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Your Weekend Guide (August 16, 2019)

Dancing Lessons

TWIN Bill Theater presents Mark St. Germain’s Dancing Lessons on Aug. 16 to 24 at Power Mac Center Spotlight in Circuit Makati. Directed by Francis G. Matheu, the play follows Ever Montgomery, a young science professor with special needs who decides to take dancing lessons to get through an upcoming awards dinner he will host. However, his instructor, Senga, is recovering from an injury that may prevent her from dancing permanently. Tickets are available through TicketWorld (www.ticketworld.com.ph, 891-9999).

Mabining Mandirigma, A Steampunk Musical

TANGHALANG Pilipino restages Mabining Mandirigma, A Steampunk Musical about the life of hero and “sublime paralytic” Apolinario Mabini at the Main Theater of the Cultural Center of the Philippines until Sept. 1. The 2019 run stars Monique Wilson as Mabini. Arman Ferrer will be reprising his role as Emilio Aguinaldo, alternating with David Ezra. Tickets are available through TicketWorld (www.ticketworld.com.ph, 891-9999).

Dani Girl

THE Sandbox Collective restages Michael Kooman and Christopher Dimond’s Dani Girl at the Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium, RCBC Plaza in Makati City until Sept. 1. Directed by Toff de Venecia, the musical centers on nine-year-old Dani who sets off on a quest to find her hair and figure out the answer to the question, “Why is cancer?” She journeys with fellow warrior and best friend Marty, through lightsaber duels, game shows, and blasting off to outer space. The play stars Rebecca Coates as Dani alternating with Kyle Napuli. Luigi Quesada returns as Marty, alternating with Daniel Drilon. For inquiries, call 0956-200-4909, 586-7105 or sab@thesandboxco.com.

Rak of Aegis

THE hit Pinoy jukebox musical Rak of Aegis returns to the PETA Theater Center, with ongoing performances until Sept. 29. The show uses the songs of the Aegis band such as “Halik,” “Sinta,” and “Basang-Basa sa Ulan,” to tell the tale of a perennially flooded barangay. This latest production features a mix of original cast members including Aicelle Santos and Kim Molina, Isay Alvarez-Seña and Sweet Plantado-Tiongson, Robert Seña and Renz Verano, and Kakai Bautista and Neomi Gonzales. Tickets are available through TicketWorld (www.ticketworld.com.ph, 891-9999).

MaArte oPen House

THERE will be fashion and food finds at the MaArte oPen House bazaar this weekend.

FROM Aug. 16 to 18, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., the spirit of the Syquia apartments’ open house parties lives again in the Peninsula Manila with MaArte oPen House. The MaArte fair will see 41 guest rooms of the hotel closed off for about 60 exhibitors, recalling the parties of the past. Among the items one will find there are Aranaz bags, ceramics by Bangay, jewelry by DSV Studio, watches by Ibarra, jewelry by Natalya Lagdameo, and scents by Oscar Mejia. New fashion brands that are participating include FDCP members Joel Escober, Lally Dizon, Maco Custodio for Pinoy ManCave, Coco and Tres, Pika Pika + Pinta, Vesti, and Evangeline Austria. This year’s fair will also feature food items by Auro Chocolates, Green Babes, and Felicisimo Gourmet Homecooking. Alongside its annual fundraiser, the Museum Foundation of the Philippines, Inc. will also hold MaArte Talks, conversations with Joey de Castro (Aug. 16), Tweetie de Leon-Gonzalez of TdLG (Aug. 17), and Nico Moreno of Ibarra Watches (Aug. 18), at 2:30 p.m., at The Peninsula Lounge Area, 2F Ayala Wing.

Rustans.com launch

RUSTAN’S will hold an online shopping party on Aug. 17, 6 p.m. to midnight, to launch Rustans.com. The upscale department store’s new online store features a curated selection of Rustan’s brands and products. To demonstrate how easy it is to shop at Rustans.com, the online store is having a digital party hosted by lifestyle and travel blogger Nicole Andersson, style purveyor Tessa Prieto-Valdes, Rica de Jesus of Heart2Heart, and Jaja Chiongbian-Rama. The Live Shopping Party will also feature discounts and drops throughout the night which shoppers can follow on @rustansph Facebook and Instagram accounts. They can also sign-up for the event newsletter at rustans.com ahead of the event. Special offers and discounts of up to 60% will be available for one night only. Over 140 brands are now available online.

