May bring no tear to any eye
When this New Year in time shall end
Let it be said I've played the friend,
Have lived and loved and labored here,
And made of it a happy year."
My Life, My World . . . . Life as I see and Live it. From Roxas City, Manila, Alicante, Barcelona, Madrid, Austin, Miami, San Francisco, Frankfurt, Brussels, London . . . and so on.
Nine people were killed and eight others were wounded after Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) rebels attacked three towns in the provinces of Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat on Christmas eve, the military reported.
The fatalities and wounded have not yet been identified. The rebels also took hostage farmer Ramil Vicente, his wife and their two children.
Col. Julieto Ando, Army 6th Infantry Division spokesman, said troops have been sent to the scene to pursue the rebels.
Residents of Ninoy Aquino and Kalamansig in Sultan Kudarat province and Alameda in Cotabato province were preparing their noche buena or Christmas eve dinner when the MILF fired a continuous barrage of mortars at the three towns at around 7 p.m. Eight residents were reportedly killed.
Three barangays in Ninoy Aquino and two barangays in Kalamansig remain under MILF control, according to Ando.
In Alamada town, an elderly woman was killed when the MILF fired 60 mm and 81 mm mortars at Barangay Dato at about 10 p.m.
“This is an atrocity against innocent civilians,” Ando said.
At 9 p.m. the MILF fired mortars continuously for 15 minutes at a military detachment in Barangay Gayunga, Northern Kabuntalan town in Shariff Kabunsuan province.
Barangay Gayunga is on the border of Cotabato and Shariff Kabunsuan provinces.
Almost at the same time, the MILF unleashed 17 rounds of 60 mm mortars at a military outpost in Barangay Puyon, Pigcawayan town in Cotabato province.
No injuries were reported in the attacks on the military installations.
Cotabato Gov. Jesus Sacdalan said residents of a barangay fled their homes when armed men attacked Aleosan town in Cotabato province at about 9 p.m. on Christmas eve.
“The attacks came while the people were setting off firecrackers. The attackers timed their attacks during the revelry,” said Alamada Mayor Ernesto Concepcion.
Eight people living near the military detachment in Alamada were taken to the Cotabato Regional and Medical Center after they were hit by flying shrapnel.
However, Eid Kabalu, MILF civil-military chief, denied the military report that they attacked the three towns in Sultan Kudarat and Cotabato provinces.
“All these incidents took place because the MILF were subjected to attacks by the military,” he said.
Kabalu said the MILF had not launched a coordinated offensive on Christmas eve as the military claims.
“In all incidents, we were on defensive mode,” he said.
As many as 400 families fled their homes after the MILF attack, according to social welfare officer Edmund Cordero.
More than 600,000 people were displaced in the fighting, he added.
Maj. Randolph Cabangbang, Armed Forces Eastern Mindanao Command spokesman, said the attack on barangays Midtungok and Kiadsam in Cotabato province were spearheaded by Guiabar Datu Kali alias Commander 511 and Commander Maxs4.
“The 601st brigade already launched combat operations in the area,” he said. “They have also requested for an air strike against the rebels.”
The MILF is starting to withdraw from the occupied communities, according to Col. Marlou Salazar, Army 601st Infantry Brigade commander.
This was the second time that barangays Midtungok and Kiadsam were occupied since the attacks in Cotabato and Lanao del Norte provinces last August. – With AP
BAGUIO CITY – Lawyers attending a Supreme Court-mandated legal seminar here took to task the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for its alleged failure to act on the proliferation of corporations suspected to be dummies of Koreans.
The lawyers said there is a growing public clamor for the investigation of corporations formed by local incorporators who actually fronted for enterprising Korean businessmen.
This is in violation of the anti-dummy law and the constitutional prohibition on the ownership of lands by foreigners, they said.
The lawyers, who attended the mandatory continuing legal education (MCLE) at Hotel Supreme here, tagged the problem as “the creeping Koreanization of the Philippines.”
But the SEC told the Inquirer that the lawyers were barking up the wrong tree since the power to prosecute dummy corporations belonged to the Department of Justice.
“The DOJ has jurisdiction over violations of the anti-dummy law since they are classified as criminal offenses,” lawyer Annie Tesoro, SEC director for the Cordillera, Ilocos and Cagayan regions, said.
What the SEC can do, she said, is to check and monitor if registered corporations complied with their articles of incorporation.
“We can file administrative cases against erring corporations en route to the cancellation of their registration,” she said.
She said the SEC has limited powers and thus, a criminal case filed at the DOJ could hasten the SEC’s administrative proceedings against dummy corporations.
