Monday, February 22, 2021

My Exchanging of Notes with an Ex-General, Congressman

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

When I dropped by at the Office of Lingayen Mayor Leopoldo Bataoil, a former Police Three-Star General and nine years’ congressman, he asked me to join him and company in the long table in his office where he met and heard the gripes of Tricycle Operators and Drivers Associations (TODA) of the Capital Town versus the hefty fees and inconveniences brought by the New Motor Vehicle Inspection System (NMVIS) where Bataoil even wrote Land Transportation Office Head -Lingayen Ms. Aileen T. Peteros in February 3. Malacanang just suspended the implementation of the NMVIS as Filipinos nationwide raised furor.
“Anong balita Mortz?” he posed.
I told him that my source told me that the Celestes will be ironing the kinks as the May 2022 Election approaches on who will run for the mayorship in Bani town because Mayor Gwen Palafox-Yamamoto (hubby is a Navy officer and a PMYer like Bataoil) will be ending her nine years’ term next year.
HIZZONERS. Outgoing Bani, Pangasinan Mayor Gwen Palafox-Yamamoto (Left) and Capital Town Lingayen Mayor Pol Bataoil


Iyong kadete natin sa PMA na kapatid ni Gwen General na daw (Army Brig. General Facundo Palafox IV, Brigade Commander of Mechanized Infantry Brigade based in Lanao del Norte -MCO) wala daw balak na maging successor ni Mayora,” I told Bataoil who was my superior at the Tactics Group in the Philippine Military Academy when I worked there as a civilian employee in the late 1980s.
“Ah general na siya. Ang father niya is Facundo ang first name”.
“Oo si Boying Palafox friends din ng mga media men because he used to work with a Marcos’ Minister. I heard he is a contractor".
I told him that some quarters in the First District wanted Bani No. 1 elected Councilor Ronaldo Catabay to run for mayor because Facundo is old and frail for the mayorship. The plan is for Gwen to run for the vice mayorship and after a term (three years to those who ain’t read the Local Government Code) both switch position. The downside however for this Solomonic Solution: Catabay is not moneyed to run against former Governor Amado T. Espino Jr.’s ally like Vice Mayor Benjie Navarro or his uncle the former mayor Marcelo Navarro Jr – whose family since the time of his father a Colonel (my father’s boss at PMA) reign the town for four decades. Ex. General Navarro is Espino’s classmate (and bunk mate at PMA as told to me by former Police three-star General Rey Velasco). The duo are members of PMA Class 1972.
So will wait how the political dilemma in the coastal town will be given a solution for the benefit of the alliance of the Celestes and the Palafox-Yamamoto versus the allies of former Governor Espino.
The former Governor and ex-Congressman is preparing to wage a huge personal war, my other source told me, against Fifth District Congressman Mon-Mon Guico who defeated him in the last year’s election.

Monday, February 15, 2021

House Ipinasa 3 De Venecia’s Bills

 

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

MANILA, Philippines — Kakapasa lang ng tatlong mahalagang panukala o bills na akda ni Pangasinan Fourth District Rep. Christopher “Toff” de Venecia sa House of Representatives.

Ang mga inaprubahan ay ang House Bill 8133 na magpapatayo ng Edades and Bernal Cultural Museum sa Dagupan City, HB 8377 na mag deklara sa Municipality of Manaoag na tourist destination, at HB 8385 na mag tataguyod sa pagsama ng urban agriculture para ma solusyunan ang kakulangan ng pagkain sa hapag kainan ng mga Filipino.


Ang mungkahing Edades at Bernal Museum ay para bigyan galang si Victorio Edades, kilala na Ama ng Modern Philippine Painting at Salvador Bernal ang kilalang guru ng Philippine Theater Design.

Ang dalawa ay pinanganak sa Dagupan.

Samantala, ang bayan ng Manaoag ay sentro ng Minor Basilica of Our Lady of Rosary of Manaoag kung saan libo-libong manglalakbay at debuto ang nagtatagpo kada linggo para sa kanilang pananampalataya.

Ang mungkahing pagsama-sama ng urban agriculture ay para ang mga Filipino ay may panggawa ng pagkain na mas madaling gawin sa mga probinsiya kaysa sa mga lungsod.

Saturday, February 13, 2021

The Story of a "Red Rose" in this Motel

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

It was an eleventh hour invitation and I found myself with my college classmates at the seafood’s house nestled near the pristine brackish water with mangroves bakawan trees in Dagupan City.
“When you used the words Rose Inn with a red rose on your signage, was in the mind of your brother-in-law the myth behind the words Sub Rosa or Covert as used by the spooks or the intelligence community?” I asked lawyer Alex Lomboy who was seated across my table.
Alex’s wife is a part owner of a popular motel’s Rose-Inn in Pangasinan whose branches can be found in the cities of Dagupan and Alaminos and Sison town.
The myth of Sub Rosa or Under the Rose in Latin my Facebook's friends saw me post it there twice since last year.

Since time immemorial the rose has often been associated with secrecy. In ancient Greek mythology, Cupid gave a rose to Harpocrates, the god of silence, to keep him from telling Vulcan about the legendary infidelities of his wife Venus, the goddess of love and beauty, who have extra-marital relationships with other gods like Mars, Bacchus, Mercury, and the mortal Adonis. Ceilings of dining rooms have been decorated with carvings of roses, Maximo V. Soliven wrote on his column’s By the Way at the Philippine Star, reportedly to remind guests that what was said at the table should be kept confidential. Roses have also been placed over confessionals as a symbol of the confidentiality of confession.
TRSYT. Couple in a tryst inside a motel. Photo Credit: Cosmos.ph


“I
yong Gateway na dating pangalan ng Rose Plaza Inn ay Motor Inn na siya noong araw. Bale ang mga nag-manage before nag take over ang bayaw ko ay mga kaibigan din ng father in law ko, he explained.
He added that the Department of Trade and Industry told them that somebody was already using the business name’s Rose Garden.
“Ang problem noong ginawa na naming motel iyon na print na sa mga towels, bed and pillow sheets ang name na Rose Garden kaya we reapplied the name of Rose-Inn and was approved by the DTI,’ he told me about the story behind Rose Plaza Inn - place of tryst whenever a couple found themselves near the cities of Dagupan and Alaminos.
“During the early years of Rose Inn it was only competing with Inawa Inns (branches of motels in Dagupan City, Calasiao, and Lingayen towns owned by the illustrious Primicias family) now there are countless of motels in the province that sprouted like mushrooms,” he cited.
Damn, who could not resist promiscuity, I told myself upon hearing Alex telling me motels breed like rabbits, too!

***
I told the lawyer that in my entire years as columnist I just learned the difference between a Home and a Motel in Tagalog.
“Ano iyon? He posed to me.
Ang Home pala ay Tahanan while and Motel pala ay Tira-han (or shooting place in English).
According to our classmate Angelito Cuevas the short time which is three hours of stay cost the patrons P250 to P300 in a room composed of a bed, shower room, small dining table, garage, and the ambiance brought by an air-conditioner.
“Malaki na rin ang tinaas ng motel rates,” I commented
“Mura iyan pard,
” National Bureau of Investigation’s Special Investigator-3 Richard de Guzman answered.
“Ganoon ba? Kasi noong panahon ng lolo ko sa Binondo mga 1960s iyon sabi niya doon sa Jirjir Ongpin Motel iyong aircon short time P120, iyong electric fan P85, iyong walang electric fan pamaypay lang P25. Noong tinanong daw ang lolo ko ng batang batang chick niya saan sila, sabi ng lolo ko doon na lang sa P25 para may pambili pa sila ng cerbeza negra at balot,” I narrated the anecdote of my grandfather who is now 120 years old.
“Nasaan na iyong mga Discount Cards niyo noong binigyan ko pa kayo sa College of Law?”
Alex asked my classmates where some are executives of the NBI, PhilHealth, and the Department of Justice who were eavesdropping on our conversation.
Everybody there denied they received a tiny card that one can shove to the face of a bellboy in Rose Inn.
“Baka iba iyong nabigyan mo Lex, 50 tayong mag ka classmates noong late 1990s li-lima lang tayong kalalakihan dito wala kaming natanggap” I hollered to Alex so the wives of these classmates who were partaking our sumptuous lunch heard it and would not lose their appetite.

READ MY OTHER ARTICLE:

Docs are easy to tax than lawyers, moteliers


(Send comments to totomortz@yahoo.com)

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Agbayani Endorses Wife for San Fabian’s Mayoral Race

             YANKS OUT BM VILLEGAS AFTER ESPINO EYES KIN MARLYN

By Mortz C. Ortigoza

SAN FABIAN, Pangasinan – The outgoing mayor of this P230 Million's annual appropriation budget town said that his wife will vie for the mayorship in the May 2022 election.

Mayor Constantine ‘Danny’ Agbayani told this writer that he changed his mind after endorsing since year 2020 Board Member Liberato Villegas to be his successor after his mentor and patron former Pangasinan Governor Amado T. Espino, Jr. called him up and other allied mayors of Pangasinan last January 2021 to finalize their slates for the May 2022 polls.

Katatapos lang ng ambush ni ama. Sinabi niya sa akin Danny patakbuhin mo ang kamag-anak ko si Marlyn. E ano ang magawa ko boss ko siya at kamag-anak ni misis kaya hayon umiyak si Liby noong malaman hinde na siya,’ the Mayor said in the vernacular.

PLAYERS. Marlyn E. Agbayani (left top photo, clockwise), Pangasinan Board Member Liberato Villegas, Northern Luzon Presidential Adviser and  Cagayan Special Economic Zone (CEZA) Administrator Secretary Raul Lambino, and Pangasinan Fourth District Congressman Christopher de Venecia.


He explained to Villegas, an outgoing Board Member of the Fourth District of Pangasinan, that he could not decline the tall order of Espino, a former Congressman of the Fifth District, for his wife as the party’s mayorship bet in the next poll.

He said the former solon ordered this town’s Sagud-Bhaley Barangay Chairman Efren Fajardo, a loyalist and fellow alumni of Espino at the Philippine Military Academy to rally the 34 village chiefs here to support the bid of Marlyn.

Agbayani told this newspaper that the electoral alignment in this coastal town will be his wife running with re-elective Vice Mayor Marinor de Guzman and the full ticket for the membership of the Sangguniang Bayan (legislature) under the auspices of the PDP Party versus the ticket of Villegas and Maria Rolyn Gubatan – a surgeon and a card carrying member of the Nationalist People’s Coalition.

Gubatan, the daughter- in- law of the long reigning mayor Conrado Gubatan here lost to De Guzman, whose family is into government construction, by 3,006 votes in the 2019 election participated by 39, 544 voters.

In that polls Agbayani trounced out for the third time University of the Philippines Law alumnus and mayorship rival Mojamito Libunao, Jr. (NPC) by 20, 145 lead votes in where 39, 599 voters practiced their Rights of Suffrage.

The problem with them is they can hardly find a bet for the SB ticket. They have only Barangay Kapitan Navarette, a retired police colonel, as candidate for the legislature”.

He found out the political stocks of Villegas declined after he loss lately to the head of a market collection office in a poll for the chairmanship of a civic organization in this town.

Market collector lang natalo pa siya,’ Agbayani chuckled as he narrated the incident.

Was Villagas a miser?

The Mayor just gave this writer a smile.

The 50 years old Agbayani said that his Ninong (wedding sponsor) who became his bitter mayorship rival former nine years mayor Mojamito Libunao, Jr (NPC), a lawyer, joined his party and will be running for the membership of Sangguniang Panlalawigan (Provincial Legislature).

Sumama na siya sa grupo”.

The party, he continued, will be supporting the electoral bid of two-term Fourth District Congressman Christopher de Venecia and the re-election of Pangasinan Governor Amado “Pogi” Espino, III.

I’ve told the camp of (Northern Luzon Presidential Adviser and  Cagayan Special Economic Zone (CEZA) Administrator) Secretary Raul Lambino not to convince me to join his congressional bid because we have already a line up”.

He eyes Lambino to support the tandem of Villegas and Gubatan.

When asked if he was not worried that the camp of the Secretary and Presidential Adviser has unlimited financial campaign chest that according to his critics at the social media he gave P25,000 and P35,000 to each of the village chiefs and each members of the SB, respectively, that visit him at his house in Mangaldan town, Agbayani said it was not true.

Hinde totoo iyang ganoong kalaking halaga”.

In the 2019 election the Mayor told this writer that he financially helped De Guzman to win because Gubatan could frustrate her vice mayorship bid.

Compared to the other mayors of the forty four towns and four cities’ Pangasinan, Agbayani is moneyed because his construction company has lucrative contract of works with the infrastructure projects of the provincial government and those of the eight towns and one city’s Fifth District when Espino was a Congressman.

Agbayani said that wife Marilyn is a classmate at the former Luzon Colleges (now Luzon University) in Dagupan City until they graduated in 1990 with a degree in Bachelor of Commerce

She majored in Marketing,” he said.

Read my other blog/column:

Voters Abuse Mayor’s Kindness As Election Nears


(You can read my selected columns at http://mortzortigoza.blogspot.com and articles at Pangasinan News Aro. You can send comments too at totomortz@yahoo.com)



Thursday, February 4, 2021

Award those Reporters who Passionately Support our Troops

         A MAX V. SOLIVEN AWARD

By Mortz C. Ortigoza


I don’t know if we in the Philippines have the Tex McCary Award of the Congressional Honor Society (CHS) in the United States just like the  White House Correspondents' Association  that I wrote before to organize where we media practitioners can invite the President of the Republic and other heads of the “Nomenklaturas” to “mock” and humor them through famous stand -up comedians in a black-tie dinner.

I was browsing this morning a book’s Medal of Honor co-written by War Veteran and renowned CBS’s 60 Minutes Anchor Mike Wallace about media men who were recipients of the Text McCary Award.

Wallace, a World War-II Veteran and 19 Emmy Awardees, said that he was the second recipient of the Award in a fete.

Text McCary Award is given to those who, through their life’s work, have distinguished themselves by service or unbiased coverage of the United States military through journalism.


SIEGE. Media men adjust the lenses of their cameras during the Marawi Siege in the Philippines where state security with the help of foreign powers like the U.S fought Muslim radical rebels in an expensive war where countless numbers of  people died and edifices of Marawi City burned literally to the ground. Photo Credit: Spicemedi.com


Wallace said
the ultimate award an American combatant can received is the Congressional Medal of Honor. By the end of World War II, he cited, the Medal had taken on the aura of a sacred icon, the stuff of legend. Some of its most celebrated recipients became legendary heroes like Eddie Rickenbacker and Sergeant Alvin York from World War I and Jimmy Doolittle and Audie Murphy from the Second World War.

My first contact with a Medal of Honor recipient didn’t take place until 1957, long after I’d returned to civilian life and resumed my career in broadcast journalism. By the time, I was doing a weekly interview show on ABC, and one night the object of my scrutiny was a U.S Army veteran who’d been getting a lot of controversial attention – as well as the Medal of Honor – for his heroic exploits during World War II. His square name was Charles Kelly, but to those familiar with his story, he was mainly known by his colorful nickname - “:Commando” Kelly. Interviewing Kelly to our viewers, I marveled at his various feats of valor, especially at the Battle of Salerno, where, single-handed, he’d killed 40 German soldiers in a span of 20 minutes,he said on that book.

***

According to the law in the United States and I believed the same in the Philippines, where its people love to copy cat anything from the Yanks’ Constitution to their Rock & Roll bands, a Medal of Honor’ awardee May by law be awarded only to one who in action involving conflict with an enemy” distinguished himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity”.

There must also be, Wallace continued, evidence that he put his own life on the line and that he acted “above and beyond the call of duty.”

When I was a kid I learned from my book worm's military father, a Korean War Veteran who is 92 years old now and lives with my mother in our ancestral home in Cotabato, that no one can receive a Medal of Honor or Medal of Valor for the Filipinos for having acted under orders, no matter how heroically he carried out those orders, for the medal is reserved strictly for those who act of their own accord and out of complete selfless. It is those rigorous conditions that set the Medal of Honor a cut from all other military commendations.

***

The swashbuckling ivory-handled Colt revolver carrying U.S Army Three-Star General George Patton once said that he would have given his immortal soul for the Medal.

Not to be outdone gee whiz two occupants of the White House – Presidents Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson – told recipients they would rather have, son of a gun, the Medal than be President.

Damn, if given a chance I'll immediately choose to be President than get those Medals, te-he! Praktikalidad lang anak ng bakang dalaga kasi Noy-Pi tayo hahaha!

Scintillating Ilokoslovakia and Saluyot nonpareil Columnist Max V. Soliven said that a Filipino Medal of Valor recipient dies, his "remains" are buried in a specially reserved area in the Libingan ng mga Bayani with most of our country’s Presidents.

He said the Award is so prestigious that the Philippines President (and everybody in the military) salutes to whoever wears it be it a Private or a Captain.
In his Op-Ed Article at the Philippines Star in August 25, 2005 titled: "Not all men of valor got a medal: We must honor those who did", the Late Manong Max wrote:
The other Medal of Valor awardee present was Major Cirilito E. Sobejana, PMA 1987 (the present AFP’s Chief of Staff - MCO), from Zamboanguita, Negros Oriental. Sobejana was the officer who led the operation which tracked down and killed the founder of the Abu Sayyaf, Abdulrajik Abubakar Janjalani, in a pitched battle in Basilan on December 18, 1998. In that hand-to-hand encounter, Lito Sobejana’s right arm was shattered with bullets from an AK-47. Refusing to have the arm amputated and determined to remain on active service, Sobejana underwent 9 surgical operations in Hawaii and the mainland USA. He recovered the use of arm and hand, and has just passed his latest physical tests, remaining very much in active service”.

There was a poster in Facebook last year that was condemned by netizens probably army men because of his ignorance when he mocked the then Three- Star General and Army Commanding Chief Sobrejana saluting with his left hand in a military rite.

Of course the General could not salute on his right hand as what we read how that lethal 7.62×39mm cartridge with a muzzle velocity of 715 m/s (2,350 ft/s) AK-47 bullets, bigger and powerful than those 5.56 mm of the M-16 Armalite assault rifle our soldiers carry.

Another Valor recipient Soliven mentioned wasthe redoubtable, charismatic Col. Arturo "Art" Ortiz, whose popular nickname among younger officers and the rank and file is, would you believe, "Valor".

I met Ortiz when I worked at the public information office of the Philippine Military Academy in the late 1980s. I was not sure if he, a Major then, was then assigned at the Office of Superintendent Brig. General Boy Enrile or the office of Academy’s Chief of Staff. But I saw him as a tall slim athletic bodied soldier with his surname embroidered on a patch at his right breast part of his uniform.
The most senior among the surviving Medal of Valor awardees, Ortiz earned the military’s highest honor in 1990, in Murcia, Negros Occidental.
Under cover of darkness, he led his troops through a grueling 11-hour cross country foot march, traversing through steep forested slopes, wide sugarcane fields and finally scaling a 1,000 foot ravine to strike a surprise against 300 enemies. In his two-hour gun battle, his 606th Company killed 84 NPAs, captured eight, wounded 105 and recovered 33 firearms. This feat remains unsurpassed in the AFP’s long counterinsurgency campaign against the CPP/NPA,” Soliven wrote.

***

I digress from the Tex McCary Award's topic which we could name from a media practitioner like the late Max V. Soliven who loved to write about the Men in Uniform, am I correct my kabaleyan Kuya Art Lomibao? 

The latter, a fan and a friend of Soliven, is a former four -star general, Philippine National Police’s Chief, and member of the elite Philippine Military Academy's Class of 1972.

If we have not form an organization like the Tex, those stakeholders in the sort of Congressional Honor Society, the National Press Club, National Union of Journalists of the Philippines, and even those Human Right Groups, whose brass are awed by the unbiased but zealous reporting of media men and women, should meet and discuss the creation of this laudable endeavor that will award each of them in a year or two or more and further buttress the support and love of our people to our cops and soldiers.

Time to form say this Maximo Soliven Award for those intrepid and unbiased reportage of the members of the Fourth Estate in the Pinoy Land.

READ MY OTHER BLOG/COLUMN


Whysnipers are glorified, glamorized?

(You can read my selected columns at http://mortzortigoza.blogspot.com and articles at Pangasinan News Aro. You can send comments too at totomortz@yahoo.com)