Thursday, May 6, 2010

Fwd: Letter from A Brave Filipina

This afternoon, I received this in my overflowing work email address.
Usually stuff like this goes to spam or trash folder - either automatically through my system's filters or I do it myself so I can lessen the emails I have to plow through.

But I took a second look, and though I do not know until now how true it is that a certain Remedios from ADB wrote this letter or if it was just passed on and on unwittingly, and if so, then I too helped in its perpetuation - and for this I cannot say I am sorry.

A disclaimer though I must add for this post - I do not guarantee nor claim anything in relation to the named writer and details below - but I do think it has a relevant and timely message to all Filipinos, wherever you may be - even those who may not feel the pinprick of the gentle "barbs" in this letter. 

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I wish all politicians and public servants could read this letter.

Subject: A Letter From A Brave Filipina
     
Very interesting letter. Share this with your friends and associates who still honestly believe that our beloved Philippines is worth saving.  I salute the person (Remedios C. Paningbatan) who wrote this letter.
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To all Filipinos Everywhere:
   
I used to think that corruption and criminality in the Philippines were caused by poverty. But recent events tell me this isn't true. It is one thing to see people turn into drug addicts, prostitutes, thieves and murderers because of hunger and poverty, but what excuse do these rich, educated people have that could possibly explain their bizarre behavior? And to think I was always so relieved when petty snatchers got caught and locked away in jail because I never fully realized that the big time thieves were out there, making the laws and running our country. 
   
Every night, I come home  & see these "honorable" crooks lambast each other on TV , call each one names, look each other in the eye and accuse the other of committing the very same crimes that they themselves are guilty of, is so comical and apalling that I don't know whether to laugh or cry.
   
I have never seen so many criminals roaming around unfettered and looking smug until now. These criminals wear suits and barongs, strut around with the confidence of the rich and famous, inspire fear and awe from the very citizens who voted them to power, bear titles like "Honorable", "Senator", "Justice", "General" and worse, "President". Ironically, these lawless individuals practice law, make our laws, enforce the law. And we wonder why our policemen act the way they do! These are their leaders, and the leaders of this nation - Robin Hoodlum and his band of moneymen. Their motto? "Rob the poor, moderate the greed of the rich."
   
It makes me wonder what kind of schools they went to, what kind of teachers they had, what kind of environment would produce such creatures who can lie, cheat and steal from an already indebted country and from the impoverished people .  It makes me wonder what their children and grandchildren think of them, and if they are breeding a whole new generation of improved Filipino crooks and liars with  equally negligible conscience. They all go to mass & receive communion!  Heaven forbid!
   
I am an ordinary citizen and taxpayer. I am blessed to have a job that pays for my needs and those of my family's, even though 30% of my earnings go to the nation's coffers.  I have complained time and again because our government could not provide enough of the basic services that I expect and deserve.  Rutty roads, poor educational system, poor social services, poor health services, poor everything.  But I have always thought that was what all third world countries were all about, and my complaints never amounted to anything more.
   
We see Scandalous government deals.  Plundering presidents pointing fingers.  Senators associated with crooks.  Congressmen who accept bribes.  Big time lawyers on the side of injustice.  De Venecia ratting on his boss only after his  term has ended, Enrile inquiring about someone's morality!  The already filthy rich Abalos and Arroyo wanting more money than they or their great grandchildren could ever spend in a lifetime.  Joker making a joke of his own "pag bad ka, lagot ka!" slogan.. Defensor rendered defenseless. Gen. Razon involved in kidnapping.  Security men providing anything but a sense of security.  The average Juan de la Cruz could not even imagine in his dreams.  Is it any wonder why our few remaining decent and hardworking citizens are leaving to go work in other countries?
   
They say the few stupid ones like me who remain in the Philippines are no longer capable of showing disgust.  Many like me feel anger at the brazenness of men we call our leaders, embarrassment to share the same nationality with them, frustration for our nation and helplessness at my own ineffectuality. It is not that I won't make a stand. It is just that I am afraid my actions would only be futile. After all, these monsters are capable of anything. They can hurt me and my family. They already have, though I may not yet feel it..
   
