pia & the US bases
bakit di ko makuhang madismaya sa sagot ni bb. pilipinas ms. universe re the u.s. bases. kasi hindi naman nakakagulat. iyan naman mismo ang naghaharing pananaw, in no uncertain terms. good to be reminded what we’re up against.
bakit di ko makuhang madismaya sa sagot ni bb. pilipinas ms. universe re the u.s. bases. kasi hindi naman nakakagulat. iyan naman mismo ang naghaharing pananaw, in no uncertain terms. good to be reminded what we’re up against.
being a natural born citizen has nothing to do pala with where you were born, rather, it has everything to do with the citizenship of your parents. you can be born in the philippines but if neither parent is a filipino citizen, then you’re not a natural born filipino.
check out harvard law review‘s On the Meaning of “Natural Born Citizen” — we copied it from the americans, after all — in the spirit of clarifying terms amid continuing allegations that obama was not natural born and therefore not qualified to be president.
… the phrase “natural born Citizen” has a specific meaning: namely, someone who was a U.S. citizen at birth with no need to go through a naturalization proceeding at some later time. And Congress has made equally clear from the time of the framing of the Constitution to the current day that, subject to certain residency requirements on the parents, someone born to a U.S. citizen parent generally becomes a U.S. citizen without regard to whether the birth takes place in Canada, the Canal Zone, or the continental United States.
… The original meaning of “natural born Citizen” also comports with what we know of the Framers’ purpose in including this language in the Constitution. The phrase first appeared in the draft Constitution shortly after George Washington received a letter from John Jay, the future first Chief Justice of the United States, suggesting:
[W]hether it would not be wise & seasonable to provide a . . . strong check to the admission of Foreigners into the administration of our national Government; and to declare expressly that the Command in chief of the american [sic] army shall not be given to, nor devolve on, any but a natural born Citizen.12.
As recounted by Justice Joseph Story in his famous Commentaries on the Constitution, the purpose of the natural born Citizen clause was thus to “cut off all chances for ambitious foreigners, who might otherwise be intriguing for the office; and interpose a barrier against those corrupt interferences of foreign governments in executive elections.”
makes sense, di ba? paano kung mga intsik pala o mga kano ang mga magulang niya, e di nalintikan tayo pag nahalal siya tapos biglang umapir ang mga iyan, behind the scenes of course, at subukang mangialam sa spratlys at kung saan-saan pa, haha, parang pelikula, but certainly within the realm of possibilities in this age of geopolitical conspiracies.
it is not enough to say she was born here, kilala naman natin siya, kilalang kilala natin ang umampon at nagpalaki sa kanya, e ano kung nangibang-bansa siya at naging US citizen, heto’t bumalik naman para nga magsilbi sa bayan, di ba, at para isulong ang mga karapatan ng mga foundling na tulad niya, with matching tears.
ang problema kasi ni grace ay foundling siya, or so she says. maaaring totoo ito — napulot lang siya sa isang simbahan sa iloilo, in which case, sorry na lang, she’s simply not qualified, not until she is able to find her parents and they prove to be filipino citizens. pero maaari ring hindi — posible ring ayaw lang niya na malaman natin for whatever reason kung sino ang mga magulang niya, kaya gumawa na lang ng istorya.
kung foundling siya talaga, bakit hindi siya registered as foundling, and why are her official documents a mess? as accountant and tax practitioner jesus clavo points out in his comment to inquirer‘s Comelec has authority when it disqualified Poe, says veteran lawyer:
It will really be an uphill battle for Grace Poe. In the next three cases to be heard, the biggest challenge facing her is her status as a natural-born citizen or not. The two contradicting birth certificates will be focused upon. The first birth certificate dated Nov. 27, 1968 which contain handwritten notes in the margin says a foundling named Mary Grace Natividad Contreras Militar was found in the church at Jaro, Iloilo on Sept. 3, 1968. The notation says “adopted child of spouses Ronald Allan Poe and Jesus Sonora Poe per court Order Municipal Court San Juan Rizal by Judge A Gorgonio dated May 13, 1974. The second birth certificate dated May 4, 2006 EXECUTED BY JESUS SONORA POE states Mary Grace was born to Jesus Sonora Poe and Ronald Allan Poe Sept. 3, 1968. Something is really wrong because the second document wasi misleading and make Grace Poe a natural-born child of Poe and Sonora, who were married only in December 1968. Jesusa Sonora Poe is known to have not given birth to any child. That fictitious birth certificate executed in May 4, 2006 was obviuolsy prepared to support the application of Grace Poe to reacquire her Filipino citizenship filed in July 10, 2006. Based on the second birth certificate, Poe is now a natural-born citizen instead of a “foundling”. There was a deliberate act to deceive.
