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No. 1 seed Patrick Cantlay no fan of Tour Championship format

PATRICK Cantlay will hit his first tee shot at the Tour Championship on Thursday with a two-shot lead.

He earned that cushion courtesy of a six-hole playoff win over Bryson DeChambeau at last week’s BWM Championship. But Cantlay is not a fan of the staggered start to the Tour Championship that provides him with a two-stroke lead over second-seeded Tony Finau and a bigger weighted advantage over the other 28 players in the season-ending field.

“Frankly, it’s not a good format,” Cantlay said on Wednesday. “I think it’s obvious why (the PGA Tour) went to the format because the previous format was confusing. I think this format is less confusing. But I don’t think it’s a good format.”

Dustin Johnson is the reigning FedEx Cup champion. After winning the first leg of the 2019-20 FedEx Cup playoffs in record fashion, he finished second in the BMW Championship to enter East Lake with a two-shot advantage last year.

Johnson finished with the third-best score at the Tour Championship. That was enough to claim the title, but he finished four shots behind Xander Schauffele’s 72-hole score of 265.

Schauffele wasn’t credited with a victory despite posting the lowest score of the week by three shots over Scottie Scheffler.

“The fact that Xander didn’t get a tournament win for beating the field by two or three shots is absolutely criminal, not just because he’s my friend, but I think that if that happened to anybody that would be criminal,” Cantlay said. “There has to be a better solution.

“I am not a mastermind on golf formats and there are lots of moving parts, so I’m not saying that I have the answer. There are lots of smart people and I guarantee you there must be an option for a better format out there than the current one we are playing in.”

That said, Cantlay is focused on taking advantage of the position he is in this week as he seeks his first FedEx Cup title. His best finish in three previous Tour Championships is a tie for 20th but Cantlay enters this week riding a significant high.

His dramatic victory over DeChambeau was Cantlay’s second win in his past seven starts. The first came at the Memorial, when he took advantage of Jon Rahm’s coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-forced withdrawal after 54 holes and outlasted Collin Morikawa.

Both victories were punctuated by clutch putts, and Cantlay has taken to a new nickname of “Patty Ice.”

“I think the energy is maybe the biggest thing after a win,” he said, “To come back, tee it up on Thursday with the same type of intensity.”

Cantlay has three other top-15s in his past seven starts and enters this week ranked a career-best fourth in the Official World Golf Ranking.

“I’m in a comfortable spot with my game where I don’t need to tinker,” he said. “I don’t need to work on anything extra hard this week. I just need to get fresh and ready and do my standard routine to prep for a golf tournament and the results should take care of themselves.” — Reuters

Räikkönen to retire from Formula One at end of season

KIMI Räikkönen, the Finnish “Iceman” who won the 2007 Formula One world championship for Ferrari, announced on Wednesday that he would retire at the end of the season after a record run in the sport.

The 41-year-old is currently racing for the Swiss-based Alfa Romeo team and his departure opens up a seat, with compatriot Valtteri Bottas strongly tipped to take it if he leaves Mercedes.

Räikkönen is the oldest driver on the starting grid and holds the all-time record for most race starts, with 341 so far from 344 grands prix attended.

“This is it. This will be my last season in Formula One. This is a decision I did during last winter,” Räikkönen said in an Instagram post to his 2.4 million followers.

“It was not an easy decision but after this season, it is time for new things… Formula One might come to an end for me, but there is a lot more in life that I want to experience and enjoy,” he added.

Räikkönen, a blunt fan favorite whose love of racing is matched by his dislike of media duties and the corporate side of the sport, made his F1 debut in 2001 with Sauber, the team that now races as Alfa.

He was so inexperienced in single-seater racing that the team had to convince the governing body to give him a super-licence.

He moved to McLaren in 2002, winning for the first time in Malaysia in 2003 and being dubbed “Iceman” by team boss Ron Dennis for his calmness under pressure. He now has the word tattooed on his forearm.

Räikkönen then joined Ferrari in 2007 as replacement for seven-times world champion Michael Schumacher.

His title success remains the last championship for a Ferrari driver and came when the Finn pipped McLaren’s then-rookie Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso by a single point after winning three of the final four races.

Räikkönen left the sport at the end of 2009 but returned in 2012 with Lotus, with whom he won two races before his second stint at Ferrari from 2014-2018.

His last win was at the US Grand Prix in Austin, Texas, in 2018 and his contract was due to expire at the end of the year. He will be 42 in October.

“Kimi is an incredible part of our sport, a personal friend and a true champion,” said former Ferrari team boss Stefano Domenicali, who now runs Formula One as chief executive.

“I had the privilege of working with him at Ferrari and know the fantastic person he is. We will all miss him and his unique style and wish him and his family the best for the future.” — Reuters

A question mark

Yesterday, Joel Embiid took to social media to deny the long-held belief that he and fellow Sixers starter Ben Simmons do not get along well — or at all. “I love playing with Ben,” he tweeted, contending that members of the media have been using his name to perpetuate a false narrative. “Stats don’t lie. He’s an amazing player and we all didn’t get the job done.” And, on this note, he’s right. No one player was responsible for the failure of the East top seeds to move past the conference semifinals.

That said, Embiid wasn’t exactly effusive in his support for Simmons back when the latter needed it. In the aftermath of the Sixers’ disappointing exit in the 2021 Playoffs, much of the criticism was leveled on the starting point guard for a pronounced failure to make any impact on offense. At the time, he not only withheld endorsement; he fueled the opprobrium with telling quotes. And the fact that head coach Doc Rivers was similarly conflicted didn’t help.

