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Bill filed to boost footwear, leather industries

MARIKINA SHOE INDUSTRY DEVT OFFICE

A MEASURE seeking to boost the country’s footwear, leather and tanning industries was filed in the House of Representatives Monday.

Rep. Stella Luz A. Quimbo, who represents Marikina which is known as the Philippine shoe capital, filed House Bill 10723 or the Philippine Footwear, Leather Goods, and Tannery Industries Development Act of 2022.

Under the bill, government support and benefits will be given to the industry’s manufacturers and sellers such soft loan packages and training programs. 

The proposed law will also set up a Competitive Enhancement Fund that would support the marketing of footwear and leather products as well as help them pay the rent on their business location. 

An industry roadmap will also be jointly drafted by government agencies and stakeholders. 

The bill, which just passed through first reading, also seeks to protect Philippine products by imposing penalties on those who falsely declare their goods as locally-made. — Jaspearl Emerald G. Tan

50 Filipinos repatriated from Bahrain

DFA.GOV.PH

THE PHILIPPINE Embassy in Bahrain brought home earlier this week 50 Filipinos from Manama as the office kicked off its repatriation program for 2022, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) announced on Thursday. 

The repatriates, which included expectant mothers, overstaying Filipinos, deportees, medical patients, minors, and wards at the Embassy Shelter, arrived in Manila on Monday, Jan. 31. 

“The departure of this first batch of repatriates effectively launched the Embassy’s Repatriation Program for 2022,” it said in a statement on Thursday. 

Quarantine facilities for all returning repatriates were pre-arranged by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration. 

The government’s no-quarantine policy took effect Feb. 1 for returning Filipinos. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

House seeks own probe on phishing scam that affected teachers

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

PARTY-LIST representatives filed a resolution late Wednesday seeking a House panel probe on the alleged phishing scam that victimized public school teachers with payroll accounts at state-owned Landbank of the Philippines (LANDBANK).

A similar inquiry has also been proposed in the Senate while the National Bureau of Investigation and LANDBANK are already conducting their respective investigations. 

House Resolution 2484 calls on the House Committee on Basic Education and Culture to look into teachers’ payroll accounts that were illegally accessed through a phishing scam. 

Phishing is when an attacker pretends to be a trusted company and contacts a target through email, telephone or texting, and tricks them into giving their private information like bank account details. 

LANDBANK has said that their systems were not compromised and the individual accounts of the teachers were hacked by phishing. 

The resolution was introduced by ACT Teachers Rep. France L. Castro and members of Bayan Muna, Gabriela, and Kabataan party-list groups. 

Meanwhile, a teachers’ group welcomed the recent partnership forged by the Bankers Association of the Philippines (BAP) and the Department of Justice (DoJ) to establish response mechanisms for cybercrimes that affect consumers and lenders.

“We welcome the initiative by the DoJ and BAP, it would have been nice if we were invited to observe the discussion,” Benjo Basas, head of the non-profit organization Teacher’s Dignity Coalition, told BusinessWorld in a call on Thursday. 

“This is a step in the right direction, but the responsibility still rests on the banking institution, which is LANDBANK,” he added. — Jaspearl Emerald G. Tan and John Victor D. Ordoñez

Comelec assures leadership vacancies won’t affect preparations for May 9 polls

PREPARATIONS for the May 9 elections will not be crippled by the recent vacancies in the Commission on Elections (Comelec), according to the poll body’s spokesman. 

“There will still be difficulties, but we’re not crippled,” Comelec Spokesman James B. Jimenez told reporters in a virtual press briefing on Thursday. 

“The preparations for the elections were established when we had a seven-member en banc. Now it is only a matter of implementing these plans,” he added. 

Mr. Jimenez said the election body still recognizes the urgency to appoint replacements for the chairman and two commissioners who retired on Feb. 3.

Under the Constitution, the independent poll body is led by a chairman and six commissioners, all of whom have a seven-year term without reappointment. The President has the authority to appoint, subject to approval by the Commission on Appointments. 

Presidential Spokesman Karlo Alexei B. Nograles said on Monday that Mr. Duterte already has a shortlist of nominees for the Comelec positions. 