and please, itigil na iyang let-the-people-decide eklat. this, from a reader cited by yen makabenta, demolishes the soundness of that vox populi, vox dei argument.
Reader Jose Oliveros, who is most likely a lawyer, has sent me several reactions to my columns that shed much light on the “let the people decide” argument.
He informs me that former Chief Justice Panganiban has the penchant for citing his ponencia in the 1996 Frivaldo case that on questions of qualification of a candidate, let the people decide. But in 2008, the Supreme Court, in an en banc decision, debunked that position in the following words:
“Petitioner also makes much of the fact that he received the highest number of votes for the position of Vice Mayor of Catarman during the 2007 local elections. The fact that a candidate, who must comply with the election requirements applicable to dual citizens and failed to do so, received the highest number of votes for an elective position does not dispense with, or amount to a waiver of, such requirement. The will of the people as expressed through the ballot cannot cure the vice of ineligibility, especially if they mistakenly believed that the candidate was qualified. The rules on citizenship qualifications of a candidate must be strictly applied. If a person seeks to serve the Republic of the Philippines, he must owe his loyalty to this country only, abjuring and renouncing all fealty and fidelity to any other state. The application of the constitutional and statutory provisions on disqualification is not a matter of popularity….
“In his dissenting opinion in the 2004 FPJ citizenship case, then Associate Justice Tinga characterized the “let the people decide” mentality as a “malaise, whether caused by academic sloth, intellectual cowardice or judicial amnesia which has unfortunately plagued this Court. (Here, Tinga cited the 1996 case of Frivaldo v Comelec). Continuing, Tinga said: “It is an easy cop-out that overlooks the fact that the Constitution is itself an expression of the sovereign will. The Filipino people, by ratifying the Constitution, elected to be bound by it, to be ruled by a fundamental law and not by a hooting throng.”
there is a time and a place naman for hooting throngs, but, please, not when the law is clear and reasonable, and certainly not for the sake of one grace doe, i mean, poe, and her trapo and tibak cohorts.
give it up for now, grace, alang-alang sa bayan. kung ukol, bubukol, in its own good time.
it was the first time i’d ever heard digong duterte speaking lengthily on anything, so i was totally unprepared for all of it. yes, the puntanginas and other cuatro letras and the libog and bathroom and bayag talk shocked me at first, pero sabay halakhak everytime. i think i forgave him very quickly for the ‘tanginas because, well, he was cursing mostly at stuff i have myself cursed at in private (except for the pope), and it was somewhat cathartic, haha.
but beyond the oral ejaculations he was talking a lot of sense, he knows, he has lived, mindanao history, and is rightfully pissed off at imperial manila and whoever made a fish out of moro hero lapulapu LOL. however, the sex talk and the going-to-confession and related stories were not as easy to forgive, napaka-for-adults-only, what if the kids are listening? my nanay was very old school.
the very next day, as i was listening to the olongapo judge’s ruling on the killing of sex worker jennifer laude by US marine scott pemberton — JUNK EDCA! — and hearing more sex talk, if on a different plane and in a different language from duterte’s — fuck, oral sex, blow, penis, vagina — the synchronocity struck me, and the thought occurred that this could be a good thing. the start of a process of desensitization to sex talk, because we NEED to talk about sex. real sex education, in the vernacular, is the only way we can stop HIV-AIDS from spreading and becoming full-blown.
PHILIPPINE HIV EPIDEMIC UPDATE (2015)
UN AIDSThe rapid rise in HIV infections nationwide, with some 21 new cases reported every day per DOH records4, has made the Philippines one of only a handful of countries at risk of a full-blown AIDS epidemic if it is unable to address the problem on time. The 646 new cases reported last February is the highest number since the Philippines’ first case in 1984, according to the DOH. The numbers in six cities — Quezon City, Manila, Caloocan, Cebu, Davao and Cagayan de Oro—already exceed the national prevalence rate of 3.5 percent4. While HIV is spread primarily through unsafe sexual contact, it can also be contracted through the sharing of dirty needles during drug use.