She said the SEC had heard of bogus corporations purportedly put up by Korean dummies but the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) should conduct the probe.
The Korean topic was an offshoot of former Dean Merlin Magallona’s discussion on the Spratly Agreement and the baseline bill in relation to the definition of the country’s national territory.
Magallona said the Korean issue was an “expansion that has become alarming.”
Baguio is one of the cities in the country that hosts a lot of Korean schools, restaurants and other businesses, which grew over the years, mainly due to the influx of Korean students who wanted to learn English here.
But lawyer Galo Reyes, a former law dean, said the SEC appeared to have been lax in its campaign to stop dummy corporations from buying land.
“From San Fabian, Pangasinan to Pagudpod, Ilocos Norte, these corporations had acquired beach lots, home lots and condominiums,” he said. “What is the SEC doing?” he asked.
Budget Malaysian airline Air Asia X has announced that flights from London Stansted to Kuala Lumpur will start in March.
The services will run five times a week, with fares starting at £99 each way for economy and £549 per trip for premium.
£99 flights from Stansted to Kuala Lumpur
Air Asia Group CEO Tony Fernandes said: “AirAsia X’s London-Kuala Lumpur route is the realisation of a long-held ambition to open up affordable access between Malaysia and Europe for both ASEAN and European communities.
"We have an incredible route network and at £99, the opportunity for Londoners and Europeans to explore the ASEAN region has never been greater.
“Being a truly ASEAN airline, we are committed to promoting tourism and travel throughout and beyond that region. This new route will benefit everyone, enabling magnificent holidays in beautiful locations, encouraging economic and tourism activity, bringing in revenue and creating job opportunities.”
He also revealed that a new fleet of Airbus aircraft with leather seats and spacious cabins would be available.
The new route will be flown by an Airbus A340 aircraft, with space for 286 passengers including 30 premium seats.
By Elizabeth Sanchez-Lacson
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 05:10:00 11/18/2008
ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corp., through its unit ABS-CBN Global, has purchased five percent of global interactive website owner Multiply Inc. for $5 million in a bid to boost advertising revenues ahead of a projected economic slowdown next year, a company official said.
ABS-CBN Broadcasting is looking at raising its stake in Multiply, the operator of the social networking website Multiply.com, to about 10 percent over the next two to three years, for a total investment of $9-$10 million, ABS-CBN Interactive head Paolo Pineda said.
The initial purchase of five percent involves 2.5 million shares of Series P common shares at $1.9 per share.
Pineda said Multiply.com increased its membership to three million Filipinos worldwide this year from 1.5 million last year, and generates 400 million page views a month.
ABS-CBN Global distributes TV programs produced by ABS-CBN Broadcasting, and other Filipino-based content, outside the Philippines, principally on The Filipino Channel.
Multiply is a privately owned corporation based in Boca Raton, Florida. Its flagship website, which was launched in 2004, allows users to share pictures, video and music, and a venue for generating discussions, feedback and interest from and among its users.
Campos Lanuza & Co. said in a daily researchThe Philippine Eagle Has Landed… on the London Bus!!! The Philippine Eagle Has Landed… on the London Bus!!! In line with promoting its latest travel product – birdwatching – the Philippines Department of Tourism (PDOT) is taking it to the busy streets of London this November. Watch out for London’s iconic buses as they carry the Philippines banner across the city.
Commuters and pedestrians in London will be exposed to the country’s campaign on a daily basis as 25 local buses, carrying the promotional banners, drive by the lively streets of the city. These buses are en route the popular streets of London such as Oxford Circus, Hyde Park Corner, Knightsbridge and High Street Kensington to name a few. These buses, that run most of the working day, arrive at a frequency of 7-10 minutes per hour on every bus stop.
Penetrating the public transportation system of London is a highly effective way to promote Philippines tourism, with the very high population of commuters being exposed to it every day. According to research by CBS Outdoor, bus advertising is the most seen outdoor format around the city centre. There is no denying that this medium will increase visibility of the country’s brand campaign.
While these buses promote the Philippines as a birdwatching destination, they are, at the same time, also strengthening the country’s image as a place of diverse interests. Furthermore, many other countries also promote their tourism through this medium; thus, this is definitely a good way to present the Philippines as a place at par with any other popular tourist destination.
This campaign will deliver the message that the Philippines is definitely an option when it comes to travelling, with the many things that the country can offer – from birdwatching to scubadiving or simply as a place of leisure.
