Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Kasama sa ating platapormang BAGETS ang Serbisyong Pangkalusugan


By CONGRESSMAN TOFF DE VENECIA
 
Kaya naman tayo ay nagkaroon ng isang Memorandum of Agreement kasama ang Region 1 Medical Center, sa pamumuno ni Director Joseph Roland O. Mejia at mga Local Government Executives natin sa ating buong distrito para sa libreng real time-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests ng ating mga frontliners sa distrito.
Nagsimula na ang pagtest sa first batch ng fronliners natin mula sa Bayan ng San Fabian.
Isusunod din po natin ang iba pa po nating frontliners mula sa ibang bayan sa ating distrito.
Ingat po tayo, Kabaleyan! 
 
***
 
Tayo ay nagdistribute ng mga gamot at vitamins sa mga Rural Health Units natin sa Bayan ng San Fabian. Ito ay habang inihahanda ng ating tanggapan ang safety protocols at guidelines ng New Normal sa pagsasagawa ng mga Medical at Dental Missions natin sa ating distrito.
Nabigyan na po natin ang lahat ng Rural Health Units natin sa lahat ng mga Bayan sa Quatro Distrito pati nadin ang City Health Office natin sa Lungsod ng Dagupan.
Health is Wealth kaya mag-ingat po tayo, Kabaleyan!

Monday, June 29, 2020

Why Are We Poor?

By Mortz C. Ortigoza
The 2004 column below of Tony Abaya influenced me a lot about my insight on the Philippine Economy since my favorite subject in the late middle and late 1990s and early 2000s when I was an Assistant Professor in universities in Manila and Dagupan Cities was Economics.
To those who follow up my political blog could notice how I wrote those economic analysis like Liberalization and others supported by data I culled from the World Bank, Central Intelligence Agency (Yes Virginia, the effin’ CIA compiled too the latest Gross Domestic Products (GDP), Per Capita Income (PCI), and other economic barometers of a country), Philippines Statistics Authority (PSA) that I even used to tear out the hubris of a former congressman and mediocre national reporter whose economic ignorance became his folly in our debate at Facebook.

IBON Survey – 7 out of 10 Filipinos see themselves as poor – IBON ...
Why Filipinos Are Poor? Photo Credit: Ibon Foundation
Tony Abaya, who is frail now, gave me an imprimatur in 2007 as my only syndicated columnist when the colored fledgling weekly newspaper’s Northern Watch in the mammoth Pangasinan province landed its maiden issue in the newsstands. Why Are  We Poor?, Abaya version was the first two Op-Eds, the other was from this wannabe writer, editor, and publisher teh-he, the Watch carried during that time.

Saturday, June 27, 2020

When Military Officers Wear Hod Instead of the Epaulet



By Mortz C. Ortigoza

After reading yesterday the post at social media's Facebook of former Army spokesman and present Chief of the Army's Operation Research Center Col. Harold Cabunoc decrying biased reporting of the Philippine Daily Inquirer by getting the sides only of those Commies' NPA supporters, I read this early morning Inquirer's going hammer and tongs against the outspoken PMAier from neighboring Bukidnon (this journalist is still lock downed in Cotabato).
I was amused by those pro-Commies and probably plain kibitzers like this U.S based guy Tony Alegre describing those Philippine Military Academy's alumni training at Sheppard Air Force Base in Texas as lousy.
Excerpt of Tony's post: "I hosted numbers of PMA exchange soldiers at Sheppard AFB, Texas and dunno where those poor things got their commissions they are more fit to carry the hod than their epaulets!"
 EPAULET VS HOD. An American military officer (left photo) in the Civil War wearing an epaulet while a construction worker (right), probably a Filipino in the Middle East, carries on his shoulder a hod. (Photos are internet grabbed)

After I read this sentence, I paused and told myself: I know the EPAULET since I read that on hardbound books about the military I bought at Book Sale like those thick autobiography of U.S Joint Chief of Staff Four-Star General Colin Powel titled: My American Journey. Some of the excerpts of his book I even quoted at my blogs.

