Thursday, March 28, 2013

FIL-AMS ON BOTH SIDES OF SAME SEX MARRIAGE DEBATE AS SCOTUS ENDS HEARINGS


Same sex marriage is evidently one of the most divisive issues in America today. It’s drawn a line even for Filipinos here – and perhaps a sign of how deeply fractured they are, is the way Fil-Ams have emerged in the forefront of the debate for both sides.

The Wall Street Journal has noted how the crowds in front of the US Supreme Court, which wrapped up yesterday two days of hearings on California’s Proposition 8 and a challenge against the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), appeared larger than last year’s “Obamacare” hearings.

The High Tribunal isn’t expected to render a ruling until July.

The schism can be attributed to how people perceive the issue. Many supporters of same sex marriage see it as a civil rights issue with a primal impact on the guarantees of the US Constitution. Those opposed are convinced it is a moral issue.

Former Solicitor General Theodore Olson, arguing against Proposition 8, told the justices that marriage is a fundamental right of all Americans, regardless of gender.





The Baltimore Sun wrote Wednesday:  “The argument against Proposition 8 and the argument against DOMA both rely on the proposition that laws treating gays differently should be subject to "heightened scrutiny," given the history of discrimination against them and their inability to defend themselves through the political process. (The brief defending DOMA, hilariously argues that gays are in fact among the most politically powerful groups in America, the passage in the last 17 years of three dozen state laws banning gay marriage notwithstanding.)”

Only nine states – including Maryland – as well as the District of Columbia have legalized same sex marriage; 39 other states prohibit it either in their constitutions or by statute.

Interestingly, both cases reached the SCOTUS because incumbents refused to defend what are existing mandates – the California governor viewed Proposition 8 unconstitutional and President Obama ordered last year Attorney General Eric Holder not to support DOMA in the Supreme Court for the same reason.

Lesbian partners Jay Mercado and Shirley Tan have testified on Capitol Hill for same sex rights. They have twin sons and live in Pacifica, California. Mercado is an American citizen but Tan has been threatened with deportation back to the Philippines because she’s not recognized as Mercado’s legal spouse that could have paved the way for acquiring American citizenship.

Pulitzer-winning Filipino journalist Jose Antonio Vargas has tried to draw a parallel between the struggle for same sex rights and the campaign to fix the country’s broken immigration system. For young Fil-Ams, at least in the Metro DC region, those lines intersect frequently under the LGBT movement.

The same can be said of opponents of same sex marriage – where it hits the anti-abortion, pro-life movement. It is small wonder that Fil-Am opposition to same sex marriage is largely fueled by religious and cultural factors.

When the otherwise popular Filipino boxing champion and now-lawmaker Manny Pacquiao weighed in on gay marriage – anchoring his opposition to his interpretation of the Bible – it drew a quick rebuke from a young gay Fil-Am in California.

Though Filipinos are generally welcoming to LGBT couples, that has a limit and often it’s dictated by their understanding of Biblical prohibitions, flavored heavily by the cultural taboos they have carried across the Pacific.

One survey showed nearly 80 percent of respondents in the Philippines believe same sex marriage is “always wrong”. ABS-CBN’s Balitang America ran a poll last night that showed 71 percent of Filipinos saw same sex marriage as a sin.

Those who oppose same sex marriage, viewing the debate from a moral and ethical perspective, have invoked the classic church vs state argument as well.  Balitang America had featured Fr. Domeng Orimaco, a Filipino parish priest in Daly City, California who blamed President Obama for what he sees as an erosion of the institution of marriage.

Still, the political history of the United States has rarely favored the status quo.

Same sex marriage is divisive because it’s so complex and profound, and elicits such powerful emotions. I’ve tried litigating this at home and after a long, draining but inconclusive discussion, I vowed never to do it again. I’ll just wait for the SCOTUS decision.







Saturday, March 23, 2013

ELIMINATING VISA BACKLOG A CHALLENGE FOR IMMIGRATION REFORMS


More than 4 million people have approved petitions for legal permanent residence in the United States but most can’t because their priority dates have not become current.

The Migrant Policy Institute (MPI) has published a brief, the first in a series timed with negotiations on Capitol Hill for a comprehensive immigration reform bill that explains the “line” for people who want to live and work lawfully in the United States.

In Going to the Back of the Line: A Primer on Lines, Visa Categories, and Wait Times they reveal the various ways of winning Legal Permanent Resident (LPR) status and eventually, American citizenship.

The Philippines remained the 4th largest source of immigrants in 2012, according to the latest report from the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Immigration Statistics.

However, Filipinos comprise the 2nd biggest bloc of immigrants (next only to Mexicans) who acquired US citizenship last year – suggesting the importance they put on becoming Americans as quickly as possible.

The DHS said over a million people were granted legal permanent status in 2012; more than half of them (53 percent) were already in the US when their applications were approved – refugees, temporary workers, students, relatives of US citizens and undocumented immigrants, among others.

The number of new Filipino LPRs grew minimally, from 57,011 in 2011 to 57,327 last year but still fewer than the 58,173 in 2010. Mexico, China and India topped the list.

While immigration was slightly down, naturalizations were up – 757,434 in 2012 compared to 694,193 the previous year. Mexico, the Philippines and India topped this list. The DHS noted a decades-old trend of Asians surpassing Europeans continued in part because more Asian immigrants choose to become American citizens.

This has contributed to building a huge backlog of petitions. The MPI report cited government statistics that showed 723,000 family-based visa petitions and 73,000 employment-based petitions were filed in Fiscal Year 2012.

For 2012, only 370,951 immigrant visas – for both family and employment based petitions – were available under quota limits imposed by Congress (the Immigration Act of 1990 sets an annual limit of between 416,000 and 675,000).

