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Heat put away 76ers again, lead series 2-0

BAM Adebayo scored 23 points and Jimmy Butler added 22 on Wednesday night as the top-seeded Miami Heat dumped the fourth-seeded Philadelphia 76ers 119-103 in Miami for a 2-0 lead in their best-of-seven Eastern Conference semifinal.

Off the bench, Miami got 19 points from Victor Oladipo and 18 from Tyler Herro. They combined to sink 6 of 9 from 3-point range, including a game-sealing bomb from Oladipo with 1:39 left off Butler’s 11th of his 12 assists that made it 114-101.

Tyrese Maxey pumped in 34 points for Philadelphia on 12 of 22 shooting, while James Harden finished with 20 points and nine assists. Tobias Harris chipped in 21 points for the 76ers, who hope to get National Basketball Association (NBA) scoring champion Joel Embiid (multiple injuries) back into the lineup for Game 3 on Friday night in Philadelphia.

But it will take more than Embiid’s 30.6 points and 11.7 rebounds per game to get the 76ers back in this series. They’ll have to tighten up a defense that’s allowed 112.5 points per game in this series. The Heat dissected them for 51.3% shooting from the field on Wednesday, including 14 of 29 on 3-pointers.

Miami also dominated the boards 44-34 and stopped Harden in his tracks in the second half. Harden managed just four points after halftime.

Philadelphia led for most of the first quarter, but the Heat took command for good late in the period. Butler had a hand in the first seven points of a 9-2 burst with one assist to Herro and two to Dewayne Dedmon before Herro drove for a layup with 1.2 seconds left to make it 31-24.

Miami pushed the lead as high as 14 points in the second quarter before the 76ers made a late push. Harden drew a three-shot foul with 0.1 seconds remaining and drained all of the foul shots to pull Philadelphia within 60-52 at half time.

But the Heat steadily increased the lead in the third quarter, going up 76-61 on a 3-pointer by Max Strus and using Herro’s floater to take a 91-80 cushion to the fourth. — Reuters

Humdinger

Ja Morant was beaming in the aftermath of the Grizzlies’ close win against the Warriors the other day, and with reason. He had just put the finishing touches on a 47-point masterpiece that ensured his place alongside all-time greats Kobe Bryant and LeBron James as the only players in National Basketball Association history with multiple 45-point outings in the postseason. Included in his opus were the last 15 points of the blue and gray, enabling them to hold court and head to the Chase Center this weekend with must-needed momentum.

To say Morant was walking wounded would be an embellishment given his lights-out effort. True, he was poked in the eye early in the second half, and he complained of blurred vision even after the buzzer. Then again, it didn’t seem to slow him down or impair his capacity to find the hoop from inside and out. And, make no mistake, the Warriors threw everything at him. He was simply too fast and too good — so good, in fact, that his 15-of-31 clip more than made up for the rest of the starters’ eight-of-28 atrocity.

How the Western Conference second-round set-to between the Warriors and Grizzlies would end up is anybody’s guess. From the outside looking in, it looks to be the type to go seven matches. Either could have gone two and zero, with the breaks deciding the outcome. And, yes, said breaks definitely had an effect in Game Two. Who knows if Morant could have exploded the way he did had Gary Payton II not been taken out by a flagrant 2 foul early in the contest? What would the final score have been if the newly minted Most Improved Player awardee been called for a palming violation halfway through the final minute of the encounter?

The NBA’s Last two Minute Report gave the Warriors no consolation. In hindsight, neither did the flagrant 2 foul meted on Dillon Brooks for leveling Payton three minutes in. And head coach Steve Kerr’s right; the dangerous hack “broke the code.” For the Grizzlies, it bore the added benefit of unleashing Morant on hapless defenders. With five-time All-Star Klay Thompson unfortunately a shell of his former self and still getting his sea legs under him post-injury, no one on the roster is as fleet of foot.

Bottom line, the Warriors and Grizzlies are headed for a humdinger.

 

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.

Workers’ party-list cites BPO employees as it backs calls for May 9 holiday declaration

PHILIPPINE STAR/ RUSSELL PALMA

A PARTY-LIST group that represents workers in various sectors backed calls to proclaim May 9, election day, as a regular holiday to avoid disenfranchisement among employees who may not be allowed to take a leave or who could not afford to miss a days wage.   

The Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) Industry Employees Network had said that some workersleave applications for May 9 were denied by employers.  

“This is what we are referring to as their economic situation is in conflict with their democratic right to vote,Anakpawis National Vice President Lana Linaban said in Filipino in a statement.   

Worst of all, (President Rodrigo R.) Duterte himself has not yet issued a proclamation to make May 9 a holiday, so it seems that BPO workers are chained to their jobs.”  

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) last week asked Mr. Duterte to declare May 9 as a special non-working holiday to ensure full participation in this years national and local elections.  

“Our call is to proclaim it as a paid or regular holiday so that workers do not regret the lost wages, and they will be free to vote,Ms. Linaban said.   

We also urge employers to allow their workers’ leave applications so that they can exercise their democratic rights to vote,she added.  

In 2016, then President Benigno NoynoyC. Aquino III declared election day a special public non-working holiday.  

LEGAL ASSISTANCE
Meanwhile, Comelec has tapped the Philippinesofficial organization of lawyers and an election watchdog to provide free legal assistance and for monitoring during the May 9 elections.  

Comelec signed a deal on Thursday with the Integrated Bar of the Philippines for free legal services to voters and members of the electoral board, and with the Legal Network for Truthful Elections (LENTE) for election day monitoring. 

“Their objective is to educate the public about the common election offenses, monitor the general conduct of the elections, and provide legal assistance to the public and the electoral board members who encounter problems or irregularities during and after election day,Comelec said in a statement.  

Also on Thursday, election watchdog Kontra Daya urged the election body to investigate a barangay captain in Samar who prevented the entry of a presidential candidates poll watcher trainers for an activity in the community.   

Videos and photos of the local official using aggressive language to drive away the volunteers of Vice President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo went viral on social media.  

“This is unacceptable behavior as local officials should not have authoritarian tendencies,” the election watchdog said. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan and John Victor D. Ordoñez  

PHL, Korea partner for climate change solutions and smart agriculture 

LEMERY MPS
LEMERY MPS

TWO projects aimed at enhancing climate change solutions and smart agriculture in the Philippines will be undertaken jointly by the government in partnership with Korea, the Department of Foreign Affairs announced on Thursday.  

The joint projects, which were agreed upon during the Joint Science and Technology Consultation (JSTC) meeting last week, are expected to commence in September with both parties providing funds totaling about P5 million over a three-year period.   

The meeting was led by Philippine Assistant Secretary for International Cooperation of the Department of Science and Technology Leah J. Buendia and Republic of Koreas Ministry of Science and ICT Director-General of International Cooperation Kim Seong-gyu.  

Philippine Ambassador to the Republic of Korea Maria Theresa B. Dizon-De Vega said the convening of the first JSTC is another milestone in the bilateral ties of both nations.  

The next JSTC shall be conducted in mid-2024 to be hosted by the Philippines. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

CALAX operator prepares for traffic surge until May 9 elections 

MPCALA Holdings, Inc., the concessionaire for the Cavite-Laguna expressway (CALAX), announced on Thursday that lane closures will be suspended starting May 6 until election day, May 9, in anticipation of more road users.   

Lane closures, unless for safety repairs or emergency, will be suspended during the period to ensure smooth flow of traffic, the company said in an e-mailed statement. 

At the same time, it said that traffic marshals, security teams, and toll plaza personnel will be deployed to assist the motorists.  

Cavite and Laguna rank 2nd and 4th, respectively, among provinces with the biggest number of registered voters in the country. The entire Cavite-Laguna-Batangas-Rizal-Quezon (Calabarzon) region and its neighboring National Capital Region have the two highest with about 16.5 million voters combined.   

The company reminded motorists to use RFID to keep away from the long lines at cash lanes.”  

Those who have no RFID yet may have it installed for free in any of the Easytrip stations just by paying the initial load of P200,it added.  

MPCALA Holdings is a subsidiary of Metro Pacific Tollways Corp., the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp., which is one of three key Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc.  

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. Arjay L. Balinbin 

Batanes gets ICU beds from US Embassy 

THE UNITED States Embassy Civil Affairs Team has donated five intensive care unit beds to Batanes, the northernmost islands in the Philippines, in support of the provincial governments coronavirus and disaster response efforts.  