Cine Argentino

CINE ARGENTINO returns to Shangri-La Plaza mall at the Red Carpet from Aug. 14 to 18, for its fifth year with a lineup of diverse films. In partnership with the Embassy of Argentina and the Film Development Institute of the Philippines, the Shang is screening five feature films produced by Argentinian filmmakers that showcase different perspectives of their country’s culture. The five films are: biographical crime film El Clan (The Clan) starring Guillermo Francella and Peter Lanzani, and directed by Pablo Trapero; Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Language Film and Cannes Film Festival Palme d’Or-nominated Relatos Salvajes (Wild Tales), written and directed by Damián Szifron; Dos Mas Dos (Two Plus Two), directed by Diego Caplan; Ariel Winograd’s Mamá Se Fue De Viaje (10 Days Without Mom); and, La Luz Incidente (Incident Light) directed by Ariel Rotter.

OPPO Reno Sunset Rose X M·A·C workshop

OPPO is collaborating with cosmetics brand M·A·C for a beauty workshop to be integrated into the Reno Collective Pop-Up Art Exhibit on Aug. 17-18 at SM Mega Fashion Hall. This will be the third leg of the pop-up exhibit featuring immersive art installations, with activities and interactive spaces especially dedicated to the Reno Sunset Rose colorway. Celebrity makeup artists RB Chanco and Sylvina Lopez will doll up several girls from the Reno Collective with M·A·C, creating looks inspired by the limited edition OPPO Reno in Sunset Rose. This interactive workshop will allow participants to learn the creative process behind applying makeup from professional artists and use the same techniques to recreate the OPPO Reno in Sunset Rose look using M·A·C products. The workshop — on Aug. 17 and 19, 2 p.m., at the SM Mega Fashion Hall — will be open to the public with a limit of 20 slots on a first come, first served basis. Exclusive special treats also await the first five in line. Interested parties may proceed to the dedicated OPPO X M·A·C booth as soon as the exhibit opens. Workshop participants will also experience a magazine-quality portrait shoot with Miguel Alomajan. The limited edition OPPO Reno in Sunset Rose retails at P26,990 and is available in 55 select OPPO concept stores nationwide.

National Book Store’s Thank You Sale

NATIONAL Book Store is holding a Thank You Sale with discounts of up to 50% on books, school and office supplies, imported brands, and more in all 240 branches across the country. Colored stickers highlight the discounts — blue for 10% off, white for 20% off, yellow for 30% off, and orange for 50% off. The sale runs from Aug. 15 to Sept. 1.

How PSEi member stocks performed — August 15, 2019

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Thursday, August 15, 2019.

 

Holcim expects sustained growth in Mindanao cement demand

DAVAO CITY — Holcim Philippines, Inc., which has just completed the expansion of its plant here, is preparing to start similar improvements in its Lugait Cement Plant in Misamis Oriental as it expects continued growth in Mindanao demand.

William C. Sumalinog, Holcim Philippines senior vice-president for sales, said the demand growth comes from both private sector and the government’s Build, Build, Build program.

“For so long, Visayas demand has always been bigger than Mindanao’s. But for the last three years, we are now bigger than Visayas,” Mr. Sumalinog said at the Habi at Kape media forum Wednesday.

“We (Mindanao) are now… maybe one million (cement bags) higher per month or 12 million bags more in annual consumption than Visayas,” he said.

Nationwide, Luzon accounts for about 65% of the company’s sales while the remaining 35% comes from the Visayas and Mindanao combined.

Mr. Sumalinog said the higher demand in Mindanao comes not just from the two primary cities of Davao and Cagayan de Oro, but also from Zamboanga, Dipolog, Butuan, and other secondary cities.

Philippine Statistics Authority data show that construction growth in the four regions in Mindanao from 2017 to 2018 at 18.1% in Davao, 16.4% for what is now the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, 16.3% in Northern Mindanao, and 13.6% in Soccsksargen (SouthCotabato-Cotabato-Sultan Kudarat-Sarangani-General Santos City).

Assistant Secretary Romeo Montenegro, deputy executive director of the Mindanao Development Authority, said the national government has allocated P761 billion for infrastructure projects in the southern islands for 2017-2022.

“With these figures alone, we can expect the extent of (cement demand in) Mindanao,” Mr. Montenegro said at the same forum.

Mr. Sumalinog said the rule of thumb is that between 10%-12% of the cost of construction goes to cement.

“So that’s about P80 billion (of cement demand for government projects alone),” he said, adding that Holcim hopes to avoid running out of inventory in Mindanao.