In addition, there are per-country limits equal to 7 percent of the total number of family-sponsored and employment preferences (25,967 per country last year).

“Nationals of countries with especially high levels of demand in certain family-based and employment-based visa categories (currently Mexico, the Philippines, China and India) face longer wait times because fewer visas are issued each year to these countries,” the MPI explained.

For Fil-Ams, the wait times are longest for those petitioning siblings (about 24 years – the longest among all the categories) and adult married children (about 20 years). Employer-based petitions for Filipino workers have a wait time of more than 6 years.

The State Department reported that as of November 2012, there were more than 4.4 million people whose visa petitions (97 percent of them family-based) have been approved but are waiting for the availability of those visas.

Based on current visa ceilings and assuming no new petitions are filed, the MPI estimates it will take the government 19 years to clear this backlog.

The MPI says the visa backlog could even be higher, and it’s uncertain whether some of them may be part of the 11 million estimated undocumented immigrants in the country. “This is a critical point because the impact of any new legalization program on the current backlog will undoubtedly depend on how many unauthorized immigrants are being double-counted,” they said.

The MPI suggested fixing this backlog is crucial to any immigration reform bill that would require undocumented immigrants to “go back the line”.

They added, if Congress and President Obama decide to pursue this path in immigration reforms, they will have to “contemplate adding additional visas in order to be meaningful”.







Thursday, March 21, 2013

U-S TELLS TPP ASPIRANTS – YOU’VE GOT TO SHOW HOW MUCH YOU WANT IT



If you want it, you’ve got to work for it – that seemed to be the challenge hurled by acting United States Trade Representative Demetrios Marantis to the Philippines and other countries that have expressed the desire to join the 11-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

“Whether it’s China, whether it’s the Philippines, whether it’s Thailand, whether it’s Taiwan, it’s incumbent upon those economies to be able to convince the other TPP partners that they are capable of meeting the high standards that we’re negotiating,” he stressed at a press briefing yesterday (March 20) at the Foreign Press Center in Washington DC.

The Philippines’ top envoy in Washington revealed the country’s “road map” to gaining a coveted seat in the TPP which will virtually eliminate tariffs and other trade impediments among the partner nations.

TPP currently has 11 “partner nations” – Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, Singapore, Australia, Peru, the United States, Vietnam, Malaysia, Canada and Mexico. The 16th round of negotiations was held in Singapore last week.

Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia Jr. said the Philippine plan is anchored on three broad pillars of “stakeholder engagement in trade policy-making; trade policy research network and capacity-building; and enhanced interagency cooperation."

Marantis said the Philippines and other aspirants have to “demonstrate a willingness to meet the high standards that we’re negotiating in the TPP agreement."

For the Philippines, that would mean amending the 1987 Constitution to fully open the country to foreign investors, legislating improved labor protection laws and further curbing intellectual property piracy, among others. (Kindly see previous posts)

“One of the key challenges that we face,” Marantis explained, “is ensuring that our exporters and our workers and our manufacturers and our service providers are able to compete on a level playing field."

Although many of President Aquino’s key economic managers and advisers are keen on the TPP, he has been described as “waffling” on the benefits of joining the trade pact which many see as a springboard for larger economic collaboration in the Asia-Pacific region.

“We are not being invited yet. If we get invited, there are certain qualifications that must be done. The process is long,” the President said, referring to key structural and legal reforms needed for joining the TPP.

“The United States and the TPP, our partners don’t invite countries or economies to join – it’s the reverse,” Marantis averred.

“If an economy is interested in meeting the high standards of the TPP agreement, it needs to express that interest; that it’s capable of meeting the high standards that we’re negotiating."

“And the 11 TPP partners then decide by consensus whether or not to admit a new member.  That’s the process that was used with Malaysia when Malaysia decided to join, and that’s the process that was used with Canada and Mexico when they decided they wanted to join last year, and that’s the process that’s underway with Japan,” Marantis explained.





Wednesday, March 20, 2013

HAGEL LIEUTENANT TALKS TO AMERICA'S ASIAN ALLIES


A top Pentagon official discussed with Philippine leaders the mechanics of deploying more American troops in the country as part of the United States “rebalance” in Asia.

US Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter was the most senior member of newly appointed Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s team to visit Manila this year. The Philippines was part of an Asian swing that also took him to treaty allies Japan and South Korea, and Indonesia.

He harped on the US-Philippine security alliance, reiterating the Obama administration’s commitment to help the Philippine military modernize its outdated weapons.

In talks with Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario and Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, he addressed concerns about the “sequester” that cuts into the Pentagon budget; the “rotation” of additional American forces under an expanded schedule of “Balikatan” joint training exercises; the emerging “security architecture” in Southeast Asia, especially amid growing fears of Chinese aggression in the South China Sea; as well as continuing cooperation in the war against Islamic terror groups, among others.

The Aquino administration earlier welcomed the deployment of additional US troops in the Philippines, notwithstanding protests from the Left. The Philippines and US have both a mutual defense pact and a Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) that govern the operations and conduct of US forces in the country.

The US has provided the Philippine Navy with two all-weather patrol ships, with a third being negotiated, that has vastly expanded its footprint in the South China Sea. It’s also financed the construction of an electronic Coast Watch system – a string of radars and sensors in southern Mindanao – that’s slowly being expanded to also look west towards the South China Sea. 

At the same time, the Philippines is seeking fighter jets, maritime patrol planes and fast attack boats from the US and other possible suppliers.