Moreover, Embiid’s backing came after an offseason’s worth of speculation on Simmons’ future. The first overall pick in the 2016 draft wants out, and not for nothing have the Sixers been shopping him around — and actively, to boot. That he hasn’t changed addresses yet is less a function of everybody wanting to run it back than a reflection of the unrealistic windfall the front office expects to get in kind. In a buyer’s market, damaged goods do not move needles.

Which, for all intents, is Simmons — unless and until he proves true to potential. For all the immediate past efforts of Embiid, he remains a question mark. Year in and year out, he had promised to improve on his outside shooting. And year in and year out, he had been found wanting in that regard. His disappearing act in the postseason was merely the latest chapter of a book seemingly without a coherent plot.

Given all the news ostensibly coming out of Simmons’ camp, it’s clear that he wants a change of scenery. It’s probably for the best. The City of Brotherly Love can be unforgiving to its fallen heroes. Embiid, also the target of naysayers not too long ago, preached patience in his defense. Apparently, however, his has run out, and there is no option left but to rebuild it elsewhere.

 

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.

There is a higher cause

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

At this point, with a pandemic challenge that has not relented, and its economic fallout proving more intractable, as a people, we have all the reasons to remain hopeful, not to give up and surrender.

Yes, affliction is almost everywhere. We have nearly two million COVID-19 cases with more than 33,000 deaths and both numbers continue to rise sharply. Health prospects are bleak in view of the recent confirmation by the World Health Organization that Delta is now the dominant variant spreading sickness and death in the Philippines. Data from the Philippine Genome Center indicate that more than 70% of COVID-19 cases could be traced to this more transmissible version.

No less than the Department of Health (DoH) warned that more cases are expected and could peak by mid-September. The OCTA Research Group is more specific by projecting a daily incidence of as many as 25,000 within this week or early next week.

The economic analogue is no less foreboding. Our failure last year to immediately restrict international mobility into the Philippines; strengthen testing, tracing, and treating capability; effect the early procurement of vaccines; and provide sufficient benefits and protection to our medical workers — forced us to rely on the more generalized lockdowns and in the process caused the deepest economic recession and the largest unemployment situation in post-war history. As laggards in vaccine rollout, we further gave more space and time for the virus to mutate into more potent and many times more contagious strains.

We have inflicted upon ourselves the deepest of economic scars that many believe would prevent us from quickly regaining our pre-pandemic expansion levels. The IMF, in its latest assessment of the Philippines, expects us to be back to the average output growth before COVID-19 in three to five years. Not this year, not next year.

To brave the strong waves and bring ourselves to safe harbor, it is important we stay the democratic course. Good governance is something we badly need today. Our civil society can very well speak with one voice and support the Commission on Audit (CoA) to pursue to their logical conclusion its reports on the DoH, PhilHealth, the Department of Labor and Employment, the Department of Transportation, the Philippine International Trading Corporation, and other public agencies concerning their possible misuse of public funds in responding to COVID-19. CoA’s constitutional mandate has been given primarily for the purpose of ensuring that government’s delivery of public services is aboveboard and consistent with the tenets of accountability and good governance. Transparency will help bring it about.

What should resonate with us is Senator Bong Go’s taunt of Senate Blue Ribbon Committee Chairman Senator Dick Gordon: “ikulong ang dapat ikulong” (jail those who should be jailed). It will be interesting to see how the Senate would respond. We expect no less than a spirited pursuit of truth in its investigation of the billions spent on contracts involving alleged overpricing and delivery of substandard merchandise. The Senate is looking into the possible collusion between the Procurement Service — Department of Budget and Management and the DoH that allegedly gave undue advantage to certain private companies of questionable provenance. With the P50 million threshold under the law, and the transactions in question amounting to billions of pesos, if proven true, this should warrant the filing of charges not only for graft and corruption, but also for plunder, in the Sandiganbayan and other appropriate courts of justice.

No less than reclusion perpetua (life in prison) awaits those who should be imprisoned.

The senators of the Republic are being watched by the nation that has seen and heard these incredible stories endlessly, involving high officials of the land. Will the unfolding narrative be another multigenerational saga? If he were alive today, and was a Filipino, author Gabriel Garcia Marquez would have volumes of material to chronicle Filipino families in One Hundred Years of Solitude and create a narrative of a people entrapped in their own idea of existence as if there are no alternative possibilities.

We should demonstrate our capacity to pursue change. Congress, for its part, should prove that the culture of impunity continues to thrive in the Philippines and work hard to stop it today in our generation.

We can only be perplexed as to why the President could not display his leadership by allowing his cabinet officials to defend themselves and cooperate fully with both the CoA and the Senate to establish the truth. We thought he had burned his ships to devote his 100% attention to handling this pandemic challenge and its concomitant economic harm? After all, the CoA is yet to finalize its audits while the Senate hearings remain in progress. More and more cans of worms are being opened, more and more people are being summoned to help the Senate piece together events, and people, and documents to establish whether the pandemic funds were spent in accordance with the law. It is clear many dots have to be connected.

Meanwhile, the ship of state seems to be going nowhere. We continue to sink in debt. The broadsheets reported that “the country’s outstanding debt swelled to a new record high of P11.61 trillion in end-July as the government stepped up its borrowing spree to finance pandemic response.” Yet fiscal mitigants are also getting thinner. The Department of Finance announced this week that the National Government is running out of good chunky assets to sell to help fund the growing fiscal deficit. With recession and joblessness, it is not surprising that 60% of Filipinos “said their income fell this year as the pandemic drags on and continues to impact the most vulnerable sector of society.” This is based on the results of the third phase of the COVID-19 Pulse PH survey conducted by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) Philippines and Zero Extreme Poverty 2030.

