Friday, February 29, 2008

STATEMENT OF PURPOSE FOR 46-ARTIST ANTHEM ENTITLED,

More than a political statement, “Kaya Mong Maging DAKILA” addresses what is beneath this political mess. It is a coming together of creative forces, reminding all of the core Filipino values taught to us by our own history and those who came before us.

Without ignoring our different views on the present political situation, the 46 artists came together in agreement in the form of this song. Written and composed by Mr. Noel Cabangon, “Kaya Mong Maging DAKILA” is a firm culmination of what we discovered common among us. We are all hungry for change, thirsty for transformation. We are artists, this is our expertise. We state our message through our craft.

Over a year in the making, the song’s production was finally completed this month. Independently produced through small contributions from the community of artists and volunteers, “Kaya Mong Maging DAKILA” is a creative co-op of musicians and believers. The song will speak for us – over and above the din of political rhetoric.

Bob Dylan said it best, “Music should not reflect culture, it should subvert culture.” Sa Filipino: Ang musika ay hindi lamang nagsasalamin ng ating kultura, musika’y naghuhulma ng kultura. This song is our loudest voice. Our collective stance. We are artists, this is our expertise, therefore we say our piece on this stage. Listen.

“Kaya Mong Maging DAKILA” is not a mere reaction to the political mess. It has been an ongoing project meant to shape the “values-direction” that we believe we should take. This is simply a magnificent assertion of what we already know and what we have been taught. We know that we are truly a brave, honest and efficient people; that is what we are. If through generations we have forgotten our nobility, let this song remind you, “Kaya Mong Maging DAKILA.”

More than just a song about nobility: this is a song about OUR nobility.

Listen.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Kaya Mong Maging DAKILA!





The idea of heroism sounds a little daft in a culture of game shows and celebrity video-phone scandals. Irony has become such an accidental virtue that it has swung back to hit us in the head. Calling someone a “hero” is to invite sarcasm and self-righteousness. So here we are now, living in a time tragically bereft of them.

Heroes are products of circumstance. There are those who have become so through sheer will, but there are people who become heroes after being pushed to a dead end.

A wise man once said our past shapes our response to the present. This nation was formed on the sacrifices made by martyrs both immortalized and anonymous. A country need not be a colony of a foreign power— it can also be the fiefdom of its own leaders. We are a heroic people, but we can also be shackled by our own pessimism and apathy.

A hero resides in every one of us. It begins in the mind, with one thought that says it can be done. To do all things with pride and dignity, to learn from the lessons of history, to realize that the deeds of our heroes are not hackneyed fables but real, breathing examples of how to live our lives.

This is a song about nobility. Listen.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Simply Not Enough

The controversial NBN-ZTE deal sprouted into a multitude of issues ranging from the obvious anomalies to the in depth exposes on the rule makers of this ballgame. Like the Pandora’s Box, it has opened all sorts of evil that have been trying to evade the public eye for so long. The country has been witness to revelations of all sorts. We shook our heads when we learned that the $262M project cost ballooned into a $329M loan. We crunched at the thought of the shady cover ups of opposing camps in a tight race to swing public opinion. Spin doctors make remedies resorting to published wire tapped conversations, revelations of dirty laundry, blemished credibility even to as far as shattering friendships of innocent children. We feared for the safety of a witness ready to tell all and watched in the same interests with our favorite telenovela the Senate hearings that feed our curiosity with blow by blow account of a true to life mixture of action, comedy, horror, drama and fantasy unfolding. We groaned in disgust on the extent of greed that spans wide from the small fishes in the tank to the whales of the ocean and realized that the whole ecosystem is in fact contaminated with stinking corruption. We grew watchful and conscious of text messages, phone conversations, security cameras after having learned that the government must had too much of methamphetamine hydrochloride.

And the camera continues to roll. And we, the movie audience grow more confused as the plot thickens. While the church remains divided into where to lead its flock, the opposition and militants dance together into another “ouster” tune. Just as right wing elements and adventurers in the military attempts to win the crowd with patriotic agitation of their messianic intentions, the veteran players of traditional politics competes to hog the spotlight with brilliant posturing and statesman like images tailor fitted for 2010. Joey and Jun like carnival stars packaged as modern heroes are being paraded in schools and civil society functions to court movers of another attempt at Edsa.

The nation is in frenzy. Calls for ouster, snap elections, caretaker government, and kabayan for president barks at every street corner yet the broad masses remains in the sidelines. We remain spectators.

Some call it apathy while others see it as cynicism. Ideologues theorized it to people power fatigue.

Whatever you call it, the common folk would simply comment, “Pare-pareho lang sila (everyone is the same)”. I would rather use what my friends would term it, “different ass, and same shit”.