The listed cement maker spent P1.5 billion on its Davao plant expansion and has budgeted a combined $300 million for the expansion of the plants in Misamis Oriental and Bulacan. — Carmelito Q. Francisco & Maya M. Padillo

Sugar funding to follow the law, but reform needed to curb underspending — Villar

SENATOR Cynthia A. Villar said the funds set aside for sugar industry development have been poorly utilized, but added she still backs a budget of P2 billion for 2020.

Ang maipu-push lang namin sa budget hearing ibigay iyong P2 billion because that is the law (The law requires us to fund sugar development for P2 billion),” she said, referring to the Sugar Industry Development Act (SIDA).

Ngayon, ayaw nilang ibigay because of underspending. So ngayong budget hearing, ire-request namin na magre-reform na sila, bigyan mo na sila ng mas malaki (Some officials don’t want to provide the funds because of underspending. So at the budget hearing we will press for reforms before we authorize larger amounts),” she told reporters after a hearing to look into the utilization of SIDA funds.

Ms. Villar chairs the Senate committee on agriculture and food.

SIDA, or Republic Act 10659, came into effect in 2015 to upgrade the industry’s competitiveness, and maximize the utilization of sugarcane resources, and boost the income of farmers and farm workers through improved productivity, product diversification, more jobs, and sugar mill efficiency.

The Sugar Regulatory Administration must use P300 million in SIDA funding for credit; P300 million for the Philippine International Trading Corp. (PITC); P100 million for scholarships; P300 million for block farming; and P1 billion for infrastructure development.

Underspending in 2016 led the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to reduce the allocation to P1.5 billion in 2017, and further to P500 million in 2018 and 2019.

For 2020, there are proposals to further reduce the funding to P67 million.

During the hearing, SRA Administrator Hermenegildo R. Serafica said underspending mainly came from undisbursed loans from Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK), and procurement money set aside for the PITC.

Kasi nga daw binigay nila sa LANDBANK, hindi napautang. Binigay nila sa PITC para bilhin ang equipment, hindi nabili ng PITC… Parang nagkamali sila ng pinagbigyan na agency,” Ms. Villar said. (They gave the funds to LANDBANK, which did not lend. They funded PITC to buy equipment, but the PITC was not able to do so… it seems like they gave the money to the wrong agencies.)

Mr. Serafica noted that for 2016, P914 million went to infrastructure, P85 million to block farms, P48 million to socialized credit, and P90 million to scholarships.

The SRA also noted that the loan application process is difficult for farmers, leading them to tap usurers.

Ms. Villar recommended that LANDBANK simplify its loan requirements for small farmers, and that the SRA allocate the P300 million for PITC to the Department of Science and Technology (DoST) to develop equipment to help modernize the sugar industry. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Iloilo City taps PPP Center to assist in three projects

ILOILO City has signed an agreement with the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Center for assistance in three projects that it plans to offer as PPPs.

“We are very excited about this… we are interested first in entering into an arrangement with the private sector partner for the slaughterhouse, waste-to-energy facility, and (the central) market,” Mayor Jerry P. Treñas said during the Memorandum of Agreement (MoA) signing Wednesday.

The MoA provides a “framework for cooperation and coordination with the goal of developing a robust pipeline of PPP projects for Iloilo City.”

The entry of private investors, Mr. Treñas said, “will allow us to free a portion of the budget, which we will be able to use for social projects.”

PPP Center Executive Director Ferdinand A. Pecson said among the center’s responsibilities is ensuring that the partnerships entered into by the city are in the best interest of the public.

“Of course, kasama na rin yung (it also includes the) environment, even gender is going to be a consideration. It’s not just about the money, income or cost savings, it’s really a holistic approach,” Mr. Pecson said.

PPP Center Deputy Executive Director Mia G. Sebastian said the center has an in-house monitoring team that will help the city ensure that the private sector partner will properly implement the project.

“This is the most important phase of the project, to make sure that the value and benefits that we estimated during the development stage will indeed be delivered by the private sector at the implementation,” Ms. Sebastian said.

The PPP Center will assist the city government in developing feasibility studies and business cases right up to the bidding process. — Emme Rose Santiagudo

Saudi, Trump ‘jawboning’ suggests $75 top for oil

LONDON — Ask Saudi Arabia about its preferred oil price and the kingdom will say it has no target.