We have not seen the worst. Consumer prices are acting up again. The Central Bank the other day announced its forecast of inflation at between 4.1%-4.9% for August, above the official 2%-4% target. This uptick may be due to more expensive food products and LPG. Electricity rates also rose during the month. With fewer goods that Filipinos can buy for every peso of income, the UNDP’s finding gains more credence.

It is therefore a tall order to challenge the analysis of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) that “economic recovery for the Philippines will continue to be tough, with its return to pre-crisis levels seen only by late 2023,” a view that is broadly consistent with the IMF’s. As ADB’s Country Director Kelly Bird put it: “It is going to be a long road to recovery. Recovery is in place, but it is still fragile.”

While we agree that the fiscal response has been generally moving in the right direction, the fiscal space could be frittered away by malfeasance of giant proportions.

But not all is lost.

There are several routes available to us in this difficult journey. The May 2022 national election is a great opportunity to effect change. To uphold transparency, accountability, and good governance, we should impress upon our Congress that we are watching, and watching closely. Our courts of justice should also be prepared to do their job: “ikulong ang dapat ikulong!”

If David’s cause in 1 Samuel 17 was to take the reproach away from Israel for allowing Goliath to defy God’s army, today’s cause is to champion truth, righteousness, and justice in government administration.

As Paul would have encouraged us, we might have been afflicted but we should not be crushed; we might have been perplexed, but we should not despair. Time to move with our hearts and minds against the headwinds.

There is a higher cause.

 

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.

In the news

FREEPIK

Among the first things a journalism student learns are the criteria that decide what to report, what to publish, and how to present it — that is, what makes an event, or whatever else, news. Known as “news values,” relevance, prominence, timeliness, proximity, and human interest are the conventional standards journalists are supposed to apply in determining whether something should be reported or not.

Although relevance (the significance of an event to a large number of people) is a primary news value, prominence — the involvement in an event or issue of someone famous or well-known — often takes first place in deciding what to report, thus the media focus on government officials, the well-connected, and celebrities.

Prominence explains why Presidents of the Philippines and other officials of government are always in the news media, whether in print, radio, television, or online. But it is also assumed that whatever the head of State says and does are of public interest and relevance, and so are the acts and declarations of his or her officials, especially members of the Cabinet. Their associates, families and kin are also the focus of media attention because of their links to the powerful.

The same news value of prominence makes what actors and other celebrities are doing or saying also the stuff of the news columns, although usually only in such special media sections or segments as entertainment and sports. But they can also make the front pages or the first minutes of broadcast news should they say or do something relevant to the lives of the citizenry.

A celebrity who is running for public office and who weighs in on a public issue can and usually does find himself on the front pages and the six o’clock news. In a number of instances, their media presence has proven crucial to the election of actors and/or their wives, children and other kin as town mayors, provincial governors, and even as president.

Prominence as a news value has been criticized for its emphasis on the doings and statements of the powerful and well-known to the exclusion of ordinary folk, who may have something to say about a public issue or who are doing something about it.

Additionally, however, in a country where the results of elections are too often decided not only by money and intimidation but also by name recall, or one’s names’ being familiar enough to voters to be remembered come Election Day, the focus on the powerful and well-known also endows them with a distinct advantage when they or their kin and associates run for public office. These privileged creatures do not even have to say anything important or even intelligent, or to have a platform of government, only that they keep media attention enough to be in the news by saying or doing this or that.

With the 2022 elections only a scant eight months away, and despite the advantages that the news conventions have endowed them with, many of the presumptive candidates for public office have also launched public relations campaigns to get even more media mileage to keep their names in the public mind, not only through advertising but also through their utterances and antics that in too many instances find space and time in the media.

Much of the media are giving them what they want, either unwittingly or in full awareness of what they’re doing.

The reporting on the I-will-run-I-won’t-run declarations of President Rodrigo Duterte, and on the supposed discord between him and his daughter Sara are prime examples of how the conventions of news reporting are helping keep Mr. Duterte and his camp in the public mind.

So are the frequent reports on Duterte confidant “Bong” Go, who’s supposed to be running for President in 2022 (he could still withdraw in favor of Sara Duterte) with Mr. Duterte as his running mate. Because of his Duterte connection rather than his performance as senator, Go has often been in the news, whether while lunching with his principal, or distributing relief goods to typhoon and flood victims. Despite the prohibition on campaigning before the official campaign period, he is getting even more time and space in media with his nomination as the PDP-Laban standard bearer.

Some of the other declared candidates for the two highest elective positions in government are also doing their all to keep their names in the public sphere. Senator Panfilo Lacson and Senate President Vicente Sotto III, who’ve been Duterte enablers and allies since 2016, are, for example, reinventing themselves as reformists and Duterte critics, and as a result are getting more media mileage than before they announced their candidacies.

But the candidate who’s far ahead of everyone else in media exposure is boxer-cum-Senator “Manny” Pacquiao. Already a media and national celebrity, Pacquiao was elected senator in 2019 with the help of, among other factors, his constant media presence.

Once in the Senate, media attention on Pacquiao became even more pronounced, with print, television, radio, and online news sites tirelessly quoting his every statement on public issues, particularly his death penalty advocacy. While the media did note his perennial absences from Senate sessions, even that was in his favor; bad publicity is still publicity. Media attention intensified even further when Mr. Duterte mentioned him as one of his possible successors, and as he declared on several occasions this year his ambitions for the Presidency.

