he success of the
kick-off rally in Makati last Friday against the Arroyo regime proved that more
people will attend rallies when opposition politicians, the tainted ones in
particular, make themselves inconspicuous, if not scarce.
I think the message is clear: The people do not want more of
the same incompetents, nincompoops, opportunists, liars, scalawags, grafters,
evildoers and seedy characters in government after Ms. Gloria Arroyo goes.
Who among the pretenders to the throne in Malacañang are
qualified and capable of ensuring that the people get what they need and want?
If none of them are, be warned. They may win the election by means fair or foul,
but they may be sure they will get the same treatment the people now accord
Arroyo.
***
Speaking of the pretenders, many believe that most, if not
all, of them actually want Ms. Arroyo to leave the Palace only in 2010.
They are afraid that with Noli de Castro sitting on the
throne, his chances of trashing all comers will be greatly enhanced. The entire
government machinery and resources will be at his disposal, not to mention the
distinct possibility of Ms. Arroyo giving him all-out support in exchange for
the necessary protection from all kinds of charges that will surely come her
way.
Makes sense, doesn't it? But doesn't that smack of giving
preference to personal interest over the national interest? The majority of the
people want change now. You be the judge.
***
The success of the Makati rally lay not so much in the number
of people who attended but in the fact that they came from all walks of life -
students, teachers, lawyers, businessmen, employees from the public and private
sectors, clerics, the rich, the poor.
***
I cringed at the sight of Congressman Jose de Venecia in the
forefront of those who attended the mass for Jun Lozada at La Salle Green Hills
last Sunday.
Now that he is out of Ms. Arroyo's cabal, he has suddenly
turned righteous?
He should just stay in the sidelines from now. He had his
chance. He is only courting contempt and ridicule from the people with his
obvious attempts at re-engineering himself as a moral reformer.
***
Surely, he must have known his wife met with Rodolfo Noel
Lozada, Jr. Yet, Senator Joker Arroyo was daft enough to accuse Lozada of bad
faith by allegedly favoring some senators over the others.
When Lozada told him he also met with his wife to seek
counsel, Arroyo turned livid, warning the former not to "mess around with my
wife."
Shortly after the exchange with Lozada, Arroyo left the
Senate hearing room. He must have found it unbearable to stay a minute longer
with all eyes looking at him with ridicule, if not disdain.
Arroyo had it coming. He was trying to shield his patroness
from being implicated in the commission of a crime. He was trying to defend the
indefensible. Quite a change for someone who built a reputation for being a
champion of human rights.
Then again, he is no worse than some of his fellow senators
for changing color like chameleons whenever it suits their personal interests.
Take Senators Juan Ponce-Enrile and Miriam Defensor-Santiago.
They were among the staunchest defenders of Joseph Estrada back in May 2001 when
his supporters were storming the gates of Malacañang to bodily oust Ms. Gloria
Arroyo.
***
In a press statement, the ZTE Corporation of China said it
"reserves the right to seek redress of grievance before all appropriate
juridical bodies" for its "continuing vilification by some quarters before the
Philippine media."
ZTE should just go ahead and seek redress, instead of making
it sound like a warning.
And since ZTE is partly owned by the Chinese government, I
believe the latter should also do its part in ferreting out the truth on the
controversial deal by conducting its own investigation - in the interest of
preserving the good relations between China and the Philippines.
***
The NBI is looking into Lozada's liability for nepotism when,
as Philippine Forest Corporation (PFC) president, he hired his own brother Jose
Orlando as PFC vice president.
In order not to give the impression that Lozada is being
singled out because of his testimony before the Senate on the ZTE-NBN scandal,
the NBI should also look at other government agencies, starting with the premier
department of the government, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).
***
Asked what she would do after 2010, Ms. Arroyo said: "My
motto is do what is right, do your best and let God take care of the rest."
Judging from her past action, I think the more appropriate
motto would be: "Do what is right for me and my family, do it the best way I can
and let God take the rest."
***
The arrest of a US Marine based in Okinawa for reportedly
raping a 14-year old Japanese girl brings to mind Lance Corporal Daniel Smith.
(In 1995, three US marines also gang-raped a 12-year old girl in that Japanese
island. The incident triggered major protests and led to the reduction of the
number of US troops stationed there.)
Smith, also a US Marine, was convicted of raping a Filipino
woman two years ago, was sent to a Makati jail, then whisked out of jail in the
middle of the night with the connivance of the Arroyo regime and deposited to
more comfortable quarters within the US Embassy compound.
Five will get you ten Smith is no longer within the confines
of the US Embassy. He will be transported back here in time for the next hearing
of his case in the Court of Appeals, the date of which will normally be made
known to his lawyers days, or even weeks, in advance.
If I'm wrong, I will be more than willing to "back off" his
case.
***
The Lozada Saga has afforded many of us respite from our
usual boring, if not dreary, daily grind. It gave us moments of love, hate,
tears, laughter - a whole range of human emotions.
Above all, Lozada's revelations stirred in many of us a sense
of outrage, an all-consuming emotion that, if left unfettered, could wreak havoc
on our mental and emotional balance.
Allow me then to divert your attention for a minute from this
draining experience by telling you a short story emailed to me by a friend:
A man and a woman who had never met before and were both
married to other people, found themselves assigned to the same sleeping room on
a trans-continental train.
Though initially embarrassed and uneasy over sharing a room,
they were both very tired and fell asleep quickly - he in the upper bunk and she
in the lower.
At 1 in the morning, the man leaned down and gently woke the
woman saying, "Ma'am, I'm sorry to bother you, but would you be willing to reach
into the closet to get me a second blanket? I'm awfully cold."
"I have a better idea," she replied. "Just for tonight, let's
pretend that we're married."
"Wow! That's a great idea!" he exclaimed.
"Good," she replied. "Get your own dang blanket."
After a moment of silence, he farted.
The End.
***
Today is the 298th day of Jonas Burgos' disappearance.
I would like to repeat here what I have said before and will keep saying -
when all is said and done, what will ultimately do Ms. Arroyo in are the
extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances that have taken place during
her illegitimate regime.