The election body’s new acting chairperson, Commissioner Socorro B. Inting, will hold her first en banc meeting on Feb. 9 to finalize committee assignments for the remaining members, Mr. Jimenez said. 

She was a member of the Comelec Second Division, which on Jan 17. favored Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. in a lawsuit seeking to bar his presidential run. 

The First Division has yet to release a majority ruling on other disqualification cases filed against the late dictator’s son. 

Former Commissioner Maria Rowena V. Guanzon, who was among those who just retired, earlier accused Commissioner Aimee P. Ferolino, who was assigned to write the ruling, of delaying the case — an allegation that the latter rejected, citing caseload.

Decisions issued by the two divisions are eventually appealed to the seven-member en banc. 

Ms. Guanzon, who revealed last week that she voted for the disqualification of Mr. Marcos, said on Tuesday that Ms. Ferolino was delaying the decision to invalidate her vote and Commissioner Marlon S. Casquejo’s. 

Mr. Casquejo was set to transfer from the Comelec First Division to the Second Division as presiding commissioner, but Mr. Jimenez said the move has yet to be officially declared. 

The election body spokesman said that reassignments will likely be declared during the Feb. 9 en banc meeting. 

Mr. Jimenez said that the election body must step up and prove that the elections will be credible despite disagreements between its officials. 

“This characterization of a crisis within the Comelec is by people from the outside. Inside it’s about doing the work and doing what’s expected of us,” he said.

“There would be fewer complications if the decisions at the division levels were resolved before the commissioners’ retirement,” Luie F. Guia, former Comelec commissioner told CNN Philippines on Thursday. — John Victor D. Ordoñez 

Detained senator optimistic about reelection bid

DETAINED Senator Leila M. De Lima is optimistic that her campaign team and supporters will trounce fake news and disinformation against her as she makes a bid for reelection in the May 9 elections. 

The opposition senator, who won a seat in 2016, has been detained since Feb. 2017 for drug-related charges. She has since been barred from participating in Senate sessions even online, but continued to file resolutions and bills.

“I rely on my campaign team, my close friends, and supporters to mount a strong campaign not only to communicate my advocacies to all Filipinos but to also dispel all disinformation and fake news propagated by sinister forces who want to prevent me from returning to the Senate and foiling their corrupt and malevolent plans,” Ms. De Lima said in a statement on Thursday. 

Ms. De Lima, who is running as part of the senatorial slate of presidential aspirant and Vice President Maria Leonor “Leni” G. Robredo, is known for being one of President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s staunchest critics. 

After she announced her intent to run again for senator, she said several pro-Duterte pages had shared Youtube links showing misleading headlines implying she was removed from her post.

She remains at the receiving end of attacks and false news by troll farms and other sinister quarters, she added. 

“We are also utilizing the power of the internet to reach out to even more people beyond those whom we already consider as our supporters,” Ms. De Lima said. 

The official campaign period for national positions will be from Feb. 8 to May 7.

Meanwhile, Ms. De Lima filed an urgent motion on Thursday asking the court to allow her to have an online conference call with her 89-year-old mother who is currently in critical condition after testing positive for coronavirus. 

“My 89-year-old Mom, who tested positive for COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) three weeks ago, is now in critical condition in our local hospital in Iriga City. Her cardio-pulmonary systems now failing,” said Ms. De Lima in a Facebook post. “I ask for prayers.” — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

Rights group slams senatorial candidate over extra-judicial killing stance

A HUMAN RIGHTS group on Thursday slammed a celebrity running for senator after he claimed extrajudicial killings (EJK) were not out of the norm.  

“This is not a movie, Mr. Padilla, where one just conjures fight scenes and be well after every shoot,” Karapatan said in a Thursday statement, following senatorial aspirant Robinhood Ferdinand “Robin” C. Padilla’s claim that EJKs have been there throughout history.

“We really need an iron fist here,” he said in an interview with ABS-CBN News Channel, citing revolutionary leader Andres Bonifacio whom he called “the first victim of EJK.”