Pacquiao’s decision to return to the boxing ring last August earned him even more media dividends. His loss to Cuba’s Yordenis Ugas was widely reported, analyzed and commented on in the prime-time newscasts. He had also been followed by the media while he was training for the fight and was interviewed before and after it took place.

His criticism of the Duterte failure to defend Philippine sovereignty against Chinese incursions in the country’s Exclusive Economic Zone in the West Philippine Sea and the corruption that has metastasized in the bureaucracy had earlier kept him in the public eye through the media’s reporting on his newfound insights into the regime that he had previously approved of.

More media attention followed in the aftermath of his fight with Ugas. One example of the kind of boost his candidacy is getting is a recent interview over ABS-CBN’s TV Patrol after his loss to the Cuban boxer.

It was not about the fight but was mostly about his 2022 political plans, as well as his views on Mr. Duterte’s running for Vice-President and his team-up with Go. Although Pacquiao did not confirm his intention to run for President, he did announce a platform of a sort: he would fight corruption; foster economic growth and development; provide employment, housing, and sustainable livelihood; improve healthcare services; and develop agriculture.

It is not only the media’s reporting on Pacquiao but also their focus on other presumptive candidates that is enabling them to advance their political interests long before the official campaign period which starts in February 2022.

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has ruled that despite the prohibition against “premature campaigning” in the Omnibus Election Code, even a declared candidate cannot be held liable for it unless he or she has filed a Certificate of Candidacy.

Granted its absurdity, that ruling is only part of the problem. The larger part is most of the media’s contributing to the politicians’ campaign for maximum public exposure through their accustomed and uncritical adherence to the news convention of prominence — and hardly anything else.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

Recognition and Art

FREEPIK

Every successful individual — in the fields of education, business, politics, arts and sciences — desires recognition. The scientist and inventor work tirelessly to find the “eureka” formula and the “aha” gadget that would solve a mathematical problem or discover a vaccine or pill to cure a disease and bring about a medical breakthrough, create or improve a positive technological advance. These efforts would make radical changes that would have a lasting impact in the world.

The race is on among countries to make a miracle drug to save the people from the pandemic. If only there would the same noble efforts to attain peace among the warring countries.

In the local setting, the complications are numerous. Many politicians use public infrastructure to promote themselves. Airports, bridges, monuments, highways, dams, town halls, health centers, and cities — their faces and names are emblazoned on billboards at the site. Although public funds are being used, they claim credit for the project. It is a not-so-subtle hint to potential new voters. This practice is multiplied before the coming of the circus we call elections.

It is all about name and face recall.

Endowment grants from private or corporate foundations are given to universities, schools, and buildings. The generous gesture is grand way of honoring illustrious alumni. In some cases, ego gratification is the motive of some tycoons who are not even alumni of the school. The name remains for posterity as stipulated in the grant. There have been occasions when the funds were insufficient, but the school was obliged to continue the project and fulfill the contract — using funds they had to raise elsewhere.

Benefactors donate professorial chairs for specific disciplines and research. This is a practical way to help the institution and support the dedicated professors who deserve adequate compensation.

As they say in showbiz and politics, name recall is everything.

Skyscrapers, elite clubs, and churches have plaques engraved with the name of founders and charter members. There are awards and honors given to outstanding individuals for the same purpose.

Almost every street, road, highway, and lane are named after a hero, a famous person, or pseudo-celebrity who has the right connections and had donated sufficient money for a cause.

No wonder people get lost in the metropolis. There are too many streets that have new names. (Waze is sometimes confused.) Paper maps have become passé. We do not have proper signage on the streets.

Hippocrates, the Greek physician, once wrote “Life is short but art is long.”

There are special exceptions that deserve credit, such as those distinguished aristocratic families and the monarchs who dominated the Renaissance in the 15th century. The city states had rulers such as the famed Florentine Medici family of bankers and aristocrats who were the most important art patrons and benefactors.

Many centuries later, Florence is still a center of arts. Every piazza, church, and open space is filled with precious art works, public monuments, and private sculptures and paintings.

The Uffizi Gallery holds a vast treasure of paintings by the masters Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonarotti, Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino (known as Raphael), and others of the era. Tourists and cultural buffs can study and appreciate the wonders of the Duomo Cathedral, the Baptistry’s bronze doors by Bernini, and the awesome sculpture David by Michelangelo.

Every city state — Venice, and Milan, and Rome (the eternal city, the center of the world) — have grand, impressive artworks. The Vatican houses the Sistine Chapel with Michelangelo’s breathtaking murals — Genesis and The Last Judgment. St. Peter’s Basilica has the magnificent marble sculpture La Pietà by Michelangelo. St. Peter’s Square has Bernini’s elegant Colonnade.

The emperors, kings, and rulers such as the Sforza and Borgia families had direct connections to Rome and the Popes. The Church financed all the best, immortal monuments. The exquisite Last Supper mural by Leonardo da Vinci is in the church Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan.

The patrons’ collective vision was to preserve the artistic spirit of the era. Behind the grand gesture was the egotistic desire to perpetuate themselves as great cultural and historical icons.

Every artist in the various genres and disciplines would consider a creation as his/her legacy — a painting, mural, sculpture, composition, book, poem, play, museum, public art, garden, building, bridge.