“We had a good discussion on intensifying our defense cooperation and the current challenges in the region,” Del Rosario said. “Dr. Carter reiterated the commitment of the US to work with us and support our efforts to strengthen our military and its ability to defend our country.”

He added, “This increased rotational presence will be crucial in allowing us to maximize our own investment in our defense.”

In Japan, Carter met with top defense officials to discuss the expansion of the US missile defense system, in the face of increasing threats from North Korea, but also that nation’s own headaches with China over a territorial dispute in the East China Sea and the re-location of the US Marines base in Futenma, Okinawa.

That move is widely reported to affect US plans to deploy forces in the Philippines, as the Marines are being asked to occupy a smaller, more isolated area of the island. According to some accounts, most assets will be pulled back to Guam but some may be re-positioned to Australia and the Philippines.

The US and Australia agreed in 2011 for the posting of up to 2,500 US Marines in Darwin. For the Philippines, they will rely heavily on their former naval base at Subic Bay, Zambales where a subsidiary of American shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls Industries recently bought into South Korea’s Hanjin Heavy Industries (Philippines) to provide maintenance, repair and logistics services to the US Navy.

The website thediplomat.com said the US also plans to forward-deploy supplies for disaster relief and humanitarian assistance at the Subic Bay International Airport at Cubi Point, Zambales.

That appears to be acknowledgement of the Philippine’s strategic value – demonstrating it has something that another US logistic hub in the region (Singapore) does not – a world-class port with lot of available space.

Carter, who revealed he had great affection for President Aquino’s father – the martyred Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr. – describing him a “greatadvisor and mentor to students” at the MIT in Boston when  he was studying there, stressed that America had “deep and abiding security roots” in the Philippines.

The US and Philippines have had several recent senior-level engagements, including meetings between Presidents Obama and Aquino, and a historic “two-plus-two” meeting in Washington, DC last April.

“All of that has facilitated real progress across an array of issues not just on defense but on foreign policy,” Carter explained, “our main goal is to keep the momentum going.”

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

CUISIA BARES 'ROAD MAP' TO PACIFIC TRADE PACT BUT IS PH READY?


The Philippines wants to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) but some experts warn the window for enacting reforms that would qualify the country in this elite club could be fast closing.

Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia, Jr. outlined a “roadmap” for joining the TPP during a panel discussion at the 2013 Annual Conference on Trade Policy and International Marketing organized by Georgetown University and the American Marketing Association in Washington DC last week.

 
TPP currently has 11 “partner nations” – Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, Singapore, Australia, Peru, the United States, Vietnam, Malaysia, Canada and Mexico. The 16th round of negotiations was held in Singapore last week.

To join them, the Philippines will have to be invited – but it has to meet certain requisites.

The Philippine plan, Cuisia explained, is anchored on three broad pillars of “stakeholder engagement in trade policy-making; trade policy research network and capacity-building; and enhanced interagency cooperation.”

He said this showed the Philippine’s “interest in joining after it had undertaken adequate preparations for the commitments required under the agreement.” Those “preparations” appear to be the proverbial elephant in the room at least where the Philippines is concerned.

Most experts say it will involve amending the 1987 Constitution, tearing down some of the most restrictive foreign investment rules in Asia, and aligning the Labor Code with International Labor Organization (ILO) standards on the rights of workers, an early staple of TPP agreements.

Not only is there a wide gap between what is and what should be, the process revives old fears about opening the Charter to changes. It’s apparently been deemed so risky that at least two past administrations (indications are there will be a third) opted to kick the can down the road despite earlier acknowledging the need for the amendments.

The five ILO principles are freedom of association; the elimination of all forms of compulsory or forced labor; recognition of the right to collective bargaining; abolition of child labor; and the elimination of discrimination in employment and occupations -- the last three said to be “problem areas” for the Philippines according to some.  

The Philippine remains in a US watch list of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) violators. The US Trade Representative said they are “encouraged” by the decline in movie piracy and remain hopeful about “improving the quality of criminal investigations and prosecutions.” They also urged the government to open the market for US-made pharmaceuticals.

 
And assuming a TPP agreement is forged, will they be accepted by Filipinos?

Three years ago, Assistant US Trade Representative Barbara Weisel said in Manila that the Aquino administration would likely need to build “domestic consensus” to achieve all these.

With a move fraught with political peril, why pursue TPP at all?

For one, the Philippine’s long-term viability apparently depends on it. The Department of Trade & Industry in Manila estimates a TPP pact could be worth as much $10 billion in additional export revenues. Cuisia said the proposed free trade area would eventually account for 40 percent of global Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

“Aside from trade in goods and services, (TPP) also covers foreign investment, government procurement, intellectual property rights and environmental and labor protections,” Cuisia argued, pointing to the wide-ranging effects of joining the pact.

He stressed the Philippines simply can’t afford not to be part of it, along with the ASEAN-led Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) with dialogue partners Australia, China, Japan, South Korea, India and New Zealand that aims to remove 95 percent of tariffs on goods.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced this week their intentions to join TPP negotiations, raising the prospect that the Philippine’s top two trading partners and sources of foreign investment – the US and Japan – would fall under one convenient yet critical umbrella.

It’s uncertain whether the Philippines can craft a garments trade agreement with the US – the SAVE Act – under the prevailing climate in Washington, when the concessional terms it seeks from an increasingly deficit-conscious US Congress can also be availed under TPP.

TPP is envisioned to eventually become the Free Trade Agreement of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP).

“The risk of not joining the TPP is that the Philippines might very well find itself competitively shut out of key markets come 2015, particularly in North and South America and perhaps even in our own ASEAN backyard,” business columnist Ben Kritz warned in the Manila Times.

