Criticisms

I have not written for quite some time but now that I have found the energy, here’s something that I’ve been thinking for quite a while now.

The Senator and his people

Photo from Filipino Freethinkers

With the much awaited passing of the RH Bill in the Senate, Sen. Tito Sotto, a staunch anti-RH Bill advocate, delivered his turno en contra speeches the past weeks.  It generated much buzz mainly because of the facts stated.  Some question the truth behind them – Sotto claimed wife Helen Gamboa used the pill Diane and cause the death of their son – but most questioned the sources of the esteemed senator.

We’ve all read the stories.  In fact, Filipino Freethinkers took the liberty to document the events that transpired in the past few weeks.  It has been indeed a roller coaster month for the RH Bill, but the worse can be said of the Senator’s position.

It has become a big deal because it’s plagiarism.  It was direct, simple, plain and crystal clear; the speech contained huge portions of someone else’s work and was delivered without any acknowledgment of the source.  When a crass apology is given out by people apparently assuming to be in the position to issue one and arrogance shines through, it fails to meet its purpose.  Apologies are given out with humility and utmost sincerity, not an out-loud rhetoric of whom to crucify for the error.

Netizens have clamored all over virtual space not because of a bandwagon mentality.  As people who write and live virtual lives, it is important for us to verify and be clear about everything.  It is a public pool of information indeed, but it doesn’t equate to public belonging.  Ownership – of words, images, opinions, sounds – still applies in this side of the sphere, and we do our best to give credit where it is due.  Evidently, with Sotto’s refusal to issue an apology, the Senator exudes the impression that he is above common courtesy.

I wish he just took the example of Manny Pangilinan, whose commencement speech was discovered to be plagiarized as well.  Humbled, he admitted his mistakes as his own (even if he has his staff to blame for sloppy researching), stepped down the board and showed everyone how sincerity should be expressed.

Take a knee, Mr. Senator.  You’re no better than anyone else; you err just as much as we do.  The only difference is everyone else has owned up to it, but you.

 

Day 1,000 of the greatest political killing in Philippine history

Photo from ifex.org

I wonder if people still remember that August 19, 2012 marks the 1000th day since the massacre that shocked the nation.  58 bodies, 32 of which are members of the media, marked what was dubbed as the greatest political killing in Philippine history.  And it wasn’t even Martial Law.

To say that greed will imprison us all is an understatement, as justice has yet to be served to the families of the victims.  Zaldy Ampatuan hasn’t even been tried and already numerous witnesses have been slain and literally chopped to pieces.

Do you remember that day?  Do you remember how the press united for this cause?  The death of so many people removed all identities in the press.  There was no Kapamilya, no Kapuso.  Everyone was just in mourning and thirsty for justice.  It seems to be taking its time to get there though.

I feel bad for having forgotten about Jonas Burgos.  Upon catching up with the news on the Ampatuan massacre, I just told myself I will do what I can to not forget.

My former college professor is one of the prosecutors on this case.  I should really touch bases with her.

58 bodies.  Ampatuan not arraigned.  Witnesses slain.  Do not forget about them.  Do not let them disappear from your sights.

http://www.interaksyon.com/1000-days-without-justice

 

RIP Jesse Robredo

Photo from Inquirer.net

It was like Magsaysay’s plane crashed by the side of the mountains again as we lost another honest man to fate.  DILG Secretary Jesse Robredo passed away when his plane en route to an emergency landing in Masbate crashed in sea.  It took some time but his body was retrieved Monday, August 20, 180 ft. under water.  The two pilots are yet to be recovered (as of writing), and already the nation is in mourning.

I will not pretend to be well versed about this man, but from what I’ve heard in the past, he is one of the few good ones.  Words that had come up when describing him were simple and humble.  I feel quite unfortunate to have not witnessed his miracles while in office.

