Friday, May 7, 2010

Willie Revillame threatens to resign from "Wowowee"

Willie Revillame
I read this news just today but I think this happened two days ago. Yes Willie threatens to resign if Jobert Sucaldito will not be fired by ABS-CBN. Here is the full article about this news:

The usual party mood on the noontime show Wowowee suddenly turned serious when host Willie Revillame rebuked TV and print entertainment columnist Jobert Sucaldito for supposedly badmouthing him and Wowowee all these years. “Alam n’yo ho dito sa ABS-CBN dapat kami dito ay isang pamilya. Alam n’yo ho meron sa DZMM na 2:00 to 4:00 (program slot) sa pangalang Jobert Sucaldito na tinitira n’ya ho itong show. Dito ho kami nagtatrabaho sa ABS, sa management sinasabihan ko lang ho kayo ba’t n’yo pinapayagan tirahin ng taong ‘to ang Wowowee?”

The host explained that Jobert supposedly made a comment on air claiming that Wowowee gets “dumb” people as its audience. “Alam mo, Jobert, dapat nga hinahangaan mo ‘yung programang ito. Araw-araw mo akong tinitira sa dyaryo, tinitira mo ko sa DZMM. Alam mo ba magkano ang kinikita ng Wowowee? Nakakatulong kami sa mga special children na ito [na] guests namin. Tirahin mo ito, sige! Wala ka nang ginawa kundi ako ang tirahin. Ako na lang ang tirahin mo, Jobert huwag na itong show.”

Willie also also questioned why ABS-CBN management is supposedly tolerating Jobert for speaking out against the show. “Huwag mong samahan ng pulitika ito. Ito ay pagbibigay-lingkod, kahit na mga 74 percent o mga bagsak ige-guest namin dito, kahit basurero gine-guest namin dito.” The controversial host said that the columnist has no right to criticize the less-fortunate people who become part of show’s audience.

Willie went on to ask Jobert not to attack the show's audience, which sometimes include special children, or people who have serious ailments. “Nananawagan lang ho ako sa management ng ABS, huwag n'yo naman ho payagan tinitira ‘yung show natin. Ang laki ho ng kinikita ng Wowowee para sa ABS,” Willie implored.

Willie let out an even tougher statement when he said that if the management won’t fire Jobert, he would resign from Wowowee. “Tandaan n’yo ‘yan. Wala na kayong ginawa kundi ako tirahin dito. Mabigat na ‘to sobra na. Ilang taon na ako nananahimik, tinitira ako sa dyaryo niyang Jobert na ‘yan. Tahimik lang ho ako, ‘yung Jobert na ‘yan pero tandaan n’yo, ‘pag hindi n’yo ‘yan tinanggal, ako magre-resign dito. Para ho sa tao ito. Para sa mga taong espesyal, para sa mga 75 percent ang grades. Ipaglalaban ko ‘yung mga batang ‘yan. I’m sorry sobra na ito.”

He also challenged Jobert to meet the sick kids every day because it is not an easy task. “‘Yan ang ginagawa ko, tinutulungan ko ‘yung mga ‘yon para malaman mo. Sobra na. Huwag mong idadamay ang programang ito dahil ang programang ito ang may-ari ang mga Pilipino hindi sa ‘yo ‘to.”

Willie apologized to the audience for his outburst, but he explained that he just had to point out to Jobert that he should not attack him, being a fellow Kapamilya. “Kasama ko na sa istasyon, Kapamilyang itinuring kami, pero tinitira kami sa loob ng ABS-CBN.” Willie then stressed again his frustration with management for allowing Jobert to get away with his comments.

The controversial host clarified that he is not being boastful, but he is just being himself. “ABS (CBN) management, gawan n’yo ng paraan ‘yan. Alagaan n’yo ang mga talent n’yo dahil nagbubuhos kami dito ng pagod, lahat. Huwag n’yo kaming [sirain] sa sarili naming tahanan tinitira kami,” he complained. Here is a petition article about Willie Revillame when Cory Aquino's video was rudely insulted.

Courtesy of ABS-CBN.com

Sponsor Links:

How to save money if you are an expatriate? - Health And Wealth

This is an article which I read last night and I would like to share it with you my fellow OFW or expatriates around the world. The title of the article is about How to save money if you are an expatriate? There are expatriates out there who forget to save money because they are thinking that having the present nice job is forever. Remember we are away from our families because we want to have a good salaries even we suffered the loneliness, abuses and discrimination in our foreign land which we work today. We accept all these humiliation in exchange for a better salary.

I am hoping that you my friends will someday be successful with your journey and become a model to all expatriates whom you know both financially and spiritually. Success begets success so start with small accomplishment in your life and start from there to become a very successful one.

Sponsor Links:

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Earn and Invest in Restaurant - Earn and Invest Money

As an expatriate, I always dream that one day I will have my own business in the Philippines. My friend has a restaurant business and one of his goals is to help generate jobs for our fellow Filipinos. If you want to Earn and Invest in Restaurant - Earn and Invest Money you should study first the foods that you want to offer for the customers. There are many restaurants out there, what makes your restaurant stand above them?

You need also to study management like how to manage the restaurant, finance and people. Many expatriates never prosper their business because they lacked one which I mentioned above. I have many advises from my other blogs like in health and wealth, Don't Worry Make Money and Earn and Invest Money so if you have time try to visit them. But whether you succeed or not in your first business, my advice is not to quit.

Sponsor Links:

Friday, April 2, 2010

Gilbert Teodoro: Light at the end of the Tunnel

Gilbert Teodoro: Light at the end of the tunnel
HINDSIGHT By F Sionil Jose (The Philippine Star) Updated January 10, 2010 12:00 AM

Gilbert Teodoro: I believe that the 1987 constitution was reactive. It was enacted for a single purpose; to transition the country from a dictatorship to a democracy. Unfortunately, it stopped there. It instituted checks and balances to the point that it completely disregarding synergy.

Being this ancient, I have a lot of hindsight, although of course we all know that hindsight is the lowest form of wisdom. I am old enough to have heard Quezon before World War II deliver those fiery speeches at the Luneta then divide Quezon City — named after him while he was still alive — among his mestizo friends.

I knew of how the late President Sergio Osmeña, a very honest man, would go down to Malacañang to check that the GI sheets in the grounds had not been pilfered. Then President Quirino, who was wrongly accused of having bought an expensive bedpan; and on to that greatest of all our presidents, Ramon Magsaysay, how the masa adored him! Then the disastrous regimes of Ferdinand Marcos, Cory Aquino, Erap Estrada, and now, Gloria Arroyo.

Being an unsinkable optimist, I’ve pinned hope on leaders like Raul Manglapus, Pepe Diokno, Emmanuel Pelaez, but they never got to be president.

The list is short — I had hopes, too, for Haydee Yorac, Richard Gordon, Oscar Orbos. Now, here comes Gilbert Teodoro, Jr.

I first got to know Gilbert when I saw him and his wife on one of those asinine TV talk shows in mid 2009. His answers to the vapid questions were sensible and well thought out. Aside from these qualities of intelligence, he exuded sincerity. I called his office and asked to see him and he readily agreed.

My first meeting with him took place at his office in Camp Aguinaldo months before he was proclaimed the administration’s candidate.