Karapatan countered that “one cannot brush these killings aside as mere inevitable incidents in any anti-crime or counterinsurgency operation, with the victims treated as collateral damage.”

“We assert that any government-sanctioned operation or policy which authorizes and incites these kinds of crimes should not exist,” the group said. “Such a policy can never be considered as something good or acceptable in a so-called democracy.” — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

A borrowing tale of two presidentiables

Recently, media reported on an interesting contrast between preside ntial aspirants Vice-President Leni Robredo and former Senator Bongbong Marcos, Jr. on their stand on the level of National Government (NG) debt.

They were interviewed by talk show host Boy Abunda, answering the same questions at different times of release of their respective face-to-face engagement.

The question was premised on the size of the National Government (NG) debt quoted at P11.9 trillion, and was rather straightforward: “If you win as President of the Philippines, how will you tackle the payment of our national debt?”

Marcos Jr. was categorical that “we have to create value in our economy.” He must be referring to the source for debt servicing. He recognized that COVID-19 crowded out other items of public expenditure. Checks and balances have to be strengthened to ensure proper disposition of borrowed funds. He also called for minimizing corruption while admitting corruption could not be totally eradicated.

The most telling part of the Abunda interview is Marcos Jr.’s reiteration of his previous position that “if you compare this with other countries, we are doing better than they are.” He cited a ratio between the debt level and the Philippines’ gross domestic product (GDP) that is obviously dated at less than 60%, one of many global metrics of debt sustainability.

At end-September 2021, the country’s NG debt stood at P11.917 trillion or 63.1% of GDP, already in excess of the 60%.

Robredo was likewise right in underscoring the need to work hard to increase our GDP to pay back our maturing loans, acknowledging the equally important support measures like fixing the government and institutions to guarantee success. She was emphatic to argue that increasing the people’s trust in the government is the only way we can ensure the sustainability of our economic output. Loans are not patently wrong as long as the proceeds are properly used, and with good social returns.

The Vice-President showed her market knowledge by expressing her intention to honor such debt commitment “because the integrity of our country depends on it.” Flatly, she rejected borrowing to feed corruption. She knew her debt numbers, clarifying that the pandemic brought the 40% debt to GDP ratio before the pandemic near the precipice, to around 60%. Our borrowing space is getting tighter.

Fiscal responsibility is the issue here because the national debt has already breached the notional metric of 60% debt to GDP ratio. Persistently high debt ratios could very well raise the issue of fiscal sustainability. We don’t really wish to be nostalgic about the Marcos years in the early 1980s because it was plain and simple, a nightmare. Our elder economic and financial statesmen had to fly to New York and London to request for debt restructuring because our economy was in deep recession and we did not have enough foreign exchange (FX) to service our maturing external debt obligations. We had miniscule FX to fund even our imports of key commodities such that we had to ration FX and depend on the Binondo central bank.

As a result, we were forced to borrow from the International Monetary Fund, cap in hand, to finance our budget deficit and to swallow those impossible conditionalities and prior actions to demonstrate our commitment to economic reforms. Bad governance was considered the biggest threat to debt repayment and economic recovery. If we refused, our private creditors would not agree to reschedule our maturities and would have thumbed down our eligibility to participate in the Brady Plan, a debt reduction scheme for highly indebted countries.

Even as the dark days are now behind us, being careless about statistics and cavalier about indebtedness are therefore not good for a presidential run.

Debt data drives our views on how to deal with it, always very careful not to take a position that could transport us back to one of the most humiliating chapters in our economic history under the Marcos dictatorship. It’s going to be a masochistic rewind, that point in social media about bringing back the “golden years” of the 1980s.

A good perspective should help us to assess the NG’s latest debt report at a lower level of P11.73 trillion, reflecting the additional debt flows of P1.93 trillion in 2020 and P2.07 trillion in 2021. Nonetheless, that level already exceeded the NG’s target of 59.1% and the European standard of 60%.