THERE is widespread disgust with the expanded VAT from all elements of the people, especially the senior citizens whose statutory benefits are negated by the oppressive law. For example, my wife bought medicines worth P2,703.57 that was reduced because of her age to P2,162.86 but in the same transaction was subjected to the expanded VAT of P259.54, making the total cost of her purchase P2,422.40. This lessened the 20 percent benefit required by the Senior Citizens Law to only 8 percent, wiping out as much as 12 percent of the original discount by only an implied amendment or repeal, which is not favored in law.
It is not only the senior citizens who are adversely affected. Even an ordinary meal advertised for only so much in the restaurant menu may embarrass a person who has ordered it with just enough of the indicated cost but is later also charged the expanded VAT. He may plead that he is only an ordinary wage earner with limited means but that does not excuse him from paying the additional tax that was authored by former Sen. Ralph Recto, whose grandfather would surely have opposed such an awkward exaction.
I imagine Don Claro would have dismissed the administration’s stupid excuse that the expanded VAT is necessary for the increased cost of government. We have enough other taxes except that they are not being paid by the powerful slackers who can invoke various pretexts for evading their lawful share in the upkeep of the government. The honest ordinary people do not enjoy that illegal convenience. It is the ordinary people, most of them from the middle class, who are directly prejudiced by the additional tax that is automatically imposed when they engage in ordinary activities like buying food and hiring services.
What makes the expanded VAT especially objectionable is that, contrary to its announced purpose, it is not being spent for “the increased cost of government,” as piously argued by its defenders. That apologia is a lie as everybody knows. Much of the expanded VAT we are paying is consumed for spendthrift purposes, like Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s junket to the United States last June. She delivered a speech at the United Nations that nobody listened to except her many pampered companions whose only function was to act as her claque. The cost of that excursion exceeded P50 million of public funds.
Only recently, the public that has been inured to the scandals of our public officials was still shocked by the incredible disclosure of the prodigal bounties given to the members of the Philippine police delegation in their over-priced but overrated mission to Russia. They could have kept their excessive allowance a dark and improvident secret were it not for the efficient inquisitiveness of the customs inspectors in that country.
The money involved in this latest exposé is the P9.2 million that an eight-man delegation from the Philippine National Police carried for its six-day attendance at the 77th Interpol General Assembly. Some of the delegates were accompanied by their wives. The specified sum for their official expenses was P2.3 million, but they also had the undeclared “contingency fund” of P6.9 million, consisting also of the proceeds from various taxes, including the expanded VAT dutifully paid by the less privileged among us. Their already retired comptroller said that Russia was an “expensive country,” as if to explain their extraordinary privileges for incidental expenses like shopping adventures and nocturnal entertainment at the ballet or elsewhere.
Unlike many inquiries conducted by the Senate that started with a bang but languished with a whimper, the investigation of their extravagant escapade swiftly ended on a positive note. After its one and final hearing, the committee on foreign affairs recommended the prosecution of the superior officers of the Philippine National Police for the grotesque offenses they have committed probably with the also guilty permission of the interior secretary. Congratulations to Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, chair of the investigating committee, and its other valiant members, for denouncing another band of vultures plundering the national treasury.
It is almost comical that the respondents are now claiming that the contingency fund entrusted to them was for the purchase of military and spy equipment, as if these were available at some talipapa in Moscow. And don’t laugh if they next refuse to say more on the ground that their defense is a national security secret covered by the executive privilege of their commander in chief. Also, mind you, the Supreme Court might agree.
To go back to my original gripe, part of their loot must have come from the proceeds of the expanded VAT that I hope will also be criminalized. Taxation must be exercised with a humane appreciation of the capacity of the people to cope with its requirements, not for the unfeeling need to raise revenues that are mostly used not to serve public needs but to cater to private caprices disguised as official functions. That is the rule in this country, where the majority of the people are exploited to indulge the pleasures of the untouchable few.