The hospital beds, amounting to about P589,000, follows the provision of personal protective equipment in November last year.  

The ICU beds we received from the US Embassy CAT will surely be of great help to our continued COVID-19 (and disaster) response,said Governor Marilou H. Cayco in a statement on Thursday.  

It is my fervent hope that this undertaking will open more windows of opportunity between the people of Batanes and the US Embassy,she added.  

Batanes, given its remote location, was among the last areas in the country to record coronavirus cases. It is frequently hit by typhoons and occasional earthquakes.  

In September last year, the province saw a spike in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) transmissions after super typhoon Kiko, with international name Chanthu, struck.   

Provincial Health Office Director Allan M. Sande said the US assistance remains timely and relevant.  

We have been truly impressed by the compassion and resiliency of the Ivatan people. On behalf of the US Embassy, we look forward to our continued collaboration and partnership,said US Army Capt. Arthur Kim, leader of the Civil Affairs Team. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Gov Pineda issues order to shut down e-sabong operations in Pampanga 

PAMPANGA PIO

PAMPANGA Governor Dennis G. Pineda has issued a directive to stop all online cockfighting in the province as he emphasized that he was among those who appealed to President Rodrigo R. Duterte to end the gaming operations.   

Pampanga-based firm Belvedere Vista Corp. is one of the biggest operators of e-sabong, the local name for online cockfighting, with a license from the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp.   

I myself appealed to our President to stop online sabong that is why I expect our mayors, barangay officials, police and other law enforcement agencies to implement the order of President Duterte,Mr. Pineda said in Filipino in a statement released on Wednesday by the provincial information office.   

The statement included a copy of the governors Executive Order No. 16 dated May 4, which directs all e-sabong operators, their agents and any and all persons acting on their behalfto immediately stop all related activities.   

The order covers all gaming websites and cease gaming operations, including all accredited auxillary operations and off-cockpit betting stations.”  

Mr. Pineda warned that those who violate the order will face criminal charges.   

The President announced on Monday his order to terminate all online cockfighting, citing the recommendation of Interior Secretary Eduardo M. Año based on a survey indicating that the social costs far outweigh the generated income from these gambling operations. MSJ

Jailed Pharmally officials’ appeal for release denied

@SENATEPH

SENATOR Richard J. Gordon, Sr. has denied the renewed appeal for release by two detained officials of a controversial company that allegedly sold overpriced medical supplies to the government.  

They have no one but themselves to blame for their continuing detention in the same manner that only their action, their compliance with just directives can pave the way for their release,Mr. Gordon said in a statement on Thursday 

The senator explained the clear violations made by Pharmally Pharmaceutical Corp. Director Linconn Ong and Corporate Secretary Mohit Dargani that serve as grounds for their detention.   

Only clear violators of the rules are subject to contempt: lying before the Committee, refusing to answer a valid question asked of the witnesses, and refusal to bring to the Committee documents required to be submitted, among others,he said, adding that the Blue Ribbon Committee, which he chairs, only sparingly and rarelyuses its powers to declare others in contempt.  

During a hearing last year, the two officials were given the opportunity by the Senate body to locate and submit documents regarding Pharmallys dealings with the budget departments procurement service. However, on the set date of submission, they took back their claims by saying the documents did not exist.  

In a written letter to Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III, Mr. Ong and Mr. Dargani noted their suffering in Pasay City jail as they pleaded for release. They accused Mr. Gordon of using their detention to further his political ambitions.”  

There is no bigger lie,the senator, who is running for reelection, said.   

On the contrary, I was aware from the start that the hearings on Pharmally could hit many personalities and thus could animate those adversely mentioned into campaigning against me.”  

And, that is exactly what happened. I have suffered from negative campaigning, especially in social media, where trolls were organized against my candidacy. Powerful men have publicly issued statements urging our constituents not to vote for me,he added.  

The two said that Mr. Gordon had stolen their lives by bending the truth in the Pharmally case. They noted their respect for Mr. Sottos fair judgementon the issue.  