I am writing this because I need to do something concrete. I need to let others know that ordinary citizens like me do not remain lukewarm to issues that would later affect me and my children. I want to make it known that there are also Filipinos who dream of something better for the Philippines. I want them to know that my country is not filled with scalawags and crooks in every corner, and that there are citizens left who believe in decency, fairness, a right to speak, a right to voice out ideas, a right to tell the people we have trusted to lead us that they have abused their power and that it is time for them to step down. I refuse to let this country go to hell because it is the only country I call mine and it is my responsibility to make sure I have done what I could for it.
   
We can pray.. After all, they cannot be more powerful than God!

I implore mothers out there to raise your children the best way you can . I beg all fathers to spend time with their children, to teach them the virtues of hard work, honesty, fair play, sharing, dignity and compassion - right from the sandbox till they are old enough to go on their own. Not just in your homes, but at work, in school, everywhere you go. Be good role models. 
   
I call on educators and teachers - . . Instill in them love of their country,, help us mold our children into honorable men and women. Encourage our graduates, our best and brightest, to do what they can to lift this country from the mire our traditional politicians have sunk us into. The youth is our future - and it would be largely because of you, our educators, that we will be able to repopulate the seats of power with good leaders, presidents, senators, congressmen, justices, lawmakers, law enforcers and lawful citizens.

I ask all students, young people and young professionals everywhere to look around and get involved .. . YOUR COUNTRY NEEDS YOU! Let your voices be heard. Text meaningful messages to awaken social conscience. Try your best to fight moral decay because I promise you will not regret it when you become parents yourselves. You will look back at your past misdeeds and pray that your children will do better than you did.
   
Remember that there are a few handful who are capable of running this country.. You can join their ranks and make their numbers greater. We are tired of the old trapos. We need brave idealistic leaders who will think of the greater good before anything else.  Be good lawyers, civil servants, accountants, computer techs, engineers, doctors, military men so that when you are called to serve in government, you will have credibility and a record that can speak for itself.

For love of this country, for the future of our children, , I urge you to do what you can. As ordinary citizens, we can do much more for the Philippines than sit around and let crooks lead us to perdition. We owe ourselves this. And we owe our country even more.
   
   
Remedios C. Paningbatan
   Administrative Officer
Office of the General Counsel
Asian Development Bank
   Tel (632) 632-4248
   www.adb.org 

38 comments:

  1. Sad truth!....w/c is why i have so little hope in any election...we find the same trapo running for office or their wives/husbands, sons & daughters...What makes them any different? Actors & actresses, all so eager to uplift the common tao...or is it uplift their egos & pockets...i have strong doubts & reservations with these saviour wannabees, people who run only to enrich themselves and to protect their own interests...and to hide from the law, create laws, bend the laws to serve themselves...How can it be that someone convicted can run for office?...diba criminal na nga ?...kulang pa...kulang pa...ang nanakaw, kulang ang kapangyarihan, kulang ang pagaabuso..kulang pa ang yaman...talagang mga kulang-kulang.
    i remember there was a letter written by an Atenean, who addressed a similar situation re our dire political situation...if i remember he said something like "he didn't care who is running the country, just as long as the true needs of the entire country and the welfare of the people are taken care of"

    God save our country, God save the people!

    thank you Cat

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  2. ako naman..with that statement, marember ko tuloy yung sinabi ni..Manuel Quezon ba yon?

    something like I'd rather have a Philippines run like hell by Filipinos than run like heaven by Americans or something like that.

    ewan....heaven looks mighty appealing to me right now...

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  3. Ms. Paningbatan has accurately expressed her sentiments about the current state of our country. It is so frustrating to read articles like this (several articles articulating the same kind of sickness afflicting our nation have been written) but unfortunately, it just lands on deaf ears to those concerned. It is so sad to think that people running the government are people who have no love for their own country. They are obviously people who are just out there to enrich themselves, bask in power and fame.
    We don’t need this type of ppl in government…what we need is a LEADER WHO WILL SERVE THE COUNTRY AND NOT ASK FOR ANYTHING IN RETURN…meron naman ganitong klaseng leader dito sa bansa natin…kaya lang hindi sila napapansin kasi ang problema sa atin ay TAYONG MGA VOTERS who vote for the wrong kind of leaders…I guess, we just deserve the kind of leader we vote.

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  4. Many Filipinos should stop treating the elections like it was the lotto, casting their precious votes on somebody because he is perceived to be the winner. Let us vote for whom we think is really qualified. A responsible leader who does not believe that the position is an heirloom. This presidential elections is very critical. I believe the country is on the way up (despite what the doomsayers sing) and we must be able to add on that.