By Bryan Mari Argos
Most of the time when I meet people during my travels and these associations have gone to Roxas City, their usual complain is, 'Walang night life sa Roxas City.' Well, partly, they are right, because in Roxas City, the nightlife is not quite the type that you can get accustomed to and know all about in just one night; and partly, they are wrong, because Roxas City does have an active night life, although not as active if compared to Malate in Manila, Eastwood, or Smallville in Iloilo City. The reason why most people don't quite find anything in the Roxas City nightlife is because they don't know where to go. For one to really enjoy the Roxas City nightlife, one has to at least go out with someone who is a native of the place. If this is not possible, the best alternative would be to walk around the city at around eight or nine in the evening and just immediately around the city plaza are bars that you can get into and have some beers in. This may not be very exciting at first, but the best way to go is to find a bar that you like and just stay there for the rest of the night. Bar hopping is not really a fad in Roxas City because most people in the City have their own turfs and you would find them in the same place night after night after night after night. In other words, if you get into a certain bar and find the crowd pleasing to your discriminating taste, then stay in that bar, because if you go to other bars, you are most likely to end up with a crowd that is either beyond what your pocket and hypocrisy could handle, or way behind your taste (that is if you do have taste). I'm not saying that bars in Roxas City are always at the extreme edges of the social penumbra; all I am saying is that when you find a crowd that you like in any of the bars, you are least likely to find any other bar in the city with the kind of crowd that you found comfort with in the first place. Now, for those of you who would really like to get into the Roxas City nightlife, whatever the cost, here are ten helpful tips that might come in handy.
1. Have at least three to five hundred pesos spending cash. This would get you a long, long way. Beer costs from 20-30 pesos in any bar and you can get a plate of decent pulutan for about 80-100 pesos. This leaves you with enough extra cash for a bowl of arroz caldo after the drinking session is over. Arroz caldo would cost you from 5-40 pesos depending on where you have it.
2. Have a ready smile always. People in Roxas City are very friendly and if you stay at a bar all alone, your smile might get you company. Roxas City folks are also very talky, so you can have a really nice conversation over a few beers. One thing though – do not offer to buy beers for your new found company, this can send out the wrong messages.
3. Either go back to your hotel early in the evening or early in the morning, say 2-3 AM. Be ready to stay out all night once you found the bar of your liking. You will most likely stay for hours on end.
4. Do not be too cautious. If someone you've chatted with and associated with offers to go to some other bar, tag along. Remember, the best way to explore the city's night life is if you have someone with you who is a native of the city.
5. Wear proper gimmick attire – I mean, no shorts, sandos, or rubber slippers. Most bars in the city strictly implement their dress codes.
6. Do not drink too much. This should be self-explanatory.
7. Look out for ads, streamers, and announcements for events in the various bars. Most likely, when there is an event in a certain bar, all party-goers will be there. This, however, does not always apply. As I said, people in the city find their turfs and stick to their bar choice no matter what.
8. Do not be an attention grabber – meaning, do not make 'eksena'. You can grab attention by looking good – attitudinal dynamics and attention grabbing antics like stealing the dance floor with weird dance moves or taking your shirt off in the middle of a party is definitely a no-no in Roxas City. This could get you the wrong kind of attention – maybe the kind that would leave you black and blue. Just behave, and you will be all right.
9. Videoke bars are a hit in Roxas City. Know a song or two; make sure those songs are rehearsed to impress. Just have some songs ready for an encore. However, refuse to sing when you have had too much to drink already.
10. Make sure you have a good soft bed waiting for you after your gimmick, and throw in a wake-up call in the morning if you need to wake up early, because if you get into the Roxas City night life, you will definitely find it really difficult to get out. It's not the beer that's addictive in the City, it's how people party!
There you have it folks. I hope to see you in one of the bars in the city one of these days!!!
Be rational; be insane… every once in a while! TTFN!
I love you all! Byers!
HE began as a series of mysterious avatars popping up on my Multiply viewing history. He didn’t bother me at first, because I was used to friendly strangers visiting my site. But when he began visiting on an almost daily basis—and under different usernames, although with the same avatar—I started to wonder who in the world was Pablo Banila.
Visits to his websites offered no clue. His avatar showed a creepy-looking guy with matted chin-length hair (think Severus Snape from Harry Potter) and a flashing sign that read, “Pablo Banila has a crush on you! That’s why he visited your website!”
That would have been almost flattering had I not already known that he had visited the websites of at least a hundred other people—all under different usernames and the same annoying avatar. He also has a dotcom, www.pablobanila.com, but it offers no clues, only rambling passages of text and close-up photos of himself.
People started complaining. “Please get a life, you pervert,” wrote one girl in her blog, after listing down his many usernames—pablobanila, ppaabblloobanila, rainbowinmycoffee, carrotperfume, laughingmankuze, edwardward, blackbetweenthestars, theblackbetweenthestars, etc. People left similar comments on that entry, saying, “OMG he viewed me too!” or “He views mine too, it’s so creepy!”
Others chimed in, “He views me every other day, more often than I check my own Multiply site,” while guys posted nervous comments like, “He checks me out too, and I’m a boy.”