I haven’t read the letter yet,Mr. Sotto told reporters on Wednesday. What I read was the report in the newspaper that they were suing me at the CHR (Commission on Human Rights) as the role of the SP (Senate President) is ministerial when a Committee has an approved motion.Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Prosecutor to charge Makati hotel quarantine violator 

THE MAKATI City Prosecutor’s Office has resolved to press charges against a Filipino returning from the United States who skipped the mandatory five-day  quarantine in December and attended social gatherings during the supposed isolation period.  

In a statement on Thursday, the office said it found probable cause to charge the respondent for not staying in the designated quarantine facility.  

The case involves a Filipino woman who traveled to the United States and returned to the Philippines on Dec. 22. She was booked for the coronavirus-related mandatory quarantine at the Berjaya Hotel in Makati until Dec. 27 but left 15 minutes after checking in and attended a party in the citys Poblacion district.  

She went back to the hotel on the night of Dec. 25 and tested positive for the virus the following day.  

The government prosecutor said the security guard of the hotel will also face charges for knowingly assisting her to leave.  

“As to the other employees of the Hotel, the Makati City Prosecution Office did not find the probable cause as the evidence failed to show that they knowingly allowed Gwyneth to leave the hotel premises,” it said.  

The complaint against her boyfriend and her parents was dismissed due to insufficient evidence of a violation, the prosecutors office added. 

Local police filed charges against the quarantine violator and several others for violating Republic Act 11332 or the Mandatory Reporting of Notifiable Diseases and Health Events of Public Health Concern Act. 

The Department of Tourism temporarily suspended in January the accreditation and multiple-use permit of the Berjaya Hotel. John Victor D. Ordoñez 

MSI unveils laptops aimed at enterprise users

MSI Summit E16

Taiwanese multinational technology company Micro-Star International Co., Ltd. (MSI) unveiled on Wednesday new laptop lines tailored for business and productivity, aiming to add office workers and home users to a Philippine market that is composed primarily of gamers.  

“There is now one MSI business and productivity laptop for everyone who seeks the optimum productivity in these challenging new normal times,” said Rhyan Sy, MSI Philippines product sales manager, at the in-person launch on May 4. 

Already an established brand in the gaming community, MSI wants to pivot to the enterprise segment, especially where the market is growing amid the continuation of remote work and learning in the pandemic, he added.  

The new lines are: the Summit series for business professionals and elites; the Prestige series for artists and content creators; and the lightweight Modern series for workers and students.  

The three product lines will be available locally this May through Techtron Systems Corporation, MSI’s new distribution partner. 

“Techtron’s key expertise and experience in the enterprise market … will help leverage our position in the Philippines in the future,” Mr. Sy said.  

Powered by 12th generation Intel Core processors, the new laptops answer the needs of users such as “device responsiveness from anywhere, long battery life, fast-charging support, and robust security and safety features,” according to MSI’s press release.  

GP Padit, country retail marketing manager of MSI Philippines, explained at the launch that these processors were developed with a focus on performance and efficiency.  

“This time, we focused more on the hybrid performance technologies,” he said. “Imagine thin and light laptops that can display multiple screens at 4k resolution.”  

Both the Summit and Prestige series will also have enterprise-grade security, according to MSI Philippines’ product marketing manager Ira James Garcia. This includes smart sensor software Tobii Aware, which blurs the screen when you step away from your laptop or when it detects someone peeking from behind.  

The Summit E16 Flip A12 UDT-057PH, the Summit E14 Flip Evo A12MT-072PH, and the Summit E14 Flip Evo A12MT-074PH cost P124,995, P89,995, and P79,995 respectively.  

The artist and content creator-friendly Prestige 15 and 14 series laptops will have five price points: P109,995, P99,995 P89,995, P69,995, and P59,995.  

Meanwhile, home users can find the Modern 15 B12M priced at P48,995; and the Modern 14 C12M, at P46,995. 

“Business and productivity laptops are not designed for gaming, but they can handle it,” Mr. Garcia added, “It’s useful for professionals and students who are also gamers.” — Brontë H. Lacsamana

Named but unashamed

BW FILE PHOTO

The US State Department has been issuing its Country Reports on Human Rights Practices since the 1980s, with special emphasis on the recipient countries of US economic and military assistance. A series of laws passed by the United States Congress in the latter part of the 1970s, during the James Carter Presidency (1977-1981), makes respect for human rights a condition for such aid.