It is perhaps remarkable that Vietnam, one of the late additions to ASEAN, was able to tap early into the TPP (it began negotiations in Nov. 2010) and push structural, legal and market reforms at a pace that’s brought them closer to an agreement, possibly by this year.

One difference appears to be President Aquino. Although he’s given the green light to pursue the TPP, press reports as late as last January suggested he still wasn’t sold on the TPP. 

“Before we do it (charter change), let us have concrete evidence first that this will be helpful to our nation,” according to the Philippine Star. He noted that the TPP’s partner nations were still reviewing their agreements and signalled he was in no hurry.

“We are not being invited yet. If we get invited, there are certain qualifications that must be done. The process is long,” he averred.

“The longer the government waffles on making comprehensive reforms in critical areas—which most would say it ought to be doing anyway, TPP or no TPP—the less likely it will be able to participate,” Kritz wrote in his column.



Monday, March 18, 2013

RETIRED BUT NOT TIRED, HAIRSTONs FOCUS ON EDUCATION


Is there life after retirement? I read somewhere that Ernie and Mencie Hairston retired recently but why do they look busier now than when they were, well, working.

They recently opened five scholarships for high school graduates under the High Bridge Foundation, Inc., a Bowie, Md.-based non-profit which they formed last year. The scholarship, Mencie explained, would help pay the cost of attending a trade school, community college or university of the beneficiary’s choice.

Graduating high school students in DC; Prince George’s and Montgomery counties in Maryland; and Arlington and Fairfax counties and Alexandria City in Virginia who are in dire need of financial help to pursue a college diploma are eligible to apply for the scholarship.

The deadline for submission of applications is April 19. You can access forms here.

A veritable dynamo, Mencie has been part of virtually all of the big Fil-Am organizations in the Metro DC region. Many of them she helped start, from charities to congressional lobbies for pushing the diverse Fil-Am agenda in the nation’s capital.


She’s still involved with Mabuhay Inc., another non-profit, which helps both Filipinos and Americans bridge the cultural divide through lessons usually given in summer in Greenbelt, Md. The unique school draws Americans who had married or are about to marry Filipinos, couples raising bi-racial children or those adopting children from the Philippines, and 2nd generation Fil-Ams who want to know more about the “old country”.

Ernie and Mencie have shared a passion (aside of course from their “apo’s”). Cognizant that she’d be an enthusiastic voice in and outside the Fil-Am community, we asked Mencie during last year’s political campaign “what would draw her to support a candidate”?  She shot back almost instantaneously – “education…anyone who’ll give our kids a good education”.

She tried to get me to join a 5K walkathon (I never made it but I was told over 150 did) to raise money for scholarships in the University of Maryland’s Asian American Studies program. It offers financial aid for deserving students who want to specialize in this field, including two scholarships given in honor of outstanding Fil-Ams – labor leader and civil rights activist Philip Vera Cruz and retired US Army Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba.

Mencie is part of the AAST scholarship committee.

“We want to ensure that these scholarships are always there for everybody. That’s how we learn about each other,” she averred.

The High Bridge website explains that, “Dr. and Mrs. Hairston are life-long supporters of youth programs that address the needs of young people, especially those with disabilities and life challenges, who may not have easy access to scholarship information and funding.  

“As recipients of scholarships during their student days, Dr. and Mrs. Hairston are aware that a scholarship is more than just free money -- it is a donor’s financial investment in a student’s potential to succeed and to give back to the community as well.”


Saturday, March 16, 2013

FIL-AM TEEN PACKS BIG VOICE IN SMALL PACKAGE


She didn’t look nervous at all. Not even when diminutive Kriskatlin Zabala walked to the middle of the Verizon Center basketball court and over 18,000 pairs of eyes and ears tuned to her rendition of the “Star Spangled Banner”.

It was “Filipino Heritage Night” at the Verizon where a packed house came to see the Washington Wizards and New York Knicks play. Kris was asked to start the evening’s main event by singing the national anthem. It was a far cry from the Fil-Am gatherings where she’d be tugged by her parents to sing some familiar ditties. This was her biggest audience and she winged it like a pro.

The 13-year-old student from Fred Lynn Middle School in Woodbridge, Va. has been singing even before she started talking. “Even before I started saying words, I could already sing,” she revealed.

“I couldn’t recognize the words or how to pronounce them but I learned the tone and the way they were sang,” Kriskatlin said matter-of-factly.

She’s the youngest daughter of Alfredo Zabala of Bataan and Catalina Zabala of Manila, both active members of the Fil-Am group Kababayan Inc.

Her parents’ involvement in the Filipino community of Northern Virginia is actually what got her started. She admitted they’ve encouraged her to sing. “They want me to take vocal lessons,” she revealed, “They want me to show my talent to all their friends.”

Not that she minds. She says the whole family is fond of singing, egged on by their father who actually introduced her to the rudiments of voice and melody. Alas, Kriskatlin intimated, his father is “hiya” (shy) so his dreams of singing publicly lives on in his daughter. 

Her elder brothers and sisters are either in college or working so that left her to carry the family’s musical ambitions. “Since everyone else is busy and they’re old (her eldest brother is 30 but she has a 10-year-old nephew who she says “I can still boss around”) I’m the only one who can do the stuff,” she explained.

“The stuff” is for the moment limited to entertaining her parents and their friends, something she does because she can, but is still unsure whether that’s the path she wants to follow. “I’m not sure it’s something I want to pursue later on. It depends on what I want,” she averred.

She hasn’t decided whether to audition for “American Idol” because that’s two more years down the road due to contest’s age requirement.

Kriskatlin is only starting to explore teen-hood but her talent is opening a whole world of opportunities for her.