When debt levels are deemed excessive, higher debt servicing reduces capital accumulation and infrastructure. In the Philippines, for the first 10 months of 2021, we paid P371 billion in interest and P277 billion in principal or a total of P648 billion. This is over 14% of the national budget of P4.5 trillion for 2021 that could have otherwise financed economic and social services as well as infrastructure. Before the pandemic, we paid only P500 billion.

These debt levels could be exacerbated by the amount of the Republic’s contingent liabilities. Contingent liabilities emanate from loan guarantees for government-owned or -controlled corporations, government financial institutions, guarantee institutions, PPP projects, and the buy-outs of independent power producers. If something goes awry, those contingent liabilities become part of NG’s actual liabilities.

An update of the contingent liabilities of GSIS, SSS, and PhilHealth alone is even more inconceivable. The Department of Finance (DoF) last December directed these government insurance institutions to observe proper accounting methods. In compliance with this directive, their financial reports showed combined total liabilities of P9.94 trillion, just a few shades from the latest P11.73 trillion NG debt. We believe Secretary Sonny Dominguez’ assurance that “there is no need for the public to be alarmed about these huge liabilities” because of their sound financials, but bad governance can always eat them away.

Quite strangely, not everyone is aware that if debt continues to accumulate, the economy will be most vulnerable to any change in monetary policy stance, particularly in the US. Our local central bank might also be forced to tighten and that would easily translate into higher debt servicing costs.

Yet we are barely into an early recovery.

Even the Financial Stability Coordination Council, chaired by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, estimates that while the Philippine economy is expected to continue to rebound, “it may take until the fourth quarter of 2023 to recover lost incomes from the coronavirus pandemic.” To be sure, the Government should have put up a plan to restore fiscal sustainability. But we are not keen on suggesting that through sharp spending cuts or tax increases. They are politically costly. Instead, some budgetary realignment may be adopted with a huge dose of political will.

If neither Marcos Jr. nor Robredo is lying, we pray, and both believe in taking out corruption from the governance equation, we are looking at some savings of at least over half a trillion pesos.

The fiscal plan to reduce the deficit and the debt should also be spaced out very carefully. We recall the experience of England after the Napoleonic wars in the early 1800s in piling up debt beyond twice its annual output. Until 1900, England busied itself but succeeded in putting back its fiscal house in order. The pandemic factor would definitely make the market more forgiving at this time. A planned reduction in both the deficit and the debt over a reasonable period will definitely help calm the market to sustain its partnership with the Republic.

Over time, as we pursue fiscal consolidation, taxes should be rationalized in order to minimize those remaining distortions in the economy. Here, the challenge is the strong interest groups which could fund billions of pesos in lobby money. Transparency and a clear fiscal roadmap for the next six years, and beyond, should be an effective counterweight because the civil society would detect any departure is an assured route to fiscal perdition.

By then, we should know which one of the two leading presidentiables is telling a tall tale, and lying.

 

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.

The elephant in the room

PHOTOGRAPHEEASIA-FREEPIK

During his Jan. 25 ONE News TV channel interview, Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. was asked why he did not participate in GMA-TV’s Jessica Soho interview with four other candidates for President. One of the two interviewers referred to the need to explain his refusal as “the elephant in the room”— as the most obvious question that had to be addressed.

His answers to that question were indicative of Marcos Junior’s mindset and his capacity to provide some sense of what his program of government is, if any. But equally important is whether and how much his background, track record, and experience would shape his administration should he be elected to the post he and his family have long coveted.

Those issues are in fact the more obvious elephants in the room. But the reasons for his refusal to be interviewed with four other aspirants also suggested that his running for President is driven by nothing nobler than his ambition to follow his father’s footsteps. One of those reasons seems to be his fear of any one of his four opponents’ coming off as better equipped for the Presidency than he. But he said it was because broadcaster Soho was “biased,” by which he meant “anti-Marcos.”

Bias consists of favoring one or another idea, person or thing despite what the facts say. Hence being “anti-Marcos,” if based on verifiable facts, is not necessarily indicative of bias. One can be anti-anything as long as the facts support one’s position, but Marcos Junior went on to say that he did not want to be asked questions about “what happened 40 years ago,” meaning the martial law period. When asked by the woman interviewer if that is not important since he is running for a government post, he claimed that he had “already answered those questions.”