I knew Gilbert’s father; he was the head of the Social Security System — a major institution with billions; he was able to protect the SSS from the rapacity of Imelda. He was a judicious public servant, punctilious and efficient. Gilbert Senior was strict, and Gilbert Junior is grateful to his old man for his Spartan upbringing; this way early enough he understood the wellsprings of his father’s unblemished integrity.

But what does a rich boy know about poverty, which is the country’s gravest malady today? His answer: a doctor treating a leprous patient does not have to have leprosy himself to treat the disease.

Though the manor where he lived was in Manila, he commuted to Paniqui, in Tarlac to that irenic Ilokano barrio Matalaptap, where he got to live with the children and know the language.

As a trapo — he honors the label — he learned how it is to be cast in the dumps, the humbling punishment of being there, and the healing rise from the bottom of the pit.

Then, in those years that he served, first as a three-term Congressman, he saw the real face of poverty, and from this visceral experience, he has come upon ideas about how to alleviate it, not by institutionalizing the solutions but assuring, for instance, that the peasantry should be comfortable through entrepreneurship and by other methods by which farm incomes will rise.

Gilbert Teodoro has more assets — in contrast to the others who aspire for the job. For one, he topped the bar examinations, and has a master’s degree from America’s most famous university, Harvard. He is a colonel in the Reserve Force.

Integrity? Vicente Paterno, one of the superb technocrats whom Marcos recruited to work for him is most admirable; of all the Marcos inner sanctum acolytes, to the best of my knowledge, he is the only one who had come out to say mea culpa; this requires so much courage and humility as well. Shortly after I had that first meeting with Gilbert, Paterno confirmed my estimate of the man when he said, as quoted in the papers that he knew of only two Arroyo cabinet members who were really honest: Esperanza Cabral of the Department of Social Welfare, and Gilbert.

During the recent onslaught of typhoons Ondoy and Pepeng when so many sections of Luzon were flooded and hundreds were killed in the floods and landslides, Gilbert, who headed the National Disaster Coordinating Agency, was often criticized for not doing enough, and if he did something, it was too little and too late.

What the critics forgot is that Gilbert was merely the coordinator of that massive relief effort, that other agencies had not acted fast enough. Still, during this period, Gilbert worked very hard, spent many sleepless nights and those who saw him on TV noticed how haggard he looked.

As Gilbert explains it, that disaster was, for him a defining moment. That catastrophe and his unequivocal stand to the challenge of the Abu Sayyaf in Mindanao were the most difficult tests of his endurance and iron obligation to his office.

Gilbert’s wife, Monica, belongs to the affluent Prieto clan of Manila. She spent her young years in Switzerland and speaks impeccable French. Gilbert’s family and hers knew each other; it was in Manila where Gilbert met Monica in 1999. They have a son, Jaime, who Gilbert says, worshipped his grandfather, Teodoro Sr.

Monica is a member of the Lower House where she has already left her imprint by creating a committee for the welfare of children — as different from the committee concerned with the welfare of women. Focusing her attention on children, she has authored bills that benefit them, including one that raises the statute on rape from 14 to 16 years. In short, a man who has sexual relations with a minor, 16 years and below, is guilty of the crime of rape.

Gilbert admits to having disagreements with his wife but these are soon enough settled; Monica, he says, is headstrong — a streak that runs in her family, and is grateful for the stout support she gives him.

The election in May will certainly be very different from past elections. First, since it will be automated, it is expected that the results will be known quicker and there will be less chances for cheating. Second, thousands upon thousands of new voters will go to the polls — many of them students who, like the young everywhere, will not be conned by popular celebrities and dazzling showbiz gimmicks. They will certainly vote for candidates who, they feel, will give us good government. In the last elections, evidence of this burgeoning political maturity surfaced in Isabela, in Pampanga and elsewhere where politicians like Grace Padaca and Among Ed Panlilio were hoisted to pivotal positions on the basis of their exemplar personalities and not as flashy TV stars or media icons. This is how it should be, that we be proud of our leaders because they have something between their ears, that they can stand shoulder to shoulder beside other leaders of the Western world.

At the end of a recent talk at the Philippine Military Academy, I was asked by a cadet to forecast the future. I said my crystal ball is foggy and that I also suffer from astigmatism. Given these liabilities, even without that crystal ball, I can see so many changes coming. So much of these depend on the elections this year. I hope we will not usher to Malacañang scoundrels, thieves and nicompoops — and that I had my eyes on Gilbert Teodoro.

My announcement was greeted with applause.

I did a bit of inquiring. The military officers know what he had done in the two years that he was Defense Secretary — a post which he vacated to run for the presidency even if he didn’t have to. They know, too, that he did not take a single peso from the department coffers, that he protected the integrity of the bidding process.

For the cadets at the Academy, he offered academic freedom, but reminded them at the same time of their obligations wherein they were not free. As for the PMA honor code, if in the past, cadets who broke it were given a second chance, he saw to it that there would be no second chance now for those who violate the code.

Two generations ago, then Senator Pacita Madrigal Warns declared that “millionaires don’t steal.” Considering the Filipino experience, the declaration was met with disbelief and ridicule.

For the moment at least, we have a politician who has validated Manang Pacita’s statement. Gilbert said that he will retire from public service when he reaches 51. With his background and record, could he possibly be the man on a white horse — or atop a tank — who will be the ultimate modernizer? Abangan, for there is no assurance that he is the man. I am sure, though, that if he wins, he will try as best as he can not to disappoint us.

It was with this thought that I sought him again the other week. We met at a coffee shop at The Fort in Taguig. I asked these questions which, I know, are in the minds of so many of us.

You are listed as one of the richest in the Arroyo cabinet. What is the nature of this wealth, how did you come to it? What does money, which is power, mean to you?

GIBO: My wife and I both inherited from our late fathers. Perhaps my father would have wanted me to pursue a profession other than public service, something more gainful such as investment banking and the like, as he was in public for 32 years and my mother for more than 10 years. But that was not to be.

True, money is a route to power. But it is also a shield against the improper influences of power. It provides a degree of independence. Thus I am thankful to have been provided for by my family

That old cliché, blood is thicker than water, is in the minds of many Filipinos. You belong to one of the richest families in the country. How will you convince our people that your high office will benefit the people and not your family?

The strongest way to convince people that one’s family will not be unduly favored is through one’s platforms, policies, and actions. I believe in encompassing interests rather than narrow interests as defined in Mansur Olson’s book Power and Prosperity, which, by the way, is an excellent read. There are interests that transcend class and benefit the majority; these are the interests one seeks to buttress. The best evidence that I have my own views is that I embarked on my latest political journey aboard a new ship, making my own choices and decisions, not under the auspices of any familial patronage.

You served Marcos who plundered this nation. I presume you understand why it is necessary for this country to have a strong leader and, therefore, a strong state. Given your experience, what does Marcos mean to you?

As with any leader, history, including its biases, will be the judge. All leaders had something positive to contribute, and people must learn to winnow the chaff from the grain in reviewing a leader’s legacy. I believe the country, more important than needing a strong leader, needs strong leadership. This is the difference between what I perceive to be contemporary viewpoints, the failure to distinguish between the person and the institution. Oftentimes, strong leadership is built around an individual and stays that way, while I believe in creating lasting institutions with the clear position that my participation will be temporary.