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  5. I really really wish all the best for our Philippines in this coming elections. May the people choose wisely. That's all I could ask and pray for.

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  6. It was MLQ. I wonder what it would have been for the Philippines had he decided otherwise. Well, Alaska would have been the 50th State and Hawaii would have been 51st if Philippines became the 49th State.

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  7. I get so sad when I overhear people saying - we shall vote for X because even if Y is the better and more qualified candiadte, di naman mananalo...*sigh*

    well hello! pano mananalo if ganon ang mentality?

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  8. that flame of hope is not yet extinguished yet in my being....may flickers pa...:-)

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  9. we need all the prayers ...
    thanks Joey.

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  10. pano yan....lahat tayo naka american accent dito, kagaya ng mga call center gays I hear here...hehehe...

    don't get me wrong...nakakatuwa sometimes you hear this accented voice talking na parang honest-to-goodness true-blue americano or british..then you turn around...and oh..here's a gaily dressed metrosexual Filipino sipping from a Starbucks cup..hahaha..

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  11. Interestingly enough, every time I call United Airlines or Hawaiian Airlines, I am get patched to a call center and I can tell they are Pinoys or Pinays but some of them have good American accent and quite intelligent too. Most of the time I give them some scenarios or challenges about my situation and some of them find some ways to resolve my issues very well. I have befriended a couple of them that one of them became my FB contact. It just makes me feel proud them.

    btw, I did not suspect any of them to be gays or lesbians.

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  12. Hi Cat. I've also read this via an email I received. It seems it's been doing the email rounds for sometime already. That Atenean you're referring to most probably is Harvey Keh whose email similar to this one was also spread via the Internet. There's just one thing I note about this piece - how come it is touted as one coming from a "brave" lady? Siya lang ba ang "brave?" Or was she facing insurmountable odds when she wrote this? The letter identifies the writer as someone connected with the ADB. Do we know if she's lost her job or was fired as a result of her essay? Don't get me wrong though. I agree with what she wrote as well as those of others who gave their comments. I'm just curious why the label "brave lady" was used.

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  13. Yup. That's what I hear. How did you guess?

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  14. Not really true. These Pinoy Call Center agents don't have a so-called American accent. It's so fake that it sounds so ridiculously funny. And there's NO SINGLE American accent. Americans have different accents depending on where they come from. Texans have their own, southerners have theirs, New Yorkers and Bostonians, Hawaiians have their pidgin English, even blacks have their own unique accent and slang, Chicanos also, etc etc etc. Here's a personal expereince: I phoned Telus (phone company here) and I got their call Center in the Philippines. I had difficulty understanding the Pinoy agent because of his put on "American accent" and so I asked to speak with his Supervisor. And guess what? His Supervisor was worst. Everyone here has an accent and that IS NOT the problem. The Pinoy's problem is MISPRONUNCIATION. A slight variation in pronunciation can alter a word's meaning. Take the word FACT. It can easily be mispronounced and take on an entirely different meaning to the listener.

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  15. Is she real or a fictitious name? If she's real, she sure has a lot of guts. Has anyone checked if such a person really exists?

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  16. The Philippines would have been like Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, the Marianas Islands - all US territories. Pinoys would have been US citizens and won't have to go to the US to earn dollars. We would have the FBI instead of the NBI. We would only have the Republican Party and the Democratic Party in politics. Traffic will be orderly, no garbage on the streets, no squatters, etc etc etc.

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  17. yeah..let's try variations of accent on pronouncing "Phuket"...not while in Thailand :-)

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  18. yeah..let's try variations of accent on pronouncing "Phuket"...not while in Thailand :-)

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  19. you are right in the sense that not all Pinoy Call centers here have an honest-to-goodness-true-blue-garden-variety American accent. But there are some ( don't have the numbers though) who actually who do sound like the genuine article.

    Most though sadly sound as we say... medyo TH (trying hard, fyi) or even TTH (trying too hard, again fyi).

    at least wala pa akong narinig dito na parang Southern states na accent...unless they were fans of True Blood na series siguro..LOL

    well folks, y'awl now have a g'day! ya hear?

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  20. hmm...and I'd probably have a problem with the style nila of just being booted out of work quickly..unlike here na di ka madaling matanggal once regular ka...

    but then again c'est la vie!