Friday, June 26, 2020

Peryahan ng Bayan No Authority to Operate – Speed Game, Inc.




By Mortz C. Ortigoza 


An official of a number betting game franchisee echoed the adverse pronouncement of the Philippines Charity Sweepstake Office (PCSO) and the judge of a Regional Trial Court that Global Mobile Online Corporation (GMOC) otherwise known as Peryahan ng Bayan (PnB)) lacked the legal authority to operate in Pangasinan.

GMOC Vice President Lawyer Bernard D. Vitriolo wrote recently Pangasinan Governor Amado Espino, III and Provincial Police Director Colonel Rederico A. Maranan of the corporation’s intention to operate again in the mammoth province.

“Iyong pinakita nila na Writ of Execution ni recall na ng issuing judge,” Speed Game, Incorporated (SGI) official Anthony Ang-angco said about the illegality of the operation of PnB in Pangasinan when he submitted to this newspaper copies of PCSO General Manager Royina Garma and the Civil Case No. 75149  Order of Pasig City Regional Trial Court No. 161 Judge Nicanor A. Manalo, Jr.
 Globaltech Mobile Online Corp. - Home | Facebook

In February 5, 2020, Garma wrote to National Bureau of Investigation Director Dante A. Gierran that the operation of Globaltech Mobile Online Corporation is hereby suspended effective February 6, 2020 until further instruction from the Office of the President.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Access Roads sa mga Tourism Sites ng Quatro Distrito, Tinatapos Na! - Cong. Toff


Seryoso si Congressman Toff De Venecia na gawing tourism hub ng Pangasinan ang Quatro Distrito. 
“Bukod sa development ng mga tourism sites, ay maghahatid din ito ng bagong trabaho at dagdag na pagkakakitahan ng ating mga kababayan,” saad ng kongresista.
 No description available.
Bago pa dumating ang pandemya, sinimulan na ang paggawa sa mga nasabing access roads, bunga ng pakikipag-usap ng kongresista sa DPWH at Department of Tourism, na siyang nagpondo sa mga nasabing proyekto, sa pamamagitan ng programang TRIPC (Tourism Road Infrastructure Prioritization Convergence Program).

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Idiotic Elective Officials



By Mortz C. Ortigoza


I had a chat lately with some Kagawads (legislator) of a barangay (village) in their public hall whose ambiances included a cool exhaling splitter air-conditioned.

“This building was probably built by the late Ex-Kapitan XYZ my friend?” I asked.

Yes sir,” two kagawads,  one is a Muslim, who were at my age but looked older, confirmed my 13 words query as attested by the text above (try counting them, tee-he!)

“I could not forget XYZ.  He had an air and he talked loud for everybody to hear as if he was all knowing hahaha! He influenced some of my antics. He was funny,” I told the two legislators, a lady secretary, and probably an assistance who relished what I told them in the vernacular Ilonggo.
 Suppose You Were An Idiot - Mark Twain on Politics and Politicians ... 
Illustration is internet grabbed.


“I was his avid supporter when he won his first term as kapitan while I won my first stint as kagawad,” the Muslim law, er, ordinance and resolution maker told me.

“So during that time you had a very intelligent secretary to write official communications because XYZ could hardly compose a sentence in English?”

Yes! Her father was the secretary during XYZ. He was very good in written communication and understood the ordinances and resolutions passed by the Sangguniang Bayan (town legislative body),” the council member referred to the secretary.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

LAHAT NG FRONTLINERS SA 4TH DISTRICT, LIBRE ANG COVID 19 SWAB TEST! - CONG. TOFF



ANG MALASAKIT SA KAPWA, NAKIKITA SA GAWA

Ikinatuwa ng mga Covid -19 frontliners ang anunsiyo ni Congressman Toff de Venecia, na lahat sila ay mabibiyayaan ng libring swab test.
Sa kasalukuyan kasi, kahit sabihing subsidized ang pagpapa-test sa mga pampublikong ospital ay gumagastos pa rin sila ng ilang libong piso kada test.
Kaya, upang ipakita ang malasakit at pagkilala sa kabayanihan ng mga frontliners, gumawa ng paraan si Congressman De Venecia, para maging libre na ang pagkuha ng naturang test. 
 
