Friday, May 29, 2009

Who Was The Better State Leader: Ferdinand Marcos or Deng Xiaoping?

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Ferdinand Edralin Marcos - 10th President of the Philippines
Term of Office - 1965 to 1986   ( 20 years )
Presided over more or less 60 million Filipinos

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Deng Xiaoping - 5th General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, 3rd Chairman of the Central Military Commission of CCP
Terms of Office - 1956 to 1966, General Secretary of the Communist Party of China; 1977 to 1989, de-facto leader of China ( 22 years )
Presided over more or less 1 billion Chinese

Mr. Marcos and Mr. Deng were both dictators who held power for about the same length of time.  They were the undisputed strongmen over the Philippines and China, respectively, for the better part of two decades.  During their terms of office, they instituted reforms in their jurisdictions which would greatly influence the destinies of two nations. 

Ferdinand Marcos commands a large following among Pinoys as "the greatest President of the Republic of the Philippines".  He was possessed of acute intelligence, charisma, and political savvy.  According to Wikipedia,  "As Philippine president and strongman, his greatest achievement was in the fields of infrastructure development and international diplomacy."  Millions upon millions of Pinoys grow nostalgic over Marcos presidency, tirelessly repeating anecdotes about how it was the best period in the Philippines' history.  

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Mr. Deng is equally revered in his native China as a spectacularly influential personality.  According to Wikipedia:  "Inheriting a China wrought with social and institutional woes left over from the devastating Cultural Revolution and other mass political movements of the Mao era, Deng was the core of the second generation Chinese leadership. He was instrumental in introducing a new brand of socialist thinking, having developed Socialism with Chinese characteristics and Chinese economic reform, also known as the socialist market economy and partially opened China to the global market. He is generally credited with advancing China into becoming one of the fastest growing economies in the world and vastly raising the standard of living. "

Obviously, Mr. Deng had ushered in an unprecedented period of progress in China.

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Both of them had their own share of the blunt criticisms.  Wikipedia states that the Marcos administration "was marred by massive authoritarian government corruption, despotism, nepotism, political repression and human rights violations".

Mr. Deng, on the other hand, was recently the subject of an inflammatory essay by Bao Tong, a high-ranking Chinese official.  According to an article that appeared on the British news website TimesOnline, Mr. Bao indicates that "Deng turned against political liberalism and backed rule by a strong state.  He [ Bao ] argues that the party has merely transferred economic privilege to a corrupt bureaucratic elite.  'The price we have paid for it today has been too steep: a cheap labor force, added to massive plunder of natural resources, poisoned air and polluted water,' Bao writes. "  Mr. Deng is also perceived, perhaps correctly, as the highest official who gave the go-ahead for the Chinese military to kill thousands of civilians during the infamous Tiananmen Square Massacre.  

It seems that both leaders had promulgated policies which were both highly praised by some quarters and reviled by others.  

Could it be reasoned that Mr. Marcos and Mr. Deng were somehow on the same league?  

And yet, there is a marked difference between how the Philippines has floundered after Mr. Marcos relinquished his stewardship, and how China emerged as a world superpower after Mr. Deng stepped down from power. 

In an article by CNN's Beijing Bureau Chief Jaime FlorCruz, he states that:  "China now is nothing short of an economic miracle. Its economy has grown at an average of 9.8 percent since 1978, making it the fourth largest economy in the world. Incredibly, China has pulled off the equivalent of reform, renaissance and industrial revolution in 30 years.  It's incredible because only three decades ago China was so poor and isolated."
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The Philippines, on the other hand, is described in less savory terms by the British Broadcasting Corporation.  According to an article from bbc.com:

"Though it once boasted one of the region's best-performing economies, the Philippines is saddled with a large national debt and tens of millions of people live in poverty. The economy is heavily dependent on the billions of dollars sent home each year by the huge Filipino overseas workforce." 
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It would seem that Mr. Marcos left quite a more bitter legacy for his people, while Mr. Deng's pioneering efforts stayed on bearing fruit in China long after he left.

Would this mean that Mr. Deng was the better state leader?  Or do the achievements of Mr. Marcos remain over and above those of Mr. Deng's?

What do you think?

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Are Pinoys Racist Bigots?

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http://img2.travelblog.org/Photos/11737/114378/f/776234-Another-big-filipino-lunch-with-family-0.jpg

We Pinoys say that we are always hospitable towards foreigners of all races, creeds, and colour. Sadly enough, the only race of people we can't seem to get along with is our own.

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Metro Manila, in the middle of a glitzy tourist district. "NO SANDALS, SLIPPERS, OR SHORTS ALLOWED", the sign on the glass doors of restaurant-cum-bar-and-nightspot right beside the swanky five-star hotel graciously warned the prospective patron. A Pinoy with the gall to stroll right up to the entrance wearing a collared shirt, khaki shorts, and hiking shoes--the essential wear of a tropical backpacker--is politely refused entry by the Pinay waitress manning the door because of violating the dress code set by the management. The Pinoy realizes this and agrees to search for another restaurant where he can be allowed to go inside.