Poverty is our foremost problem. How will you resolve it in the six years? Our political economy—will you reform it? What is your view on foreign investment?

One cannot resolve poverty. One can only set the stage for people to get out of it. If a government has for its primary purpose the resolution of poverty, solely or principally through government intervention, then it will be taking on a burden which is not fully its own, thereby creating a moral hazard. In the final analysis, only the individual can free himself or herself from poverty. A government can only create the basic conditions that will provide a favorable atmosphere to alleviate poverty.

My goal is to make the Philippines a favorable platform for investments both domestic and foreign, with some conditions, for example protection of workers’ rights, of the environment, of our farmers. The goal is to provide proper government investments, such as infrastructure, and policies such as transparency, to afford confidence in our economy and in our people — basic education reform. Thomas Friedman recently wrote an article entitled “Innovate, innovate, innovate,” where he says it is once again the age of innovation. A country to get ahead must innovate and invent something new that the world does not have and that it will need. The Philippines is not exempt from this reality.

Your program on health and education will require a vast outlay of resources. You need to increase revenues. Will you finally, really tax the very rich?

Tax reform both on the policy level and the administration level is extremely important. One must be able to balance between those two goals. I favor strict enforcement balanced by simplified taxation systems and perhaps some easing of tax rates. Our corporate tax rates are one of the highest in ASEAN. We have to study how we can make up the shortfall enforcement while easing tax rates to attract investments.

Certainly you are aware that your connection with an unpopular administration diminishes your chances at the polls. How will you defend your position?

It is I who should be the focus, not the administration. I have my own views, goals, achievements, and the capacity to govern. It is convenient, of course for the opposition to use the administration line of attack, but I believe our people will be able to see through such a tactic.

As a member of the administration party you will be beholden to the same people who are perceived to have wrought havoc on government. You will have to repay them because you are Filipino. Is this perception correct?

If I were to be running just to be a lapdog or a paid hack, I can very well be that with less risk. I will not risk a carefully guarded reputation and a legacy that I want our son to be proud of.

We will be hundred million people in less than five years and will have difficulty feeding this population. What are your ideas on population control?

Population management is essential, not merely because our resources are not limitless but also to reduce the risk of disaster. With the visible effects of climate change on our country, we have more vulnerable areas and fewer areas where people can stay. Population is a big issue. It is a problem that continues to fester while everyone gets lost in the acrimonious debate on which is the right institution to deal with it. So nothing gets done.

Granting that the cornerstone of population management is a moral choice freely and knowledgeable made by couples and that government should not make that moral choice, several things must follow because the debate must not stop there. We cannot pretend the problem does not exist. The following construct must logically follow: 1. There must be institutional responsibility and accountability. If government is not the proper agency to deal with the problem because it is a moral issue, then our moral guardians must take the responsibility and the consequent accountability for positive results, and not merely for information and education; 2. Government must support the choice freely made by a couple; 3. No to abortion.

As secretary of National Defense you have had a first hand view of the military. What is the most important problem in the military and how did you handle it? What does this experience mean to you?

There are two major problems of our military: resources and doctrines. In terms of resources, there is a serious shortfall both in manpower and equipment. I trace this back to the failure of our country to properly plan for and build up a credible AFP since our independence after WWII. We have low defense spending and a force that is small for our country’s geographical make up.

In terms of doctrines, we still have the mindset of addressing ideological wars in a conventional sense, while we should be building up our small unit expertise for internal security and law enforcement purposes. This though is now being introduced by the AFP hierarchy. Recent literature, particularly with what is known as 4G warfare or fourth-generational warfare, preaches that although territory is important, the key element now is people, or a single person. You have to arrest that person to stop a security situation. The best example is Osama bin Laden. Here you have Bravo, Kato, Parad, and their ilk. This is what we have to re-engineer our AFP to deal with.

Surely you know of the Ampatuans, the clan wars in Moro Mindanao. What can be done about it? What have you done?

It would have been militarily impossible to disarm a sizable armed threat while facing a restive MILF during the time the MOA-AD issue was being heatedly debated, and amid irresponsible threats of some local and national leaders which led to actual skirmishes, creating a volatile and confused situation on the ground, At that time our troops were also focused on the repeated kidnappings in Sulu and in the Zamboanga peninsula. Now because of the ceasefire with the MILF we can disarm. But the question is how long we can maintain our current police and military strength in the area so the equilibrium holds. Your guess is as good as mine.

Granting that the two rebellions will be diminished under your term, how will you insure that they will not recur? What will you do with the armed men in both organizations?

There is one essential thing that must be done so as not to allow security situations to recur: effective deterrence. This is achieved through a combination of various things like presence of police and military personnel in the area for an effective length of time, infrastructure development, capacity building of LGUs, livelihood opportunities; education, and such other empowerment measures. But the underlying factor is the disarmament of non-state armed groups.

You are in favor of changing the Constitution. What are the main provisions that you want changed by a constitutional convention or a constituent assembly?

I believe that the 1987 constitution was reactive. It was enacted for a single purpose; to transition the country from a dictatorship to a democracy. Its tactical objective was to dismantle Marcos mechanisms. Unfortunately, it stopped there. It instituted checks and balances to the point that it completely disregarding synergy. It is a constitution which breeds false expectations because the state guarantees a proverbial heaven on earth.

We must ingrain into our people’s mindset that our political system must evolve with the times. It must effectively address the operational environment. It cannot be stuck in the quagmire of its own making. Although we must be equally vigilant and steadfast in preserving the Bill of Rights and the independence of the Judiciary. I am in favor of a freely elected constitutional convention that will have no other mandate but to study and to consider the subject.

Our relationship with the United States is the cornerstone of our security policy. What are your thoughts on this relationship? Should the Visiting Forces Agreement be renegotiated?

Our relationship with the United States is a cornerstone of our policy, as our relationships with ASEAN, the OIC, and other regional and multilateral groups, and our bilateral relationships as well. Our bilateral relationship with the United States has transcended the traditional diplomatic, economic, and military spheres but has permeated into this country’s cultural and social fabric in the informal sense. We have shared ostensible political values such as the different constitutionally guaranteed freedoms and the concept of democracy. It is a strong relationship both in the formal structured sense and the informal personal sense.

We should leverage this relationship as we should our relationship with other countries, identifying mutually advantageous and mutually beneficial points of cooperation, after a transparent and arms-length realization of each country’s conditions. It is a paradox that one of the most effective deterrents against conflict between states is close interaction between their armed forces—soldiers do not make wars, politicians do. The VFA is such a mechanism. Recently we have seen it at work in the non-traditional military sense, in what we call HADR—humanitarian assistance and disaster response. In typhoon Frank last year and in Ondoy, Pepeng etc. this year US troops immediately came to our assistance. Thus the VFA should be judged from a broader perspective than just criminal jurisdiction. Second, the VFA is merely an implementing treaty of Mutual Defense Treaty which embodies both countries’ bilateral military obligations. To sum up I am in favor of more VFAs with other countries.

China’s growing influence in the Asian region and the world is increasing. What would our relations with China be? With China’s claim on the Spratleys? Our rich and powerful Chinese minority?