Apparently Marcos Junior is not aware that it is the duty of every journalist to ask candidates the hard questions because, as the woman broadcaster pointed out, they are running for government posts that will have an inevitable impact on the lives of millions. In addition, his claim that he has answered the questions that have been raised about his father’s dictatorship is not completely accurate.

It is important that he do so. Of all the candidates for President this year, it is he whose appraisal of that period would most likely have an impact on the kind of government he could inflict on this country and its people. He tried a kind of appraisal-cum non-apology six years ago. He has limited his recent statements about it to generalizations, but he did go into some detail then, in August 2015, when he announced his intention to run for Vice-President. “We (the Marcoses),” he said then, “have consistently said that if during the time of my father, some were hurt, were not helped, or were victimized in some way, we are sorry that happened. Nobody wanted that to happen. These are instances when people fell through the cracks.”

But, he continued, “Will I say sorry for the thousands and thousands of kilometers [of roads] that were built? Will I say sorry for the agricultural policy that made us self-sufficient in rice? Will I say sorry for the power generation? Will I say sorry for the highest literacy rate in Asia? What am I to say sorry about?”

That “apology” made it appear that martial law was meant to help people and that whatever abuses occurred were not intended. The men and women who were “victimized” just “fell through the cracks.” Marcos Senior’s intentions, however, were quite clear: he declared martial law to keep himself and his cronies and military thugs in power, and to halt the demands for change and democratization that were sweeping the country in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

This is not a matter of opinion. The indisputable facts are that his term of office was ending in 1973, but martial law enabled him to stay in power for 13 more years — and he would have been President for life had he not been overthrown in 1986.

The kleptocracy he created used the most brutal means to stay in power, among them abductions, murder, enforced disappearances and the indeterminate detention of some of the best and brightest sons and daughters of the Filipino people. A 100,000 men and women were arrested and detained for daring to imagine an alternative State and society, and over 10,000 were tortured, disappeared, and murdered. Again, this is not a matter of opinion but of fact, as dozens of studies, and the National Historical Commission, have long established.

The second non-apology not only claimed that there were “thousands and thousands of kilometers of roads built” during the martial law period, it also made it appear that to build them a dictatorship was necessary. Marcos Senior was in fact already building those roads during his first term as President, when he did not have the powers he gave himself by declaring martial law.

Marcos Junior’s claim about self-sufficiency in rice was similarly false. There was a rice crisis during much of his father’s reign, with people lining up for the cereal for hours, and mixing rice with corn. Alternative means of generating power were indeed explored during the last years of Marcos’ rule, but these attempts, such as the corruption-ridden, badly designed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, never made any difference in assuring reliable power sources beyond the 1980s.

“The highest literacy rate in Asia” was not the regime’s doing either. The Philippines had had that distinction since the end of World War II. But it dropped during the Marcos autocracy, when telling the truth, and learning and teaching became dangerous undertakings, with journalists, artists, writers, students, teachers and academics among those targeted for arrest and worse.

Not only did the Marcos despotism savage the Bill of Rights, the economy, the free press and the representative democracy that, though flawed and limited, nevertheless allowed some measure of dissent and free expression, it also established a pattern of unparalleled corruption, abuse, and repression from which the country is still suffering.

The latter is the most dangerous legacy of the regime that, rather than apologize for, Marcos Junior is celebrating. When he declared martial law, Ferdinand Marcos let loose the forces resident in the darkest corners of a corrupt society, releasing from the restraints of civilization the most murderous and most brutal elements of the police and military on a defenseless people.

But not only did Marcos Junior claim during the ONE News interview that he has already answered questions about martial law. He also contradicted himself at every turn. He denied, for example, that he had said he would not make his SALN (Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth) public, but he had done so only a few days earlier, only to declare the opposite when reminded that making one’s SALN public is legally mandated.

That interview was a reminder that Marcos Junior has not only refused to apologize for martial law — despite what the facts say he has even glorified it. Neither did he provide any indication that he has a credible program of government behind the glittering generalizations and sloganeering that have characterized his campaign.