The Reports are issued annually in furtherance of US foreign policy, and were in response to criticism that the United States was fomenting military coups against democratically elected, “unfriendly” governments, while supporting brutal dictatorships such as those of Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines (1972-1986) and Augusto Pinochet in Chile (1973-1981).

US military and economic assistance did help keep those tyrannies and others in power because of their anti-communism and allegiance to the former’s economic and strategic interests.

Nevertheless, State Department analysts say the Reports are meant to “name and shame” violators and encourage respect for human rights in exchange for US assistance. But the US record has not been consistent with that supposed principle (it supported Marcos Senior up to the last minute in 1986).

US President Joseph Biden promised that he would make human rights “more central” in US foreign policy and would hold violator regimes to account. But in June, 2021, Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that the Biden administration had notified the US Congress of the sale to the Duterte regime of some $2.5 billion worth of sophisticated weaponry. HRW demanded that the sale be stopped because it would reward and encourage the police and military minions of the “increasingly abusive” regime to continue committing the human rights violations that characterize its “drug war” and anti-insurgency program.

Neither the alleged centrality of human rights in its foreign policy nor the Reports’ criticism had prevented the US from selling weapons and providing military and economic assistance to a succession of Philippine regimes from that of Marcos Senior’s to Rodrigo Duterte’s. The Reports’ 2022 edition on the human rights situation in 2021, which again names security forces as the worst violators of human rights in the Philippines, would very likely have minimal impact on such military sales and assistance.

Presidential Communications Operations Office (PCOO) head Martin Andanar described as “baseless,” “rehashed,” and “recycled” the allegations in the Reports that numerous human rights violations such as extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, arbitrary arrests and detention, and torture occurred in the Philippines in 2021, that conditions in its prisons were “life-threatening,” and that police and other security forces were responsible. Department of National Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana for his part labeled them “innuendoes,” and the Philippine part of the Reports a “witch hunt,” and “black propaganda.”

Though once again named, the regime is apparently far from shamed. But Andanar is partly correct about the “recycled” part. The Reports have made the same allegations in its past editions.

However, their being “rehashed” suggests that they have not been sufficiently addressed and are continuing.

Lorenzana is also only partly correct. The propaganda part of the Reports is not so much against the subject country as for the US to appear to be committed to the protection of human rights despite its military aid and sale of weapons not only to the Philippines but also to Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and other countries that are hardly paragons of democracy.

Although it can eventually be established, the exact number of human rights violations in the Philippines is still in dispute. But the grief and outrage of the families, friends, and communities of the victims of the violations cited by the Reports cannot be denied.

The survivors of those victims lament and have been demanding justice for those killed during the “war on drugs” that President Rodrigo Duterte himself has admitted is a failure (his pledge to end the drug problem was merely “campaign hubris,” he recently said), and for the social and political activists who have been imprisoned on fabricated charges, abducted, or shot dead in the streets.

In a continuing demonstration of the persistence of the culture of impunity, only in a few instances have erring police and military personnel, including those guilty of the most heinous crimes, been penalized, in most cases by merely being suspended, re-assigned, or dismissed from active service. Indeed, despite the possibility of his being prosecuted for crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court (ICC), in a statement that in effect validated the claims of the State Department Reports, Mr. Duterte even proudly declared last March that while Russian President Vladimir Putin “kills civilians,” he himself “kills criminals.” But the so-called “criminals” killed, among them minors, were in fact civilians as well, and were alleged suspects whose guilt no court had established.

A report by the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) equally validated the Reports’ findings that the perpetrators of the crimes it noted have mostly escaped punishment because of the inefficacy of police internal cleansing mechanisms.

PCIJ’s “The Desaparecidos of Duterte’s Drug War” is on a little known aspect of the “Tokhang” terror campaign. In addition to outright killings, the Duterte police also abducted and forcibly disappeared not only suspected drug pushers and addicts but anyone else who happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.

PCIJ reporter Aie Balagtas interviewed a mother whose son had gone out to buy a soft drink but who has since been missing, and a police asset who alleged that he and other mercenaries had abducted individuals including minors, and brought them to a police safe-house called “compac” where they were killed, without their families’ ever knowing where they were and whether they were alive or dead.