Our connection with China is strong, both in an economic sense and in a cultural sense. It is perhaps without fear of rebuttal that I can say that within ASEAN, save for Singapore and maybe Thailand, the Philippines is where the Chinese have assimilated with the least prejudice and with the least difficulty.

China’s rising economic power is a reality of the world. Its economic growth is a welcome development because it has been a strong economic partner of our country. We must enhance our economic relations with China in a sustainable way. Yet the geopolitical realities still remain — China has embarked on an unprecedented military build up. It has blue water naval capabilities to include aircraft carriers and it cannot say that Taiwan is the sole focus of such a military enhancement. It behooves China’s leadership to be transparent and to be forthright in stating its military objectives. It must also be clear in its policy regarding states such as North Korea, which are popularly believed to be under its influence. The Philippines must assert its sovereignty realistically and responsibly in accordance with legally supportable aspects of international law. We must be steadfast in this.

Some two decades ago, James Fallows of the Atlantic Monthly postulated that our “damaged culture” hinders our development. If culture both as anthropological and aesthetic concept is a factor in the building of a nation, how will you handle it?

I believe that the effort to disregard the rich cultural diversity of our country led to a lot of damage. The single language, single ideology line of nation-building has not been a positive development for our country. It has bred bigotry and division.

I believe that we must accept that we are diverse. We are an archipelago, for heaven’s sake. We must encourage that diversity and teach each other what we are, so that a culture of tolerance and respect evolves. Even the contributions of our colonizers such as languages, both Spanish and English, must be appreciated and their use enhanced. The world itself because of increasing interconnections is getting increasingly culturally aware. We should be the same in our own country.

Is your wife an important factor in your decision making?

Yes, any member of one’s nuclear family is an important element of decision making for two reasons: trust and the fact that your decisions affect them, too. They are an important source of feedback, as are other groups in your political atmosphere. But at the end of the day, the reality is that they are one, rather than the only, element in decision-making. The determining factor should be conscience and the appreciation that several factors need to be weighed in arriving at a decision.

Among the many insights into the Filipino character, which our history unfailingly illustrates, is that, despite our faults, we are a talented and heroic people with a revolutionary tradition. You are a student of history, what makes a Filipino a hero?

A hero takes extraordinary steps, with total disregard for personal safety and security, for the benefit of others.

Heroism bears the essence of individuality in the context of using it for collective good. Thus the soldier who dies while saving others in a flood, the seven-year-old who saves his younger siblings from an inferno while his parents are away, to the schoolteacher who spends her own money to buy food for her students who had to be temporarily housed in the public school because of the flood — they are all heroes.

What is your vision for our country?

I want to see a Philippines that is peaceful, has strong institutions of governance, has modern infrastructure, has food security, is technologically and educationally advanced, with a people who have the capacity to make rational decisions for themselves, true freedom of thought and of expression, a power in Southeast Asia and perhaps the Asia-Pacific, ecologically rich and diverse, in short a country where our people would want to remain.

Sponsor Links:

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Open Letter for All Expatriates

I been stuck on the news, that one of our colleague, who been working here for 25 years here in Saudi Arabia, and recently retired , has die of heart attack.

It sadden me because, of the lost of another good person, who dedicated his whole life working and serving the company with all his heart and talent.

It also sadden me to know that when he die, he is as poor as when he came here.

He lost his wife while he was here, for a reason that i don’t understand, he spend most of his life working here and still when he retires, he cannot even live comfortably with his pension.

A question stuck my mind, Is working here in foreign country is really the solution to, for your family to have a decent life? Or it is the reason for family break-up?

We heard a lot about the children, lost their way because their parent are working abroad, children have been abuse, and so on and forth....!

And it all boiled down to one reason, our country men have been forced to look for greener posture outside the country because nobody guide them and educate them, no employment opportunities and even the government lied to them by branding them as the new heroes, instead of helping them educate on the important of financial education.

I’m so grateful, that my mindset has change dramatically, when I join the CREATE ABUNDANCE, my purpose in life has been renew, my goal has been clearer, my mission of spreading financial education is not only a dream but a reality. And now it is not only “MY” but “OURS”.



Help us spread the financial education throughout the nation and world. And bring back our OFW to their family.


Wilson A. Vina

Core team

Sponsor Links:

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Brief History of the Philippines

This brief history of the Philippines, told by a philosopher of ‎the streets, is probably closest to the truth about ourselves.

WHAT'S the big deal when Lapu-Lapu killed Magellan in ‎‎1521? Nothing much really. During Lapu-Lapu's time, Mactan ‎was strictly tribal. Think small, guid. There were no big ideas ‎such as nationalism or geopolitics.

Lapu-Lapu was simply the local siga-siga and Magellan was ‎the culture-shocked Westerner, a native first-timer in the ‎
exotic east. We lionize Lapu-Lapu as a hero and nationalist. ‎Ang totoo, mayabang lang si Lapu-Lapu. But this defeat of a ‎foreign invader did not make a Filipino nation. The timing ‎was wrong. And don't you believe that bull that Spanish ‎explorers came to find spices of the East to improve the taste
of their bland cuisine. Their hidden agenda was to spread ‎their kingdom through colonization, the euphemism for land ‎grabbing.

During the 333 years of Spanish rule (1565-1898), hundreds‎
of rebellions were waged by native firebrands in many parts
of the archipelago. Not one succeeded. Our rebels were ‎either caught, garotted, or simply ignored by the
Commandante as nuisances. Puro malas!

The execution of Rizal in 1896 was a traumatic experience ‎for Filipinos. Those who read Rizal's Fili and Noli were ‎incensed by the abuses of the church and state regime
of the Spaniards. Emotions ran high, from Aparri to Jolo.‎
The critical mass needed for nationhood was formed. At last ‎we could rebel as a people, as a nation.

The Katipunan did their battle heroics, originally led by the
firebrand Bonifacio and later on by the crafty Aguinaldo. ‎With more Katipunan charges (Sugod mga Kapatid), freedom ‎seemed possible. Between 1897 and 1899, stealth, betrayal, ‎and skullduggery bedeviled our prospect for independence.‎
The Aguinaldo and Bonifacio factions engaged in ugly ‎infighting (the talangka mentality) resulting in the execution
of Bonifacio.

Meantime, an American Admiral named Dewey entered ‎Manila Bay and defeated a luckluster Spanish navy. ‎Aguinaldo reneged on the pact of Biak na bato. He resumed
the revolution by proclaiming the Philippine Independence in ‎Kawit. June 12. From whom? We were still under the ‎
Americans & Spaniards at that time.

Meanwhile, American and Spanish soldiers held a moromoro"‎
battle in Intramuros with the Spaniards surrendering. ‎Aguinaldo's republic and his KKK patriots were left out and ‎ignored. Naisahan tayo... Minalas na naman.

The Filipino-American War broke out. Tall American soldiers ‎looking like Clark Gable chased and battled the outlawed ‎Filipino revolutionaries, ending in the capture of Aguinaldo in ‎Isabela. Thanks to the mercenaries from Macabebe. This is
the second time those Macabebe turn in their own kind, first ‎with the Spaniards. This was the mother of all kamalasan.

At that time, our population was 8 million. The gap between
the rich and the poor was estimated at 30% middle-class ‎and rich, 70% low-class and rural poor.