Friday, March 15, 2013

FRANCIS: A POPE FOR THE TIMES


Every election of a new Pope augurs a fresh beginning for the 1.2 billion-strong Roman Catholic Church.

Pope Francis is being closely scrutinized. The Faithful hang on his every word, every gesture to imagine the contours and colors of his papacy. From most accounts, Pope Francis has brought hope to a church rocked by scandal and facing huge challenges.

I can imagine friends like lawyer Arnedo Varela ecstatic over the rise of a Jesuit Pope. Or my daughter who was educated by Franciscan nuns.  My brother had joked in a Facebook post that only the Dominicans weren’t in a celebratory mood (well, we brothers all did go to the University of Sto. Tomas for college so I guess we can joke about it).

Over the past days, I feel like I’ve pored over nearly every news report about Pope Francis. I was enthralled by accounts of his simplicity and humility, and his affection for the poor and the disenfranchised (I was especially struck reading how as archbishop of Buenos Aires he chastised priests who refused to baptize the children of unwed mothers).

It brought back my own experiences, growing up with the Salesians of Don Bosco who probably exerted the greatest spiritual impact on me.  The Salesian order was established in the pits of the “industrial revolution” to help educate the sons of a growing army of unemployed, displaced and impoverished by the machines that were supposed to bring progress.

Many of the Salesian priests (at least during my years there) were Italians. They taught us how to play soccer until they succumbed to the Filipino addiction to basketball. They introduced us to those quixotic concepts of “free will” and “conscience”. We heard Mass three times a week (excluding the feast days), encouraged to avail of the Sacraments (one elderly priest who’d probably heard his share of confessions from young punks had come up with a list of sins so all we had to do was answer yes or no, then say our penance) and make ourselves always busy (one favorite motto – “an idle mind is a devil’s workshop) either through study or sports.

When I think of the Pope, I think of the church and when I do, I think of personal values – mine as well as those around me. Then I go back to what the Salesians taught me. For more than a decade and through some of my formative years, I saw them as the face of the Church.

The Church is facing difficult times. The sex abuse scandals, debate over contraception and gay marriage, allegations of financial mismanagement, growing secularism and radicalism within the church, and host of other troubles will have to be addressed by Pope Francis.

If his actions are any indication, Pope Francis intends to take the Church back to its “core competency” which is saving souls through the practice of simplicity, humility and above all, hope. He also talked about evangelization.

When Manila Archbishop Luis “Chito” Cardinal Tagle (who also happens to be Jesuit) visited Washington DC last year, he talked about the role of Filipinos in spreading Christ’s Gospel. He said the over 10 million Filipinos who now live and work in all corners of the globe are especially well-positioned to help spread “Filipino-style Catholicism” in their adopted communities.

While the Church can dictate dogma, for most of the Catholics I know, it is a deeply personal affair steeped in family and tradition that I believe are the hallmarks of “Filipino-style Catholicism”.

In Don Bosco, the priests imbibed a practice that I still carry on to this day; something that I can attest has never failed me. In the darkest days or the brightest, after tragedy or unexpected bounty or as an act of contrition, one “Our Father”, three “Hail Mary’s” and a “Glory Be” said alone, with a sincere heart for the Virgin Mary’s intercession convey our petitions to the Almighty.

If there was anything I learned from the Salesian fathers, it is the power of prayer and God’s love.

There, I believe, lies the church’s future. To teach the coming generations just as the Salesians had taught me. Life is simply too tough and complicated without the spiritual tools to steer us through. Through good works and better still, good example. I pray for Pope Francis because he bears the heavy burden of shepherding the church to a brighter future; because without it, I doubt we’d have one ourselves. 

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

FIL-AM SERGEANT COOKS MEALS FOR U-S DEFENSE CHIEF


If Defense US Secretary Chuck Hagel develops a fondness for chicken relleno or pinakbet blame it on one very talented Filipino-American chef.

Staff Sgt. Ghil Medina has been with the US Air Force for the past six years. He is officially part of the 633rd Force Support Squadron working out of Langley Air Base in Virginia. But he is also one of the cooks who feed the Defense Secretary and other Pentagon brass and is sort of a celebrity within the elite clique of culinary warriors.

He’s already collected a silver medal in the K1 “professional” category of the 38th Military Culinary Arts Competition at Fort Lee, Va. which ends on Friday (March 15). Medina won on a dish that he says was inspired by his Filipino roots – chicken relleno, mixed vegetables and garlic rice with adobo sauce.

Hagel is probably no stranger to Asian dishes. He served and was wounded twice in Vietnam in 1967-68 as a squad leader with the 9th Infantry Division. But unlike that other Vietnam War vet in the Obama Cabinet (State Secretary John Kerry) I couldn’t find any record that Hagel stopped at either Subic or Clark where the seriously wounded were usually brought from Vietnam to recuperate.

But the 25-year-old Medina assures he’ll be well fed in the Pentagon.  The Secretary, he revealed, “eats simple and on the healthy side”.

Medina’s life story is like that of many other immigrants to the US. He survived on “bare essentials”, living with his godparents until his father and stepmother could bring him to New York when he was 18 years old.

“It’s a different world,” he told a US military journal years back. “In the Philippines, if you don’t have anything, you truly don’t have anything. I know the definition of starvation.”

He joined the USAF to get a college education. His family couldn’t afford the tuition and financial aid was out of reach, he explained. He enlisted in 2007 and rose steadily through the ranks by topping one exam after another and reaping awards. He also started winning cooking competitions in the military.

"I put so many hours in the kitchen, it was exhausting. But I knew I had to work that hard to get where I wanted to go," Medina declared. "I wanted my whole life to be a success and make a better life for myself, and this was how I was going to do it."

