Monday, May 5, 2008

Rice and Shifting Rage

The Philippines failed to buy 675,000 metric tons of rice - News

In panic for the loss of rice in local stalls and, consequently perhaps, her hold on the country, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, the President of a rice producing country, is virtually forcing other countries to sell her rice by offering outrageous prices. Now, she placed the Philippines on the map not only as the biggest importer of rice but also as the country that raised the price of rice worldwide. Anyway, it’s not her money.

She, a PhD in economics is simply beyond comprehension. Stalls sell rice at P40/kilo or less. NFA begs to pay more than P50/kilo for imported rice. This is the equivalent of P25/kilo of palay. It is willing to buy locally palay at only P17/kilo. Rice traders pay much more. She threatens to sue rice hoarders, but didn’t file charges against bodegas where sacks of NFA rice were found illegally stored.

In her campaigns she promised more food on our tables. Now she is desperately trying to put some rice back on our tables by importing the staple commodity, instead of helping local farmers produce enough of it.

Senate Inquiry failed to connect PGMA to the CTE-NBN anomaly – Bunye.

He may be right. It may not be necessary though.

The President’s men already implicated her by sending Jun Lozada abroad to avoid a Senate inquiry, by kidnapping him allegedly for his safety, and by carrying out an intensive but bungled cover-up operations that included a gift of P50,000 from a jobless man; Executive Undersecretary Manny Gaite, by gifting a nonentity a hefty sum of P500 thousand just to lessen his discomfort in a land where most of us can visit only in our dreams; Chairman Ben Abalos, by being omnipresent in CTE affairs even at the height of the 2007 elections; and Neri, by running to the Supreme Court instead of answering simple questions.

Even PGMA incriminated herself by firing Jun Lozada for being too talkative and not pliant enough and by giving him something to chew about at CHED, presumably, so he can’t talk; by not canceling the contract immediately; and by admitting that she knew that the contract was flawed even before she signed it. This list should include the nine associate justices of the Supreme Court by… well, just by being lucky. Jun Lozada is not in the list. His feather differs.

Now that the truth is out, the question that confronts us all, the Senate and the CDCP in particular, is what now? Ok, so the CTE-NBN anomaly is just the tip of the iceberg because of the Jocjoc Bolante Fertilizer scam, the P5 billion swine scam, the NFA imported rice found in bodegas of rice traders, the South Railway project, etc. The question is still, so what? What can we do about it? What are we doing about it? Incessant bootless Gloria bashing and investigations may only shift the rage.


Sunday, May 4, 2008

Pogi and Ganda Points and Federalism

Villar bats for P1-B fund to bring home OFWs in distress.

Why only now? We just hope that this is not just for 2010 pogi points. We also hope that this fund does not go in the way of the fertilizer scam.

President Arroyo earlier ordered Napocor to cut by half its charges to Meralco, apparently to pressure the latter into lowering electricity rates.

Pressure indeed! She is only buying time for herself at the people’s expense, again. What does her ally, Senator Joker Arroyo, say of this brazen attempt to gain ganda points? “This was done in 2003 and was corrected in 2005 because the public in the end had to shoulder the cost.”

This of course assumes that the Meralco will give in to the “pressure”. If it doesn’t, it would be Meralco’s gain, and our loss. Why doesn’t she directly help the poor by suspending the EVAT of small time power users?

How else does she buy time? ATM’s, Philhealth cards; pittance for the poor at Abra and P500,000 for the rich including Jun Lozada; billions in NFA subsidy for foreign farmers; and another P5 billion for the poorest of the poor, presumably, those who were hit hardest by her corruption and "economic gains".

Sen. Panfilo Lacson seeks probe into a South Korean investor’s alleged P400 million bribe.

The public cannot stand another Senate inquiry. Why embark on another inquiry when nothing came out of the much dramatized CTE-NBN investigation?

Federalism, for the Philippines

Senator Nene Pimentel must be kidding. Yes, that’s precisely what I mean - giving birth to a goat. Here’s a quote from a former US congressman, Newt Gingrich, on why his country is in near recession, “Big bureaucracies were created at the federal, state, and local levels; and they have been decaying in efficiency and effectiveness ever since.”

He might as well be speaking of the Philippines. Look at how national and local offices and legislative bodies practically drain our coffers. And we aren’t even into federalism yet!

Friday, May 2, 2008

Kidding is Giving Birth to a Goat

Senate President Manuel Villar Jr. doubts cheap medicines bill will work.

After years of working on it? At least he knows what we knew all along. The country is ruled by oligarchs. And by multinationals as well!

Villar said announcing possible changes in the Cabinet might alarm those in positions at present and start working better.

Start working better for whom?

Agriculture Secretary Arthur Yap earlier revealed that the government is mulling a cut in rice subsidies amid concerns of the country's fiscal position.

From near zero to nil! NFA has bankrupted the government subsidizing foreign farmers.

Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said the first priority of Mrs. Arroyo is to put food on the table for Filipinos, particularly the poor.

The durable Bunye (He survived the Hello Garci fiasco, didn’t he?) is right, for once. After seven years in the Presidency, it would be an accomplishment enough if Mrs. Arroyo could put back some food on our tables. Incidentally, her campaign promise was more food on our tables.

Federalism, for the Philippines

Senator Nene Pimentel must be kidding. Yes, that’s precisely what I mean - giving birth to a goat. Here’s a quote from a former US congressman, Newt Gingrich, on why his country is in near recession, “Big bureaucracies were created at the federal, state, and local levels; and they have been decaying in efficiency and effectiveness ever since.”

He might as well be speaking of the Philippines. Look at how much we spend on national and local legislative bodies. It could be intolerable within a year or two of federalism.