The spirit of creative genius is in every work. It could be a brief, ephemeral one-day installation of floating flags, banners, leaves in Central Park, or a timeless Japanese bridge and Zen garden in Kyoto, a quaint arched trellis with wisteria in a forest, a bronze life-like sculpture on a park bench in New Jersey or Ibiza, or a colorful mobile fountain in the Left Bank, Paris. In Bonifacio Global City, there are public art pieces such as the impressive Balanghai sculpture with moving sails, the Sarimanok sundial, and the bronze trees canopy in the parks. There are temporary paintings on the steps of an office building and the fabulous digital artworks flashed onto the wall of another building.

An artwork is the child of the spirit. The artist is mortal, but art is immortal.

The brilliant and witty, director-producer-actor Woody Allen commented wryly, “I don’t want to achieve immortality through my work… I want to achieve it by not dying.”

 

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

mavrufino@gmail.com

Whether done by the government or private sector, mandatory vaccination is just wrong

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

The issue, fundamentally, isn’t about “caring for others,” “government control,” “rights,” or “acting out of fear.” The issue is whether vaccination has sufficient public health merit to justify making it mandatory on everybody.

Because if it is, if vaccination is indeed the exclusive, sole, the only possible way to be saved from COVID-19, then of course everyone must be vaccinated. But if it isn’t, or if there is any reason to suspect or be wary of its safety or efficacy, then it being mandatory (even if rationalized as “caring for others” or an “act of love”) makes no sense whatsoever.

Notably, even longtime existing vaccines for transmissible diseases that killed more Filipinos through the decades (flu and pneumonia, and tuberculosis), killing far more than COVID-19, have not been made mandatory.

NATURAL IMMUNITY VIS-À-VIS VACCINE IMMUNITY
In a massive “study, conducted in one of the most highly COVID-19 — vaccinated countries in the world, examin[ing] medical records of tens of thousands of Israelis, charting their infections, symptoms, and hospitalizations between June 1 and August 14, when the Delta variant predominated in Israel” (Sciencemag.org, Aug. 26) found that:

“SARS-CoV-2-naïve vaccinees had a 13.06-fold (95% CI, 8.08 to 21.11) increased risk for breakthrough infection with the Delta variant compared to those previously infected, when the first event (infection or vaccination) occurred during January and February of 2021. The increased risk was significant (P<0.001) for symptomatic disease as well. When allowing the infection to occur at any time before vaccination (from March 2020 to February 2021), evidence of waning natural immunity was demonstrated, though SARS-CoV-2 naïve vaccinees had a 5.96-fold (95% CI, 4.85 to 7.33) increased risk for breakthrough infection and a 7.13-fold (95% CI, 5.51 to 9.21) increased risk for symptomatic disease. SARS-CoV-2-naïve vaccinees were also at a greater risk for COVID-19-related-hospitalizations compared to those that were previously infected.

“Conclusions: This study demonstrated that natural immunity confers longer lasting and stronger protection against infection, symptomatic disease, and hospitalization caused by the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2, compared to the BNT162b2 two-dose vaccine-induced immunity. Individuals who were both previously infected with SARS-CoV-2 and given a single dose of the vaccine gained additional protection against the Delta variant.” (“Comparing SARS-CoV-2 natural immunity to vaccine-induced immunity: reinfections versus breakthrough infections”; Sivan Gazit, et al; Aug. 28, Aug. 25, 2021, published in medRxiv)

The foregoing is just one of many studies, reports, anecdotal evidence coming out that should make reasonable people take pause and seek to inquire more closely as to vaccine safety, efficacy, and merit.

Unfortunately, what happened instead are virtue-signaling, irrational calls to make vaccinations mandatory, as well as proposals to discriminate against those that refuse to be vaccinated or have justifiable reasons to be wary of vaccination.

LAWS DO NOT ALLOW FOR MANDATORY VACCINATION
Mandatory vaccination laws presently don’t exist. So, any measure carried out that effectively coerces people to be vaccinated is illegal and any government official doing so needs to be held accountable. Even if mandatory vaccination laws are legislated, such are likely unconstitutional (see “Forcing people to be vaccinated is illegal and wrong,” Aug. 5) and should be struck down.

Private institutions must respect constitutional rights.

Unfortunately, the idea being presently touted is that such constitutional restrictions are only as against the government. Private institutions, whether it be businesses, schools, or residential condominiums have the right to require vaccinations of employees, students, or residents simply because — so the argument goes — they are private establishments. That is utterly wrong.

The constitutional prescription that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law or be denied the equal protection of laws is applicable to all and the responsibility of all.

That responsibility has been further legislated specifically in the Civil Code, particularly Article 19 (every person must, in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of his duties, act with justice, give everyone his due), Article 20 (every person who causes damage to another, shall indemnify the latter for the same), and Article 26 (every person shall respect the dignity, personality, privacy and peace of mind of his neighbors and other persons). The following and similar acts, though they may not constitute a criminal offense, shall produce a cause of action for damages, prevention and other relief: meddling with or disturbing the private life or family relations of another; intriguing to cause another to be alienated from his friends; vexing or humiliating another on account of his religious beliefs or other personal condition.

Then there is Article 32: Any public officer or employee, or any private individual, who directly or indirectly obstructs, defeats, violates or in any manner impedes or impairs any of the following rights and liberties of another person shall be liable to the latter for damages, which includes: freedom of religion; freedom of speech; freedom from arbitrary or illegal detention; the right against deprivation of property without due process of law; the right to the equal protection of the laws; the right to be secure in one’s person, house, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures; the liberty of abode and of changing the same; the right to take part in a peaceable assembly to petition the Government for redress of grievances.