But a look at the pronouncements on the oil market by the world’s top oil exporter this year points to an oil price aspiration of around $70 per barrel LCOc1.

OPEC’s de facto leader probably would not mind oil prices rising to $75 per barrel and beyond.

But it has a problem. As soon as prices surge, U.S. President Donald Trump pops up, often on Twitter, to urge Saudi Arabia to lower prices.

OPEC has long understood the impact a few words said to reporters in a hotel lobby or over the phone can have on the price of oil, often called “jawboning” by analysts.

As a result, prices have been stuck between $60-$75 per barrel this year, despite financial market volatility and big oil supply outages, mainly driven by U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela.

OPEC accounts for about a third of world supply and comments from unidentified officials with insight into production levels not previously disclosed or forward guidance on OPEC policy can move prices quite significantly.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and Saudi Arabia do not have an official price target, but sources say Riyadh wants oil to be at least $70.

Verbal interventions by OPEC and Saudi sources this year appear to support this.

Only in April with Brent near $75, according to comments reported by Reuters, has an OPEC source with insight into Saudi production made a comment likely to cool prices. At least five other comments with oil between $70 and $57 have been price supportive.

“Saudi Arabia is committed to do whatever it takes to keep the market balanced next year,” a Saudi official, who asked not to be identified by name, said on Aug. 8, a day after Brent had fallen below $56, its lowest since January.

The comment helped to drive oil prices 2% higher on that day.

OPEC has been mostly trimming production since the start of 2017 and traders say they expect Saudi Arabia to reduce output further amid slowing global oil demand.

“The oil cartel is well-trained in the practice of lifting sentiment and stabilizing energy markets in times of trouble,” said Stephen Brennock of oil broker PVM of the Saudi comments.

“This time was no different and leading from the front, as ever, was the group’s de facto leader Saudi Arabia,” Brennock said, referring to the Aug. 8 comments.

Meanwhile, Trump has been urging U.S. ally Saudi Arabia to lower prices and make up for a shortfall in exports from Iran. His comments on OPEC have sometimes had an even bigger impact on prices than OPEC’s own.

“Gasoline prices are coming down. I called up OPEC, I said you’ve got to bring them down,” Trump told reporters on April 26, a day after Brent reached $75.60, its highest this year.

Oil fell 3% on that day as Trump’s comments gave impetus to a sell-off.

With prices falling below $70 and $60, the frequency of OPEC source comments likely to support prices has increased. With prices well below $75, Trump has eased back in his public pressure on OPEC. — Reuters

Banana exporters to meet with DA’s Dar to discuss industry dev’t plan

DAVAO CITY — The Pilipino Banana Growers and Exporters Association, Inc. (PBGEA) is meeting next week with new Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar, to discuss the implementation of the Banana Industry Development Road Map.

“On Aug. 22, we will be laying down some of the requests to the secretary, and hope those priorities will be granted and funded,” PBGEA Executive Director Stephen A. Antig said during this week’s Habi at Kape forum.

Completed in 2018 and signed by former Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol in December, the industry plan aims to address the pressing concerns of banana farmers as well as identify new growth areas for the industry.

Mr. Antig said the road map was not finalized in time for inclusion in this year’s General Appropriations Act.

“Unfortunately, medyo nahuli na (it came a bit late) when it comes to budgeting (for 2019),” he said.

He added that the industry hopes that talks with Mr. Dar ensure funding for the plan under the 2020 national budget. The industry also hopes to explore the possibility of tapping any available funding from the Department of Agriculture (DA) this year.

“We are really hopeful that the roadmap will eventually take off from the ground, not so much for the big players but also for the small and medium size banana growers who are the ones who really need help,” he said.

PBGEA represents the industry’s large corporate growers.

One of the priority projects under the road map is the establishment of an institute for banana research.

Medyo kulelat tayo (We are lagging behind), sad to say, the existing research facility of the government does not even have reagents,” he said, referring to substances used in chemical analysis.

The facility is expected to help address diseases as well as develop banana varieties other than Cavendish, the main export variety.

He said saba and cardava, both cooking bananas, are emerging export varieties.

Under the Philippine National Standard issued by the Bureau of Product Standards, Saba refers to the fruit known as Dippig in the northern part of the country, while Cardava, also referred to as Cadisnon, is bigger and “more popular” in the Visayas and Mindanao.

“A month ago, several buyers from all over the world were asking me for a supply of saban and cardaba. But there is a shortage… and one of the reasons identified is that there is no laboratory that produces tissue culture for saba and cardava,” Mr. Antig said.