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  21. nice question Chito...but maybe its just ...like all things...a matter of marketing.

    how do you call attention to a product, service, email, post, blog whatever..dapat may mga ganon na words siguro...though honestly I think its been overused already..dapat yata they check the thesaurus once in a while para ibang synonym...

    going back to my train of though which was derailed...it seemed nicer siguro to be titled that way (it wasn't me)...saying a letter from a "concerned citizen" seems ho-hum...how about "a fed-up citizen" (parang nabusog sa kakakain?)

    I did try going to the adb site and searching for her name..pero no results.
    I have not tried calling the number though.

    For me, whoever the sender was...bahala muna sinong mag-verify..I wanted to get the meat of the message out.

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  22. lucky guess, I guess.

    IMHO, going to Starbucks is not high-class. Probably I'm just inured coz we had Starbucks as a case study before. Matter of perception and point of view...so for all those Starbucks lovers out there, who think its high-class...if that is how you see it, then it can be also seen that way in your eyes *grin*

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  23. Well, am not saying all are gays of course. Am sure meron din sigurong straight ones.

    however, most of the times when I go inside an elevator inside buildings housing call centers and I'm faced with a gaggle of gays and girls who obviously work in a call center (you can tell from the way they speak and what subjects they are talking about) - parang - anobayan kuya..puro na lang bading nandito sa Manila? pano na ako magkaka-boypren po Panginoon?

    MWAHAHA!

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  24. Yes, could be. But this one suffers from the kind of mis-interpretation from other people. I remember the case of a baby milk formula which was introduced a few years ago in the Philippine market. Of all the brand names in the world, they had to choose this brand - Milupa (see http://www.milupa.ie/products/). I don't know if it really tasted like earth as it's name implies. Also the case of a car introduced as Nova by car maker Chevrolet. When it was introduced in Spain, nobody was attracted to it. Can you imagine a car in Spain that's No Va! But of course, it could be just one of those pesky urban legends...

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  25. ah..that Nova anecdote, sinabi yan sa amin ni Prof Angtuaco sa AIM..hehehe...I remember that one. Actually, I have a book somewhere about brand names...and I think that was in it too if memory serves me right.

    maybe the writer was a timid person in reality (if she is really a living person and not just a made-up name)...and by writing about it, she was being brave...

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  26. ah..kc Milupa galing Germany?

    siguro dapat MayLupa no? para they can tout that when your baby drinks that milk, she will be a landowner later in life...

    yeah, yeah..corny...just got off from firing out my last email...

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  27. Ang super corny mo talaga Cat! Di bale super naman, hehehehe... Matulog ka na. Puyat lang yan.

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  28. I shall take your advice...may flight pa ako bukas and I keep on stopping my packing and cleaning...hehe..in between emails and checking of sites *grin*

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  29. Unless they were born and raised here, they will never sound like a North American, absolutely never. You can still detect it by certain nuances in inflection, the use of idioms (Pinoys seldom use idioms in normal conversation), slang words (not "slang" accent) and again, pronunciation. Someone used to hearing North American English spoken everyday can easily detect a fake a mile away, no matter how good he sounds.

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  30. Where'd you get that information Cat? I'll have to clarify that. It is not true that you can get booted out quickly, unless you did something wrong or unless the company is in deep financial trouble. Even then, compensation is awarded to those who get laid off depending on length of service. Otherwise, the company is opening itself to civil lawsuits.

    In a unionized environment, a regular employee cannot easily be booted out. The union will defend its members and it'll be very difficult for management to fire anyone without cause. There's also a grievance process the employee can take advantage of, and this could drag for a long time.

    By the way, these situations are found in large companies, not in mom and pop operations. Of course in very small companies, anything can happen, and employees do not have protection.

    I'm very familiar with the labor laws here and in the US because I was in both sides of the fence: while an employee I acted as a union job steward for one term, and when I was in management I was involved in union bargaining agreements.

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  31. I was talking about the image of an employee going to work in the morning, finding out he is going to be out of work, and going home in the afternoon with a box of his belongings :-)

    too much tv I guess..but of course, there are situations...am not saying there is no compensation afterwards or its not as if he goes to work and he suddenly just gets thrown out of the window with shoemarks over his back...hehehe...

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  32. probably..but I always maintain that generally speaking, most Pinoys really are good imitators esp when it comes to language...mabilis ma pick-up and given enough time and coaching, they can come out with a good twang or two...

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  33. am aghast at reading this now...korniks...:-)

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