Unless concrete reforms that deal with the real issues of the people are raised and confronted, all the efforts will serve a lost cause. Unemployment. Rising Cost of Education. More classrooms and textbooks. Starvation Wages. Hunger. Extreme Poverty. Regressive Taxation. Embedded Corruption.

From the way things are going, it will not be different from the past Edsa that merely changed the moustache of an Asiong Salonga to the mole of a Nora Aunor. What remains are options to install a “kabayan” speaking moron or a pack of vultures waiting to feed on the nation.

Let us hope that the objective condition will not be cruel to limit us with a choice between evils. May we have the opportunity to write history with genuine freedom to choose what is truly beneficial for our country.

While everybody’s busy ousting a President, nobody is talking about the real issues.

Don’t get me wrong. I would party in the streets just to see that evil bitch fall but not to hand over on a silver plate a rod to the salivating monsters ready to beat the hell out of another generation of my country men.

-leni-
disturbed on a friday night

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

labo...

  • US$329M worth of NBN-ZTE Deal
  • 65 million Filipinos or 80% of the population are struggling to survive on the equivalent of US$ 2 a day. Based on the current exchange rate, thats around P 80/ day. (Ibon, Mar 2007)
  • Poverty treshold is pegged at PhP 41 per person per day for food and non-food needs(NSCB, March 2007). This means if you have more than PhP 41 per day, you are not considered poor. Let's say you are a balut vendor who earns around PhP 100 a day, you are not poor.
  • Almost 1 out of 2 Filipinos see themselves as poor.
  • 46% of Filipinos families (estimated 8.1 million families or about 40.5 million Filipinos out of the 2007 projected population of 86 million) see themselves as poor.
  • The cost of living is PhP 158 per person per day for food and non-food needs (NWPC, July 2007)
  • PhP 792 is the dailly cost of living for a family of 5 living in the National Capital Region
  • Minimum wage in the Philippines is PhP 362 a day. A large percentage of the work force earn below minimum wage.
  • 1 in 10 Filipinos has never gone to school (6.8 million) (Education Network Quick Stats, 2003)
  • 1 in 6 Filipinos is not functionally literate (9.6 million)
  • 4.1 million Filipinos are complete illiterate.
  • 1 in 3 children/ youth is not attending school(11.6 million)
  • 12 Filipinos die of dirty water daily (Cebu Daily News citing USAID, November 7, 2006
  • More than 90% of all sewage in the Philippines is untreated (Cebu Daily News citing the World Bank, November 7, 2006)
  • 10 Filipino women die daily from childbirth-related complications because they do not have access to emergency obstetric care. We have among the highest maternal mortality rate (estimated at 162 per 100,000 live births) in Asia and the world. (FIES, 20063,300 workers leave the country daily (Ibon, Mar 2007
  • Income of top 10% of the income decile is equivalent to 19 times that of the poorest 10 percent. (2006 FIES)
  • 3.5 million families or the top 20% of the income decile account for 52.8% or more than half of the total family income, while the remaining 47.3% was shared by the poorest 80% or 13.9 million families. (2006 FIES)
  • 7 out of 10 peasants still do not own land while less than 1/3 of landowners own more than 80% of agricultural land (Ibon, 2006)
  • Oil companies earn PhP 110 million a day in 2006 (Ibon, 2007)
  • 16.1 million Filipino workers or more than 50 percent of the labor force (in 2005) earn wages around Php5,000-8,000 (wages that hover around the poverty threshold), which translates to PhP33-53 per person per day (6.1 M farmers and fisherfolk and 10 M laborers and unskilled workers) (pegged at PhP41 per person per day).
  • 4.1 million Filipinos * (or 7.3% of the total labor force) are unemployed (NSO, 2005-2006
  • According to Cielito Habito, this is based on the new definition of unemployment which was introduced in 2005. Under the old definition, the current number of Filipinos unemployed is about 4 million.
  • 7.47 million Filipinos are considered underemployed (or 13.4% of total labor force). Despite the slight improvement from 2006 to 2007, the average annual unemployment rate is still posted at 10.8%, just a little lower than the previous year at 11 percent. (NSO, 2005-
  • 861,000 (NSO 2005-2006) jobs were created by the government at the end 2007 but revealed the following:
    142,000 household help or kasambahays
    116,000 in transport, storage and communication 111,000 in wholesale and retail trade o what we called the ambulant vendors
    103,000 construction workers
    34,000 in unpaid family labor
  • Every Filipino owes about PhP 44,000.00. (Debt Quick Stats, Freedom from Debt Coalition)
  • The total debt of the Philippines as of December 2006 is $118.19 billion.
  • Debt service is allocated PhP612.8 Billion in the 2008 National Budget.
  • 25 % of the Annual National Budget ends up in corruption. (PS Link)
    Philippines is the most corrupt in Asia (PERC, 2007)

You do the math. Question. Think. Analyze. Make a Stand. Be Heard.