During the Commonwealth period (1901-1941) which ‎followed, there were lots of learning on democratic ‎principles, its structure and governance. Technology ‎transfers were done on Constitutional Rights, Public ‎Education, Transportation, Health, International Trade and ‎Industrialization. The Americans turned out to be good ‎tutors. Filipinos also went crazy over American brand ‎products like Libby's corned beef and Portola sardines, ‎Hershey's Kisses and Wrigley's chewing gum, Camel ‎cigarettes and Model T Ford for the hacienderos of
Pampanga and Iloilo.

Hollywood films made Pinoy males fantasize on Jean Harlow, ‎Betty Grable, and Mae West. Thus, Filipino colonial mentality ‎began. We fondly called this period Peace Time. By the way, ‎American troops massacred innocent people in Balangiga. ‎Mga hayop din pala!

‎1941. Disaster! World War II! After attacking Pearl Harbor,‎
the Japanese army invaded our country defeating the
combined American and Filipino forces (USAFFE). General ‎McArthur, the proud and handsome Army chief, fled to ‎Australia at the height of the battle. Then the Filipinos ‎marched to Bataan as prisoners in the Death March.

For four miserable years we suffered the sadism of the
Japanese militarists' rule. Torture, famine, and death were ‎for us, the order of the day.. Kawawa. Malas na malas!

The American forces returned in 1945 to liberate the
country. McArthur, General Superiority Complex himself, ‎sporting Ray Ban sunglasses and corncob pipe, swaggered ‎back to Manila. Piqued at his humiliation in 1941, McArthur ‎ordered the bombing and shelling of Manila till kingdom ‎come. So he can get back at the Japs for wrecking his R&R ‎place in Asia. Malas na naman.

The whole-wide expanse south of Pasig - from the Post ‎Office to Vito Cruz, including all of Intramuros - was ‎pulverized. Manila was the most devastated city of World ‎War II next to Warsaw, Poland (Tokyo was not damage that ‎much because they surrendered after 2 atomic bombs). Our ‎culture, our heritage, and historical assets (seven beautiful ‎churches in Intramuros, hundreds of elegant Art Deco and ‎neo-classical architecture in Paco) were sacrificed recklessly ‎and completely erased from the face of the earth. Sayang na ‎sayang!

In 1946, we gained our independence from the Americans. ‎We were a free nation at last (because the Americans saw ‎how much it will cost to rebuild the devastations, better to ‎let pinoys do it themselves)! A true Independence Day for ‎us, July 4th 1946 not the June 12th that Aguinaldo declared ‎and Disocado Macapagal (Marcos did initiate change, but ‎Macapagal) celebrated. We had enough exposure and ‎lessons on how to govern a democratic country, the first in ‎Asia. Our population was 17 million. The dollar exchange ‎was US$1 to P2.

But there was still no peace from 1947 to 1955 (not 1966 ‎because Pres. Ramon Magsaysay was successful putting it ‎down as Sec. of National Defense before becoming President. ‎In late ‘60s, it is the CPP by founder Jose Maria Sison). A ‎widespread communist rebellion led by Taruc, the Lava ‎brothers, and its armed guerillas called Hukbalahap ‎‎(supposed to be Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa Hapon) waged ‎bloody war with government troops and turned out to be ‎nothing but bandits in disguise. Filipinos killed kapwa
Filipinos. Malas na naman!

Our politicians and bureaucrats learned to engage in graft ‎and corruption (What are we in power for?) - such as the
war surplus bribery, the Tambobong wheeler-dealing and
the Namarco scam. Talo nanaman!

Six presidents were elected to manage the country from ‎‎1947 to 1972, under the democratic system. They were ‎Presidents Roxas, Quirino, Magsaysay, Garcia, Macapagal, ‎and Marcos.

Economists looked back to the decades of the 50s and 60s ‎as the best years of the Philippine economy, surpassing ‎Asian countries. The nostalgia was naiveté, useless ego-‎tripping. The gap between the rich and the poor remained ‎big. 30% middle-class and rich, 70% low- class, rural and ‎urban poor. We were 27 million people. US$1 was to P4.

During the late 60's, the Maoist communists led by ‎Commander Dante intensified its drive to overthrow the
government. Marcos added fuel to the fire by creating a ‎communist spook. Violence and mayhem ruled the streets.‎
The youth went up in arms! Martial Law was declared in ‎‎1972 and Marcos became dictator. Freedom of assembly and ‎of expression went out of the window.

What followed were years of dictatorial abuse, crony ‎capitalism, shackled free enterprise, near economic collapse ‎and a demoralized middle class. The gap between the rich
‎(30%) and poor (70%) remained in a quagmire. Pareho rin ‎pala ang situation.

Our population was 40 million. Exchange rate was US$1 to ‎P7. Kawawang kawawa! Malas na malas! In 1983, Ninoy ‎Aquino, Marcos' exiled arch rival, was assassinated upon his ‎return. Push came to shove. Cardinal Sin engaged the people ‎on to protest. Outrage, self- pity, shame and fury raged and ‎rumbled like a tidal wave, culminating in the incredible ‎People Power Revolution. The very sick and obstinate Marcos ‎fled (hijacked by Americans from Clark) to Hawaii (sounds ‎like Paoay) where he died. His alleged millions of stolen ‎dollars intact and unresolved, up to now... peso to dollar ‎exchange is now US$1 to P20 (in the black market, it was ‎P30-35).

But People Power was our shining glory! The whole world ‎applauded our saintly courage, our dignified defiance, our ‎bloodless solution to expel a dictator. We were the toast of ‎all freedom-loving countries, the envy of all oppressed ‎people. In 1986, we placed Cory Aquino, Ninoy's widow, in ‎Malacañang. She was virtuous, sincere and full of good ‎intentions for the country. But what happens under Cory?

Endless brown-outs… living in a situation where portable ‎generators was a must and monopolized by Cory's relatives ‎who threw out her Energy Department down the Pasig River. ‎The land reform she professed and promised was going good ‎at first, but after she found out her Hacienda Luisita will be ‎greatly affected, that program went down the Pasig River ‎too! No wonder that river is so polluted. (Land reform will ‎not uplift the pinoy nation if the attitude of the majority of ‎the beneficiaries does not change from get-rich-quick ‎mentality)

Coup attempts by Honasan, power struggles, political ‎squabbles, and the infighting for juicy deals harassed the ‎amateur Cory presidency. So nothing happened. No progress ‎took place. The economy was still bad. The poor suffered ‎more and more. Sure we got democracy back on its feet. But ‎the Filipino resolve didn't happen. People Power pala was ‎‎"ningas cogon" power. (Honasan coup of 1989 did us in. The ‎economy was picking up fast after 1986 People Power ‎despite the brown-outs. We more or less recovered ‎economically only after 10 years because of that most ‎serious coup)

Sayang na sayang! Tha gap between the rich and the poor ‎remained at 30% (middle-class and rich), 70% (lower-class ‎and rural/urban poor). Exchange rate was US$1 to P25. We ‎were 55 million people.