LIBRE. Tuluy-tuloy ang pamimigay ni Cong. Toff de Venecia ng libreng gamot at bitamina sa 140 barangays ng 4th District ng Pangasinan (Photos taken during the distribution of medicines in Manaoag.)
Noong June 15, ay nilagdaan niya ang isang Memorandum of Agreement, tungkol sa libreng pagpapa- swab test sa mga frontliners ng ika-apat na distrito, kasama sina Dr. Roland Joseph Mejia, director ng Region 1 Medical Center at sina Dagupan City Mayor Brian Lim, Mangaldan Mayor Marilyn Lambino, San Fabian Mayor Constante Agbayani, San Jacinto Mayor Leo De Vera at Manaoag Mayor Kim Mikael Amador.
Sinimulan ang naturang programa noong June 19, kung saan sumalang sa Covid - 19 swab testing ang 86 frontliners ng San Fabian.
Matatandaang noong ika-10 ng Hunyo, binigyan ng Department of Health ng license- to -operate ang molecular biology ng R1MC upang magproseso ng mga specimen para sa polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test.

Even Death could Not Stop this Defiant Broadcaster


(Excerpt from Max Soliven’s Column By the Way. Title by Mortz Ortigoza) 

There were in fact many notables who were incarcerated by the Japanese in Fort Santiago at the time. Some were released early, some later; others never heard from again. One Ferdinand Marcos was arrested and jailed in Fort Santiago. But he stayed for only one day, as many of the inmates at the time would attest.

Dindo (Golf enthusiast Dindo Gonzales- Mortz) spoke of being in the company of an almost totally unknown boy who became an inspiration to the inmates of Fort Santiago. His name was Carlos Santiago Malonso, a 17-year-old Filipino who showed both the prisoners and the Japanese what real courage was about. 


Amazon.com: The Voice of Juan de la Cruz: Edited by Mary Skiles ... Malonso had been the announcer in the Voice of Freedom, a radio station transmitting from Corregidor at the time. He identified himself over the radio as "Juan de la Cruz." Broadcast(ed) three times daily, Juan de la Cruz’ programs were closely monitored by the Underground. It usually opened with the US and Philippine anthems, followed by encouraging news about the war’s progress, including the Japanese losses incurred elsewhere in the Pacific, followed by a short commentary on the need to resist the invaders, and closing usually with an offer of 50 bottles of beer to anyone who would capture the Japanese Commander-in-Chief, dead or alive. The last part was particularly insulting to the Japanese who must have found the idea totally galling and impertinent. 


When Corregidor fell, the Voice of Freedom continued to broadcast from underground. But despite the many ingenious ways of relocating the transmitter to avoid detection, the Japanese eventually triangulated and captured the clandestine group. In his last broadcast, an agitated Juan de la Cruz announced that their equipment were actually mounted on a calesa and that he could see the enemy closing in. Then, against a background of rapid gunfire, Malonso chocked a last goodbye and the station went off the air. Arrested with him were Oscar Arellano who wrote the program scripts and Antonio San Juan who built and maintained the transmitter. The date was July 9, 1942.

Online Sellers Should Pay Taxes – BIR


NOTHING SPECIAL ABOUT THEM

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

PANIQUI, Tarlac – The top tax collector of the Bureau of Internal Revenue in this province said that there is no distinction before the law that online sellers should be exempted on taxation than those traditional sellers who religiously pay their taxes to the government.
In a post at Facebook, Revenue District Office No. 17-B Chief Maria Bernadette B.Mangaoang quoted taxation book author Rex Banggawan who denounced politicians who want that online sellers, in consideration of the Corona Virus Disease -19 pandemic, be exempted to business taxes. The government reeled on its cash sufficiency after the pandemic wrought havoc to businesses all over the country after President Rodrigo Duterte imposed almost two months of hard lockdown in the Philippines.
Online Seller /BIR requires online sellers to register business ...
Photo is internet grabbed.

