THE CRISIS OF THE PRESIDENCY

By Francisco S. Tatad1

On orders of President Benigno Simeon Aquino III, 188 members of

the House of Representatives, which has the exclusive power to initiate

impeachment cases, have impeached Supreme Court Chief Justice

Renato Corona without reading the Articles of Impeachment, and without a

committee hearing or a floor debate.

At first Malacanang tried to deny its involvement. But a Malacanang ally

quickly disabused the public by saying the impeachment complaint was

drafted at the Palace. And the President, who likes to be called Pinoy,

formally thanked the congressmen for their "help."

In making the congressmen sign an unread document in exchange for certain

tangible gifts, Pinoy unduly risked his political reputation for being previously

incorrupt. Critics see him now as the first corruptor of Congress.

In their view, he has made himself impeachable in the very act of impeaching

the Chief Justice. He, rather than Corona, should be the one impeached for

culpable violation of the Constitution, bribery, corruption, betrayal of public

trust and other high crimes. He should be the one tried and removed from

office.

These are strong words, but nothing more than words. Having full control of

the House, Pinoy is in no danger of ever getting impeached, whatever wrong

The author was Senate Majority Leader during the 2000-2001 impeachment trial of then
President Joseph Ejercito Estrada. His book, A Nation on Fire: the Unmaking of Joseph Ejercito
Estrada and the Remaking of Democracy in the Philippines, is by far the most authoritative
documentation of the trial and ouster of Estrada.

1

3

he does. But he has provoked a constitutional crisis, and strong words and

strong passions are the first elements of this crisis.

The Articles of Impeachment, consisting of eight charges, are now in the

Senate. The Senate has the sole power to try and decide impeachment

cases. All 23 sitting senators have taken their oath to render "impartial

justice." Some of them, however, seem to take a cavalier view of the

impeachment process.

They say that impeachment is nothing but a political process, to be decided

on the basis of public opinion, not on the basis of the evidence. If that were

the case, then the Senate should have no role in it. The case should be put to

the people in a referendum, which should tell us what the "public opinion" is,

so long as everyone participates and the process is not rigged.

But that is not what the Constitution says. Impeachment is a constitutional

process. The Senate tries and decides all impeachment cases, on the

basis of the evidence, not on the basis of party line or personal sentiment of

the "judges."

Now, a former assemblyman and former national president of the Integrated

Bar of the Philippines (IBP) has asked the Supreme Court to restrain the

Senate from hearing the complaint, on the ground that the allegations are all

null and void. Atty. Vicente Millora's petition runs into a few pages. He is the

first one; others, including the IBP itself, could follow suit.

What happens then if and when the Court finds the complaint invalid? Would

the President recognize and respect such a ruling, given the fact that he

4

seems to believe he is free not to obey what the Court says? Would it not

create a crisis so grave that the only possible outcome would be either to

completely abolish the Constitution or to remove the President?

Should the case come to trial, Pinoy may have to move heaven and earth to

make sure the Chief Justice is convicted. Can he do to the Senate what he

did to the House without creating a farce? And supposing he fails, how will it

all end? Nobody knows.

In 1991, Cory Aquino, Pinoy's mother, led a big march to the Senate to

pressure the senators to approve the proposed RP-US treaty extending

the term of the American bases by another ten years. She thought she

could count on their votes, having helped 22 of them get elected in the 1987

senatorial elections. So she sat in the gallery and watched them vote. But the

ingrates voted "according to their consciences," and the treaty lost.

Pinoy could yet repeat his mother's experience. Should that happen, after

he had put his presidency on the line, he may no longer be able to govern. He

may have to resign, or else be removed by other means. I don't want to see

that happen to Pinoy.

He deserves a break. He has made enough mistakes. He must redeem

himself. He must abandon his zero-sum game and rethink his course.

He must choose democracy clearly and irrevocably against any form of

dictatorship. And he must do so now.