In 1992, Cory's choice, Fidel Ramos, West Pointer, soldier, ‎and hero of People Power won the presidency. He had the ‎bearing, the single-mindedness and the vision to bring the ‎country to a tiger economy status. Ramos was a terrific ‎salesman of the Philippines to the world. He was able to ‎hype a climate of good economic grounds. He removed ‎barriers to progress. He was an apostle of privatization. His ‎mantra was, less government, more private sector! Fidel hit ‎the right note and the economy went on a roll. Fidel wanted ‎to run for reelection but failed to swing the cha-cha (an ‎idiotic acronym for Constitutional Change) so he could run ‎again.

In 1997, the Asian economic crises struck, triggered by the ‎bursting balloon of the hyper-speculative Bangkok economy. ‎The financial debacle created disastrous effects in the ‎investment institutions of Manila, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur,‎
Hong Kong, Seoul, and Taiwan. All the Ramos gains ‎evaporated into thin air. Malas na naman! The poor, specially ‎Mang Pandoy, were poorer than ever. (Manila was the least ‎affected by this crises because we have the least foreign ‎investment among ASEAN, so not much investment to ‎withdraw by foreign investors, but Erap did not capitalized ‎on this fact – so we suffer as well because Erap was sleeping ‎on the job)

‎1998 was showbiz time! The Erap para sa mahirap show ‎opened to the chagrin of Makati Business Club. Pasensya na ‎po kayo, mga elitists. Democracy is also weird. The choice of ‎the masa must be respected.

Catastrophe! Chavit Singson exploded jueteng bombs! For ‎days on end, a nation sick in the stomach, sat through ‎primetime TV aghast at watching the bizarre drama of ‎alleged bribery, gambling, drunkenness, womanizing, deceit, ‎and corruption. A lantern-jawed witness and a sexy ‎intelligence "asset" hogged the witness stand.

Viewing the scandals on TV was like watching dogs mating in ‎the public square. It's embarrassing but you can't take your ‎eyes off them.

The impeachment trial serialized on TV was riveting. The ‎defense lawyers, some wearing a canine sneer (ngiting aso) ‎insulted our intelligence often. (Lokohin n'yo ang lelang ‎n'yo). The whole country was stinking to high heavens. The ‎prosecution produced its own witnesses - Clarissa Ocampo, ‎Emma Lim, Carmencita Itchon and many others.

Idols with feet of clay fell crashing into the dust. Those who ‎voted against opening the envelope were legalese, ‎procedural, sounded intellectually brilliant, but also ‎heartless and thick-skinned. They couldn't fathom the ‎heartbeat of the nation. Cardinal Sin, aging and sickly, called ‎on the people again. It was People Power II!

Same humongous and collective umbrage, same ‎brinkmanship, and same staccato prayers! Generals Reyes ‎and Villanueva simply joined the mammoth EDSA crowd. No ‎US jets from Clark this time. Erap was out! Gloria was in!

Hope springs eternal. Malacañang regained its honor and ‎dignity. Protocol was observed. Absurdity was gone. ‎Grammatical English was back. Now the first gentleman ‎should have been named Mr. Pakyao, he has the monopoly of ‎graft behind Gloria's back.

‎2001. More catastrophies! The peso plummeted to a ‎horrifying US$1 to P51. The Abu Sayyaf (extremist ‎ideologues, or mindless barbarians?) were into kidnapping ‎and terrorism, gaining worldwide notoriety. Businesses are ‎still closing shop. Thousands of workers are being ‎retrenched. Prices of food and gasoline are very high. ‎‎(Galunggong is P80 per kilo!) Our streets became permanent ‎garbage dumps. Maggots multiply to spread disease. Our ‎communities stink.

Again, the whole nation was witnessing sickening crimes ‎attributed to people in the government. Talo na naman! We ‎are now 75 million people but the gap between the rich, 30% ‎‎(middle-class and rich), 70% (lower-class and rural/urban ‎poor) remains the same for one century.

When will this end? It's been more than 350 years since ‎Lapu's- Lapu's victory, 100 years since Rizal martyrdom and ‎we're nowhere as a people, as a nation. Malas pa rin!

Some wise guy said the Filipino is a damaged culture. Bully! ‎And what do you call other foreigners. They used slaves in ‎their plantations, and landgrabbed from the natives! What ‎should we call such cultures? Predatory Culture? Bully ‎Culture? What about that other country? How many ‎countries did it put under the barrel of its gunships, so they ‎could gloat that the sun never sets on their empire? What ‎shall we call this culture? Sahib culture? Gunga Din culture? ‎C'mon, give us a break!

We Filipinos have strengths and endearing values. We are ‎Christians, God-fearing, and peace-loving. We are patient ‎and tolerant (matiisin to a fault). We are musical. We sing ‎our blues away. We have a sense of humor. We concoct and ‎text Imelda hyperboles and Erap malapropisms. We learn ‎fast because we are bilingual and highly educated. We've got ‎thousands of MBA's and PhD's in economics and ‎management from AIM, Wharton, Harvard, UCLA, etc. (most ‎of them now overseas).

We've got a surplus of technocrats for nation-building. We ‎want to work if there are vacancies. We want to go into ‎business if we have the capital. We want to obey the law if ‎the law is being enforced. We want to live and die here, if ‎there is peace and order.

But, but, and but. We have many shortcomings. We are ‎immature in our politics. Given a choice on whom to elect: a ‎handsome pabling movie star or an honest and brilliant ‎political scientist, we'll vote for the movie star.

No brainer tayo dito. Talo! We have many stupidities. Like ‎dogs, we pee (Bawal umihi dito) on walls and tires. Our ‎driving is suicidal. Our service quality is inferior.

Clerks at City Hall act arrogant. Sales ladies at department ‎stores don't know their product features. No exchange No ‎return even if it is defective, you have to argue for it. ‎Tourists get mugged by thugs in uniform. Police lay traps so ‎they can catch you and ask for bribes. What's wrong with ‎us? We don't have a great leader. And good governance. (In ‎Singapore, Lee Kwan Yew did it. The constituency profile is ‎similar to Filipinos). Admittedly, this country is impossible, ‎tiresome, and frustrating.

But it's the only country we've got. We live and die here. Will ‎we ever see the dawn?

Dios na mahabagin, kailan pa kaya? Ubos na ang aming luha. ‎Katog na ang aming mga tuhod. Tuyot na ang aming utak. ‎Hingal na ang aming puso.‎

Dios na mahabagin, isalba Mo po kami. Hindi po kami ‎talunan. At lalo pong hindi kami tanga. Sunod-sunod lang po ‎ang malas.

NOTE:
Dati Kastila, Amerikano, Intsik, Hapon at ngayon may ‎Koreano pa.

Mahabagin Diyos, Nasaan Ka PINOY?‎


As this article correctly pointed out “People Power was our ‎shining glory!” Let this election of May 10 be like it, a People ‎Power. Let us be hungry for change, zealots of our rights. We ‎should not leave it to the elected officials, to run the nation as they ‎like. After all, they are our servants and not the other way around. ‎Most of all, let us all be aware of the issues and not be led like ‎lamps to slaughter.‎

Sponsor Links:

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Korean Essay about Filipinos

I have read about this
Korean Essay about Filipinos - Earn and Invest Money and I am touched by the author's message. This is a little bit late but very informative. The lack of love of our country is maybe the reason why the Philippines is very poor. As an expatriate I think we have a duty too to help our country instead of turning our shoulder back.