So far, his visits to sites have been harmless (all he does is view homepages; he doesn’t leave comments), but creepy—there’s just no other word for it. Attempts to discover his identity have so far been futile. But identity aside, what everyone wants to know is, how does he find time to check out all those Multiply pages?
Is Pablo Banila actually a team of high school kids with nothing better to do?
Is Pablo Banila actually a group of college students doing a psychology research project for their thesis?
Is Pablo Banila a new Internet virus?
Is Pablo Banila actually just the government looking for suspected terrorists by combing through the pages of unsuspecting Multiply users?
Is Pablo Banila merely the victim of pranksters who are out to get him?
Or is Pablo Banila just really a sad person with no friends and nothing better to do?
In any case, Multiply users are waiting for an answer. But until then, Pablo Banila continues to stalk our websites—and our nightmares.
E-mail the author at biancaconsunji@yahoo.com
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update:update:update
reply
edwardward wrote on Sep 27
As I have patiently cleared before, again and again: I am exploiting the concept of a "viewing history" as a problem of function.
Public domain is public domain. If they feel harassed in any way it was because I keep exercising my right to view their public profile, AND they harbor an irrational fear and irritation against my scarecrow headshot LOL founded by a notoriety based on a shallow social validation. People read about accusations, libels, and death threats against me written in my very guestbook. As the "wisdom of crowds" would send lemmings to their final swimming lesson so does it lead human beings into biases. I am hated in exactly the same way other human beings discriminate Blacks, Muslims, and homosexuals.
Interestingly, most of my most passionate haters honestly believed that I had a crush on them until I opened up a guestbook. They found out it wasn't only them. Most of them are kids who are not allowed to have a Multiply account in the first place.
Wait until EVERYBODY exploits this method of "advertising" (: It turns out I'm the first one to execute a classic prank in a Biblical scale (100 million accounts viewed, worldwide).
~Pablo Banila
is the next Slavoj Zizek
miguel8088 wrote today at 6:49 PM
Right on hhahhaha. after all the none of these people whom he allegedly stalked have their accounts set at limited viewing only by private contacts. Ergo: it's a free world. As far as i know, pablo banila, annoying as it may seem, has not committed any crime. if he adds you up, you always have the choice to ignore him. if you're freaked out because he's lurking at your postings (that's free for the entire world to view anyway), then maybe you should restrict access to your posts. just a thought hehe.
this guy, is a deviant, I guess, but hey, that's his personal choice after all.
DesignFour-door sedan. The Volvo S60 has a sloping roof line, swept-back C-posts and short rear section - a combination of sedan and coupedesign that gives the car its sporty appearance. In order to further emphasise the S60 model’s sporty profile, the nose section has been extended, the haunches are more pronounced and the body has a ground-hugging stance. Although the body is compact, the interior offers generous space and comfortable seating for four occupants. However, this is space for a fifth passenger, along with a fifth seat belt and head restraint. One of the reasons for the good interior space is Volvo’s modern powertrain concept, which features transverse engine installation. Volvo
SafetyVolvo Cars adopts a holistic view of safety that encompasses both Preventive and Protective safety. Preventive safety is closely linked to the car’s driving properties. The body of the Volvo S60 features immense torsional rigidity and the car has a sturdy chassis, a combination that results in consistent, predictable behaviour on the road (see also under "Powertrain and Chassis"). Volvo Cars has developed various information systems designed to help the driver while on the move. One such system is IDIS (Intelligent Driver Information System), which for instance delays incoming phone calls in complex traffic situations that require the driver’s undivided attention. S60 models intended for the US market are equipped with a tyre pressure control system - TPMS (Tyre Pressure Monitoring System). Powertrain and chassisThe engines in the Volvo S60 are five-cylinder, transversely installed in-line units. A five-cylinder engine gives low vibration and smooth operation. Together with large displacement, the five-cylinder configuration provides high torque across a broad rev band, and thus also swift acceleration and excellent driveability within a wide speed range. The Volvo S60 T5 is the top model, featuring a turbocharger and a six-speed gearbox. The engine range also includes diesel engines with particle filters, and the environmentally optimised Volvo Bi-Fuel, which can be run on methane or petrol. The environmentThe Volvo S60 is designed and equipped to impact as little as possible on the global environment and to offer a clean and healthy interior climate. Volvo’s IAQS (Interior Air Quality System) effectively reduces the amount of particles, pollen, gases and certain unpleasant odours in the air entering the cabin. All the textiles and leather upholsteries are certified according to ÖKO-TEX 100, an international standard that ensures that the interior trim is free from allergy-producing and hazardous substances. |