Pinoy is a democratically elected president, not a revolutionary one. He must

act as one. He is presiding over a deeply divided country, in a time of troubled

5

peace, amid so many natural and man-made calamities and other worries.

He should show the world he has the will and the skill to unite his people and

to mitigate the humanitarian disasters no man is able to prevent.

Senator Joker Arroyo, Cory's former Executive Secretary and hardly an

adversary, chides Pinoy for assuming control of all the three branches of

government without proclaiming martial law, and without any of the conditions

obtaining which could otherwise justify such a proclamation. Many agree with

Senator Arroyo.

In 1972, President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law all over the

country, in response to the communist rebellion that threatened to take over

the government. It was a legitimate response to an actual emergency. By

contrast, many see Pinoy's rush into one-man rule as an attempt to conduct

the presidency as a kind of video game, of which he is reputedly a master.

But neither life nor government is a game. Not anywhere, least of all in

a constitutional democracy. Would Ninoy Aquino, Pinoy's father, have

approved of it, were he alive today? It is not unfair to ask that question, since

Pinoy ran on his parents' record, lacking one of his own. The best answer

that comes to mind is--- maybe yes, maybe no, no one can say.

Filipinos remember Ninoy as the opposition leader whom Marcos jailed during

martial law and who was eventually assassinated in 1983 at the Manila

international airport while coming home from his medical furlough in Boston.

But what most Filipinos do not know is that Ninoy was a most passionate

advocate of martial law.

6

Ninoy liked to tell his friends in the press that should he ever become

president, and many thought that would happen one day, the first thing he

would do was to declare martial law, exactly as Park Chung Hee did in Korea,

to consolidate power and accelerate the country's economic development. But

Marcos beat him to the draw.

Now Pinoy has fulfilled, or is about to fulfill, his late father's dream without

formally proclaiming martial law or national emergency. Is Pinoy simply

trying to follow his father's vision, or is he being egged on by some power or

principality?

In its Dec. 23, 2011 issue, the US-based Executive Intelligence Review

reports that Ninoy has become a frontline supporter of US President Barack

Obama's "Ring around China" policy, along with Japan's Nobuteru Ishihara,

governor of Tokyo and secretary general of LDP. EIR is not the least

passionate when writing about Mr. Obama, but it was light years ahead of

everybody else in predicting the collapse of the US housing bubble and the

euro, and the continuing meltdown of the trans-Atlantic economies.

EIR says that during Obama's recent Asia tour, Pinoy insisted that the US

denounce China as an aggressor in the South China Sea. EIR then cites

Pinoy's recent speech calling on the Armed Forces to prepare for external

challenges, not just internal ones. At the same time it sees more US warships

being dispatched to the area close to the Spratlys.

Is President Obama the cartilege that has stiffened Pinoy's back and made

him believe he could take over the entire government without provoking

resistance or hostility? Supported by the US, Pinoy could be tempted to

7

believe he could do anything without risking his office. After all, the Filipino

poor have remained docile until now, the remnants of the communist left that

were a threat to Marcos are now his allies, the elite look only after their own,

and the Americans will go after any dictator anywhere, except when he is

their own.

Still history is full of strongmen whom the US had coddled for years and then

dumped as soon as they were no longer useful to them. Pinoy would do well

to learn from their experience, including from his own father's. Ninoy himself

may have narrated his own story to his wife and children.

In 1957, during the so-called Permesta revolt in Indonesia, Ninoy undertook

secret operations for the CIA, according to the book "Subversion as Foreign

Policy" by Audrey Kahin and George Mc T Kahin, quoting the late Senator

Jose Wright Diokno as its source.

According to that story, Ninoy set up a clandestine radio station in Indonesia

for the rebels, shipped them guns from a third country, and opened up

Hacienda Luisita as a training ground for the rebel pilots. But when the

Americans saw they could not topple President Sukarno, they promptly pulled

out without telling Ninoy, leaving him in the dark and holding the proverbial

empty bag.