Monday, February 11, 2008


We posted gang badoy's blog entry here at Dakila's site to give you an insight on the latest blockbuster blunder on the zte scandal and the decency of a simple man caught in the crossfire of thieves - moderate and otherwise.


Taken at approximately 545am today. Feb 7, 2008. Crucial witness to the scandal-ridden National Broadband Network deal, Rodolfo "Jun" Lozada finally gets some rest from the tornado he was in.Making a public narration of his inter-actions with former-Comelec Commissioner Ben Abalos, Jun Lozada flew home from HK to testify before the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee. Lozada narrates that Abalos kept insisting for him to tweak deals on the NBN transactions between ZTE-China and the Philippine Government. As an IT consultant, Engineer Lozada stated that this deal should be done through bidding of private companies but Abalos, according to Lozada, kept insisting otherwise. So ang nangyari, naging government loan ang arrangement dito. (this loan was signed in China a few months after -- witnessed by President Arroyo herself) An additional (approx) 130Million USD was added to the project cost. Abalos was to keep a huge kick-back from this deal. "protektahin natin ang 130Million ko..."-Abalos) Lozada said in his statement, "When I quit the project, the project cost was $262 million. So it was approved. I don’t know what happened then. I’m not imputing anything now. But when it was approved, it was already approved at $329 million." On the day he was supposed to testify before the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, Lozada flew to HK to avoid it. Subsequently, Sen. Enrile moved that a warrant of arrest be given out to Lozada for him to show up and narrate to the people what he knew while working with the project group in charge of the NBN-ZTE deal. After a few days, Lozada got a phonecall from Atienza saying that he should just come back to the Philippines but they will take care of him. (whatever that means) Right when he flew in from HongKong, Lozada was sneaked out by men who claimed to be sent by DENR Sec. Atienza. (Atienza later denies that he sent this order saying perhaps his name was just used) Lozada said his family was waiting for him outside but the men insisted in taking him anyway. Fearing for his life, he went with them and they drove him to the outskirts of Manila. They just drove around the SLEX, the C5 and finally they dropped him off to meet his family. According to Lozada, the men received orders thru a phonecall or a radio transmission that said, "Masyado nang mainit sa media, ihatid nyo na lang siya sa pamilya niya." After realizing that Jun was not going to come out from the airport after his flight, naturally his family filed official complaints and was covered by the media as his wife, Violet gave her impassioned plea to surface her husband. He finally got in touch with the religious groups (the combined association of religious orders) and requested for safety. Glad that he's safe now, Lozada told me this morning that he truly feared for his life when the men took him from the tube so he just followed them out. After a presscon at the La Salle Greenhills chapel with Bro Armin Luistro, FSC (President of the La Salle schools) he left for the Senate surrounded by nuns of different religious orders. He said all that he had to say. Everyone gaunt from fatigue, we convoyed the Senate's Sgt-at-Arms van that picked him up from the LSGH presscon. I was able to go all the way into the room that held him first, (another blog entry for how I managed to do that) we were escorted deep into the Senate building, far from the mob of the media. We were met by Senators Cayetano, then Aquino and 2007 FilmFest best actor Jinggoy Estrada. In any case, he sat down on the couch, ate quietly, watched himself on TV while quietly saying, "...sorry ah low-batt na ako." I asked him what he wanted to tell the young people while he's going through this. He said, "Wag niyong papayagan mangyari ang mga ganito............mahalin ninyo ang bayan...at ang bayan ay hindi lang iisang pamilya...basta ...wag papayagan ito...wag...naku, pagod na ako..."I asked the staff of Sen Cayetano to dim the lights of his office and lower the volume of the TV as I knew most of them were exhausted. As soon as they did this...the nuns and Lozada started nodding off. I left the room and took one last photo of this brave man and his veiled security guard. Rock Ed will keep working on making these issues known. I "live-googled" this info for all of you to see the human face behind what goes on. And the torment honest men face when faced with the multitude of the greedy powerful men and women in government. Rock Ed is still politically non-partisan, but it will continue to focus on making civic issues more interesting to the young. Political sides should be the personal choice of the person participating in Rock Ed's spirit. But on a personal note, this administration will have to explain this scandal soon, own up, and amend --otherwise I will take it that -- it has officially declared itself my enemy. (more photos on an album in my photos link above entitled, "Jun Lozada, witness")

Gang Badoy7Feb2008728amKatipunan Road

Saturday, February 02, 2008