My heart joins the nation in mourning for him, but mostly, it mourns for the loss of the likes of Jesse Robredo, when already we have so few.

http://www.rappler.com/thought-leaders/10926-jesse-robredo,-a-man-for-others

 

August tears

Rolex Dela Pena/European Pressphoto Agency

Although the month of August promises a good back-to-back of long weekends, it has also given what seem to be the worst rains of the year.  The monsoon exceeded Ondoy levels, and Igme left the northern tip of the country somber.

But, like Ondoy, it has brought out the spirit of the Filipino.  It has even caught the attention of the New York Times blog.  I felt pretty good about that.

However, after a good mulling over, you kind of want to ask yourself:  does a tragedy have to happen before we rally together?  A friend commented that the Filipino race could use a do over.  I can’t really disagree; we have failed each other more times than we have impressed each other.  I just hope we won’t need a deluge to bond.  Or a good government official’s death.  Or a massacre.

I hope the Filipino race can rise without the need for a tragedy to rise from.  The current state of the nation is enough tragedy in itself.  Death and loss need not be such a big factor to be a motivated people.

 

That’s all.

Understanding Flood Alerts

With the southwestern monsoon unleashing its wrath and water in the Philippines for about 26 hours straight, I’ve been reading a lot of flood alerts in my Twitter feed.

I appreciate these alerts, but the problem is, I don’t really know what it means.  Somehow, it became color coded, versus the usual signal numbers we get when there’s a storm.  So I looked it up for future reference (should have done this sooner, I know).

Now this is real color coding!  Not that color coding scheme our cars follow.  That’s more like number coding.  Bwahaha.

Moving on, here’s a more detailed explanation from Usec. Manuel L Quezon III:

Under the heavy rainfall warning system, a yellow warning is raised when the expected rainfall amount is between 7.5 mm to 15 mm within one hour and likely to continue.

Communities given this advisory are advised to be aware of the weather condition and warned that flooding may be possible in low-lying areas.

The green alert is raised in areas where rainfall is between 15 mm to 30 mm within one hour. Flooding is a definite threat in communities under the green alert.

A red alert is issued when downpours constitute an emergency. This is raised when observed rainfall is more than 30 mm within one hour or if rainfall has continued for the past three hours and is more than 65 mm.

When Pagasa raises a Red warning, communities should be prepared to respond. It means serious flooding is seen and that residents should be ready to evacuate to safety.

Another good monitoring tool is Project NOAH.  The Nationwide Operational Assessment of Hazards (NOAH) is

a program launched by the DOST to put in place a responsive program for disaster prevention and mitigation, using advanced technology to enhance current geo-hazard vulnerability maps.

So to check your location’s flood reference, just head on over to noah.dost.gov.ph.  It can still use a lot of improvement, but it has been helpful recently.

There you go.  So far, the sun is shining, everyone is conducting relief drives left and right, and from how things sound and look like, the Philippines is ready to get up again.

Like always.  Like a Boss.

UPDATE:  I know it’s pretty late but as of August 8, 2012, PAG-ASA has changed the color GREEN to ORANGE.  Apparently, there has been some confusion with the color grading.  Makes sense.  Yellow-Green-Red doesn’t really sound like something is worsening.  Yellow-Orange-Red, oh yes.  Hope this helps!

The World Tonight will never be the same

I have never seen Tina Monzon-Palma this lonely behind the anchors’ desk.

Dylan and I discovered another thing we have in common.  We both saw Angelo Castro Jr. as the alpha newsman.  His manner of delivery and writing shows he is smart and he expects his audience to be of the same caliber.  We both miss the nights when the news is delivered in English, where thoughts are more critical than judgmental, where biases are not present in the tone of voice.

Ah, the industry will never be the same again.

 

Nurses’ salary to increase

This has to be the best news ever.  I mean really.  I have friends and peers who have been waiting for this day for a very very very long time.  I hope this actually gets enacted in the near future.  I hope the government realizes how important this is.