Then, a whole group of foreign tourists clad only in beachwear comes along...and the waitress has no trouble letting the dudes go in--even when these guys are apparently dressed in beach shorts and slippers.

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It appears that foreign tourists can come in whatever fashion they please into this restaurant, never mind the rules. This is a factual incident. It is only one of countless others which illustrate how other races are accorded preferential treatment by Pinoys over their own.

A convicted rapist who happens to be an American is given a speedy appeals trial while thousands of wrongly accused Pinoys languish in prisons without having been convicted in the first place. Pinoys struggle hard to converse with foreigners in English, for the sake of courtesy, while they laugh at Bisayans who are simply talking in one of the Philippines' major languages, mocking the speakers with the jocular phrase "Bisaya ka man, gid, ha?" Drunken Pinoys walking along the street can always be reported to the authorities for social misdemeanors, while foreigners just as inebriated can race their motorcycles or cars down public roads without being penalized. Crooked policemen find it easier to extort money from fellow Pinoys than victimize our dearly beloved visitors. When the Abu Sayyaf abducts foreigners and Pinoys to hold them for ransom, the foreigners are the ones prioritized to be rescued first, while Pinoys are beheaded and are forgotten as casualties.

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Then again, perhaps foreigners do deserve to be treated better. After all, what are fellow Pinoys anyway but simply a worthless bunch of riffraff? It will not be of any benefit to any Pinoy of he or she treats and regards fellow Pinoys with the same respect, courtesy, and...well, reverence which foreigners are showered with. Why would anybody want to treat their own Pinay maid with the same civility as they would a foreign visitor at their own house--no matter that the foreign visitor was also a maid in his or her homeland?

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One of the definitions of the word "racist", according to http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/racist?qsrc=2889 is "Discrimination or prejudice based on race".

Pinoys appear to be innocent of being racist since they don't actually treat any other race besides their own as inferior. Then again...maybe there are some things Pinoys neglect to ponder about with regards to their own?

So--are we or aren't we racist bigots?

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Do Pinoy Males Look Like Toilet Bowls?

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Admit it.  Pinoy guys are indescribably ugly.  Standing next to a hunky athlete like Oscar dela Hoya, Manny Pacquiao looks more like a lackey, or maybe even a dog scavenging for scraps, rather than a consummate boxer--perhaps one of the best boxers of all time.

Pinay women would certainly prefer to date or even marry foreign guys.  Imagine a scenario where Manny Pacquiao and Oscar dela Hoya were both trying to set up a date with a Pinay, say, by sending her text messages on her cellular phone, and then using MMS to send her their pictures.  Most surely the Pinay will choose the dashing and debonaire Oscar over ugly Manny.

It is fair to say that Manny Pacquiao has the facial features of the typical Pinoy guy walking on the street.  In essence, he is from his face down to the very fibre of his bones purely of Pinoy breed.  He does not have a surname like "Geisler", "Taulava", "Jones", "Bektaz", "Anderson", "Young", or any other surname which sounds as if the person was born in the United States or Australia or Korea--wherever else.  "Pacquiao" can easily sound like "Benipayo" or "Malibay".  His mother and father are of Pinoy genetic origins.  He is not "half-" German, Swiss, Japanese, Bulgarian--any of hundreds of other countries of origin.  

Pinay women simply relish the thought of walking arm-in-arm inside a shopping mall with a foreign-looking dude at her side, which makes the both of them get noticed by everybody else.  The experience would be surely close to enjoying a certain instant celebrity status.

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Perhaps there are numerous justifiable reasons why Pinays would like it better to be paired with foreigners.  They are certainly more handsome than the typical Pinoy on the street.  Some people simply generalize that Pinays favor foreigners because they have more money.   However, this would mean, too, that Pinays are nothing more than gold-digging leeches, insatiable seekers of financial gain no matter what--something which Pinays themselves might not agree with.

Isn't it, after all, a fact that Pinay showbiz actresses and celebrities--women who arguably enjoy a high level of financial security--also date and/or marry foreigners?  

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Maybe foreigners are simply the better choice.  They probably work harder and are the best providers.  A Pinay and a foreigner union could also result in children which are "half-" this and that, progeny which would definitely be better looking compared to children looking like Manny Pacquiao.

Maybe Pinoy guys truly deserve to be labelled as the pickings at the bottom of the barrel, scrapings which are only chosen when there are no other alternatives available.  Maybe Pinoy guys simply look like toilet bowls.

What do you think?

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Would You Give the Philippines an A-Grade?