I encourage everyone to at least give love and respect to our country. Be patriotic!

Sponsor Links:

Monday, September 7, 2009

Debt Free | Financially Free

I found this small article though not well written but I realized that to be financially free we must be debt free. When are you going to say that you are debt free? That is when you received your salary late but you are not complaining because you still have money for your family back home to sustain for the foods and needs. I am an expatriate too who wish that someday I can stay in the Philippines where I was born. Right now I am Debt Free but not financially free.

Financially Free is when you can relax but still earning money. Passive income is enough to generate income for you to live with your lifestyle. But don't you know that more than 90% of the expatriates are not successful? It is because they are financially illiterate and do not save and invest their earning. My piece of advice is to save money at least 10% then invest it with anything that you think will generate money for you. If it generate income about 10% per year then after years it will be greater than your yearly salary. I have computed it and it is true. Try it!

Sponsor Links:

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Nursing Board Exam for June 2009 released

Nursing Board Examination for June 2009 is now released.

Over 32,000 passed for nursing board examination held in various places in the Philippines last June 2009.

Here are the top placers of the Nursing Board Examination Courtesy of ABS-CBN News


Golda Manto Yap of Felipe Verallo Memorial Foundation got the highest score at 86.8%.

She was followed by Ronie Rose Capati Arevalo of Adamson University at 86.4%.

Michelle Alejandro Barberan of Arellano University Manila was third at 86.2%.

Tied at fourth were Caroline May Rellosa Chamen of Philippine College of Health and Sciences, and Clarissa Leonor Tible Escober of Naga College Foundation at 86%.

Three students of UST--Marco Magtulis Dometita, Margaret Cheung Encarnacion, and Marc Bago-Od Marzan--were tied at fifth with Lalaine Lim Perlas of Our Lady of Fatima University Valenzuela. They all got 85.8%.

The Professional Regulation Commission on Saturday released the results of the exams that were held in Manila, Baguio, Cagayan de Oro, Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Legazpi, Lucena, Tacloban, Tuguegarao, Sulu, Pagadian, and Zamboanga.
The top schools with 100 and more examinees were:

1) St. Paul University;
2) Chinese General Hospital College of Nursing and Liberal Arts; St. Louis University; Trinity University of Asia (Trinity -QC); University of Santo Tomas;West Visayas State University-La Paz;
3) University of the East Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Medical Center.

Sponsor Links:

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Two OFW File Rape Complain

Working abroad especially in Middle East is not easy. Many of our OFW experienced bitter life their longing for their loved ones in the Philippines. Some of these OFW end up parting each other and the children are the worst victim of this tragedy. Anyway that is just a small problem because aside from their family in the Philippines these OFW or Overseas Filipino Workers are prone to abuse mostly by their Boss or sponsor. Many women are usually the victims of rape especially if they are domestic helper because they stay in the Villa alone so no one can help or protect them from their employer.

Just now I read in the News website that two OFW file a rape complain with the help of the Philippines Embassy in Kuwait because they allegedly said that they were raped by two Kuwaitis. According to the news these two Filipino ladies where brought to their cells since they ran away from their employer while the other has an expired passport. These two ladies are both married and came from Davao City and Cagayan de Oro City in Mindanao.

I just hope that these two expatriates can get justice before they can go home to be with their family. Our government should take good care to our expatriates.

Courtesy from ABS-CBN.com

Sponsor Links:

Thursday, March 5, 2009

An Insults to Filipinos by Art Bell

I come across to this email and I find it very important to us all Filipinos so read it and you may copy it and share it to your Filipino Friends too.
AN INSULT to Filipinos - Please take time to read-annoying email Share
Today at 1:37pm
I hope you take time to read this and pass it on till it gets back to Mr. Art Bell….
Let’s be proud to be all of Filipino origin!!!

This is a hate letter coming from a radio talk show host Mr. Art Bell from Nevada . I don't consider myself as patriotic but please read the reply below in BOLD LETTERS and send this to as many of your
Friends as possible until it reaches him.

Subject: HATE LETTER

This is a very disturbing open E-mail letter to all Filipinos around
The world; specially here in North America !, from a man who has the power
To reach million of people. (he's a radio talk host)

Please read on..............

This is an open letter email by Art Bell, a radio talk show host in Nevada (more info in the email itself). Here is yet another person who has taken advantage of his power and privilege to use hateful words and racial stereotypes that breed further ignorance and intolerance in our society.

Art Bell is a talk radio host who has two shows that he broadcasts from his home in Nevada , that is rebroadcast by 400 stations across the country.

He's written 2 books. He lived in Okinawa , Japan for some years and had a radio program on the English station here. And, though it's hard to believe after reading the following letter from him, he actually has been to the Philippines (he's traveled fairly extensively around the world).

This letter is so degrading, I think it's really important that everybody read this and not attack him, but respond to him in a civilized manner because otherwise his thoughts will be reaffirmed. Understand that not everyone has a viewpoint like we do, and that this is an opinion of someone who hopefully can be changed only by civil actions.

...............................................
Filipinos.....*make me puke* (Art Bell)

As we've all come to notice, in the past few decades, Filipinos have begun to infest the United States like some sort of disease. Their extensive involvement in the U.S. Armed Forces is proof of the trashy kind of qualities all Filipinos tend to exhibit on a regular basis. You can see this clearly by studying the attitudes and cultural Icons of most Filipino Americans.

Origins of Pinoys/Pinays:

Are they really Asian? Well we've come to accept the fact the Filipinos come from a part of the world known as South East Asia . But the term ' Asia ' is used in the wrong way. You may notice that contemporary Filipino Americans try very hard to associate themselves with groups that we know as Asian. I cannot count the number of times I have seen a ' Third World ' Filipino try to connect themselves to the Chinese or Japanese people. There is no connection and here's why. The Philippines is a Third World country. Nothing respectable has EVER been created by Filipino people during our entire human history. Young Filipino men in America have become obsessed with 'import racing'. They have an enormously perverted affection for Japanese cars. It's a common phenomenon. In their minds, these Filipinos somehow believe that they are Asian and that it somehow connects them to Japanese people and Japanese cars. They often take credit for the ingenuity of Japanese people and say how it's an 'Asian thing'. This term...'Asian thing' derived directly from African American slang 'blackthang'. 'It's a black thang.' 'It's an Asian thang.' You can see the connection. It's even funnier that, in Japan , Filipinos are heavily discriminated against. The only Filipinos that can live successfully in Japan are the Filipino prostitutes. But that's the case for most Filipino people no matter where they live in the world. Now we've come down to this fact...and it is a fact.

Nothing in Filipino Culture can be seen as Asian. They have no architectural, artistic, or cultural influence which is in ANY way, Asian. Thinking of the great countries in Asia such as Japan , Korea , and China there is no way you can possibly connect the Philippine Islands. This assault by Filipino Americans to connect themselves with the great peoples of North East Asia is foul and disgusting. Try visiting a young Filipino's web site too. You'll see something called the 'Asian IRC Ring'. It has to do with the chat rooms. The most horrible thing about this is that these TRASHY people are trying to associate themselves with Asia again!! People in Asia don't act like, this at all. What we are seeing here is the natural Filipino in it's element with full access to technology and this is how they act! You will consistently see this behavior over and over again.