He is competing with the “best of the best” in the US Armed Forces. For those who’ve been in Clark and Subic when the Americans still ran the bases, it’s obvious they fed their soldiers well.  At Fort Lee, they had well-stocked containerized kitchens that were probably the closest thing they could come up with to simulate field conditions. 

"What they can expect here is enhanced professionalism, enhanced culinary skills, more developed techniques in the arts of food preparation and food sanitation, and the credentials that will allow them to be recognized in the private industry," explained Lt. Col. Luis A. Rodriguez, director of the Joint Culinary Center of Excellence at Fort Lee in a US Army website.

Medina said he doesn’t mind going back to Lackland Air Base in San Antonio, Texas where he started, and cook for other Airmen. “I am passionate about cooking because I love to make people happy. That's the main thing,” he stressed.

Monday, March 11, 2013

AN EVENING IN THE MOVIES


There were exactly 11 of us in a theater that could probably sit 200. It wasn’t exactly a “drove” but considering that the AMC theaters at the Hoffman Center in Alexandria, Va. wasn’t in the press release or included in the advertisements, I thought “A Moment in Time” drew a decent-sized crowd.

My daughter discovered the movie – featuring perhaps the Philippine’s hottest “love team” of Coco Martin and Julia Montes – by sheer accident. She was actually looking for the nearest IMax that was showing “Oz” and found one at the Hoffman Center, about a block or two from where we worked.

It was a bit surprising to see a Filipino movie (with English sub-titles) running in that part of Northern Virginia. They were usually shown at the Lohman theater along Arlington Blvd., which wasn’t really any better proximity-wise for Filipino movie-goers scattered all over this region (in the press releases for the movie, it only listed another AMC theater in Gaithersburg, Md.)

It did however offer some modicum of habit as people got used to going there to watch Filipino movies.

We’ve heard occasional griping here about Filipino entertainers neglecting this region. The big-name stars from home usually trek to New Jersey in the north or Virginia Beach to south, where the Filipino market is more compact.

Metro DC may not yet attained the “critical mass” to convince promoters to make the region a standard stop for Filipino entertainers, but it can be a key demographic for those peddling Filipino wares in search of bucks as well prestige.

Last year, the Philippine Embassy brought the world-renown Bayanihan dance troupe to the Kennedy Center, that magnificent edifice by the Potomac River that’s become a center of the arts and culture (they also performed in New York).

They also helped promote in Silver Spring, Md. celebrated Fil-Am filmmaker Ramon Diaz’s latest work about the rise of Journey front man Arnel  Pineda from obscurity to YouTube sensation to being part of one of America’s most successful rock bands. The documentary began its regular theatrical run on March 8.

In the Fall, a group led by businesswoman Loida Nicolas Lewis will be bringing “Noli Me Tangere: The Opera” based on Jose Rizal’s satirical novel that helped spark a revolution and pave the way for Asia’s first republic.

There is a sense among Filipinos here to show off who we are. When Menchu Sanchez, the nurse from New York, was invited to attend President Obama’s State of the Union address on Capitol Hill, she wanted to wear her terno until White House handlers asked her to opt for something simpler.

My wife gave “A Moment in Time” two thumbs-up and the others also seemed animated as the credits started rolling. The backdrop was spectacular, I thought Gabby Concepcion looked comfortable playing “daddy roles”, Cherie Gil still looks hot and the movie reaffirms my belief (built over weeks of following the tele-nobela “Walang Hanggan”) that no one weeps (or smiles) as profusely or as adroitly as Coco and Julia.

Still, I wished they had shown some other Filipino movie. Or some more of them. 


Tuesday, March 5, 2013

FIL-AM NURSES TELL PH LAWMAKERS: CLOSE SUB-STANDARD SCHOOLS


It at least took some of the bite from “Desperate Housewives” or racial comments from DC’s former mayor. They can almost be excused because of their ignorance about Filipino medical professionals, but coming from a well-heeled “kababayan”, a “distinguished” member of Congress and the wife of someone who aspired to be Philippine president – the words got to hurt.

Cynthia Villar stirred a hornet’s nest. Her “they don’t need to be that good” comment about Filipino nurses – one of the Philippine’s top exports that generate tens of millions in yearly remittances – has drawn the indignation of Filipino nurses groups all over the world. Yes, they are virtually everywhere.

“Her ignorance is an embarrassment,” said lawyer Arnedo Valera, a co-executive director of the Virginia-based Migrant Heritage Commission (MHC).

Villar is running for a seat in the Philippine Senate this May, and most likely wished she didn’t leave home to sit in that candidate’s forum (she’s running for the Senate this May) and answer questions from Winnie Monsod.



In trying to defend her decision to block the closure of sub-standard nursing schools in 2005, Villar – a name synonymous with Philippine real estate – dug a much deeper hole.  In the first place, how could you possibly justify mediocrity? Apparently, Villar believed, by leveling (or perhaps more accurately, lowering) the playing field. 

“Ang sinasabi naming sa kanila na ‘actually hindi naman kailangan ng nurse na matapos ang BSN. Kasi itong mga nurses, gusto lang nilang maging room nurse,” Villar said.

But the thing is Filipino nurses are flourishing. Countries from the United States to Great Britain to Libya have sought them.

Victoria Navarro, president of the Philippine Nurses Association of America (PNAA) – one of the most influential Fil-Am organizations in the US – attributed this to the “bachelor’s degree preparation of nurses in the Philippines that is at least 4 decades ahead of developed and industrialized nations.”

They are decrying attempts to lower those standards. “The quality and caliber of Philippine schools of nursing must be of the same standard, if not better, with our international peers,” the Texas-based PNAA declared in a position paper distributed today.