Unlike most of his rivals for the Presidency, he has no economic program, and no clear agenda in dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. Their absence is the bigger elephant in the room.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

Musings on the lunar year

NIZOVATINA-FREEPIK

The lunar new year of the Water Tiger has begun. Geomancers and astrologers have mixed predictions. The Tiger is strong and ferocious. There are rituals to follow and lucky charms to acquire for protection. It is the beginning of a new cycle, a time of great transition. It is necessary to reconnect with our inner compass, to navigate uncertainties and radical changes. One should get out of the safe zone, and travel on a different path. One needs to deal with new challenges, prove self-confidence and seek personal growth.

In the spirit of fun, let us look at V Day, the most popular day of the year.

A well-known astrologer said that the theme is exciting, erratic and unpredictable. She cautioned that it would not have permanence. “A relationship would have sudden meetings, sudden departures that are not convenient.”

The shifting energies are happening because of the start of a new zodiac cycle. There will be instability because of the imbalance of the elements.

“For ongoing, old relationships or those trying to revive relationships, it would be good because there would be electrifying emotions, rejuvenation.”

The key words are “fantasy” and “glamor” in the old-fashioned sense of the word.

Glamor is the antithesis of reality. It would be dreamlike for a few days because of the position of the ruling planets vis-a-vis the moon. “Enjoy the day.”

Then, it’s back to reality.

The most romantic day of the year has always been Valentine’s Day. Not anymore. Over the past few decades, it has deteriorated into an OTT (over-the-top) commercial event. The excesses of materialism and consumerism were evident in marketing gimmicks and advertisements. Before the crisis, one felt pressured to spend on gifts, romantic dinners, weekend treats for the special someone (or the “significant others,” plus, plus… meaning the others — No. 1 and No. 2). The macho men with the wherewithal to spend and impress could celebrate on three consecutive dates. This practice has toned down considerably during the past two years of lockdowns. Downsizing is the buzz word.

Where is true love if it is not exclusive? If affection is spread out thinly among several “beloveds,” it would be washed out and wrung dry. One can forget about fairy tales and seeing the world through rose colored lenses.

The full moon will coincide with V Day. As it revolves around the earth, the moon affects the tides, the moods and behavior of people. Its magnetic pull is phenomenal and mystical. For astronomers, astrology buffs, and moon lovers, it is magical to gaze at a rare blue (or red) moon, or a lunar eclipse.

The weather has been weird and unpredictable for the past years.

Solar storms occur in the sun but they do not affect us directly.

However, devastating, vicious typhoons happen on and off season — uprooting homes, wreaking havoc and destroying farms, communities, and cities. There have been long inconvenient power outages in the ravaged islands.

Global warming adversely affects the environment — the coastal and marine populations. In the Arctic and Antarctic regions, the glaciers are melting. Despite warnings of catastrophes, fuel emissions and plastic garbage disposal continue unabated. Every year, the temperature of the earth and the water level rise.

Above us, the planetary alignments and celestial patterns are slightly askew. The variance may appear tiny but the effects are far reaching. Lunar and solar eclipses have eerie effects on our planet.

On the lighter side, we are lucky to have constellations, falling stars, shooting comets, and meteor showers. These are the spectacular treats of the night sky.

Nothing is as wondrous as making a wish on the silver moon.

 

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

mavrufino@gmail.com

Abortions are evil, wrong and anti-women

MACROVECTOR-FREEPIK

The question was: “Will you allow abortion?” One presidential candidate’s reply was to reject abortion but carved out an exception: for pregnancies arising from rape or incest.

Clearly, this is a difficult matter and the emotional and physical violence suffered by the woman victim is incalculable. Nevertheless, the problem with that response is that the fundamental reason for prohibiting abortion is because the fetus is a human being. Which it is.

Rape or incest will not change the fact that to abort the fetus is to murder an innocent baby. To allow any abortion — except to directly save the life of the mother — simply results in an immoral inconsistency. A law mandating government to assist raped pregnant women, providing health and psychological care, and then providing means for the baby to be adopted by the State is a far better option than simply leaving the raped mother alone on her own to have an abortion.