Hence, why the Department of Labor was quite correct in reminding all that: “any employee who refuses or fails to be vaccinated shall not be discriminated against in terms of tenure, promotion, training, pay, and other benefits, among others, or terminated from employment. No vaccine, no work policy shall not be allowed” (Labor Advisory 03; S. 2021).

DISCRIMINATION AGAINST THE UNVACCINATED MAKES NO SENSE
Mandatory vaccination and proposals to give preferential treatment to the vaccinated simply does not make sense. Why give preferential treatment only to those vaccinated? Remember: the vaccinated can equally be infected and transmit the virus as the unvaccinated.

What about the 1.8 million Filipinos that were infected and recovered, thus achieving natural immunity (which studies show is better than immunity achieved through vaccination)? Should they be discriminated against?

And why discriminate against the 58 million Filipinos from 0-24 years of age, of whom (if they have no co-morbidity) are merely mildly affected by COVID, even likely to be asymptomatic, and for which vaccines are logically not recommended?

Exercise, better hygiene, better diets, more sunlight, early and out-patient treatment surely should be encouraged and be implemented vigorously as government policy.

After all, such could only be better than lockdowns, masks, face shields, school closures, and now vaccines that have been tried or relied upon for the last 18 months, and yet with rising cases as the patently visible result amidst a devastated economy, disturbing unemployment rates, and a damaged education of our youth.

 

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.

https://www.facebook.com/jigatdula/

Twitter @jemygatdula

Billions paid in fraudulent virus aid, according to pandemic response watchdog

REUTERS

FRAUD OR IMPROPER payments accounted for more than $90 billion of the government’s emergency pandemic aid for the unemployed and small businesses, according to a report from a federal watchdog.

Almost $87 billion will have been paid in improper or fraudulent supplemental unemployment insurance claims by the time the program expires in September, according to the report from the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee on Wednesday. That’s an increase from $63 billion in fraudulent payments reported in February, according to data from the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General.

The report also found that the Small Business Administration approved 57,500 Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans worth $3.6 billion to businesses who had been flagged by the government as entities that shouldn’t receive payments.

The report also said that the SBA Inspector General found “no evidence” that businesses in under-served and vulnerable areas received the forgivable loans, a key priority that Democrats included in the March stimulus legislation.

The report underscores just how much the government has struggled to distribute roughly $5 trillion of coronavirus aid to the proper recipients, even after some programs have been operating for more than a year over the course of two presidential administrations.

The Internal Revenue Service also sent approximately 2.2-million stimulus payments totaling nearly $3.5 billion to deceased individuals, a glitch that was fixed in the system for subsequent rounds of payments, the report said. However, only about total of 59,500 payments totaling more than $72 million, roughly 2%, have been voluntarily returned as of Oct. 1, 2020.

The total fraud figures could be far higher than those detailed by the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee. An academic study by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin and released earlier this month suggested that about 15% of the 11.8 million PPP loans made — totaling $76 billion — had at least one signifier of fraud.

Much of the misdirected aid may never be recovered. A select House subcommittee charged with overseeing the pandemic response found in a March report that less than 1% of the $84 billion in stimulus-related fraud identified had been recovered by the Department of Justice as a result of criminal and civil investigations. — Bloomberg

New York City mayor declares state of emergency after record-breaking rain

NEW YORK CITY MAYOR Bill de Blasio declared a state of emergency on Wednesday night due to what he called a “historic weather event” with record-breaking rain across the city leading to flooding and dangerous conditions on the roads.

Nearly all New York City subway lines were suspended late on Wednesday as the remnants of Tropical Storm Ida brought drenching rain and the threat of flash floods and tornadoes to parts of the northern mid-Atlantic, CNN reported earlier.

At least five flash-flood emergencies were issued Wednesday evening by the National Weather Service, stretching from just west of Philadelphia through northern New Jersey.

Earlier in the night, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy also declared a state of emergency in response to Ida.

Storm damage from Ida astounded officials on Wednesday three days after the powerful hurricane pounded southern Louisiana, as reconnaissance flights revealed entire communities devastated by winds and floods.

Tornadoes spawned by the storm ripped through parts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, images on social media showed. At least nine homes were destroyed in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, Philadelphia’s NBC10 television station reported.

New Jersey’s Newark Liberty Airport said on Twitter it was experiencing “severe flooding.” It said it resumed “limited flight operations” close to midnight after all flight activity was suspended late on Wednesday.

New York City also experienced flooding, with social media images showing water gushing over subway platforms and trains.

Subway service was “extremely limited” due to the flooding, the Metropolitan Transit Authority said.

The New York City mayor urged people to not go outside.

“Please stay off the streets tonight and let our first responders and emergency services get their work done. If you’re thinking of going outside, don’t. Stay off the subways. Stay off the roads. Don’t drive into these heavy waters. Stay inside,” he said on Twitter. — Reuters

Food prices expected to rise as world runs short of workers

ACROSS the world, a dearth of workers is shaking up food supply chains. 

In Vietnam, the army is assisting with the rice harvest. In the UK, farmers are dumping milk because there are no truckers to collect it. Brazil’s robusta coffee beans took 120 days to reap this year, rather than the usual 90. And American meatpackers are trying to lure new employees with Apple Watches while fast-food chains raise the prices of burgers and burritos.   

Whether it’s fruit pickers, slaughterhouse workers, truckers, warehouse operators, chefs or waiters, the global food ecosystem is buckling due to a shortage of staff. Supplies are getting hit and some employers are forced to raise wages at a double-digit pace. That’s threatening to push food prices — already heated by soaring commodities and freight costs — even higher. Prices in July were up 31% from the same month last year, according to an index compiled by the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization.