Some politicians are taking advantage of the issue to create a nice impression for themselves to the public. Don't be tricked by these fools. We have to be reminded that we are equal under the Constitution. What makes online selling so special from physical selling? There is no substantial distinction so the rule of taxation must be the same. Taxation rules on physical selling applies the same with online selling and there is no need for a new law for that,” excerpts of the statement of Banggawan that Mangaoang posted recently at her Facebook Page.

Monday, June 15, 2020

My town’s basketball team defeated the U.S before Cojuangco’s cagers



By Mortz C. Ortigoza

Invited recently by Arturo "Turing" Almario for a lunch at his shed in Barangay Tawan-Tawan in my rustic landlocked fertile town where I exchanged notes and banter with his college clique. They were Robert "Marao" Hinojales and Ferdinand Vilarosa. Almario and Villarosa who are ten years older than me were the early batch (1978) of Philippine Marine recruits when Mindanao and the brave Tausog Muslim locked horns in Jolo Sulu particularly. Probably because of my antics at Facebook these amused Senior Citzs wanna rubbed elbows with me where I brought my gang mate and classmate Fire Captain Jerry Reyes at Turing's abode in Tawan-Tawan. Turing and Jerry' s older brother the late Alfonso "Ponso" Reyes were basketball pal. "Kabalo ka nag lalis pa kami ni (Don’t you know that I argued with) San Miguel Corporation Big Boss Danding Cojuangco tungod sa imo (because of you Turing) while we were (Senator Chiz Escudero , Pangasinan then Governor Amado T. Espino,Jr. in late 2000s) drinking beers at the cloud kissed mansion of his son Cong. Mark in Sison, Pangasinan.” I jested.Off topic: Trivia: NCC, Northern... - True Blooded San Miguel ...
 An astonished Turing wondered and asked me why billionaire Danding C. would ask about him, former Vice Mayor Bernie Abasquez, Minggoy Eulatic, Mongo, and Ponso. 


I explained: Danding crowed to the Marlboro ciggie smoking Senator Chiz and Abono Chairman Rosendo So that when he was President McCoy's Man Friday his Northern Consolidated Cement ( the name of his cement factory in Pangasinan) Pinoy cagers won against the Americans at the two Jones Cup. "Supak gid ako, siling ko bag o mag daog (I disagreed, I told him that before the NCC won) ang mga players niyo boss Danding with Ron Jacobs as coach sa Kano pinirdi na nila Turing kag Minggoy ang mga almost 7 - footer nga mga Baptist nga mga Amerikano sa court didto sa Pilot Elementary School sa M’lang".

Saturday, June 13, 2020

June 15 Deadline of Annual Income Tax Return's Payment Nears


AMID FEARS OF CONVID-19

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

CALASIAO, Pangasinan – As the June 15 deadline of the payment of the Annual Income Tax  Return (AITR) by taxpayers looms, the Bureau of Internal Revenue sets the health protocol to shun the contagion of the dreaded Corona Virus Disease-19 pandemic.
Revenue District Office No. 4 Chief Ernesto I. Mangabat said the BIR limits the presence of the taxpayer inside while they maintain a meter distance with each other outside the edifice to avoid the infliction of the Convid-19.
Nakita ninyo naman na dati rati iyong mga taxpayers natin nandiyan nakaupo lahat iyan. Nakita ninyo naman na may distance limited lang talaga ang papasok dito kasi hindi puwede ang lahat ang puwede papasukin,” he stressed.

LETHARGIC COLLECTION. Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) 13 expects a very substantial drop in tax collection for the first quarter of 2020 as quarantine measures due to the Corona Virus Disease-19 outbreak that hurt local businesses. PHOTO CREDIT. Yahoo.com
The new normal being practiced at the BIR Central Pangasinan’s office here showed plastic curtains separate the taxpayer and the tax agency’s personnel as the former transact his business, everyone inside the office wears mask,  a foot bath wait near the main door for the shoes of those who want to ingress, and a long queue  of taxpayers wait for their turn to be allowed inside the RDO-4 while still maintaining the ideal distance  with each other while waiting to be allowed to go inside.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

DepEd Mentors Favor Modular System of Teaching


                      THEY FEAR THE DANGER OF COVID-19

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

M’LANG, Cotabato – Some secondary education public school teachers were in favor of the modular method of teaching in the August 21 opening of classes all over the country because of the danger brings by the deadly Corona Virus Disease -19 Pandemic.
Grade – 8 Social Studies mentor Raffy Santiago of M’lang National High School said he was in favor of the modular approach because a teacher avoids direct contact with the students.
Mas pabor ako sa modular kasi materials lang ibibigay sa mga bata walang physical (presence),” Santiago said in Tagalog.
Modular Distance Learning is an individualized instruction that allows learners to use self-learning modules (SLM) in print or digital format or electronic copy whichever is applicable in the context of the learner and other learning resources like learner’s materials, textbooks, activity sheets, study guides, and other study materials, according to teacherph.com
Learning Delivery Modalities — The Filipino Homeschooler

Learning Delivery Modalities (Photo Credit:filipinohomeschooler.com)

.Santiago said however that the most effective pedagogy is still the face-to-face system because “ma transfer talaga ang knowledge sa bata,” he stressed.
But Alternative Learning System (ALS) teacher Easter Joy Garcia deferred to the face-to-face as the absolute strategy of mentoring the wards inside the classroom.
As ALS teacher handling students from Grades 1 to 10, she used the modular system despite using the face-to-face.
Was she in favor of the customary system where teacher and students meet inside the classroom?
“For me sir in my own opinion, hindi. Oo hindi kasi kaya din naman naming magturo dati ng modular”.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Greatest Contemporary Filipino Writers, Novelists


By Mortz C. Ortigoza

One of the three famous writers and novelists mentioned below by Manong Max Soliven I sometimes saw in some social functions, mostly related to journalism, in Pangasinan. At  first blush, I did not appreciate the flair and the power of the pen of Buddha’s doppelganger F. Sionel Jose of Rosales town because the first time I read about him was in a rebuttal article in the middle of 2000s by Graphic Magazine Columnist Tony Abaya, whose economics insights like Liberalization influenced me, on his “opus” Why We Are Poor. Anyway, I will be posting later that column of Mang Tony (CLICK IT TO READ HERE) who gave me an imprimatur in 2007 as my only syndicated columnist when the colored fledgling weekly newspaper’s Northern Watch in the mammoth Pangasinan province landed  its maiden issue in the newsstands. Why We Are Poor, Abaya version was the first two Op-Eds, the other was from this wannabe writer, editor, and publisher teh-he, the Watch carried during that time. 
Famous Filipino Writers and their Pen Names or Pseudonyms - NON ...
Photo is internet grabbed.


***

Greatest contemporary Filipino writers and novelist, according to scintillating columnist Maximo Soliven: “ A few days ago, while we were at a dinner in the "Fairways & Bluewater" Clubhouse in Boracay, I was asked by one of the Balikbayans who had come from Los Angeles with a group of fellow golfers to enjoy that island paradise and its championship-class 6,600-yard 18-hole golf course, whom I considered the greatest contemporary Filipino writers and novelists.

Startled by the query, I blurted out two names – that of the late Nick Joaquin (alias Quijano de Manila) and Frankie Sionil Jose. Another fine writer who could have written the "great Filipino novel" (like Frankie), came third to my mind: Greg Brillantes. I hope the ones I didn’t mention will forgive me, but these were the three whose names sprang to my lips, in answer to the question.