At his 1st State of the Union address after being re-elected, President Obama honored Fil-Am nurse Menchu de Luna Sanchez of New York University’s Langone Medical Center who orchestrated the evacuation of 20 at-risk infants at the peak of Hurricane Sandy that devastated New York and New Jersey.

Sanchez, in a Facebook post, said her fellow Filipino nurses were “hurt” and appeared to question Villar’s qualification to run for Congress (“yung mga ganung tao hindi natin nilalagay sa puwesto”).

"While everybody is admiring the professionalism and dedication of our nurses in the US, Ms. Villar is degrading them,” Valera said.

In 2005, more than half of the 21,500 foreign trained nurses who passed US nursing licensure examinations were educated in the Philippines.

Villar has offered her “heartfelt apology” to the Philippine Nurses Association. She argued in a separate interview with Maria Ressa that the 60 seconds to answer Monsod’s question was insufficient.

But this 2nd encounter with the media for the “PHVote” campaign appeared to turn just as badly for Villar who had trouble explaining to Ressa why she seemed to put the “concerns of the business people” above the public.

Here again it seems is the disconnect between rich, successful business people aspiring to be politicians and the people (the 47 percent?) they vow to serve.

“Elected officials in the Philippines must introduce and support legislation that will promote the high quality of nursing schools regardless of business and political pressures and to keep sub-standard nursing schools closed,” Navarro stressed.

Sadly, even at home, Filipino nurses are under-appreciated. Perhaps that’s why they need to prove themselves abroad.



Monday, March 4, 2013

3 PINOYS CONVICTED FOR ARMS SMUGGLING IN THE U-S



A federal court in Los Angeles, Ca. has convicted three Filipinos, including a former Philippine Customs official, for smuggling high-powered weapons into the United States.  

Sergio Syjuco, 26, Cesar Ubaldo, 27, and Arjyl Revereza, 26, were convicted after a four-week trial by a federal jury in US District Court in the Central District of California of conspiring to illegally import the weapons into the US, and aiding and abetting the importation of those weapons.  

Their sentencing has been scheduled for June 10 this year and each could get more than 20 years in prison.

They were indicted on Jan. 12, 2012, according to Acting Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and Bill Lewis, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI's Los Angeles Field Office. 

The trial was briefly sidetracked when reports surfaced that the FBI allegedly paid Filipino prostitutes in the Philippines as part of undercover operations. 

They were found guilty of conspiring to sell high-powered military and assault weapons to a buyer interested in bringing weapons into the US to arm drug dealers in Mexican drug cartels and Mexican Mafia gang members.  

The joint FBI-NBI operation was launched shortly after Ubaldo met a prospective weapons buyer in November 2010 who was actually an undercover FBI agent.  




Ubaldo later introduced the undercover agent to Syjuco, who supplied the weapons, and Revereza, the Philippine Customs official assigned to the Manila airport who facilitated the movement of the illegal weapons through Philippines customs and eventually into the US.

The weapons supplied included a rocket propelled grenade launcher, a mortar launcher, an M203 single-shot grenade launcher and 12 Bushmaster machine guns, as well as explosives including mortars and grenades.  

The weapons landed in Long Beach, Ca. on June 7, 2011, where they were promptly seized by the FBI. 


Sunday, March 3, 2013

WIZARDS-KNICKS GAME SHOWCASES FILIPINO CULTURE AT VERIZON CENTER


It was Filipino Night at the Verizon Center last Friday (March 1). The NBA's Washington Wizards and New York Knicks clashed on center court they shared with Filipino talents.

It was the first of its kind for an NBA game in the East Coast, explained Ken Mendoza, president of the Filipino-American Basketball Association of Metro DC (FABA-DC). But he added he got the idea from Fil-Am basketball groups in the West Coast that have been doing it yearly.


The Filipino Heritage Night was a collaboration between the Wizards franchise and FABA-DC. 

FABA-DC is one of only 5 “youth basketball partners” of the Washington Wizards and Mystics. The other organizations are the Arlington County Dept. of Parks and Recreation, Germantown Hardknocks Youth Foundation, I-270 Hoops and the Mercer Lunsford Basketball League.

He said they had to turn away hundreds of Fil-Am hoops fans after selling the 500 tickets allotted to them because the tickets for the game were sold out. The Verizon Center seats over 20,000.

The US national anthem was sung by 13-year-old Fil-Am Kriskatlin Zabala of WoodbridgeVa. She is the daughter of Kababayan Inc.’s Alfredo Zabala of Bataan and Catalina Zabala of Manila.


The audience also got to see the popular Filipino folk dance “tinikling” performed by the Migrant Heritage Commission (MHC) Dance Ensemble during the half-time break.
  
The MHC dance ensemble is composed of Jolin and Kathleen Calaro, Matthew Aninzo, Joyce and Khrisna Mata, Alex and John-John Cabrera, Lex Crisostomo, Ian Tamayo, Neng Poliquit and Julie Quitoriano.


Before the Wizards-Knicks game, various FABA-DC youth and adult teams played on the court.

The Filipino Heritage Night was a smashing success all around. It brought to a larger audience the talent and culture of the burgeoning Fil-Am community in the Metro DC region. The small army of young Fil-Ams playing hoops was also a reminder of one of America's enduring legacies in the Philippines - a nation addicted to basketball.




Saturday, March 2, 2013

U-S WARNS CITIZENS -- NO PLACE TO HIDE FOR SEX FIENDS


The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) warned Americans overseas that they can be prosecuted for engaging in sexual acts with minors wherever they may be.