The coronavirus pandemic has helped spark a labor shortfall for many parts of the economy. But the impact is particularly stark in food and agriculture, which are among the world’s least-automated industries. Food security is a sensitive issue in many parts of the world and thin margins mean rising costs generally pass through to buyers, according to Boston Consulting Group (BCG).    

“Almost certainly there is disruption,” said Decker Walker, BCG’s agribusiness expert in Chicago. Effects vary among locations and products, he said, but “the general theme seems to be: The roles with the least desirable working conditions are actually the ones that we have the most pain with.”

There are signs the labor shortfall is curbing supplies. In the US, wholesale distributors like Sysco Corp. and United Natural Foods, Inc. are reporting production delays and slowdowns for items ranging from bacon and cheese to coconut water and spices. In the UK, some stores are running low on staples like bread and chicken, while McDonald’s Corp. ran out of milkshakes in August. 

“We have family-wage, great jobs that have been open, that we’ve been recruiting really hard for and have had trouble filling,” said Patrick Criteser, chief executive officer of Tillamook County Creamery Association. The Oregon-based dairy co-operative recently ran so short of workers that a board member had to skip an operational meeting to help out in the fields. “With the inflation we’re seeing in the business and the inflation that we’re seeing at the farm level, it’s going to translate to the shelf.”

Shortages are hitting farms, processors and restaurants alike. Malaysia, the world’s No.2 palm oil producer, has lost about 30% of potential output of the edible oil used in everything from chocolate to margarine. Shrimp production in southern Vietnam — one of the world’s top exporters — has dropped by 60% to 70% from before the pandemic. And a fifth of tomato production in the South of Italy has been lost this year, due to the scorching heat and transport paralysis, according to the farmers’ association CIA.

`“I have been in this business since the ’80s, but I have never seen a situation like this,” said Michele Ferrandino, a farmer in Foggia. “Tomatoes are very perishable goods. There were not enough trucks to transport the crop to the processing plants, in those crucial days” of the harvest, he said.

Canceled or delayed deliveries have also forced British dairy farmers like Mike King in South Gloucestershire, England to dump milk while stores run short. Mr. King estimates he has lost some 20,000 liters (5,283 gallons), and says some farmers have resorted to milking their cattle less frequently due to staffing shortfalls.

Even as restaurants and other businesses re-open in the US and parts of Europe — boosting demand for goods such as meat and bottled drinks — the delta variant is spreading in places like Southeast Asia, curbing primary production. Other, longer-established pandemic effects are still causing problems too: COVID outbreaks continue to crop up in meat- and fish-processing plants, forcing temporary closures, and border restrictions in countries from the UK to Thailand are limiting the supply of migrant workers.

In some places, the scramble for staff is compounded by local issues, such as difficult and dangerous farmwork conditions caused by a record US heatwave, or the disruption of Brexit.

WORKERS
As a result, employers face another hurdle: Workers have plenty of options.

The current economy is creating “choice where choices may not have existed in the past,” said BCG’s Mr. Walker. When “the entire world is short-staffed,” filling less desirable jobs get more difficult, he said.    

Employment in the food supply chain can certainly be tough. Whether it’s backbreaking strawberry picking, insecure slaughterhouse work or the fast-paced, high-pressure environment of a restaurant kitchen, many jobs are physically taxing, short-term, poorly paid — or a combination of all three.

With more jobs available, Australian workers who might previously have settled for positions at meat processing plants in sparsely populated areas can opt for work in busier towns instead. Many of the European Union citizens who might typically travel to the UK to work on farms, in haulage or serving coffees are choosing to stay in their home countries or on the continent. American laborers who have struggled with sweltering heat in the fields may choose the cool interiors of a store instead.

Jon DeVaney, president of the Washington State Tree Fruit Association, acknowledges that work such as fruit picking is demanding.

“It is a physical job,” he said. “You are picking fruit and carrying it up and down ladders, so if your alternative is pushing buttons on a cash register, that might be more appealing.”

DOWN ON THE FARM
Higher salaries and perks can sweeten the deal. Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. recently raised US menu prices by as much as 4% after increasing average pay to $15 an hour; in Canada the company is offering a referral bonus to help with recruitment. Pork-processing workers at Smithfield Foods, Inc. in South Dakota get freebies like Apple Watches or iPads once they complete their first 60 days, a company official said. Pizza chain Rossopomodoro, which is headquartered in Europe, has been forced to boost its base pay by 50% in London, CEO Daniele di Martino said.

But often money is not enough. Workers are increasingly demanding greater protection from the coronavirus as well as higher wages, according to Sunny Verghese, CEO of agricultural trading giant Olam International Ltd.

While meatpackers have made significant safety progress since last year, they are up against the delta variant now. That has slowed the amount of cattle moving through slaughterhouses at meat giant Tyson Foods, Inc.

“We were on a good trajectory and then the delta variant showed up, and we’ve taken a step back as result of that,” CEO Donnie King said on a call with investors last month. “Essentially it takes six days to get five days’ worth of work.”

Worker shortfalls aren’t happening everywhere, and the effects aren’t evenly distributed. Much of mainland Europe has not felt the same crippling shortages as the UK, where Brexit constrained the flow of EU workers. China has been largely unaffected and in India, while inflation is still a worry, labor is plentiful and agriculture has been mostly untouched by virus restrictions.   