Fresh bananas took up 7th place among the Philippines’ top export commodities in 2018 , with a value of $1.3 billion, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority.

Mr. Antig said so far this year bananas were the 5th-largest export as of the first half with an export value of $984 million.

“It’s really a huge jump, and you can see in these figures alone that China is really the market to watch out for,” he said.

The industry will hold an international banana congress in October. — Maya M. Padillo

Commercial fisheries, aquaculture output fall

COMMERCIAL fisheries and aquaculture output fell in the second quarter, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.

In its Fisheries Situation report for April to June 2019, PSA noted that production from both sub-sectors declined 2.4% and 3% year-on-year, respectively.

Commercial fisheries accounted for 24.6% of the fisheries sector’s total output, while aquaculture made up 48.1% to total fisheries production in the second quarter.

Output of the municipal fisheries segment rose 4.3% year-on-year. The segment accounts for 27.2% of total output.

Production of three major species declined — skipjack (5.6%), seaweed (2.9%), and milkfish (1.4%). Those that increased were yellowfin tuna (33.4%); round scad (10.7%); tiger prawn, (4.6%); and tilapia (0.6%). — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

EU imposes duties of up to 18% on Indonesian biodiesel

BRUSSELS — The European Commission on Tuesday imposed countervailing duties of 8% to 18% on imports of subsidized biodiesel from Indonesia, saying the move aimed to restore a level playing field for European Union producers.

“The new import duties are imposed on a provisional basis and the investigation will continue with a possibility to impose definitive measures by mid-December 2019,” the EU executive said in a statement.

Last week Indonesia’s trade minister said he would recommend to an inter-ministerial team a 20% to 25% tariff on EU dairy products in response to the EU targeting the country’s biodiesel, adding that he had asked dairy product importers to find sources of supply outside the 28-nation bloc.

The EU duties are another blow to Indonesian biodiesel producers after the bloc said in March that palm oil should be phased out of renewable transportation fuels due to palm plantations’ contribution to deforestation.

The European Commission, which coordinates trade policy for the EU, launched an anti-subsidy investigation in December 2018 following a complaint by the European Biodiesel Board.

It said its investigation showed that Indonesian biodiesel producers benefit from grants, tax benefits and access to raw materials below market prices.

The EU biodiesel market is worth an estimated 9 billion euros ($10 billion) a year, with imports from Indonesia worth about 400 million euros, the commission said.

Indonesia Biofuels Producers Association (APROBI) Chairman M.P. Tumanggor told Reuters that companies affected by the anti-subsidy duties will likely be forced to renegotiate their contracts with buyers in the EU and it may reduce the country’s 2019 biodiesel exports.

“We initially targeted 1.4 million tonnes in export this year to Europe. That will not be reached,” Tumanggor said. The exports would likely reach around 1 million tonnes, he said.

He said the association is in consultation with the government on a response to the EU duties.

Indonesian Trade Minister Enggartiasto Lukita told reporters the government will file an official objection within five days.

He also reiterated that the government is encouraging dairy product importers to start looking for new sources of supply outside the EU.

The ministry will start a program for Indonesian dairy importers to help them find replacements for dairy products they usually import from the EU with products from the United States or other countries, he said. — Reuters

The politics of hate

Every tyranny has used fear and hate to take power and to keep it. Coercion and the use of force have never been enough. A gun can only kill, but fear can make entire nations tremble, and hate lead them into committing the worst of crimes.

Adolf Hitler used anti-Jewish sentiments to stoke German fears so effectively he convinced even learned men, among them the philosopher Martin Heidegger, that their country and Western civilization itself were on the verge of annihilation and needed a strongman to save them. German fears for the future found in the Jews of Europe a convenient target of hate, and a “problem” that required a “final solution.”

In the hands of the Nazis, what was alleged to be a war for “the defense of civilization” gave birth to the worst barbarism in history: the systematic murder of six million men, women, and children by a people so steeped in philosophy, the arts, and the sciences it was once thought impossible for them to be inhuman.

Though labeled a Hitler from the mid-1960s to his dying day, Ferdinand Marcos was only a pale copy. Instead of the fear of being ground under the heels of more powerful neighbors, Marcos used fears of anarchy and revolution to convince the middle class, the technocracy, the Church, business, and his American patrons of the need to combat the “leftist-rightist conspiracy” with whatever means necessary.