I don’t know if anyone of you ever noticed but teachers and nurses are required to get professional licenses and yet they cannot charge professional fees.  Ye?  Maybe after this, the teachers would go next. :)

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Nurses’ salary to increase — Angara
Published : Sunday, March 11, 2012

A BILL seeking to increase the monthly salary of nurses and  further protect the nursing profession was filed in the House of Representatives.

House Bill 5780, authored by Rep.  Juan Edgardo Angara, once enacted into law will give nurses monthly pay equivalent to Salary Grade 15 or about P14,000.

The bill intends to amend Republic Act 9173 or Nursing Act of 2002.

Angara said that the minimum base pay of nurses in public and private health and health-related institutions should be in accordance with prevailing salary standards set by law for professionals.

The bill mandates the hospitals and other medical institutions to provide incentives and benefits to the nurses.

At present, a nurse is receiving a monthly salary of only P5,000 to P7,000 in government and private hospitals while those working  in clinics and small privately owned hospitals are getting P4,000.

Angara said the quantity of Filipino nurses has been inversely proportional to the quality of education provided by nursing schools in the country.

Based on records, when Republic Act 9173 was enacted into law, there were only around 251 schools but now the country has 491 nursing schools.

Records also showed that from 2000 to 2010, there were about 2,668,046 enrollees in nursing schools nationwide with only 491,900 graduates and 365,625 passing the nursing licensure examinations.

Angara said that the Nurse Licensure Examination (NLE) results show an alarming decline in the annual national passing percentage. It reached an all-time low of 35.26% in December 2010 NLE with only 29,711 passes out of 84.287 examinees.

“We have an oversupply of nurses and yet we are still far from achieving the ideal nurse to patient ration of 1:4 per shift. The Philippine General Hospital has a nurse to patient ratio of 1:15-26 per shift while Davao del Sur has a province-wide ration of 1:44-45 per shift. Clearly, there is an urgent need for reforms,” Angara said.

Under the bill, the National Nursing Career Progression Program which will be created will get the funding from the annual appropriation act, the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes, the Philippine Amusement and Games Corp., and the Professional Regulation Commission.

“The bill will expand the roles and responsibilities of nurses that focus on specialized and more advanced practice in the various health care settings and not just primary health care service.         Jester Manalastas

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Side note:

I added a new page here in the bloggity as we prepare for another giveaway!  Come on you guys. :)  You know you want to join so click follow at the footer now! :)

On life and death and getting there

This entire week, although it is barely over, has been a sombering life experience.  I say that of course with my strong penchant for drama and whatnot.

It has been a difficult work week for Dylan.  I actually panicked when he texted me the other day that his co-nurse has passed away.  A day after, he texted again, saying their former customer care officer committed suicide.  A few hours after that, they heard news that their pregnant co-staff lost her baby.

This week is just filled with bad news, and when I opened the Yahoo! homepage, this headline caught my eye:

Girl, 12, kills self after mother told her she’s ‘dumb’

I really don’t know how to react to this really.  She could easily have been my cousin Maylene, a little older than her to be specific.  And I remember how her brothers tease her.  She’s easing in to puberty and well, she’s growing things that she didn’t have to buy extra apparel for.  She’s very self-conscious and has been gaining a few pounds.  They kept calling her fat, and ugly and messy and I remembered her when this piece of news came out.

And I tried to recall if I’ve ever been more careful with kids.  If I’ve ever let slip a harsh word or two.  If I’ve been overly critical.  Or more destructive in my criticism instead of constructive.  I try to recall all the simple words I said and how it would have affected them.

There was a brief period in time that I believed that kids today are born wise.  They are born when homosexuality can be seen around the corner, debates in procreation is up in the air, and much much more.  I believe this is a testament to the fact that no mater how wise kids today are, they are still young souls that need to be honed and loved and cared for, with every thought, deed and word.

Read the entire news here.