The uncertainty has made the life of the mother of the missing boy sheer agony. She has consulted fortune tellers in the vain hope that she would be told that her son is still alive, and, in the hope of running into him, has frequented the streets he used to walk through when coming home. But the police asset told PCIJ that her son was among those he and his companions had abducted and killed, supposedly on police instructions.

An anonymous source, said PCIJ, had later tipped off journalists on a dozen killings that were to take place in the same vicinity as the missing boy’s neighborhood, although no news account mentioned it. But the fact remains that most of those targeted for killing, abduction, or enforced disappearance were from the poorer sectors of society to whom security forces could do anything without fear of accountability.

What to make of the State Department Reports then, given their being in the service of US foreign policy, but in the context as well of the validity of their claim that the same human rights violations are still occurring in the country of our sorrows while the perpetrators are still free to harass, torture, abduct, and kill again?

The Reports do give a voice to the victims of human rights violations and adds to that of their families’ and communities’. They are also a reminder of the imperative of holding the guilty to account, and added pressure on the Philippine National Police — which does have procedures on, among others, the investigation of the cases of the many poor people who go missing — to observe those protocols.

Perhaps those named can eventually be shamed into observing their own rules? In the present lawless circumstances in these isles of fear, that is probably the most that anyone can hope for.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

Bayan, may pag-asa tayo!

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN
PRESIDENTIAL ASPIRANT Vice-President Leni Robredo waves to supporters during a campaign rally along Diosdado Macapagal Boulevard in Pasay City on April 23. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

Some commentators have started to talk about GOTV — get out the vote. It was grueling, but now we are in the last week of the 90-day campaign period. This is inexorably the culmination of the whole process of the political campaign. True, the message to the electorate is key to building the base, but actually bringing this base to the precinct is indeed the litmus test of how those mammoth rallies and endless caravans managed to connect to the hearts and minds of the electorate. Converting them to votes is tough.

Winning pre-election surveys or even Goggle trends is one thing, but inspiring people to go out, queue at the polls, and deliver the votes is primordial. Vice-President Leni Robredo’s unquestionable momentum should now spill over to the polling places, on to the undecided among our registered voters.

There are still a great many of them, the undecided among us.

Ten days ago, Inquirer reported Jean Franco, a UP political science professor, saying that in 2016, 45% of voters chose who to vote for president only in April and May, and even waited until the day of the election itself. This would contextualize some comments in media that recent endorsements of some candidates from major groups are just too late. The exit poll of the Social Weather Station (SWS) back in 2016 in fact would support the observation that the number of the undecided rose as the D-day approached: 12% decided in April, 15% in May and 18% on the day of the election.

No less than Mahar Mangahas, then SWS president, confirmed that “taking time to decide is a characteristic of the voters.” If those who made up their minds only on election day were to be the gauge, we are seeing more of them recently. The share of the undecided to the sum of the voters rose from 15% in 2010 to 18% in 2016.

What is the political significance of this enormous number of the undecided?

For one, this could be the missing link between the seeming contradictory results of pre-election surveys and what Google trends suggests.

Marcos Jr.’s dominance of the surveys derives from his heavy use of social media after his 2016 loss to VP Leni. With no small support from Cambridge Analytics, he has managed to rebrand the Marcos name while his troll farms have propagated a thousand urban legends about the family gold and his achievements. His campaign continues to directly access civil society through social media which has practically no filters against disinformation. By calling for unity and sobriety in this campaign, he managed to condition the minds of his supporters and would-be supporters to avoid mounting personal attacks against any one candidate — including Marcos Jr. himself. That call works for him because of the skeletons in his closet. There are the troll farms to demolish the other contestants. He ends up holier than the Pope. He is Teflon, nothing seems to stick to him.

Disclosures of the truth about his father’s Martial Law brutalities and plunder of the country’s treasury, even as confirmed by the Supreme Court and Congress, were easily dismissed as “politically motivated.” TikTok and YouTube and Tweeters are cheap vehicles for disinformation. Avoiding public debates is convenient, and patently consistent with this ingenious public relations coup. This is where Marcos Jr. is coming from each time he declines an invitation to a public debate.

Thus, those high survey results simply reflect the reward to this protracted social media exposure and disinformation.

But this large margin also cuts the other way.