“Americans, with twisted overseas travel plans to engage in child sex tourism, may think they are beyond the reach of US law enforcement,” said Special Agent Eric McLoughlin, who led the ICE’s Homeland Security Investigation (HSI) participation in a raid on a Subic, Zambales bar that resulted in the arrest of Arthur Benjamin of Texas.


HSI is one of the lead federal law enforcement agencies that identifies, investigates and arrests child predators and sexual offenders worldwide – a priority investigative area. They have a presence in 48 countries around the world.

Benjamin’s case was highlighted in a special ABC News report broadcast earlier this week.

“Millions of American citizens travel abroad on a regular basis. While the vast majority of them are law abiding, some commit sexual crimes against minors in foreign countries.

Each year, over a million children are exploited in the global commercial sex trade. Child sex tourism involves people who travel from their home country to another and engage in commercial sex acts with children.

Child sex tourism is a shameful assault on the dignity of children and a form of child abuse and violence. For the minors involved, these acts have devastating consequences, which may include long-lasting physical and psychological trauma, disease, drug addiction, unwanted pregnancy, malnutrition, social ostracism and possibly death,” the statement read.


LOUISIANA PINOY WORKERS' SUPPORTERS CLAMOR FOR CUISIA'S HEAD



A group fighting for Filipino oil rig workers in Louisiana is demanding the recall of Philippine Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia Jr. back to Manila over his alleged failure to help them.
The National Alliance for Filipino Concerns (NAFCON), International Migrants Alliance-USA, and the National Guest-worker Alliance mounted a protest caravan last week to draw attention to the plight of about 70 workers who’ve sued their employer, Grand Isle Shipyards (GIS) over alleged wage violations and exploitation.

“These brave oil rig workers, trafficked from the Philippines, are standing up for their rights as workers, as migrants, and as human beings against slavery, trafficking, wage theft, fraud, and other forms of abuse, and exploitation - right here in our backyard,” declared NAFCON president Terry Valen.  

The 21-car “Freedom Ride” drove through New Orleans to Lafitte, LA. bearing placards with demands that included justice for Filipino GIS workers, the end of slavery and trafficking of migrant workers, end “forced migration” from the Philippines and for Cuisia to resign. 



Cuisia earlier criticized the “belated” support of these groups, pointing to the work done by consular officials to look after the aggrieved Filipinos.

“While we welcome their sudden interest and belated expression of concern for Filipino offshore oil workers in the Gulf of Mexico, Philippine Forum and other so-called solidarity groups should have first done their homework and get their facts straight before accusing us of indifference,” he said.

“This is an unfair assertion coming from a group that claims to represent the interests of our offshore oil workers,” he added.  Cuisia said they were aware of the problems of the workers as early as 2010 when 8 of the Filipino workers met with Philippine officials before Filipino-American lawyer Ellaine Carr filed the complaint against GIS.
“We have no problems with Philippine Forum if it wants to publicize its involvement in this issue but it should not do this at the expense of the Philippine government.”

But at the Manila Village marker in front of the Lafitte town hall, Julia Camagong of the International Migrants Alliance-USA declared that “Unlike the Philippine government which has not done enough to address this issue, today is a sign of our commitment. We will not stop till justice is served for Filipino workers and all the exploited migrant workers here and around the world.”

Filipino contract workers have accused GIS of abusive and exploitative working conditions akin to slavery.



In addition to being made to work under unsafe conditions, the migrant workers alleged that they were paid approximately $5 an hour for 10-14 hour days with no overtime. They were also deducted $1000- $3000 a month for employer housing that consisted of 4-6 workers sharing a single 10 feet by 10 feet room,” said Katrina Abarcar.

“Bunkhouse lockdowns, a 10:00 PM curfew, constant surveillance from security cameras, and limited communication with the outside world were also enforced. Workers also endured discriminatory practices from their employer such as restrictions on religious practices and threats of termination and deportation if workers failed to comply with their employer’s strict rules,” she added.

The group said the Nov. 16, 2012 Black Elk oil rig explosion in the Gulf Mexico that killed three Filipino workers, helped draw international attention to the “flagrant abuses and injustices they have suffered,” Abarcar said.

The crowd, estimated at 100 was greeted by Dr. Carmelo Astilla who created the inscription commemorating one of the first settlements in the US of Filipinos who escaped from forced labor aboard Spanish galleons.

Rev. Israel Alvaran, who gave a benediction, described the trip as a “pilgrimage where we remember those who have gone before us to fight for justice.” 

“Today in 2013 we are still escaping slavery. We are still brave Filipinos, we are still proud Filipinos. It is through our organizing, our unity, and power across all communities that we will stop this from happening again,” NAFCON head Valen said.

The day was described by other supporters of the campaign such as Daniel Castellanos of the National Guestworker Alliance as “a day of unity – the day we united to defeat all bad employers like GIS.” According to Alfred Morshew of STAND with Dignity, he came out to support his Filipino brothers “because it is one system oppressing Filipinos and African Americans.”

The program ended with “Bayan Ko” led by Pendong and Chat of “Ang Grupong Pendong” and the release of 100 white balloons, symbolizing the more than 100 Filipino workers believed to still be working for GIS “under oppressive conditions who the conveners of the campaign hope to see freed”.

After the program, the caravan made an unplanned trip past a Grand Isle Shipyard site in Lafitte, and left placards with campaign slogans on the ground, including Filipinos Against Slavery and Trafficking (FAST), the newly formed workers organization in the area.

Their next stop will be Washington DC on March 17 that will include a public forum for the Washington DC., Maryland and Virginia community as well as a mobilization in front of the Philippine Embassy to demand Cuisia’s resignation.