Princeton’s Robert George’s remarks before the American Political Science Association Convention is relevant here: “A human being is conceived when a human sperm containing 23 chromosomes fuses with a human egg also containing 23 chromosomes (albeit of a different kind) producing a single-cell human zygote containing, in the normal case, 46 chromosomes that are mixed differently from the 46 chromosomes as found in the mother or father. Unlike the gametes (that is, the sperm and egg), the zygote is genetically unique and distinct from its parents. Biologically, it is a separate organism.” It is science, not religion, that brought us to that conclusion.

Yes, it is a woman’s body, and, yes, it may be her choice, but the fetus also has a body and should be entitled to the same right to life as the woman.

Catholics should thus have no qualms employing “my body my choice” reasoning against vaccines while being assured of its invalidity vis-a-vis abortion:

“There’s a second human involved, and it is the protection of that more vulnerable human that conservatives feel justifies government involvement, not some secret fetish for fascist authoritarianism. Obviously, in the case of government compelling a person to get a vaccine, the consequences of that decision affect the life of the one making the decision, not a third party. That’s the distinction.” (“Why the ‘bodily autonomy’ argument works against vaccine mandates but not for abortion,” Not the Bee, Jan. 21, 2022)

There’s also the tremendous psychological damage to women subjected to abortion: “…both sides agree that (a) abortion is consistently associated with elevated rates of mental illness compared to women without a history of abortion; (b) the abortion experience directly contributes to mental health problems for at least some women; (c) there are risk factors, such as pre-existing mental illness, that identify women at greatest risk of mental health problems after an abortion…*” (“The abortion and mental health controversy: A comprehensive literature review of common ground agreements, disagreements, actionable recommendations, and research opportunities,” David C Reardon, 2018).

ROE VS WADE
Roe vs. Wade is emblematic of the dangers of the “living constitution” theory, which many of the so-called prestigious and progressive law schools in the Philippines remain enamored with. Even liberal academic and Stanford Law Dean John Hart Ely famously labeled Roe as completely untethered to the text, structure, and understanding of the US Constitution.

“Roe invented a constitutional entitlement to elective abortions effectively at all stages. It forbade virtually all abortion regulations in the first trimester and allowed only those serving the mother’s health — not protecting fetal life — in the second. While it purported to permit prohibitions in the third trimester, it required exceptions for ‘health,’ which a companion case (Doe v. Bolton) defined so broadly as to include ‘emotional, psychological, [and] familial health’ considerations. This guaranteed a virtually unlimited right to abortion up to birth.” (“Roe Will Go,” Robert P. George, October 2021)

Hence, the case of Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a case awaiting decision by the US Supreme Court. The issue is the constitutionality of a 2018 Mississippi state law banning abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy. Oral arguments were held last December. Legal experts, observing the oral arguments, mostly opine that the conservative majority is likely to uphold the Mississippi law.

The Dobbs case undoubtedly, “is a long-awaited opportunity for the Court to get right with the Constitution. There are now six justices appointed by Republican presidents who are known or strongly believed to think that Roe and Casey were terrible constitutional blunders resulting in an appalling toll of human lives. There has been no better moment in the last half century than the present one for the righting of an injustice — an unconstitutional injustice.” (“Roe Undermines the Supreme Court’s Legitimacy,” Matthew Franck and Robert P. George, Nov. 11, 2021).

It is ironic that precisely at this moment when the catastrophic wrong that is Roe vs. Wade is at the brink of being corrected, the Philippines is now considering committing the same atrocious and deadly mistake.

* “…and (d) it is impossible to conduct research in this field in a manner that can definitively identify the extent to which any mental illnesses following abortion can be reliably attributed to abortion in and of itself.”

 

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

Biden plans several stops during Asia trip, to keep focus on region

PHOTO FROM JOE BIDEN FACEBOOK PAGE

WASHINGTON — President Joseph R. Biden plans several stops during a visit to Asia this spring, which will be his first to the region as president and include a summit with three key regional allies in Japan, a senior administration official told Reuters.

