the citizenry, from day one of martial rule, the information denied them by the regime-controlled press that finally led even entire families to mass at EDSA from Feb. 22 to 25. The dictatorship would have prevailed without them — and the same dedication to good government of almost the same sectors assured the ouster of Joseph Estrada via EDSA II in the year 2000.

As contrary to the facts as Enrile’s re-invention of EDSA I may be, it seems that Duterte shared his view, although not necessarily because of his say-so, and without publicly admitting it. The same assumption of military primacy as Enrile’s was evident in his courtship of the officer corps — his packing his government with retired generals, and his putting the interests and welfare of the soldiery above those of everyone else’s in terms of perks and salaries. Rather than the people shielding him from the military, it seemed that Duterte anticipated the possibility that the military might have had to shield him from the people.

His successor does not seem to share those fears, perhaps because it was his father who, after all, transformed the military from the fist of civilian authority into a power broker whose support has become vital to every post-martial law regime. As for another People Power uprising, that, too, seems unlikely despite the inflation, the hunger, and the rank injustice that afflict millions of Filipinos.

Mr. Marcos Jr. and his family are now in the same position as that of their late patriarch during his reign as President — that of being protected by the self-serving loyalty of the military — but with a further advantage. Added to that is the cluelessness and apathy of the heirs of a generation that brought down a seemingly invincible tyranny to which government was but a banquet for it to feast on. It is this latter fact that makes it so much the worse for the long-delayed and so problematic democratization of Philippine society and governance.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

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