Another interesting thing is that these 'third world' people also frequent RC chat rooms such as #Chinese # Japan and #Asian. They must believe that they are some how related racially or culturally to North Asians. But it's completely WRONG! There might have been some distant contact With China and even less with Japan during World War II, but these people are actually more closely related to African Americans and Mexican Americans.

Do the parents of these young Filipinos know what's going on? Would they accept this? I believe that they would and do. This is the natural 'Trash' element in Filipinos manifesting itself. Nothing good has ever come from Philippines and I don't believe anything good ever will.

Recognizing your Roots (A Message to Filipinos)

To all Filipino people:
Please recognize your ROOTS! You come from the Third World ! You country is a disgusting and filthy place. Most people there live in poverty! Your culture has MUCH MORE SPANISH influence than Chinese, and absolutely no JAPANESE influence whatsoever. People in Japan and China , do not act like you. They do not constantly talk about sex and they have a MUCH HIGHER level of RESPECT for each other. There is NO WAY that you can connect yourself to Asia other than location. Your culture and technological advancement does not even come CLOSE to What Chinese, people have done in the past and what Japanese and Korean people are doing now! Everything you do is distinctly Filipino. You cannot take credit for Japanese cars, video games, or Hentai! It's not an 'asian thing' it's, an 'American thing'. You have no concept of culture...no concept of Asian ideas or Asian philosophy! Can you demonstrate how you use Confucianism or Taoism in you everyday life?? You can't. And you will NEVER be able to. I understand that you are trying to create an identity for yourselves as young people... but it is NOT related to Asia ..

Your Identity is Filipino. That's all you are. Just Filipino. Think about what that means....

Sincerely,
Art
------------------------------------------

I find this funny, he is right in some ways where we, as Filipinos dont actually have an 'Identity'. I think this is due to the confusion of our mixed races from Hispanic, Chinese, American and Malay origins. I see it in malls, imagine young generations wearing ski caps and ski goggles in a tropical country, baggy low rise pants like that of African Americans living in th e Bronx of New York, not to mention endless whitening products being sold at department stores and drug stores. But his ignorance also blinds him from the other truth. That while we may glorify Anime shows and Japanese Internet gaming, he is not aware that a nameless Filipino may be responsible for some technical aspects of some Japanese software. He is not aware of our contribution to the the society in general ..

Technological advancements that may have aided post war navigations and landing on the moon. That the antibiotic Erythromycin was discovered by Dr. Abelardo Aguilar from Iloilo creating the brand 'Ilosone'. Thomas Edison may have discovered the electric light bulb and the fluorescent lighting was thought up by Nikola Tesla. But the fluorescent lamp we use today was invented by Agapito Flores (a Cebuano named Benigno Flores of Bantayan Island , according to the Philippine Daily inquirer), a Filipino scientist. Americans helped then-Philippine leader Ramon Magsaysay to develo p it for worldwide commerce.

That the personal physician of former U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton is Eleanor 'Connie' Concepcion Mariano, a Filipina doctor who was the youngest captain in the US Navy. A Filipino writer Jose Rizal could read and write at age 2, and grew up to speak more than 20 languages, including Latin, Greek, German, French and Chinese. Or that a Filipino genius was responsible for the near hiatus in the PENTAGON and White HOuse nearly infiltrating their closely guarded secrets with the 'ILOVEYOU' bug. Nuisance maybe, but still one heck of a 'beautiful mind'...not to be underestimated.The list goes on and on, but who cares right?

Certainly not Mr. Art Bell...

Boy, I'm not surprised. Perhaps Art Bell does not know that although we consider ourselves ASIAN because we are strategically located in the Southeast Asian region of which our nearest neighbors are Malays, ASIA does not mean only Chinese and Japanese race of people. Then maybe it is his connotation that 'Asia' meant only our economically successful, paler brothers and he considers Malays such as Thais, Malaysians, Indonesians, and ourselves as a ' Third World ' race. Then it is 'his' ignonimity that would make a civilized person of whatever race puke. Imagine literally connecting Chinese, Koreans and Japanese to the Philippine Islands which is archipelagos away from the countries he has mentioned. I also wonder where he got the impression that we aspire to be Japanese(???) Hispanics maybe but not the Japanese. But even Hispanics today do not mind sharing their 'surnames' to their Asian brothers who they have colonized for 3 centuries.

Another sad reality that although most Filipinos working overseas are domestic helpers and prostitutes, who does he think educates the toddlers of Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and Tokyo? Parents of these countries rarely have time spent with their children, leaving them to their Filipino nannies. And with regards to prostitution. Filipinos are not the only ones working as one. I HARDLY SEE FILIPINOS STARRING IN PORN MOVIES. THERE MIGHT BE A FEW FILIPINOS WE HAVEN'T SEEN , BUT MOST ARE FROM MR. ART BELL'S RACE.

He also mentioned that we have no concept of culture..no concept of Asian ideas or Asian philosophy. How can we demonstrate Confucianism or Taoism in a Christian nation? IS HE INFORMED THAT THE PHILIPPINES IS THE ONLY PREDOMINANTLY CHRISTIAN/CATHOLIC NATION IN ASIA ?! YOU HAVE TO USE COMMON SENSE IN A LOT OF THINGS SOMETIMES...

We do not need to create an identity for ourselves. We are who we are. Our identity stems from the anonymity we live in this world. How we contribute silently towards the progress of the world and not just one country. Although the Filipino blood may be tainted with malice, corruption, poverty and prostitution, it is not a perfect race...

But so are the others. Maybe Mr. Art Bell needs to think about this.

WE MAY NOT BE PERFECT MR. BELL BUT AT LEAST WE STILL HAVE VALUES. FOR ONE THING WE DON'T PUT OUR AGING PARENTS IN NURSING HOMES BECAUSE 'THEY'RE SIMPLY OLD AND WORTHLESS'. WE DON'T HAVE AS MUCH NUMBERS OF SINGLE MOTHERS WHO GET PREGNANT IN THEIR VERY EARLY TEENS AND EVENTUALLY BECOME PARASITES OF THE GOVERNMENT FOR YEARS AND YEARS. YES...WE CAME TO YOUR COUNTRY TO WORK, TO EARN DECENT MONEY (HALF OF WHICH BY THE WAY GOES TO TAXES BECAUSE THERE'S SO MANY SOCIAL PARASITES FROM YOUR RACE).AND BY THE WAY, MOST EDUCATED PEOPLE THAT I WORK WITH DON'T COME FROM YOUR RACE...

THEY'RE ACTUALLY IMMIGRANTS TOO. AND THOSE EDUCATED ONES DO NOT ACT LIKE YOU DO, PERHAPS BECAUSE THEY'VE REALLY BEEN WELL EDUCATED..AFTER ALL THAT'S SAID...

WHO IS THE IGNORANT ONCE AGAIN?! -

____________________________________________________________________
So, be proud, you are a Filipino,...and not like
Mr. Art Bell. Please do
send this to as many person as you can until it
reaches him.

Amee R. Hain-Bautista
Account Executive
ABS-CBN Regional Network Group
CP# 0917-8271371

Sponsor Links: