Saturday, December 30, 2006

'Noli' gets published Worldwide

‘NOLI,’ PENGUIN CLASSICS

Rizal joins ranks of Dickens, Austen



By Lito Zulueta

Inquirer

Last updated 05:31am (Mla time) 12/30/2006


JOSE
Rizal’s “Noli Me Tangere” has been published in a new English
translation and released worldwide by Penguin Books, one of the major
publishing houses of the English-speaking world, under the Penguin
Classics imprint. The publication effectively canonizes the novel as
one of the classics of world literature.


It is the first time that a Southeast Asian title has been included
in the Penguin Classics, which was started in 1946 with the publication
of E.V. Rieu’s translation of Homer’s “Odyssey.”


In the book’s blurb, Penguin bills the “Noli” as “the book that
sparked the Philippine revolution” and “the great novel of the
Philippines.”


“[It] was the first major artistic manifestation of Asian resistance
to European colonialism, and Rizal became a guiding conscience—and
martyr—for the revolution that would subsequently rise up in the
Spanish province,” Penguin said.


The new translation of the “Noli” was done by an American writer,
Harold Augenbraum, a scholar of Hispanic-American letters and the
executive director of the National Book Foundation and the National
Book Awards.


Filipino-American writer Jessica Hagedorn, author of the critically
acclaimed and best-selling novel, “Dogeaters,” has said that
Augenbraum’s “Noli” was a “beautiful new translation.”


Elda Rotor, Penguin Books Classics’ executive editor, said the
publication “represents Penguin’s commitment to publish the major
literary classics of the world.”


Rotor, a Filipino-American, said she was not the original
acquisitions editor for the book, but “for me, it’s a particular joy on
many levels, to place Rizal on the same shelf as Dickens and Austen, to
share a classic that is read, studied and celebrated in parts of the
world, yet unfamiliar to a wider audience.”


In Manila, the book is available at Powerbooks and Fully Booked.


Scathing portrayal


First published in Berlin in 1887, “Noli Me Tangere” tells the story
of Crisostomo Ibarra, who returns from his European studies to find his
old town in the grip of social iniquity and decay. His efforts to
introduce enlightenment and modernism are defeated at every turn by the
Spanish colonial establishment as represented by abusive civil and
military officials and obscurantist friars.


Because of its scathing portrayal of Spanish colonial depredations,
the book was banned in the Philippines, but copies of it were smuggled
into the country for clandestine reading by educated Filipinos.


As a result, the “Noli,” along with its dark sequel, “El
Filibusterismo,” which tells of the return of Ibarra as an avenging
angel a la “The Count of Monte Cristo,” became the bible of the
Philippine revolution against Spain in 1896.


Although Rizal denied any involvement in the revolution, his name
became the password of the Filipino revolutionaries, and he was
executed by the Spanish authorities on Dec. 30, 1896.


Fascinated


Augenbraum said he stumbled upon Rizal’s novel in 1992 while
compiling a bibliography of North American Latino fiction writers. He
said he came across the name of National Artist N.V.M. Gonzalez whom he
thought to be Latino. He went on to read Gonzalez and “loved it” and
thereby got “introduced to a whole world of Filipino and
Filipino-American literature, which I began to seek out here in the US.”


“The name of Rizal came up several times, so I read the ‘Noli,’
which fascinated me,” he said. “Then I read the ‘Fili,’ which also
fascinated me. Then I read the Austin Coates biography, and Rizal
himself became one of my heroes.”


Augenbraum said he tried to get university presses interested in
republishing the novels in the English translation by either Charles
Derbyshire or Leon Ma. Guerrero, but none was interested. (The
University of Hawaii Press has published the Soledad Lacson-Locsin
translations of both books.)


In 2002, after editing and revising a Penguin book, Augebraum was
asked by Penguin editors if he could recommend a new addition to the
Penguin Classics line, and he suggested the “Noli.”


Very excited


“[They] knew very little [of the ‘Noli’], but when they began to investigate, they became very excited,” he said.


“This would be the first Filipino writer in the venerable classics
tradition, and the Filipino-American community had been growing,” he
said.


Penguin at first thought of adapting one of the existing English
translations, but “concluded that it needed a new translation for the
American eye and ear,” Augenbraum said.


Augenbraum said he enjoyed translating Rizal. “The ‘Noli’s’ Spanish
was not particularly difficult to translate. Rizal wrote a clear, lucid
Castilian without much slang and without overusing idioms,” he said.


“I would like to add that the pleasure of translating [and reading]
the ‘Noli’ is that the non-central characters are extraordinarily
rich,” he said.


Augenbraum said he found it more difficult to be editor than translator.


Bridging cultural divide


“The harder part was to compile the notes that would explain the
many, many religious and cultural references Rizal used... The US is
not steeped in the Catholic faith and many Americans will probably be
reading about the Philippines for the first time,” he said.


Apparently, Augenbraum succeeded in trying to bridge the cultural
and historical divide between the “Noli’s” 19th century-Philippines
setting and American readers in the 21st century.


According to Hagedorn, Augenbraum’s introductory essay, “is smart
and sensitively written, providing great background for Rizal’s rich,
moving novel.”


Augenbraum said he liked the Derbyshire and Guerrero translations, but there should be new translations of Rizal’s work.


“Most translators will tell you that each generation should have its
own translation of classic works. Language changes over time, political
ideals change over time, information emerges over time, new critical
thinking emerges. I hope that this translation will be the translation
for our time,” he said.


Required reading


Augenbraum said the “Noli” should be required reading in
Asian-American courses in US universities “because it is the
foundational novel of the nation, with large implications for the
diaspora and its influence on other writers.”


According to Rotor, Penguin has learned that the novel has generated
interest among professors across the US who would like to make the
novel a part of their curriculum.


The new English translation of the “Noli” comes at a time when
Filipino critics and historians are starting to complain that there was
too much lionizing and even deification of Rizal so that honest
critical assessments of his work and legacy have become nearly
impossible.


Florentino Hornedo, Unesco commissioner and a literature and history
professor at the University of Santo Tomas, said rendering Rizal and
his works as a “dogma” was “not good” since the novels were a “fiction”
and a creative embellishment, with some exaggerations conditioned by
Rizal’s masonic and liberal leanings.


Augenbraum agreed. “The Noli’ is fiction obviously, but [that’s] an
interesting point about how historical fiction becomes perceived as
history,” he said.


“In my introduction to the ‘Noli,’ I discuss Rizal becoming a sort
of ‘santo’ in the Filipino diaspora, no longer a real personage, and I
question whether he ever really was a real person, since he saw himself
as part of Philippine narrative history and acted accordingly. Although
some people have compared Rizal to Jose Marti [the 19th-century Cuban
writer and patriot], Marti has never attained the supernatural status
of Rizal,” said Augenbraum.


“[Rizal] is a prisoner of his own legend... Whoever he was in life
has become irrelevant. He’s probably closer to Joan of Arc or St.
George than he is to Jose Marti,” he said.

















Copyright 2006 Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Brothel owners, 'windows' prostitutes sue Amsterdam

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands - A group of brothel owners that represents
nearly a third of the prostitutes in Amsterdam's famed red light
district have challenged a decision to revoke their licenses, the city
said Friday.



The city notified the owners of 37 brothels and sex show venues on
Nov. 30 they would be closed because of suspected involvement in money
laundering. The brothel owners maintain their financial problems are caused by banks refusing to do business with them.



In its statement, the city said it would wait for a court ruling to
take action. The case will likely be heard in mid-January, the city
said.



The brothels represent around 300 of the district's scantily clad
"windows" prostitutes who stand behind windows and tap their fingers
against the glass to attract customers.



The narrow streets near Amsterdam's center have been a hangout for
prostitutes since the city was the hub of a global trading empire
during the Netherlands' 17th century Golden Age. - AP

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Let's All Rise.

Rising sea levels engulfing Indian world heritage islands


Agence France-Presse
Last updated 12:31pm (Mla time) 12/21/2006


KOLKATA -- Rising sea levels have submerged two islands in the Sunderbans, where tigers roam through mangrove forests in the Ganges River delta, and a dozen more islands are under threat, scientists say.


A six-year study of the impact of future climate change on the world natural heritage site that India shares with Bangladesh came up with alarming results.


Official records list 102 islands on the Indian side of the vast Sunderbans, where the Ganges and Brahmaputra empty into the Bay of Bengal.


But scientists have been able to map only 100 islands and found the other two have been swallowed up, says Sugata Hazra, director of Kolkata's School of Oceanography Studies at Jadavpur University.


Fifty-two of the islands are inhabited with a population of more than 1.8 million people.


"Two islands, Suparibhanga and Lohacharra, which have gone under water could not be sighted in satellite imagery. The (disappearance of the) two islands have rendered over 10,000 people homeless," says Hazra.


"A dozen others on the western end of the inner estuary delta are threatened.


"As the islands sink, nearly 100,000 people will have to be evacuated from the islands in the next decade," Hazra tells Agence France-Presse at his office on the university campus.


He blames global warming and the depletion of mangrove areas for the rising sea levels in the world's biggest delta.


The Sunderbans -- or beautiful forest in Bengali - covers a total of nearly 6,000 square kilometers (2,300 square miles).


The islands, separated by a complex network of hundreds of tidal rivers and creeks, form an important buffer shielding millions from cyclonic storms and tidal waves in the Bay of Bengal.


The report by the oceanography scientists has recently been sent to the federal government as part of India's input for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Changes.


"The study shows several changes in physical, biological and social components and the temperature of the group of islands has risen by over one degree centigrade," since 1965, Hazra said.


The annual number of cyclones has fallen, but they are more intense now due to global warming and this means more coastal flooding, erosion and more saline water moving in on the islands, he adds.


While rainfall has risen only marginally over the years, most of the rain no longer falls during the traditional monsoon periods.


"Rainfall has shifted to the post-monsoon period and this shifting is a definite indicator of climate change," he said.


The study shows that the temperature in this area is expected to rise by one degree centigrade by 2050.


Hazra says the relative mean sea level in the Bay of Bengal is rising at a rate of 3.14 millimeters a year due to global warming.


"And if this trend continues, the rising sea will devour nearly 15 per cent of the islands in the Sunderbans," he adds.


Sunderbans Biosphere Reserve director Atanu Raha, who also studied satellite images of the last 20 years, agreed two of the islands have sunk and a dozen more are under threat of submergence.


"Things like a rise in temperature, in sea level is a highly alarming trend and it needs more study to tackle the situation," he said.


To add to the fears, a study published earlier this month in the journal Science found that global warming may lift sea levels faster than previously expected.


The study by Stefan Rahmstorf, professor of ocean physics at Potsdam University, said rising temperatures could boost sea levels by as much as 1.4 meters (4.6 feet) by 2100 -- almost twice the rate previously forecast.


Climatologists so far agree that sea levels will increase 9-88 centimeters (4-35 inches) over 1990 levels by the end of the century.


But Rahmstorf suggests the range could be much higher, 50-140 centimeters (20-55 inches).












Copyright 2006 Agence France-Presse. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Holliday Trip to Aklan

Start:     Dec 23, '06 11:00a
Location:     Aklan

Private Christmas Party

Start:     Dec 22, '06 10:00p
End:     Dec 23, '06
Location:     Discovery Suites, Ortigas Center

Gonzales Coat of Arms, Family Crest

http://www.houseofnames.com/coatofarms_details.asp?sId=&s=Gonzales

Mijares Coat of Arms, Family Crest

http://www.houseofnames.com/coatofarms_details.asp?sId=&s=Mijares

Ramos Coat of Arms, Family Crest

http://www.houseofnames.com/coatofarms_details.asp?sId=&s=Ramos

Aguirre Coat of Arms, Family Crest

http://www.houseofnames.com/coatofarms_details.asp?sId=&s=Aguirre
The word Aguirre means a high place overlooking a field. There are many lineages of this name whose origins are so old that there is no way to connect them in terms of documents.

Some historians claim that the oldest manorial house of Aguirre was the one established in Bermeo, Guernica, Vizcaya, Spain. Others claim that Juan de Aguirre, Ensign to the King Don Sancho, the Wise established the first manorial house, in Navarra in the year 1200. Yet other historians claim that the first Aguirre manorial house was in Guipuzcoa, and its men served the King Ramiro I in the battle of Clavijo in the 800's.

With all these different opinions it would be impossible to determine if there is a common lineage to all the Aguirre families.

Aguirre is a surname well established in the region of Vizcaya and Guipuzcoa as a family name of recognized Hidalguia (non-titled nobility). In order to understand the significance of this nobility the origins and conditions will be explained.

Hidalguia is the name of the first nobility in all of Europe, and it is exclusively a Spanish tradition. The word comes from the phrase "hijo de alguien" which means son of someone, meaning someone important or honored.

Its origins date to the 8th century, when the King of Castilla started the war to reconquer the south part of Spain, which had been invaded by the Moors. This was such a massive effort that the King offered the men of the north of Spain the condition of nobility with the privileges of not paying taxes to the crown, being able to own more land than others, and being able to set up town and regional governments headed by themselves. The areas involved in the war effort were the regions of Galicia, Leon, Burgos, Santander, Asturias, Navarra, Vizcaya, Aragon and Cataluna, all located in the north of Spain, which geographically are set apart from the rest of Spain by mountain ranges.

Since this war lasted seven centuries, the style of life of the men in the northern parts of Spain revolved around the bravery of going to war and the opportunity of becoming a noble recognized by the King. Once the war was won the condition of nobility was so much a part of the people that it was never lost. The hidalgos took over the government of their towns and provinces and they were proud to pass on to their sons and daughters this condition of nobility. Hidalguia was inherited by all offspring of the marriage, unlike the titled nobility that goes to only one of them.

The Aguirre families have more than enough proof of their contribution to the reconquest of Spain from the Moors and throughout the centuries has had many individuals bearing this surname serving the King in many capacities. Many men have been honored with the knighthood of Military Orders, like the Order of Santiago, Carlos III, Calatrava, etc. Many of them have proved their Hidalguia in many chanceries, including Juan Antonio de Aguirre y Leguina, who made this proof in 1772 at the chancery of Guernica. The reason for his proof was that he was establishing residence in Astillero de Guarnizo and since his father and grandfather had moved to different towns in their respective lives, no one knew Juan Antonio and he needed to prove to the city of Astillero that he was a legitimate son of Hidalgos originally from Arrigorriaga, a legendary seat of the Aguirre lineage.

One of the privileges that an hidalgo had was that he was granted the license to have a coat of arms. The Aguirre family of Arrigorriaga has always used the coat of arms with a gold background, with a tower of stones on the top half, and silver background with a green treee and two wolves walking in front, one on each side of the tree.

- Thanks to jgauirre. :)

Sunday, December 17, 2006

It's the Economy, Stupid

This is an interesting blog I read posted in one of the Friendster accounts. It's worth a read. :)


 


Good/Bad Leaders Are Criticised All Alike




Economic conditions and policies affect everyone. I wonder why not everyone takes economics in their studies. And since most of us do not study economics, why are there so many who are so ready to comment on the economic affairs and criticise the policies? Don't they have a single bit of worrisome that their rants turn out to be untrue and superficial, that in the process they reveal merely a deficiency of understanding? Perhaps the usual large camp of vociferous peers at their side helps assuage this insecurity.


The only answer one could surmise is most people see economics as a simple discipline. Even a postdoctoral study in it would bring us where common sense would lead us to. But the truth is "economics is a difficult and technical subject but nobody will believe it", quoted from J.M. Keynes. We can imagine how thankless the job and how hard the position is for a well-informed and well-intentioned government. For any unfavourable announcement, the public almost always does not want to listen and does not believe in the government's explanations, but wants to make noises that are non sequitur (to an expert). Paul Krugman, for long in his writings, has been attempting "to explode some plausible-sounding idea that happens to be false or to promote some implausible, disturbing idea that happens to be true", and in the end has managed to make enemies. I remember reading about the uproar he ignited by answering "none" to a question about North American Free Trade Agreement's effect on the US employment.


My point is, economic conclusions can be counter-intuitive. The most commonly cited would be Ricardo's Comparative Advantage. On this, Krugman wrote a long essay explaining why many smart people don't understand it and are not ashamed of their failure.



"Like any scientific concept it is actually part of a dense web of linked ideas. A trained economist looks at the simple Ricardian model and sees a story that can be told in a few minutes; but in fact to tell that story so quickly one must presume that one's audience understands a number of other stories... and you continually find yourself obliged to backtrack, realizing that yet another proposition you thought was obvious actually isn't."


So, good leaders are criticised for policies that look "stupid and suicidal" (i.e. for how they go about running the economy), which the public does not approve of. Bad leaders are criticised for unsatisfactory economic outcomes, which the public also does not approve of.


......................................................


PS: I am not saying that it is wrong for the public to make noise. But it is tricky when the rabble-rousers do not really know what they are noising about. Any sensible explanation is rendered useless at such moment. Emotional hightide overwhelms the most basic logic. I presume, in the first place, we vote for leaders whom we believe could lead the country, not for their ability to follow the crowd in areas that require expertise e.g. economic planning, foreign policy, law, intelligence and security matters. Thus the proper stance in facing dubious policies should be of questioning, not of teaching the experts. Likewise, an enlightened government would conduct consultations with the professionals from their respective fields before the release of a policy, e.g. Singapore and Hong Kong.


......................................................


Excerpts from Poypips's Comment, on Time Horizon:



"when someone does good which has negative short-term effects for greater benefits in the future, people start filling the streets shouting... people do have tendencies to be short-sighted... When a doctor tells you to undergo surgery, you don't tell him 'Go to hell, surgery hurts. Give me a treatment that I'll enjoy.' "


That's right. One of the problems in making economics clear to people is time horizon. We see, hear and feel the immediate short-term pain. Any long-term gain is unbeknownst to us. And we tend to say the economists live in their theoretical world, when in fact they are the ones who see the "real" reality. Economics does not promise instant wealth, but ensures that seeds of success are sown. That's why a well-informed and well-intentioned government is treading on eggs. They have a hard task ahead on persuasion. An irresponsible politician would just pick the easier path by pleasing voters now, at the expense of society's future well-being -- injecting sweet poison instead of bitter pill.


Saturday, December 16, 2006

Uh- Oh. Brace yourself UP.

UP regents vote 7-0 for tuition hike

300% increase for incoming freshmen


By DJ Yap

Inquirer

Last updated 02:13am (Mla time) 12/16/2006

Published on Page A25 of the December 16, 2006 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer


IT’S OFFICIAL.


The cost of education at the state-run University of the Philippines will be triple the current rate starting next year.


Voting 7-0, the UP Board of Regents upheld the controversial
proposal to adjust tuition and other fees at the state university,
despite mounting opposition from student groups that voiced their
protests yesterday at two of the UP’s yearly traditions: the Lantern
Parade and the Oblation Run.


The board approved president Emerlinda Roman’s recommendation to
impose a 300-percent increase in tuition, which had not been adjusted
since 1989. The increase will apply to incoming freshmen next school
year.


With the approval, the cost of an academic unit shall be raised from
P300 to P1,000 on the Diliman, Manila and Los Baños campuses, and from
P200 to P600 on the Baguio, Visayas and Mindanao campuses.
Miscellaneous fees shall also be increased in varying degrees across
the campuses.


The BOR, chaired by Commission on Higher Education chief Carlito
Puno, also approved the revised Socialized Tuition Financial Assistance
Program, which categorizes students according to their financial needs.


UP officials said the modified STFAP would ensure that students who
could not afford the tuition would not have to pay, and would even
receive stipends of up to P12,000 per semester.


Full rates


Under the new tuition scheme, only the “millionaires” among the
students would bear the brunt of the full rates, while the less
affluent would pay rates corresponding to their income brackets, the
officials noted.


The decision enraged students who had gathered in a massive
demonstration outside the College of Law building, where the meeting
took place. Upon learning the news, dozens rushed to the lobby to
confront the regents. But they later calmed down and peacefully left
the Malcolm Hall after their leaders stepped in to pacify them.


University Student Council chair Juan Paolo Alfonso said more
protests were being planned in response to the new development. Student
Regent Raffy Jones Sanchez, on the other hand, described the decision
of the board as an exercise in “shamelessness.”


“This administration is worse than the House of Representatives,” he
said in an apparent reference to the failed bid of administration
legislators to effect a Charter change through a constituent assembly.


Protest


Sanchez, along with faculty regent Roland Simbulan, did not attend
the meeting in protest of the sudden change in venue. The original
venue of the meeting was Quezon Hall, but the officials later moved it
to Malcolm Hall to avoid a confrontation with students who had
“barricaded” the entrances to the administration building.


At 3:30 p.m., UP vice president for legal affairs Marvic Leonen
attempted to enter the hall, only to be blocked by students who had
formed a chain around the entrance, amid hoots and loud chants.


Earlier in the day, officials announced the cancellation of the
Christmas Lantern Parade, citing security concerns. But some students
said the affair went on as scheduled, even if some participants dropped
out of the parade.


Some 30 members of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity streaked naked for
their annual “Oblation Run.” Spokesperson Joselito Caparino said this
year’s run was also in protest against the tuition increase, Charter
change, and the withholding of funds of the Philippine Collegian, UP’s
official student publication.

















Copyright 2006 Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Saturday, December 2, 2006

Millions

Rating:★★★★
Category:Movies
Genre: Kids & Family
What would you do if a bag full of money comes hurtling towards you? For 7 year old Damian Cunningham (played by newcomer Alex Etel), it was all too easy- give it to the needy. Danny Boyle, the director best known for violent films like Trainspotting (another personal favorite), helming a emotionally sophisticated, thickly nuanced, in what seemingly innocent movie like this can a be a little off-tangent. But of course, Mexican Alfonso Cuaron who directed a teen sex and drugs romp movie Y Tu Mama Tambien also directed the third installment of the Harry Potter itself.

The brothers and their Dad (James Nesbitt) just moved into their new home (pointedly named Serendipity) when the unexpected fortune drops onto the laps of Damian and his elder brother Anthony (Lewis McGibbon) and they were expected to spend the 265,000 GBP in one week before the United Kingdom switches over to Euro. Though the premise might sound very simple, the story is further spiced up by Damian's ability to see the saints and in the end, his dead mother. While this is the third time I have watched a movie that has similar themes finding unexpected huge sums of money (Alex de la Iglesia's La Comunidad and Pen-ek Ratanaruang's 6ixtynin9), this whimsical piece of having a good heart in the middle of a thoroughly materialistic society proves to be the film's defining character.

With clean and crisp cinematography, as well as a patient and an apt soundtrack, Millions is a very absorbing, non-preachy children's tale that would be a good film for adults alike - especially for the upcoming holiday season. Released in 2005, Millions was an official selection for the Toronto Film Festival. This lovable story was very-well paced and kept me glued to the whole film the entire time. Watch out for the "appearances" of Saints Nicholas, Francis of the Assisi, Joseph the Worker and the Ugandan Martyrs.

For executing a sweet-tempered family story without being condescending, Millions deserves 4 stars.


Thursday, November 30, 2006

Anticipating Storms














Storms remind you of things you can't control and things that are fleeting. And life is one of them.

More than 26 years ago, the entire family was in mourning. It was to be the loneliest Christmas of all. The first-born, a beautiful baby girl of fair skin and aquiline nose, left as quickly as she had came into this world. The family was in so much deepest grief that the whole family took a funeral vigil of more than two months. Sobbing, teeth-gnashing and chest-beating suddenly found its home in a two-story and stately wooden house by the beach. The tiny angel's abuela fainted as soon as the tomb was being sealed.

Years later, the second-born son would have a vivid dream of his dead elder sister he never even met. He dreamt that he was on a cemetery on a top of a hill. There were plenty of people wearing white flowing gowns, and there was a long line snaking from the top of the hill and the queue stretched on for miles. The sister was there. It was her. The boy knew, because it was heart telling him so. The One was there. His face radiates a light that was as bright as the sun but yet doesnt blind. His face is so beautiful and compassionate that no painting of Him comes close. The boy's tears flowed like the purest spring that suddenly burst forth from a parched earth. He woke up sobbing. His pillows soaked with tears.

Deaths are like Latin novels in his family. Years later, during the funeral of his beloved grandfather, a tornado appeared out of nowhere before the cement on the freshly sealed tomb dried. It ripped through a section of the busy section of the provincial town, injuring one of the drivers that the family hired. The earth trembled. The wind was electric. The twister lifted the poor man's tricycle and hurled it a few meters away with the driver still in it. Before the grandfather died, the boy went home from the university to take care of the preparations for the airflifting of his abuelo to seek better treatment in Manila for his swelling tumor in his gall bladder. As he was being wheeled to the plane, the sky was overcast and there was a light drizzle. The grandfather was ashen-faced, sad. It was indeed a farewell. The next time they would meet would be at the old man's funeral. When the abuela died, it was albeit quieter, save for the hysterical Born-Again service that drove the boy nuts- a fitting end to the endless proselytizing of his Uncle, who seems actually bent on putting up a new religion on the basis of his daughter's religious visions of the heavens and hells. It was scary and daunting. On the surface the boy was indifferent and with his usual sardonic self. But he was afraid. And no one saw that. Because noone cared. He felt being used as pawn, a spineless puppet that would bow down to everyone just because they were older and they were family.

The boy waited for someone to scream for a commercial break. But it was no ED TV. And he was no movie star in some reality show that has gone awry.

He then came to accept that in fact this was maybe what life is all about. It is about anticipating and accepting challenges, making decisions, and moving on. And continue loving. Because if he stopped loving, he would stop believing in dreams. And when you stop dreaming, you start to die.

That boy was me.
















Wednesday, November 29, 2006

A Series of Significant Altered States

Superman.

"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." - Albert Einstein.

I lowered my eyelids. The walls suddenly became covered with red cushions. I was in a club. SASH! is playing. A Mexican boy peeped from the computer screen. Then a Japanese girl. The air was ethereal and cool. People were all sitting against the wall watching us. I am in a spaceship. First in command. I lowered my eyelids. I woke up. Sitting on a hard chair, on the rooftop of a building. I gaze into the nightsky. The twinkling lights of the city around me, and the twinkling of the stars in the firmament above me. The wind was getting cold. And now, Superman has come down from the skies.

Euro.

"Reality in our century is not something to be faced."- Graham Greene.


I looked around me. I was in a room unfamiliar. I was looking at a moving whiteboard smeared with the black marker. I see a figure moving around me. The light from the persistent July morning is trying to find me.


Pink M n Ms.



"In the American metaphysic, reality is always material reality, hard, resistant, unformed, impenetrable, and unpleasant." - Lionel Trilling.


The bed began to move higher. I never thought beds could fly like magic carpets. I smiled. Now, it's The Chappel's Show on the laptop.

My Traffic Lights.

"Reality leaves a lot to the imagination."- John Lennon.

There was a waterfall in the bedroom. Water was flowing from the closets. The walls began to sway. His face began to disintegrate. The skin peeling. I giggled. The lights all around me smiled. The stars were laughing and it is the music of the pealing of a thousand bells. I lay down. South Park is on the screen. I sighed. I closed my eyes. I was on top of a grand staircase in the lobby of a beautiful hotel. The lights from the chandeliers were warm. The plants on huge pots were so green and tropical. I closed my eyes. I was on a never ending magic carpet ride that took me all around the city at night. The wind was gentle. I can hear a soft voice. I closed my eyes. I was on a giant waterslide with millions of colors that would shame Willy Wonka. It was an explosion of colors. Shades of candy crimsons, pinks, aquamarines, sapphire blues, yellows, vermillions. It was like a huge paint waterfall. and I was moving fast, and then slow. I can hear a voice again. I responded. I sighed. The waterslide almost never ends. I am getting tired. I entered a cavern. It was red, and the water turned to a reddish pink sponge, and marshmallowy. I dipped my feet and they turned to sponge. And red. I sat down, my eyes still closed. I heard a voice bidding me to drink. I drank Orange Juice. And went back to bed. And I slept.







Monday, November 27, 2006

Memories of My Melancholy Whores

Rating:★★★★
Category:Books
Genre: Literature & Fiction
Author:Gabriel Garcia-Marquez
Love is defiant. It thrives in the most adverse and unusual conditions. It is a force of nature. And sometimes, we can't help but bow down and respect its power when it starts to overwhelm and consume us.

As soon as I put down Gabriel Garcia Marquez' Memorias de mis putas tristes (Memories of My Melancholy Whores), one cannot help but feel hopeful, that no matter how long it will take, it wont matter whether you are 9 or 90, love will come and get you. His first novel in 10 years, The Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author of One Hundred Years of Solitude, No One Talks to the General and Love in Time of Cholera, dishes out an unforgettable, sensual, amusing and refreshingly liberating love story about a bachelor who decided to have a wild night with a young virgin on the eve of his 90th birthday. And he got more what he bargained for. As what he was accustomed to in the past, he contacts his ever reliable Madam to procure a woman for her. The 14-year old girl is beautiful, but as being tired from taking care for her younger siblings as well as in a job sewing buttons in a factory, all she she could ever do is lie naked on the bed. And sleep. And watched the bachelor, oh, he did.

Night after night, the silent courtship of the naked sleeper and the old watcher grew deeply. And for the two, unknowingly, they slid through that slippery slope of love.

While initially some readers might be expecting the 115-page book overflowing with sex. It does not. But it does overflow with the warm sensuality as expected generally from Latin American writers the likes of Allende (Eva Luna, Stories of Eva Luna), Esquivel (Like water for Chocolate) and Coelho (I have read The Alchemist, 11 Minutes and By The River Piedra I Sat Down and Wept). The tentativeness and the sweeping descriptions of smells, of colors, of touch, of nostalgia. It is a love that you can almost inhale.

While I feel that Memorias is a little more subdued than One Hundred Years of Solitude, the pervasive intelligent eroticism is pulsating all throughout the novel.

When the bachelor found his girl missing after the brothel closed down, we sympathize with him as he looked high and low for the missing "Delgadina"(the name he gave her). We feel his anxiety and his sadness as he finds everything connected to Delgadina and every face in the crowd, her face. We felt his righteous rage as he accused Delgadina of being unfaithful. And we sat beside him in his anguish and his pain and then his bewilderment and his new sense of hope in the realization that at 90 years old, he felt in love for the first time, and the knowledge that she too, loves him back.

When I told my friends about the story, I was most amused of course with myself rather than with their reactions. Though it certainly would be revolting in most societies, I never seem to see the pedophiliac nature of the relationship between the bachelor and the girl. I guess I was just way too blinded by the awesome power and beauty of such kind of love.

For giving me hope in love when hoping seems not be fashionable anymore, and for leaving me breathless in the process, this gem of a piece deserves 4 stars.


Friday, November 24, 2006

NU 107 Rock Awards 2006

Start:     Dec 1, '06 8:00p
End:     Dec 2, '06
Location:     World Trade Center, Manila

I suffer, because I love.






I am reposting a poem I wrote July last year for my friends who requested so... I initially composed each stanza of this poem on my mobile and was to send it to my object of affection, but instead of sending it to the person, I sent this instead to a friend who asked me to compile everything, and I did. I wrote this down in a piece of paper, and sent the poem along with a bouquet of a dozen peach pink roses that you see here to the one I loved.


"Untitled or Otherwise Known as a Secret Suffering of a Person in Love"


I

I love him just because I love him
and when I love, I love without exceptions.
When I love, I love intensely not tentatively,
I'll love even if I know it will hurt me.
It's like a fire that consumes me,
it burns me, it blinds me, it may even kill me.

II

For he became the air that I breathe,
the blood in my veins, the passion in my poetry.
I feed from the sound of his laughter,
the sparkle in his eyes when he sees me,
the corner of his smile, the movement of his shadows,
the peace of his sleep, the sweetness of his kiss
and the warmth of his body next to mine.
He is a million reasons to live.

II.V (Postcript to I & II)

You came like a misdirected arrow that pierced my quietitude, cursing me to love in an unequal measure, and now that I am dazed and confused, you left me dying in my stained solitude...

III

As fast as the mercury rising, my love ran wild in the night.
Tame me, and make me yours, envelop me in the glow
of your being, I need the shower of your affection,
for I chose not to be anywhere but to be beside you,
beside you I live, to hold your hand and never let go.
Tonight, I decide to dream of you, for in my dreams,
I have you forever.

IV

In the break of dawn I silently gaze, upon the hillocks
and valleys of your body, the soft morning light falling on your
olive-colored skin, counting every heaves of your sighs,
the crests and troughs of your chest as your heart beat steadily,
memorizing every detail of your face, not knowing how long
will I bask in its sweet contemplation, for in this very hour,
I was happy in the midst of my desperation.

V (unfinished)

With your touch, I tremble, tremors course through my body,
with your touch, you leave me breatheless
and with the sweet suffocation, your touch defined my existence.

(and maybe it was my eloquent isolation and the deep
pathos whispers the breathe of my acquiesence to my calm
desolation.)

V.v (Prelude to VI)
Make love to me in pain, whip, bind, subdue me
and drive me to submission, bruise me, I want you
to leave my body in black and blue.
suffocate me, strangle me, chain me, and leave me
beaten senseless, dying on the crumpled sheets
of my dreams, for no pain can match the suffering,
my suffering of loving you.

VI

I drown in the river of my saline grief,
the night I've lost you to the tumbling, fickle winds
and the steady, falling, melancholic rain, the same winds that
carried me to you and then you away from me.
I drown myself in the river of my saline grief,
in the night of the saddest stars.

the other David
July 2-4, 2005














Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Liquid Dreams

http://yamanitoshi.blogs.friendster.com/my_blog/

Going Home




The saddest part of a trip to Boracay is leaving it. I had to separate these photographs from the Boracay Trip 2006 folder because of a different melancholic gaze of the camera upon the setting sun. Photos courtesy of дима ларионов.

Underwater Hockey Grad Tourney




PUHC Novice Game. (SAPUHC)

Embassy Superclub - Why Getting a Visa Can Be Quite a Trip

Rating:★★★
Category:Other
This review should be long overdue, but it seems when everyone crashes to their beds after a long hard night partying, one forgets the good and bad details of that night. Embassy touts itself as the classiest, snottiest dance club in the whole country where everyone begs to be in their permanent guestlist. Composed of the VIP room (plays hiphop & R&B), Main Room (House &Trance), Cuisine (Chillout & Lounge) and the Cafeteria (nothing here but food). With the current crop of clubs and party places in the metro, there are no other place that can equal Embassy's insouciance. Why, they even have the resident Queen Bitch to flush out unruly clubbers (and thats excluding the usual coterie of bouncers). Embassy, like Nuvo, M Cafe and Citrus, is a place to be seen. Forget the expensive cocktails and the irritatingly loud music on the Main Room (if you wont get hammered by your drink, chances are you'll get your eardrums busted by the super loud music). Embassy is prettier during events. I have been to several ones and I loved the rainbow laser lights that hit the disco balls, the smoke effects, but what annoyed me was the confetti rain. I was wearing white shirts that time and since I got all sweaty from you know what, I left the club with my shirt in soaked in different colors. The VIP room was so packed the last time I was there (last Saturday), and so sod it, I just left when I found myself wading through so many people just to get thru the bar.Hiphop and RnB is not my thing so getting myself in the VIP doesnt matter. I used to go to Embassy almost every weekend a few months ago, unfortunately, I figured out that the same music gets played everytime I go there. There was one time that we would time the song Fly Away by Jean Claude Ades, we noticed that it gets played around 1 AM. Always! Cuisine's chillout is the best place to go people watching. Friday and Saturday is the best time to go there, have some few heady cosmopolitans before heading to the Main Room. My friend Edge and the Soundsgood Crew; and Calypso Events' Soulshine spin some soulful and classy grooves. I just wished they put on some more lighting effects. The food in the Cafeteria is Okay, probably one of the more expensive tapsilog in town. My basic complaint with Embassy is the annoyingly loud music at the Main Room and the music is so unfresh.The music at the VIP Room leaves much to be desired. And yeah, maybe they should invest in better special lighting effects, because after the second set, everything becomes boring.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Why The Netherlands is the Happiest Country on Earth

Dutch group wants to roll world's biggest joint


Agence France-Presse
Last updated 07:39am (Mla time) 11/22/2006


THE HAGUE -- Insouciant of police warnings, a Dutch group is set to roll the world's biggest joint, sending the previous record for a marijuana cigarette up in smoke, the ANP news agency reported Tuesday.


The world's largest joint will be a 500-gram (17-ounce), meter-long (3.3-foot) monstrosity, rolled with cigarette paper and easily dwarfing the previous 100-gram winner, ANP said. To beat the record, it must be made entirely of marijuana with no tobacco mix.


"Afterwards we'll light it up," predicted event organizer Thijs Verheij, who is hoping his feat will land in the Guinness Book of Records.


The Dutch police are not amused however, warning they will intervene if the joint surpasses the five grams of marijuana allowed for consumption and sale in the Netherlands.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Rufo's

Rating:★★★★★
Category:Restaurants
Cuisine: Other
Location:Kalayaan, Makati
This is the place to go to after a hard night partying, Conveniently tucked in an almost secluded area, the place offers rest and a sobering up. I meant to write this review for such a long time but I always seem to forget everytime I am online. The last time I was here was last early Saturday morning around 4ish with my friend Daryl and Anton. We had sizzling sisig, fried danggit and of course the tapas which they are famous for. The service is amiable and fast, and the food, what can I say... hmm.. let me say, after a night of finishing almost a bottle of vodka, throw your diet out of the window because garlic rice, tapas and danggit and sisig just felt heaven. It was so good I almost had an orgasm. (Just thinking of it, just makes me shiver!) Price wise, they are priced wisely. Just perfect, no complaints there! If you are tired of the usual McDonald's fare after parties, Rufo's is the best place to be, before hitting your bed or someone else's! (Just make sure you gargle Listerine to take away that garlicky breathe!)

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Jeff Li's Birthday Party

Start:     Nov 19, '06 11:00p
End:     Nov 20, '06
Location:     Marina, Jupiter St. , Bel-Air

Cyprien de Bari's Farewell Party

Start:     Nov 24, '06 11:00p
Location:     Donnely's, Alabang, Muntinlupa
Donnely's, Alabang, Muntinlupa

Saturday, November 11, 2006

The Gross National Product and Foam Parties.

Now I really know where half of the Philippine GNP are being spent. In foam parties in ritzy subdivisions. I was supposed to go out and just chill out with a Marie Antoinette movie in Greenbelt last night, but as luck and timing would have it. My friend Daryl was late (again) and it is Friday night. We checked out Bedspace (too lame crowd), M Cafe (too well lit), Nuvo (too senior crowd) so we sent our asses scurrying to the Fort where we chilled over cosmos and and white russians (stupid name for a drink.. he he he diba Carlos?) and reminisced over our conquests over the years while '80s music was being played at Jills (so apropos..).

Around 11ish, we got an invite for Chris Parker's Annual Birthday Bash with Foam Party as this years theme at a South Forbes residence. Guestlist includes Manila's virtual partyphiles - Rajo Laurel, Borgy Manotoc, Vina Morales, fire-dancin Rachel Lobangco, recently outed Robby Tarroza and Manila's X community, and lots and lots of foam, sexy music and flowin drinks.

It takes parties like this to really wake you up. While being photographed and published in expensive in glossies and society pages, one thinks how poor families cannot even send their kids to school. A copy of Philippine Tatler costs pretty much a day's meal for a poor family of 4-6. And the money spent on that party could have been the annual income of 20 poor families combined. Oh well. Ill post some of the photos here soon. Maybe I should do some charity or volunteer work soon... Washing my guilt? Maybe.


Thursday, November 9, 2006

Schadenfreude! Now It's Legal to have Oral Sex in Singapore, BUT...


Singapore may relax sex laws, but for heterosexuals only




Associated Press

Last updated 04:52pm (Mla time) 11/09/2006


SINGAPORE
-- Singapore plans to decriminalize oral and anal sex for adult
heterosexuals under legislation unveiled Thursday, but the government
said sex between homosexuals will remain banned.


The government posted proposed amendments to the city-state's Penal
Code -- the result of a three-year review -- on a Web site, and
Singaporeans have a month to offer feedback. The Ministry of Home
Affairs will consider the input before presenting the proposals to
Parliament early next year.


The amendments that have generated the most water-cooler buzz in
strait-laced Singapore are those that would legalize oral and anal sex
between consenting heterosexuals over age 16 -- and the retention of
the law against acts between homosexuals.


That drew immediate criticism from People Like Us, a gay rights group.


"If the government aims for an open, inclusive society, it should be
doing all it can to overturn prejudice and discrimination, rather than
give people reason to remain close-minded through retaining (the ban)
for symbolic purposes," the group said in a statement.


The Home Affairs Ministry said it wants to modernize the laws "to be
in line with social mores and emerging societal trends" -- but that
doesn't include homosexuality.


"Singapore remains, by and large, a conservative society. Many do
not tolerate homosexuality," said a note published with the amendments.


However, it said it would continue its policy of not proactively prosecuting private homosexual acts.


"Gross indecency" between two men can lead to two years in jail, but
it's rarely punished. Singapore has a thriving gay community.


Other proposed amendments would ban necrophilia, toughen penalties
for sex with minors under 14, and introduce penalties for men who rape
their wives.


The amendments would also expand the Sedition Act to cover "the
wounding of racial feelings," and would toughen credit card fraud laws.


A change in the "unlawful assembly" law would broaden its focus to
groups "whose common object is to commit any offense, and not just
those relating to public tranquility."


Outdoor gatherings of more than four people now require a police
permit -- a law seen by critics as an attempt to curb political
dialogue.


Such laws were highlighted in September, when protesters were
confined to an indoor lobby during annual International Monetary Fund
and World Bank meetings held in Singapore.


















Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.





Wednesday, November 8, 2006

In a Place of Love, Hate Exists

Vatican calls for Jerusalem gay march to be banned


Agence France-Presse
Last updated 08:00am (Mla time) 11/09/2006


VATICAN CITY -- The Vatican on Wednesday called for a planned gay pride march in Jerusalem to be banned for fear of offending "the sensibilities of religious communities that reside in Jerusalem and hold her dear."


"It is clear that the Gay Parade scheduled to take place in Jerusalem will prove offensive to the great majority of Jews, Muslims and Christians, given the sacred character of the city of Jerusalem," the Holy See said in a letter to the Israeli foreign ministry.


While free expression must be respected, it is "subject to just limits," particularly when it offends religious beliefs, the Vatican added.


The Vatican joined a number of religious leaders and extreme-right activists who have called for the canceling of Jerusalem's fifth gay pride march, scheduled for Friday.


Given the go-ahead Sunday by Israel's attorney general Menahem Mazuz, the march has sparked fierce reactions.


Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox mayor, Uri Lupolianski, was beaten Tuesday by fellow ultra-Orthodox Jews opposed to the march. And a group of rabbis reportedly intend to place a Kabbalistic curse on it.


Critics have also filed petitions in court against the planned rally, which Israel's Industry and Trade Minister Eli Yishai described as "an abomination on the streets."


So far, Israel's Supreme Court has thrown out several petitions to cancel the march, but was due to examine more on Wednesday.


On Monday, officers and gay organizers agreed to switch the route of the parade from downtown to the ultra-secure zone around various government ministries, the supreme court and central bank, far from religious sites.


In its note, the Vatican expressed confidence that Israel's foreign ministry would "exert all its influence" in having the authorization for the march reconsidered, "as a mark of respect for the religious sentiments of all those who venerate the Holy City."


Israeli police said late Wednesday that the gay pride march was likely to be postponed because of a high state of alert following threats by Palestinian factions to resume suicide attacks.


"We have made it known that it will without a doubt be necessary to postpone this event, which will require the deployment of thousands of officers to ensure security," Ilan Franco, Jerusalem police chief, told Israeli television.


Police said the march could be postponed for a week.


The Holy See also opposed a similar World Gay Pride march in Rome six years ago.


The rally -- which then pope John Paul II described as an "affront on Christian values" during the celebration of the Vatican's Holy Year -- took place anyway, with an attendance of tens of thousands.












Copyright 2006 Agence France-Presse. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Friday, November 3, 2006

McDonald's and the Environment

Let me repost this environmental issue confronting not only McDonald's or Jollibee but other fastfood chains as well. While I dont agree with Gary Granada's off-tangent tirade against the Arroyo government and what he calls as 'state-sponsored summary executions' ( I have my sources from the different Embassies and Missions that the most killings of journalists are NOT work related as well as that there is an ongoing purge of the militants all over and therefore the military is not to be blamed for that). As for the legitimacy of the Arroyo government, that has already been settled in the Supreme Court and I dont even need to elaborate on that.

The following article is a little sad for me since McDonald's (in Greenbelt Paseo de Roxas) is usually our meeting place and afterparty pigout place and for their top honchos acting irresponsibly in addressing this issue is disappointing. For a multinational brand like McDonald's, its managers must be always in the forefront in considering its consumers' feedback and suggestion, listen and actually do something about it. I agree that there is too much plastic packaging that goes around and this creates a problem especially in waste disposal. I think McDonald's should not only be more socially responsible and environmentally friendly but must learn in how to deal with the general dining public. After all, they are the reason for your existence. Kaya listen bitches.



        My Personal Ordeal with the Arrogant Managers of
McDonald's




5 seconds





My name is Gary Granada, I am a Kaalagad
volunteer, and I need 5 seconds of your time to help reduce the use of
styrofoam in fast food chains.





What was meant to be a nice and simple Saint
Francis Day motorcade-march to McDonald’s yesterday turned out to be a
nightmare. We were rudely treated by McDonald’s, to put it mildly. Weeks
before, we already sought a dialogue with them to reiterate our concern
regarding their reluctance to reduce their use of styrofoam, despite their
pledge to seriously attend to it during our dialogue in 2002! (Jollibee said
the same thing, and while we are not satisfied with their response, at least
they made some effort to shift to other packaging and serving materials.)





We sent them a letter, went to their office,
made follow ups, waited for a response. The most we got from them was
‘you wait for our call’. They never called, never wrote back, but
verbally said they will assign representatives to receive our motorcade’s
representatives.





When we got there, their representatives turned
out to be the
Citibank Building’s security detail. Ill-mannered and impolite, they told us that
they were told by McDonald’s that they were not expecting us. One of our staff
went up to their 17th floor office to find out whether they were
willing to sit down and talk matters. Told to tell us to wait, we
waited. The giant that it is, the bosses of McDonald’s apparently regard
little children, nuns, mothers, priests and concerned consumers as their
employees. We asked how long we were supposed to wait and got no straight
answer. Finally they sent word for me to come up, just me, no one
else. I thought these people must have seen too many spaghetti movies,
perhaps they thought they had a hostage crisis. I was led to a conference
room that could easily sit six or seven people and was greeted by two bright
boys.





Think about it. Naglakad kami papuntang
McDonald's, at pagdating namin doon, wala man lang bumaba para kausapin kami ng
maayos. At pinatawag ako nitong dalawang batang managers!





It occurred to me that there were far more basic
issues that plague McDonald’s than styrofoam. Like common courtesy.
So I explained to these rich young rulers that the courteous thing to do was to
go down, greet the delegation and ask how they may be of help. I even
asked them where they were schooled, because in the public school in an obscure
town where I came from, they manage to teach such things in Grade One. Their
bloated bright brains must have taken up the space that was meant for their
ears. It felt like talking to an electric fan.





Meanwhile I insisted that somebody from
Greenpeace, the Ecowaste Coalition, Franciscan Movement for Justice, Peace and
Integrity of Creation, and the JPICC of the Association of Major Religious
Superiors of the
Philippines (our partners in the activity) be present as well. They said they
can only accommodate three people at most. Fine. So I said I and
our staff will go down and we will send three people up. But at the lobby,
the three representatives we sent were barred by security people from
proceeding, again upon McDonald’s instructions they said.





It looked hopeless.





We decided to wrap up the program when out of
nowhere a condescending woman materialized and introduced herself as the media
relations officer of McDonald's. She said, ‘Why don’t you go to Jollibee
instead, they’re number One.’ To which Father Ben Moraleda replied, ‘We
did, and at least they are doing something.’





On the side, irked by her audacity, Fr. Ben
quipped, ‘And please take that hand of yours off my shoulder, I don’t like
you.’





And all that commotion for a very simple and
very reasonable plan: that McDonald’s reduce the use of styrofoam by 50% within
one year. McDonald’s has once again demonstrated its arrogance and
incapacity to appreciate the sincere and constructive efforts of common folks
to protect our environment. Unlike them, we do not make money doing what
little we can to help make things a little better for everybody.





Five seconds, that’s all I ask of
you to help reduce the use of styrofoam. Sa mundo ng mga mayayabang,
papansinin lang nila tayo kung tayo ay maninindigan.
Take 5 seconds
to think twice before choosing where to dine or order food.





WHEN YOU HAVE A CHOICE, DON’T
CHOOSE MCDONALD’S





I feel sad for that woman and those two young
managers. So young, so successful, so ahead of their game, so privileged;
so rude, so arrogant, so lacking in character, so bland. And I have since
stopped wondering why their burgers taste the way they do.





------------<>------------





It will take a bit longer than 5
seconds, but it will go a long way if you can email this page to friends.
Thank you for your time~






Gary Granada




7 October,
2006





------------<>------------





We have some people asking if the
story about my ordeal with McDonald's is just one malicious smudge
campaign. So I feel compelled to post this letter which is actually a
reply to one email I got regarding the issue. Two things: One, it is
quite understandable that people are skeptical about such things (I myself hate
spams and cons) and that is fine, we should by all means verify sources before
forwarding messages. Two, I am not entirely an obscure person in the
advertising industry, I make jingles and did the music for two Ad Congresses
including the last one. It is against my personal interest to be at odds with
people who regularly employ advertising to sell their goods and wares. But
one needs to draw the line somewhere, as they say.





Hi Niva,





In 2002, we had separate dialogues with both
McDonald's and Jollibee. We specifically suggested for them to
create an Ecolane, where people who bring their own plates may be
accommodated. We even held a small activity with Jollibee in SM
where kids brought their own plates, spoons and forks.





Sometime after that, Jollibee replaced their
styrofoam plates with washable reusable plastic baskets which are better we
thought (This was of course not as a result of our dialogue alone, many groups
have been working on the issue of plactics and styrofoam)





Both Jollibee and McDonald's were less than
accommodating, both did not bother to look into the possibility of the
Ecolane. So we shifted our campaign to schools, expalining to
students and school

admninistrators the ill effects of using disposable non-biodegradable
materials. (We have a simple module and a makeshift exhibit for
aids)





After four years, we thought we needed to go
back to institutional advocacy and press for a zero-use of styrofoam in three
years. The usage extent does not matter at the moment, as we were
using a percentage tracking platform : reduce to 50 on the first year, then 20
on the seond year, then 0 within three years.





To kick off the campaign, we decided to start
where we started: McDonald's.





And that's what happened. It would
have been nice if McDonald's accommodated us and explained to us what they were
doing to precisely address the issue. But they completely ignored
us.





As such, this has gone beyond
styrofoam. We need to persuade big business to be mindful of public
sentiment, hopefully in a cooperative way, but sadly, in this case, through a
more tedious way since McDonald's is too arrogant to listen.





My suggestion is to organize a real effective
consumer movement to force big corporations to behave accordingly and remind
them that their single-minded profit-driven imaginations may be tolerated up to
a point, but always subservient to public welfare.





McDonald's is a giant, it will not be hurt by
people like me, but if get organized, we can at least bring manners and humility
to these people, and who knows that might bring some real change in policy and
praxis.





-Gary



10 October 2006





Please forward this to your
friends if you find it appropriate, thank you~





-------------------





To help collate comments on the
McDonald's issue,


please log on to the



PHILIPPINE CIVIL SOCIETY FORUM



http://garygranada.com/cgi%2Dbin/phpbb/



CLICK Institutions



CLICK McDonald's



Or go straight to the topic:



http://garygranada.com/cgi%2Dbin/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=5



Thanks~



And please forward if you find it relevant
and


appropriate, salamat po~~





McDonald's
hires PR agency



to invite
Fr. Ben Moraleda and Gary Granada





On the evening
of October 17, I got a call from Ms. Bonjin Bolinao. She said McDonald's
was sending a letter to Kaalagad, inviting us to a dialogue. She also
asked me if it were possible to indicate in my website that McDonald's already
sent a letter to Kaalagad (we received the letter the following day). I
promised her that I will publish her letter in my website (http://garygranada.com). I believe the
only way we may have an honest to goodness dialogue where public concern is
concerned is for the public to know the facts. So I'm publishing and
circulating this letter, as well as my reply to Bonjin, in fairness to
everybody.





If you haven't
yet, please read for a backgrounder



My Ordeal with the Arrogant Managers of McDonald's





--------------------------------





16 October 2006





KAALAGAD



Attention:



Fr. Ben
Moraleda, Spokesperson



Mr. Gary
Granada, Volunteer





Dear Fr.
Moraleda and Mr. Granada:





On behalf
McDonald’s
Philippines, we would like
to invite you to a dialogue with senior McDonald’s representatives on Thursday,
October 26, at
9:30 AM at Top of the
Citi restaurant, 34th floor,
Citibank Center, Paseo de Roxas,
Makati City.





McDonald’s
would like to discuss with your group their efforts in addressing the various
issues that you have raised. They would also like to formalize their commitment
to your cause of reducing the use of harmful substances in the quick-service
industry.





Thank you for
your attention. Please confirm if you are available on the said date and time.
Should you have further queries, please contact Mr. Stevie Martinez at 889-8332
loc. 131 or 0918-9258163.





Thank you.





Sincerely,





HCN Bonjin
Bolinao



Managing
Director



DDB Phils.



Ad Verbum PR





--------------------------------





And here is my
reply to her letter (thru e-mail):





19 October 2006





Dear Bonjin,





I just read
your letter dated
16 October,
2006
. Thank you for the invitation. Because we are a
consultative community, Kaalagad is currently consulting its members and staff
as well as our partners in order to come up with an appropriate collective
response.





Offhand, I
would like to share with you my personal view. (Kaalagad is drafting its
official position.)





I am of the
opinion that your letter is insincere, insensitive and mercenary. It is
insincere because you write as though October 6 never happened. No
mention of the incident, no need for apology, no need to explain why McDonald's
acted the way it did.





It is
insensitive because you picked a venue which is one elevator ride from
McDonald's's bosses' office, while we have to commute all the way to
Makati from Quezon City. To add
insult to injury, you picked the very same building where we were harassed by
your security people and shabbily treated by your managers.





It is mercenary
because I see PR written all over the page. It is not even signed by
McDonald's but by an ad agency. We are not a 'market' that your college
advertising textbooks may have taught you to regard. We are not a
'segment' of the market that you can simply 'sample', 'profile' and 'contain'
if need be.





Don't treat us
like we are a PR problem. I cannot take this veiled insult sitting
down. So, to cut the crap, I will excuse myself from any possible
dialogue with you or your client.





I have a very
simple, doable and straightforward suggestion to you though. Why don't
you and McDonald's use everything within your enormous financial and media
clout to discredit what I am saying:





DON'T BUY
MCDONALD'S BECAUSE:



1. McDonald's
is arrogant - don't make them more arrogant.



2. McDonald's
uses styrofoam - don't encourage them further.





I urge you to
publicly discredit those two statements. And I shall be very happy, even
eager, to be discredited and proven wrong if you really mean what you
say. Show proof in all your stores and offices that contrary to what I am
saying, McDonald's is a humble giant that puts public welfare above
profit. That way, we all win!





I will publicly
broadcast those statements. I know it sounds laughable for I can't even
afford to pay for one column-centimeter of news item. A little-known
folksinger versus a transnational ad agency of a transnational megacorporation
is a like playing chess blindfolded with one rook less. On the other
hand, I believe there are lots and lots of people who simply seek goodwill and
solidarity. And I suspect many of them are fond of spaghetti and brewed
coffee.





This will be
the last time I'll write to you regarding McDonald's, hell I don't get paid for
writing letters like you do.





Lastly, please
do not take this letter as a personal affront. Like you said over the
phone, we have common friends. I hope we are on the same page then, for
instance, in taking the illegitimate Arroyo government to task over the specter
of state-sponsored summary executions and brazen political opportunism that has
become the norm in this country.





Tell you what,
I hang out at Conspiracy (
Visayas Ave, Quezon City, across Shell,
beside Equitable Bank, landline 4532170). My favorite singers Cooky Chua
and Noel Cabangon (who by the way once did a commercial for McDonald's) perform
there. Our mutual friend Conrado DeQuiros is a regular. You might
want to check the place out. Please let me buy you a beer, no scripts, no
agenda, but as real persons in a real way.





Sincerely,





Gary Granada





-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





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