It is not known how that affected Ninoy's relations with the CIA. But in 1978,

when Ninoy ran from his detention cell for the interim Batasang Pambansa,

then Defense Secretary (now Senate president) Juan Ponce Enrile accused

him of being a CIA agent. He did not deny it. His only reply was that he

worked "with the CIA", but "not for the CIA."

7

about it.

Twenty-eight years after Ninoy's assassination, and no mastermind has

been identified, conspiracy theorists have started saying that NInoy was

terminally ill when he came home from Boston in 1983, and had agreed to

be sacrificed in a foreign intelligence operation specifically intended to bring

down Marcos, make Cory president, and restore the primacy of US interests

in the Philippines.

I do not buy that theory. But others may. Pinoy has to intervene. He has to

unlock the mystery about his father's death, to end all speculation, once and

for all. But he must, at the outset, make an irrevocable commitment to our

constitutional democracy, respect the separation of powers, act more the

statesman he is supposed to be, and make his countrymen, not any power or

principality, the sovereign masters in their own country.

Angry bird bomber

Cupcake-polvoron a sure bomb for kids and kids at heart

iCloud + SugarSync + Dropbox is equal to

Minimum free:
iCloud: 2GB?
SugarSync: 5GB!!
Dropbox: 2GB
Sum: at least 9GB!!!
LOTSASPACE. Will we still need external or USB drives? Only if we are not online.

iCloud = SugarSync = Dropbox ???

The three are platforms (not the shoes that make you taller) (let's just say they're apps?) in the internet that allow you to store files for free and enables automatic syncing with your other devices.

iCloud is owned by Apple (like iPhone, iPad, iPod,...). You can only encounter it when you have iDevices. For Dropbox and SugarSync, you can encounter them even if you don't have iDevices.

For additional 2GB cloud space

Always have your stuff when you need it with @Dropbox. 2GB account is free! http://db.tt/5aARWLGS
Earn 250K per referral for a max of 8GB. Not baaaad.

Will there be a need for a rain dance in cloud computing? Sweet SugarSync and dropped Dropbox

What the heck is this cloud computing? Is it the activity of students needing to practice their maths on the fly or something? Or is it the new task for weather forecasters to make sure their rain prediction work? There is no need for weather mumbo jumbo here or calculating x's or y's.

Cloud computing is the activity that you do in order to make file uploads and file sharing between devices simple and sweet. There is only the act of syncing folders from the device you have up to the internet cloud. I think "cloud" is used because that is what is labeled as a sort of network or something. 

Two cloud computing applications I used in the last 24 hours are: Dropbox and the SugarSync. The former was suggested by a coordinator of real estate projects so that the files shared will always be the latest. I signed up for that to get the files. Its benefits are having free 2GB of space up in the cloud and for every successful referral, I get additional 250K up to a cap of 8GB. I thought it was nifty until my FB friend posted a reply to my Dropbox ravings. Then I learned the fantastic free 5GB for the free accounts in SugarSync. Aint that sweet. For every successful referral to the app, there is additional 500K space for both the suggester and his friend. And no ceiling at all!

Why don't you try sweet SugarSync: http://bit.ly/rwpMSQ

Stress buster #4

Stress buster #5

Stress buster #6

Stress buster #3

Stress buster #2

Stress buster #1

Missing

Missing beside the tree is YOU. Merry Christmas to YOU!

Merry Christmas to all of us


There was a tennis ball inside my congee bowl

Urbi et Orbi Message of His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI (Christmas, 25 December 2011)

Urbi et Orbi Message of His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI (Christmas, 25 December 2011)
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Rome and throughout the world!

Christ is born for us! Glory to God in the highest and peace on earth to the men and women whom he loves. May all people hear an echo of the message of Bethlehem which the Catholic Church repeats in every continent, beyond the confines of every nation, language and culture. The Son of the Virgin Mary is born for everyone; he is the Saviour of all.