The arbitrary arrests and detention, torture and extrajudicial killings that he unleashed under martial law had for objects of hate critical labor, student and peasant leaders, writers and journalists, progressive clergy, academics, and anyone else who could be labeled as “subversive.”

By the time Marcos was overthrown in 1986 his regime had detained 100,000 men and women, tortured several hundred, murdered nearly 4,000, and left the country in ruins. It was on these foundations of fear and hate that he built the dictatorship that destroyed the Republic he claimed to be saving and to the return of which the Philippines is still in constant peril.

As far apart as they were in terms of the number of their victims, Hitler and Marcos had in common the use of the politics of hate and fear to gain support and adherents as well as to intimidate the potentially critical into silence and inaction.

The same politics is in obvious display in the current regime’s drive to a tyranny worse than that of Marcos’, whose record of extrajudicial killings it had already surpassed by the second year of its problematic watch. But President Rodrigo Duterte’s free use of expletives against anyone who displeases him, and the hate and incitement to violence his regime trolls and old media hacks spew daily are not its only signs.

Even before he came to power, in 2016 the then candidate for president had already identified drug users and pushers as the objects of hate and elimination Filipinos should blame for the country’s ills and its uncertain future. He and his accomplices in the civilian and military bureaucracies have since added others, among them the “Yellows” and the independent press. But they have since settled on the “Reds” and the poor, disempowered and marginalized as their prime targets of hate, upon whom they have heaped blame for the country’s poverty, underdevelopment, social unrest, and political instability.

Deliberately heedless if not totally ignorant of the undeniable historical truth that rather than their cause, social unrest, rebellions and “insurgency” are the consequences of poverty and underdevelopment, the Duterte regime has launched a mini-equivalent of the Hitlerian all-out offensive against European Jewry. It has targeted for “neutralization” the farmers, workers, indigenous people, political activists, lawyers, journalists, human rights defenders, and even Churchmen and reformist officials whom it claims to be either members of Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) “front organizations” or co-conspirators in a plot to oust Mr. Duterte from power. In the process it has transformed not only Negros Oriental but also much of the country into the Philippine version of Cambodia’s killing fields.

Add to the regime’s lengthening hate list its most recent target: student activists whom it has accused of being either brainwashed or coerced into joining youth organizations by their professors and the academic institutions in which they are or were enrolled.

Supposedly to check the alleged recruitment of students into any of the dozens of youth and student groups in the country’s universities and colleges, and even into the CPP and the New People’s Army (NPA), the Department of Interior and Local Governments (DILG) is reviewing a longstanding memorandum of agreement (MOA) with state universities. It forbids, for perfectly valid reasons, the deployment of police personnel in state universities and colleges without the permission of their administrators.

If the DILG review leads to the rescinding of that agreement, the police and military, on the argument that it involves national security, can at will enter the campuses of the universities with which the MOA is currently in effect, among them the Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP) and the University of the Philippines (UP), which they claim are not only the hotbeds of student activism, but also the fertile grounds for CPP and NPA recruitment.

If that happens, police and military personnel won’t be hanging around only on the grounds of those universities or drinking coffee in their cafeterias, but will be establishing their presence in the very classrooms, laboratories, and libraries of every college in both universities where learning takes place. Though hardly equipped for the objective and competent assessment of, say, the validity of a lecture on political economy or plasma physics, they can label any professor critical of government, or his or her students, as recruiters for, or as already recruited members of, this or that “front organization,” or even the CPP and NPA.

What is worse is that police and military presence, whether publicly known or solely assumed, will serve as a hindrance to the untrammeled discussion of whatever subject is on hand. How thoroughly, for example, can a professor of literature in the University of the Philippines whose lectures are being monitored discuss Herman Melville’s novel Moby Dick as a critique of the capitalist assault on nature without being red-baited and targeted? (The whaling ship Pequod, in pursuit of the white whale of the novel’s title, is a factory that kills and processes for profit one of nature’s grandest creatures.)

The MOA the DILG wants to review and quite possibly rescind was signed and implemented for perfectly sound reasons. Far from merely being an attack on student activism, which is bad enough, police and military intrusion into universities will constitute a direct assault on the academic freedom the Constitution guarantees all state universities.