Elsewhere, labor is just one of several headaches for the world’s food ecosystem. Extreme weather from Brazil to France has affected harvests. Surging crop prices have pushed up the price of feeding livestock — and therefore the price of meat. Transport costs have skyrocketed due to soaring demand, container shortages and overwhelmed ports, not helped by the temporary partial closure of China’s Ningbo-Zhoushan, the world’s third-busiest cargo port.

Still, the shortage of workers threatens to further add to costs, whether through wage increases or supply shortfalls. And the issue won’t disappear when the pandemic ends: The share of workers employed in agriculture has been falling for decades amid a shift to cities and services sectors, and hiring for some jobs was tough long before Covid. These more permanent changes to the labor market call for technological solutions, and investment in automation and robotics has accelerated during the pandemic.      

FARMING ROBOTS
In the US, automated tractors, robotic milkers and machines such as carrot planters are replacing human labor. Meanwhile, UK farmers are trialing robots to pick strawberries, lettuce or broccoli. Harvesting tools have helped Brazil’s robusta-coffee farmers cut dependence on manual workers to one-fifth of the number needed just a few years ago, according to Edimilson Calegari, general manager at Espirito Santo-based cooperative Cooabriel. While the country’s labor shortfall extended the length of the harvest, he said, technology has lessened its impact.

Still, it will take years before farmers really take to robots, according to Cindy van Rijswick, a senior analyst at Rabobank in Utrecht who specializes in horticulture.

“In the end, prices for food have to go up to compensate workers in a better way and to find solutions,” Ms. van Rijswick said. “They just cost money and we need to be willing to pay that.” — Bloomberg

Bisaya content creators celebrate rise of the VisMin influence  

The online playing field has evened out for content creators from VisMin (Visayas and Mindanao), according to the Creator and Influencer Council of the Philippines (CICP). 

“There are now people from Luzon who like our content, so we’ve put subtitles. They can laugh at our humorous content even if they don’t understand what we’re saying,” said David Jones Cua, member of Cebuano boy band 13C and co-founder of Bai TV, a Cebuano entertainment channel that boasts over 356,000 Facebook followers.  

This was a far cry from almost half a decade ago, Mr. Cua shared, when there was no creative industry to speak of where Bisaya content creators and influencers could converge, hold events, and find opportunities to connect with brands.  

Now, there are many avenues to explore, including the digital talent agency Bai Social to events like the Bisaya Fan Fest or BaiCon InFest.   

These developments, in addition to providing opportunities, also showed that the Philippine creative landscape did not have to be Luzon-centric, according to Phillip Te Hernandez, known online as Davao Conyo.  

“It’s really the internet that changed things. We see a lot of Bisaya creators online and we see it’s possible to have an audience, to have someone to listen to you, even if you are Bisaya,” he said during a CICP general meeting this August. 

Humor is the difference between Luzon content creators and VisMin content creators, according to Mr. Hernandez: “I would not be able to write my scripts in my way if I wasn’t Bisaya, even if I usually use Tagalog now. Bisaya [style] is punchier and braver.”  

Mr. Cua confirmed this difference in humor and style, and added that brands and agencies should put up Bisaya-language billboards in Cebu — since Tagalog billboards are a pet peeve among Cebuanos.  

REGIONAL APPEAL 
The appeal of working with Bisaya creators lies in their ability to connect with consumers in VisMin in ways people from Luzon can’t, according to panelists. 

Public relations firm Greenbulb Communications started working with regional influencers in 2017 for brands such as P&G, Nestle, Grab, and Klook. “It’s been rapidly evolving, seeing the number of content creators emerging across the different platforms,” said Ayel C. Agbanlog, Greenbulb’s public relations director. “In terms of perspective, I would definitely say we can see the added value regional creators bring.”  

Michelle De Guzman, marketing director of Cebu Pacific, acknowledged the importance of Bisaya creators in promoting flight routes in VisMin.  

“We operate a lot of flights everywhere in the Philippines. The question then was, how might we promote the new flights we operate? That’s why we partnered with VisMin creators early on because we realized that, by working with them, we could reach a specific audience and reach our customers on a local level,” said Ms. De Guzman. — Brontë H. Lacsamana  

Pargari Design International comes to the Philippines

The master of luxury fused with the finest craftsmanship,world-acclaimed interior designer Parviz Pargari is the founder and President of Pargari Design International, a highly sought-after design company with a remarkable global portfolio.

Before he put up his own design company, Parviz Pargari worked for adistinguished interior design firm in Beverly Hills. But his career as a designer began in the late 1990s when he joined a prestigious international design company where he created pieces of furniture that reflected his flair for elegance. His creations were selected and sold by major retailers, and the name Parviz Pargari started to circulate in the world of interior and furniture design.

A national treasure in his country Iran, Parviz Pargari’s fearless approach to European elegance intertwined with comfort is rooted in the richness of his heritage combined with years spent as a student at California State University where he ultimately earned a Master’s degree in wood and furniture design.

Parviz Pargari and his firm ushered in a new age of European luxury, one with a stronger sense of colors, texture and functional comfort. His imaginative way of blending all these with fabric, woodwork, lighting and accessories has enlivened grand homes in prestigious addresses like Beverly Hills. Even high-profile hotels, condominiums and office spaces have been graced with his master designs.

His signature style and aesthetic has earned him global awards that includes The Gusi Peace prize recognizing his professional work and peaceful solutions through Interior Architectural and Furniture Design.

Now, Pargari Design International comes to the Philippines, creating stunning spaces for the discerning local clientele. The firm’s mastery of mixing styles, comfort and functionality is set to amaze anyone who yearns for an arresting retreat with exceptionally crafted details.