Increasing prevalence in key populations. National HIV prevalence remains under 0.1%, but rapidly expanding among key affected populations (KAP)2. By 2013, HIV prevalence reached 5% to 8% among males who have sex with males (MSM) in the cities of Cebu, Quezon and Manila; 53% among people who inject drugs (PWID) and 5% among female sex workers (FSW) in Cebu City1.
More are infected. The number of cases reported has shown a steep increase in the recent years – from less than 1 case a day in 2006 to 21 cases a day by March 20151. The actual cases are estimated to be at least double of those reported. The Philippine National AIDS Council (PNAC) has projected that the total number of HIV cases in the Philippines could reach 37,000 [as high as 54,000] by 20152. 12,000 of those will be needing treatment2 which could cost the Philippine Health Insurance around P360 million ($8.4 million).
Those infected are young with a median age of 27. HIV infection among 15-24 years old increased more-than ten-fold, from 44 in 2006 to 995 in 20151. The period of initiation to sex and drug use among key affected populations is as early as from 14 years old2.
Male to male transmission had significantly increased. Sex is still the main mode of transmission with, 85% of new cases were reportedly through male-to-male sex in 20151.
More local transmission. HIV cases among Overseas Filipino Workers (OFW) continue to increase (395 cases in 2013 – highest ever) despite the decrease in proportion of OFW to the total cases from 42% in 2006 to 11% in 2013 indicating that local transmission has outpaced infections reportedly contracted overseas.1
Very Low Prevention Coverage mostly below national targets of 80% since 2005; specifically 63% for establishment-based Female Sex Workers, 38% for freelance FSW, 23% for Males Who Have Sex wth Males (MSM) and 11% among people who inject drugs (PWID). Low number of Key Affected Persons (KAP) are tested for HIV (merely 14%) and zero for key affected populations under the age of 18.
High-risk practices among KAP continues. Knowledge levels (index of basic HIV knowledge including misconceptions) among Key Affected Persons was only 32%, with those aged 15 to 17 years, even lower.
basic HIV knowledge, including misconceptions, of gay and bisexuals, female sex workers, needle-using druggies, is only 32%, and even lower than that for teen-agers. sa madaling salita, kulang na kulang ang sex education. the departments of education and of health will, of course, claim that all students get sex education, but the question is, what kind?
In a recent media forum, people living with HIV (PLHIV) advocate Wanggo Gallaga said there is an immediate need for schools to include sex education modules in order to encourage those with risky sexual behaviors to practice safe sex.
yes. it’s not enough to teach about reproductive body parts and how babies are made. kailangan din ituro ang tungkol sa libog and hormones, vaginal and anal sex, and the consequences of unprotected sex, besides unwanted pregnancies, as in sexually transmitted diseases, the worst of which is human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection that untreated leads to the painfully deadly Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS).
most important, these teaching modules should be not only in english but also in tagalog and taglish, and gayspeak na rin, as well as in the dialects of target audiences, which should include young and old, male and female, gay and bisexual, specially the sexually active who engage in casual sex / exchange bodily fluids with different partners.
read godofredo u. stuart’s Sex Education: The Comic Failure of Language and marlon james sales’ Sex and the Missionary Position: The Grammar of Philippine Colonial Sexualities as a Locus of Translation.
sex education is key to preventing an HIV-AIDS epidemic. government agencies (DEPED and DOH) simply have to get on the job, the sooner the better. for certain the bishops will raise a howl. let them. it might even be a good sign that all they’re apoplectic about right now is the cursing at the pope, the adultery committed with two wives and two girlfriends, and the allegation of sexual abuse by jesuits. i haven’t heard anyone decrying the bayag and libog talk. maybe they can’t find the words. while we have all the words we need.
*
772 cases of HIV/AIDS recorded in June, the highest ever in one month – DOH
Living with HIV in the Philippines
The Predictable Failure of HIV/AIDS Education in the Philippines