The official brushed off questions about whether the Ukraine crisis could distract the administration’s attention from Asia, saying: “We continue prioritizing our Indo-Pacific focus and will have more to come.”

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity on Wednesday, declined to give details of the other stops in the region, which Mr. Biden’s administration has declared its priority as it seeks to push back against China’s expanding power and influence.

US officials have said Mr. Biden has accepted an invitation to visit Japan in late spring to attend the summit of the Quad, which groups Japan, the United States, Australia and India, but details were still being worked out.

A person familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday the trip could be in May, with concerns over China and North Korea on top of the agenda, and that Washington was looking into having Mr. Biden visit South Korea at the same time.

Japan’s Yomiuri newspaper on Tuesday cited multiple government sources as saying the Tokyo visit could be in the last half of May.

“The President will travel later this year to Tokyo for the Quad Summit, as part of our commitment to regularize our engagement through the Quad, which continues to operate at full speed,” the senior US official told Reuters in an email.

“The President will also make several other stops on that trip,” added the official, who declined to elaborate.

In stressing the US commitment to the region, the official pointed to US plans to host a summit with leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, and for Secretary of State Antony Blinken to visit Australia next week for a Quad foreign ministers’ meeting.

The administration also plans to launch a new Pacific Islands initiative with allies and partners that would bring together regional countries “to coordinate our actions, drive resources, and raise our ambition in the region, including on climate, maritime, and transportation issues,” the official said.

It would, at the same time, finalize negotiations on Compacts of Free Association: agreements with three Pacific Island countries — the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia and Palau — that facilitate US military access. They are due to expire in 2023 in the case of the former two states and in 2024 in the case of Palau.

US Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell warned last month the Pacific could be the part of the world most likely to see “strategic surprise” — comments apparently referring to possible Chinese ambitions to establish Pacific-island bases.

Mr. Campbell said the United States had not done enough to assist the region and that there was a very short amount of time, working with partners like Australia, New Zealand, Japan and fellow Pacific power France, “to step up our game across the board.”

The senior administration official said an announcement of “concrete offerings” under an Indo-Pacific Economic Framework initiative Mr. Biden announced in October could also be expected “soon.” The official said progress was also being made in an agreement dubbed AUKUS for the United States and Britain to work with Australia to provide it with nuclear-powered submarines.

Mr. Biden has visited the region multiple times during his more than three decades as a senator and as vice president in the Obama administration. — Reuters

EU’s border-free Schengen zone needs overhaul — Macron

REUTERS

TOURCOING — The European Union’s (EU) border-free Schengen area should be managed by regular ministerial meetings, just like the euro zone, French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday, adding that this could start as early as next month.

National security concerns, waves of migration and, most recently, the coronavirus pandemic have led to the re-emergence of border controls in the Schengen zone and much criticism of how it functions, eroding what had been hailed as a milestone achievement in Europe’s post-World War Two integration.

Speaking to EU justice and interior ministers, Mr. Macron said what he dubbed the “Schengen Council” would evaluate how the border-free area was working but would also take joint decisions and facilitate coordination in times of crisis.

“This Council can become the face of a strong, protective Europe that is comfortable with controlling its borders and therefore its destiny,” he said in the northern French town of Tourcoing. He said its inaugural meeting could take place when the EU’s justice and home affairs ministers next gather, on March 3.

Such a proposal would need the support of other member states in the 27-nation bloc to take effect, though French officials say it would not require any change to EU treaties.

The EU has been deeply divided for years in its response to immigration and on how to police Schengen’s common external borders, and it remains to be seen how much France can achieve during its six-month presidency of the EU Council of Ministers — which mostly involves setting the agenda for meetings.

But Mr. Macron, who is all but certain to seek re-election as French president in April in a campaign largely dominated by security and identity issues, said he hoped that a step-by-step approach could win over a number of reluctant EU countries. “We must reform Schengen,” he said. “There can be no freedom of movement if we do not control our external borders.”

France has also proposed an emergency response mechanism that could be triggered when the bloc’s external borders are under threat. — Reuters

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