Even worse, it will legitimize the inclusion of academia and academics in the list of targets of the regime’s politics of hate and intimidation. The access to, and search for, the knowledge that is indispensable to the freedom, humanization, and betterment of society that is the true university’s reason for being will be among the collateral damage that the Duterte regime has often justified as necessary in preventing the loss of power that it most of all fears. It is, in fact, the regime’s own fears that drive the politics of hate that it has unleashed on these sorry isles. But that is small comfort to those whom, out of fear and hate, it will continue to harass, threaten, defame, and even kill.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

A legal education at cross purposes

Just guessing: there are probably between 16,000 to 20,000 students that annually want to enter law school. That’s before the PhilSat (Philippine Law School Admission Test). The PhilSat in 2018 cut that down to roughly 10,000 to 12,000.

Without PhilSat and staying at 20,000, historically a rough average of 5,000 law graduates will take the Bar. Setting the Bar passing average at 20%, around 1,000 will become lawyers.

That means, theoretically, around 19,000 people would probably have been better off being encouraged to explore other careers. From the beginning. Without wasting time and money.

And that is with a legal education many criticize (a bit unfairly, albeit with modicum of truth) as built on rote.

Now the Bar exams, believe it or not, are actually simple. And also designed to respond to rote studies. Bar questions are neither deep nor complicated.

This is not because the Supreme Court (SC) is composed of simpletons — far from it — , but because the SC is reasonable: the Bar exams are deliberately designed to give everyone a fair chance at passing. (I should know. I was an examiner once for political law and international law).

My point is this: Assuming it’s true that legal education today is rote, memorization tested by mere Q&A recitations and essay exams — yet 19,000 still fail to become lawyers — What does that tell you of the quality of law school entrants?

And yet people still complain about the quality of the 5% that do become lawyers!

Now, the reader may want to think about this: memorizing law provisions is much simpler than analytical/philosophical work that involves not only law but also socio-economic-political thought-philosophical learning.

So, does anybody see the disconnect here and with many of the proposals made at the recently concluded Legal Education Summit? At simple rote, 95% of those who enter law fail in the end to become lawyers, and yet some law professors are hoping to make law studies even more complicated.

But we can’t have it all: we can’t allow morally to have the bulk of those 19,000 people waste their time entering law school knowing the chances of them becoming lawyers are close to nil. But we can’t raise the passing rates because that will mean lowering standards and endanger society.

There is also the matter of legal academics talking at cross-purposes. Or even agreeing at cross-purposes.

The issue of “social justice” being one of them.

If the idea is based on that of Catholic social teaching relating to matters of human dignity and the common good, to “purify reason and to contribute, here and now, to the acknowledgment and attainment of what is just” (as Pope Benedict XVI puts it), resting on the cornerstones of human dignity, solidarity, and subsidiarity (Pope John Paul II), then such is all well and good, and indeed proper for legal education.

But 99% of the time today, when “social justice” is mentioned, usually it refers to the liberal progressive version, which means whatever it is that liberal progressives want — be it totalitarian State power to reengineer society, coercive wealth redistribution, LGBT+ “rights,” or same sex “marriage.” To build legal education on this ridiculous concept is insane.

The other is the Bar Exam.

Of course there is a need to improve it. But people again are talking at cross-purposes: there is indeed merit in a legal academe not dependent on the Bar results for increased quality, but such does not necessarily follow that the Bar exams have no positive contribution in developing and regulating traditional legal practice. In other words, developing a scholarly legal academe and developing ethical competent legal practitioners. Those are two strands of issues and to reform the Bar exam not recognizing these differing strands or purposes could be tragic.

The reality is if something has reasonably (not necessarily perfectly) worked for a long period of time, then we must be wary of making changes based on some new fashionable idea.

The problem is when you have legal academics getting all giddy over some “progressive” practice they saw abroad. Never mind if those other countries had been implementing the said changes only for a relatively short period of time, if discernible results can be analyzed, and whether such are actually appropriate for Philippine conditions. It is a good bet many of these novel or “progressive” suggestions fail this standard.

Finally, three additional points:

• the PhilSat has only been in execution for a few years and none of the PhilSat “babies” have taken the Bar — we don’t have the data yet if the program resulted in better educational and professional performance;

• the rest of the academe, particularly that leading to law school (i.e., grade school to college), should be surveyed, consulted, and analyzed; and

• the whole legal community, meaning the practitioners and not merely the academics, plus the concerned end user clientele (businesses, government, etc.) should be surveyed, consulted, and analyzed as well.

Legal education is just too important to be left to the lawyers.

 

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

A matter of perception

One’s perspective and attitude determines the way things appear. A glass of water is either half-full or half-empty. The donut is a pastry with a hole. The pessimist looks at the hole instead of the whole sweet treat. On another level, a persistent problem could be a situation — according to the optimist. It can be solved. It’s matter of perception.