(Photo taken from http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/thumb_334/122698095815R9y2.jpg)

Let us just suppose that the whole world was a classroom and that each country is a student in that class.  

The class attendance sheet would contain names such as Mr. USA,  Mr. Russia,  Mr. China,  Mr. Finland...and so on.  Of course, we should not forget that somewhere in that list would also be a Mr. Philippines.  

We are all aware that in any class, there would be top performing students and, well...less than stellar ones.  If the world were a classroom, the student who would rank the highest in all curricular ( and perhaps, even extra-curricular ) activities, the student who serves as the yardstick by which all the other members in class are evaluated, would arguably be Mr. USA.  This particular genius excels in science and technology, in the arts, in the fields of commerce and industry, as well as economics. Why, Mr. USA would also fare outstandingly well in sports and military studies.  In short, it doesn't take a genius to think of Mr. USA as the Top Dog.  He might as well be the class President, too.

However, it would also be apparent that some other students are also eagerly competing with Top Dog Mr. USA.  These students distinguish themselves as a fervent group that, in their own respective ways, strive to at least achieve merits that could rival some abilities of Mr. USA.  Mr. Japan, for one, would probably be neck-and-neck with Mr. USA in the field of science and technology.  Mr. China has recently emerged as a brilliant economic tactician.  There would also be the erstwhile presence of Mr. Russia, Mr. UK, Mr. Germany, Mr. South Korea, Mr. Finland, Mr. Brazil, along with a host of others who unabashedly display flashes of ability which give them a fair amount of class "honors".


Perhaps, like in any other typical class, this "classroom of the world" would have three groups of students.  First, the Elite Top 10 Students, each of whom typifies the ever assiduous student vying for Top Dog position, and who also virtually exert the most significant influence over the classroom.  


Below the Top 10 would be the mid-performers, who are mediocre or run-of-the-mill--these students would simply be content with obtaining the minimum "passing grades" on their "subjects".  

Way below would be the bottom feeders--students who are forever tardy in class, totally uninterested in self-improvement, and would most likely disrupt any class discussion with rambunctiuous demonstrations of hooliganism.  Some people may classify them as students who don't care about their own future.  Some people dismiss them as worthless members of the class, which the classroom could do well without.  
 

We Pinoys are specially fond of students who excel.  Many Pinoy families pride themselves with their one or two family members who receive the most number of academic honors in class.  

Could we as a whole country also be proud of Mr. Philippines as a member of the "world classroom"? Would Mr. Philippines be deserving of a high grade in this class?  Would Mr. Philippines be among the top elite?  Would he be a mediocre student?  Is he an underachiever?  Is he a bottom-feeder, which means that the classroom could do better without him ever being there in the first place?

Would you give Mr. Philippines an A-grade?

Friday, May 1, 2009

Are You "Mukhang Longkatuts"?















(Picture taken from: http://www.eastasiafair.com/wp-contentuploads/2008/12maid-in-malaysia-2.jpg )

Millions, literally millions, of Pinays are branded as "mukhang longkatuts" in the Philippines.  The phrase literally translates to English as "looks like a maid".  

According to widespread perception, a Pinay who is "mukhang longkatuts" possesses certain facial features which would distinguish her as belonging to a category of the Pinay population characterized as, well, primarily ugly and totally unappetizing to discriminating eyes.   This pathetic categorization carries with it the implication that the Pinay in question might actually be a maid employed in some well-to-do household.  

Pinay maids in the Philippines are generally characterized as maleducated, barely literate, and totally incapable of rising above their status as mere servants--i.e., drones of manual labor inside the house. They are said to speak with an accent that many Pinoys mock as--if not painful to the ears somehow, then certainly almost unintelligible in a hilarious way.  It can be said that owing to these qualities attributed to Pinay maids, they are relegated to a social standing far below the mainstream society.  

Perhaps at one time in US history, African-American slaves were suffering under the same burden of...unequal treatment and regard.  Up to now, African-Americans tirelessly speak of the discrimination their ancestors had to endure under the white folk.  One can imagine that for a person to look like a black servant back then would attract scorn and avoidance.  They even say that remnants of the same attitudes remain today.

Then again, what is a "mukhang longkatuts" person, anyway?  Are there any definite and empirical parameters for this?  Granted that the person above is an actual Pinay maid, and that she can be said to look the part, then perhaps maids of foreign nationalities must also have a facial appearance that distinguishes them from, well, the not "mukhang longkatuts". Consider the two maids below:

 

 
Both are maids, and yet it would be apparent that the woman on the left would not be "mukhang longkatuts".  

In any case, the Americans recently elected a president who perfectly looks like an African-American slave. Could it be said that, for Americans somehow, he is a "mukhang longkatuts"?

Perhaps someone would be kind enough to truly differentiate what is "mukhang longkatuts" from what is not?  And by the way, do the longkatuts and those who look like them deserve their treatment?