This is how Christ is invoked in an ancient liturgical antiphon: "O Emmanuel, our king and lawgiver, hope and salvation of the peoples: come to save us, O Lord our God". Veni ad salvandum nos! Come to save us! This is the cry raised by men and women in every age, who sense that by themselves they cannot prevail over difficulties and dangers. They need to put their hands in a greater and stronger hand, a hand which reaches out to them from on high. Dear brothers and sisters, this hand is Jesus, born in Bethlehem of the Virgin Mary. He is the hand that God extends to humanity, to draw us out of the mire of sin and to set us firmly on rock, the secure rock of his Truth and his Love (cf. Ps 40:2).

This is the meaning of the Child's name, the name which, by God's will, Mary and Joseph gave him: he is named Jesus, which means "Saviour" (cf. Mt 1:21; Lk 1:31). He was sent by God the Father to save us above all from the evil deeply rooted in man and in history: the evil of separation from God, the prideful presumption of being self-sufficient, of trying to compete with God and to take his place, to decide what is good and evil, to be the master of life and death (cf. Gen 3:1-7). This is the great evil, the great sin, from which we human beings cannot save ourselves unless we rely on God's help, unless we cry out to him: "Veni ad salvandum nos! – Come to save us!"

The very fact that we cry to heaven in this way already sets us aright; it makes us true to ourselves: we are in fact those who cried out to God and were saved (cf. Esth [LXX] 10:3ff.). God is the Saviour; we are those who are in peril. He is the physician; we are the infirm. To realize this is the first step towards salvation, towards emerging from the maze in which we have been locked by our pride. To lift our eyes to heaven, to stretch out our hands and call for help is our means of escape, provided that there is Someone who hears us and can come to our assistance.

Jesus Christ is the proof that God has heard our cry. And not only this! God's love for us is so strong that he cannot remain aloof; he comes out of himself to enter into our midst and to share fully in our human condition (cf. Ex 3:7-12). The answer to our cry which God gave in Jesus infinitely transcends our expectations, achieving a solidarity which cannot be human alone, but divine. Only the God who is love, and the love which is God, could choose to save us in this way, which is certainly the lengthiest way, yet the way which respects the truth about him and about us: the way of reconciliation, dialogue and cooperation.

Dear brothers and sisters in Rome and throughout the world, on this Christmas 2011, let us then turn to the Child of Bethlehem, to the Son of the Virgin Mary, and say: "Come to save us!" Let us repeat these words in spiritual union with the many people who experience particularly difficult situations; let us speak out for those who have no voice.

Together let us ask God's help for the peoples of the Horn of Africa, who suffer from hunger and food shortages, aggravated at times by a persistent state of insecurity. May the international community not fail to offer assistance to the many displaced persons coming from that region and whose dignity has been sorely tried.

May the Lord grant comfort to the peoples of South-East Asia, particularly Thailand and the Philippines, who are still enduring grave hardships as a result of the recent floods.

May the Lord come to the aid of our world torn by so many conflicts which even today stain the earth with blood. May the Prince of Peace grant peace and stability to that Land where he chose to come into the world, and encourage the resumption of dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians. May he bring an end to the violence in Syria, where so much blood has already been shed. May he foster full reconciliation and stability in Iraq and Afghanistan. May he grant renewed vigour to all elements of society in the countries of North Africa and the Middle East as they strive to advance the common good.

May the birth of the Saviour support the prospects of dialogue and cooperation in Myanmar, in the pursuit of shared solutions. May the Nativity of the Redeemer ensure political stability to the countries of the Great Lakes Region of Africa, and assist the people of South Sudan in their commitment to safeguarding the rights of all citizens.

Dear Brothers and Sisters, let us turn our gaze anew to the grotto of Bethlehem. The Child whom we contemplate is our salvation! He has brought to the world a universal message of reconciliation and peace. Let us open our hearts to him; let us receive him into our lives. Once more let us say to him, with joy and confidence: "Veni ad salvandum nos!"


Sent from my iPhone