The pessimist thrives on complaints — about everything. He sees what is wrong with others except himself.

In the extreme sense, a negative person would “…cut his nose to spite his face.” He would look for flaws in a friend and sabotage the relationship by being cold, closed, or critical. Or nitpick over small imperfections instead of seeing, appreciating, or accepting the complete person or object. He misses the values and sees the shadows.

The underlying problems could be a deep-seated insecurity masked by a superior self-righteous attitude, anger at the world or an exaggerated persecution complex. The negative individual lashes out at others, and would rather bring down everyone with him.

Misery loves company.

William Safire aptly describes pessimists as a “nattering nabobs of negativism.”

Let us observe a few composite characters who walk around with gray clouds hovering above them. In the service, travel, and hospitality industries, they stand out as the complaining customer, passenger, or guest.

The very fastidious person is uptight and walks around with a perpetual frown — probably caused by a chip (or a block) on his shoulder.

At a fine dining restaurant, the demanding connoisseur complains about the little, fine details of a gourmet meal. The tiny pale speck on a white mantle, the less-than-perfect slice of beef, the not-so warm baguette, a misshapen curl of butter, the tepid water, the insipid wine, and the barely visible marks of droplets on the silver cutlery and porcelain. There are valid things that are worth reporting such as undercooked food, too much salt in the soup, and the lipstick stain (of a previous guest) on the goblet, the draft of the air conditioner, the stray piece of plastic in the vegetables, and the slow service.

Even when the meal is divine and the ambience perfect, he finds something wrong — imaginary or real. To the despair of the exasperated maître d’ and the frustrated chef and the harassed waiters.

The boorish traveler gripes about the airplane — from the miserable food to the clogged air vents, narrow seats that don’t recline, itchy blankets, dim lights, broken arm rests, leaking ceiling, and the inflight entertainment. Worse, he looks for a reason to sue and collect from the airline for being upgraded against his will, for being bumped off, for lost or delayed luggage.

Of course, legitimate complains should always be considered and used to improve the service in the classes. There are proper ways of saying and doing things without being brash, abrasive, or offensive. A letter would be appropriate so that it is on record. Power trips (wielding power and name-dropping) are among the bad reactions of the VIP passengers. A person in a government position should not take undue advantage of others.

However, some querulous people like to gripe for the sake of griping. Sour grapes are bitchy people who crave attention.

Nothing ever fits. Nothing tastes right. Nothing feels good.

KSP — Kulang sa pansin. The Pinoy phrase aptly describes the attention seeker.

Disapproval is expressed in different forms — personal, public, verbal, nonverbal. There are variations of disapproval.

Constructive criticism serves a purpose. It creates public awareness about particular issues that need correction and how these can be rectified.

Media — print, TV and radio — have scathing editorials, sharp commentaries, acerbic opinion pieces and caricatures, and withering reviews. Most articles have valid concerns that enlighten the readers and audience.

Blind items and white papers of anonymous origin have malice. Rumors are crafted to smear reputations, damage or destabilize institutions. Innocent people get hurt.

Social media has both positive and negative sides. It may be uncontrollable, especially when trolls spread fake news that can destroy reputations and create havoc.

The gullible can easily believe tall tales, half-truths, and nasty gossip. The discerning reader sees through the innuendos.

People have used the popular methods of protest movements and spontaneous rallies to complain about urgent burning issues. Among them, justice and fairness, poverty alleviation, politics. Strikes have been held to protest oil price increases, to demand better wages.

The cause is a national issue. The forum is public — in front of the Senate or the House of Representatives. There are prayer rallies, as well.

However, in a protest rally, anything goes. Freedom of expression is being threatened. The guardians of the people have doused students and clerics in a prayerful crowd with water canons or disperse them with tear gas. All in a day’s work. They justify the methods with phrases such as “For their own safety” or “for keeping the peace.” The local authorities resort to blaming others — except themselves.

In a free society people can voice their opinions about everything. Using the proper forum, citizens can demand positive change, persuade and convince the leaders to act.

The only hitch in our system is the prevalent destructive attitude of the crab. The shadow of the crab looms larger than we would care to admit.

People should shed the self-centeredness, indifference, myopia and negativism that afflict society and the world.

It is time to do positive things to raise our consciousness as a people.

 

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

mavrufino@gmail.com