Notwithstanding the many reservations about their sampling design and methodology, these survey results were enough of a challenge for VP Leni to intensify her campaign and the results are astounding, quite obvious from the ever-increasing groundswell of support in all the “Olympink” rallies from Luzon, to the Visayas and Mindanao. This is called momentum. Tsunami, if you will. Marcos Jr.’s camp has a serious handicap battling volunteerism, a spontaneous response of goodwill to an inspiring cause. It’s tough even to equal the size and energy of the pink crowd. The top three areas in NCR south — Pasay, Batangas and Laguna — alone turned out nearly a million people. Tomorrow’s Miting de Avance in Makati promises another million people.

But the Filipino people are not content with what they see and hear from Marcos Jr.’s website and other social media uploads. They search the internet, and, finding the truth, they also search for alternatives.

If there is one person who was diligent enough to do her own homework before she decided on her presidential choice, it is Jean Christine Armas, a young economist. No, she did not engage in any partisan politics but she conducted a good objective research of the top two contenders for the presidency by assessing their respective platforms of government through searching the internet, among other resources, as well as their track record. She uploaded her research on her Facebook page.

A good summary of her findings should be helpful to any one of those over 40% undecided. On their overall policy statement, JC concludes: “The country’s macroeconomic framework is unlikely to change drastically regardless of who between the top two aspirants wins amid policy continuity from the incumbent administration, with focus on job creation, agriculture, MSMEs, foreign direct investment, and agriculture.” This is something one should expect, especially when both candidates are expected to depend on economic managers of a generally liberal market-friendly persuasion. It is wisdom, too, to build on their predecessor’s accomplishments.

Beyond this similarity, JC distinguishes between the two by saying “on investor/market perception, Robredo’s presidency is deemed to be more favorable than Marcos’ administration amid the former’s initiatives aimed at improving governance and transparency.”

JC subscribes to that virtuous cycle of transparency and accountability leading to enhanced competition and investor perception, which actually encourages higher investments, employment, and income generation. In turn, this is expected to drive higher spending and higher economic output. Marcos Jr., by his pronouncements favoring the reversal of the rice tariffication law and reviving the regulatory powers of the National Food Authority, shows his bias to policies that are both populist — mandating lower rice prices at the expense of the farmers — and statist — more government intervention in the market. This has a chilling effect on any businessman.

Finally, and the most significant aspect of JC’s research, what would assure us that the candidate will deliver as promised?

She invokes a basic human resource principle that “past behavior predicts or determines future performance.” On paper, both candidates appear impressive, but taking a deep dive into Marcos Jr.’s legislative performance, it was rather sloppy and hollow. JC also cited the following cases that continue to haunt Marcos Jr: “(1) Ill-gotten wealth cases => Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) has recovered P174.2 billion as of March 2021. P125.9 billion in Marcos ill-gotten wealth has yet to be recovered and remains under litigation; and (2) Six convicted cases on tax evasion => Convicted on 27 July 1995.”

JC anchors her choice on May 9 on three H’s: history of care, heart with character, and hand of competence. Hands down, JC is writing Leni Robredo, number 10, on the ballot.

JC is only one perhaps of a thousand or a million Google users to search and find the truth in this pandemic of lies and disinformation. The alternative is VP Leni and she has scored almost the same rating as Marcos Jr. in the lagging indicators of the survey results.

The big difference between VP Leni and Marcos Jr. in either of the survey results or Goggle trends could be the size of the undecided and how each camp intends to convert them on May 9. One thing we know, the pink wave has gone on house-to-house campaigns all over the Philippines, in both the High Street of Bonifacio Global City and Divisoria on Juan Luna. “Heneral” Arcilla stopped traffic in Tondo to address the people directly to endorse tropa rather than trapo.

For the undecided reading this column, you may wish to consider the road taken by JC. She concludes her research by expressing her choice of a leader as one “who can represent our country with integrity, honor and excellence.”

VP Leni is not banned from traveling in the US or in Switzerland. She has no criminal or civil case against her. She wears her badge of excellence with degrees in economics and law. She will have no trouble being addressed as “Her Excellency.”

Bayan, may pag-asa tayo! (My country, we have hope!)

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former deputy governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was alternate executive director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.