I’m probably biased in favor of Frankie because the two of us go back a long way – aside from being fellow Saluyots – but F. Sionil and his novels have been the most persistent in telling, in epic-style, the story of the Filipino, warts and all. Having fought his own way up from poverty, it’s clear that Frankie is obsessed with the dilemma of poverty. Even his latest opus which I received by messenger from him a few weeks ago, is a collection of his typically pungent essays and speeches, entitled (how else?) "WHY WE ARE POOR." Instead of a subtitle, he puts on the cover a pre-title: Heroes in the Attic, Termites in the Sala . . ."
I found the collection, on perusal, vintage Frankie. Full of compassion, of humor and tenderness and of rage.
Frankie, who founded that wonderful bookshop La Solidaridad on Padre Faura street in dusty Manila, has seen his novels translated into 28 languages, including our native "Ilokano." Sionil Jose is a veteran journalist, who started out in the ’40s – by gum, more than 64 years ago! We were buddies in the old Manila Times during that great daily’s glory days on Florentino Torres street in the TVT building, up till he quit the newspaper in 1960.

His essays on social issues and agrarian reform won him many awards. In 1980, Frankie received the Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Award for Literature and Journalism. In 2001, he was named National Artist for Literature, and in 2004, he received the Pablo Neruda Centennial Award. What an irony the latter award was: for Frankie Sionil Jose, a lifetime anti-Communist! He won the prestigious prize dedicated in honor of the great Chilean poet and leading Communist, the late Nobel Prize laureate Pablo Neruda!

Frankie, now coasting alone to retirement (he’ll never quit, though) has begun to look, with his shaved head like a benign Buddha. Don’t be fooled. Fires of anger and wisdom continue to blaze within his soul, and erupt from his fingertips onto his pen.

Yesterday, I received, posthaste, the following reaction from Frankie. I published it without further comment”.

Maximo V. Soliven,

I hope you have perused my latest book, Why We Are Poor. That book is an endorsement of your column today on nationalism.

I always have had great affection for you knowing you for years, your opposition to a fellow Ilokano –Marcos – that took some doing! Also, I recall only too well that rousing extemporaneous Lecture on Rizal in Baguio some years back, and etc., etc.

Max – I am older than you but we have seen together our country sink deeper into poverty and corruption. And now, you have pointed a finger at the real cause of it all – the fact that we are not a nation although we are already a state. And why not? Because the rich Filipinos – the mestizos, the Taipans, the Indio oligarchs did not modernize this country. Being anti-Filipino, they send their money to Europe, to the United States and Switzerland, and to China. And for this reason, we are poor and our women go abroad to work as servants and prostitutes.

Max, how do we build a nation? How do we redeem our people?

Lakayac unayen. Nabannogac nga agririawen (I’m already too old and too tired to argue). Like Bertold Brecht said, "shouting about injustice hoarsens the voice."

I hope your voice will never hoarsen.

Agbiag ka! – Frank
                                                                                                   ***

May bayag kayo (You have balls) Frank, Max Soliven, and Tony Abaya by exposing the injustices committed by our corrupt leaders in this sorry country. I will be posting later in my blog F. Sionel Jose’s Why We Are Poor and Tony’s rebuttal why indeed Filipinos are poor. To those who follow my blog you have already the iota of ideas about that economic “craps” I blabber in my column and interviews with those either hypocrite. transactional, or corrupt senators why until now they keep procrastinating in approving the amendment of the Public Service Acts. To the unsophisticated, the proposed law  is 100 percent economic liberalization in the Philippines  to attract foreign investors to come to our shore and compete with the oligopoly perpetrated by either the Sys, Gokongweis, Pangilinans, Ayalas, Aboitizes, Angs, or others so that we can solve the perennial poverty, like how to dislodge the over congestion of our folks  in Metro Manila,  in this heathen country.

Analysis:Why the Philippines is poor?

(Send comments to totomortz@yahoo.com)