Posts Tagged PHILIPPINES

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I was still in my early high school years when I decided to consider taking Political Science just because the course would give you an immaterial and intangible prestige once you mention that it is what you’re taking up for your college degree. Whenever people inquire about my college details, I really feel an intense sense of superiority–I feel like I am on top of a pedestal while the others, of course, are on the floor looking up at me. Sounds arrogant and downright self-serving but oh well, that’s how I see things with these lenses that I wear.

Speaking of lenses, I am starting to wonder, what kind of lenses people nowadays use that all they see and say when they hear the word politics is–politics will always be equated to pejorative acts. Whether it be falsifying of public documents, bribery, forgery, plunder, invasion of privacy–name it and for sure, people will deliberately find a way to somehow associate politics with it. But I think, it’s not the lenses that we use that dictate out point of view of politics–I’m going to make a wild assumption that the manufacturers of the lenses are the ones resposible for these very derogatory and disturbing images that we have on politics.

There are several factors that influence our view of politics, and I dare say that these factors played a big part in shaping our political perspective. But I won’t really deal on these factors, instead, I’d rather deal with one specific factor that I find more powerful than the government itself–the media.

Everyday of our lives we are exposed to the different forms of media. Newspapers, televisions, radios, computers, cellular phones–all these are, in a way, mediums of information. I am not bothered by the fact that your little cellular phone can spread information in just minutes, what bothers me is the information these mediums give out and spread globally, defying continents and across oceans. I am bothered by the big possibility that journalists who took responsible journalism seminars and what not are being bribed just to curtail delicate information that is essential to the whole news story. I am bothered by the thought that journalists tend to exaggerate news just so that people will find them interesting, catchy, amusing and entertaining.

Politics is never meant to be a malign concept. I’d like to say and argue that it is a rather benign idea but I’m pretty much sure that out of the 92 million population of our country, almost 80 percent of them would stick to the notion that politics is such a bad thing, the remaining 20 percent divided between the apathetic and optimistic who still believes that politics is not a bad thing after all. And I dare say that the proportion of the apathetic ones is larger than those of the optimists. Sometimes, I am bound to blame the media for such preconceptions that people have about politics. I always thought that exposure, since this is what media’s all about, is a good thing but now, when you zoom things in a bit, exposure becomes a rather questionable deed capable of tilting our verdicts of politics to the opposite. Instead of clarifying, media makes things even vaguer.

I can’t be sorrier for the kids of the next generations, perhaps, the positive perspective of politics will only exist in their history and what would linger in their present is the negative, derogatory and pejorative political perspective. They will never get to see the ideal society that Artistotle dreams of. Though there is no such thing as the ideal, but since approximation is attainable, approximations are good enough to keep the spirits of achieving the perfect society up. I’m not saying that politics is clean–it may be and may be not. But I can’t stand the fact that, the way I see it, it’s the media that starts to govern the country and we are unconscious about it and not the leaders whom we voted for. Even just a tiny glimmer, I still see hope in our leaders.

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By Jaeyoun Kim

Filipinos always complain about the corruption in the Philippines.
Do you really think the corruption is the problem of the Philippines? I
do not think so. I strongly believe that the problem is the lack of
love for the Philippines.

Let me first talk about my country, Korea. It might help you understand my point. After the Korean War, South Korea was one of the poorest countries in the world. Koreans
had to start from scratch because entire country was destroyed after
the Korean War, and we had no natural resources. Koreans used to talk
about the Philippines, for Filipinos were very rich in Asia. We envy
Filipinos. Koreans really wanted to be well off like Filipinos. Many
Koreans died of famine. My father & brother also died because of
famine. Korean government was very corrupt and is still very corrupt
beyond your imagination, but Korea was able to develop dramatically
because Koreans really did their best for the common good with their
heart burning with patriotism.

Koreans did not work just for themselves but also for their neighborhood and country. Education inspired young men with the spirit of patriotism.
40 years ago, President Park took over the government to reform Korea.
He tried to borrow money from other countries, but it was not possible
to get a loan and attract a foreign investment because the economic
situation of South Korea was so bad. Korea had only three factories.
So, President Park sent many mine workers and nurses to Germany so
that they could send money to Korea to build a factory. They had to go through horrible experience.

In 1964, President Park visited Germany to borrow money. Hundred of
Koreans in Germany came to the airport to welcome him and cried there
as they saw the President Park. They asked to him, “President, when can
we be well off?” That was the only question everyone asked to him.
President Park cried with them and promised them that Korea would be
well off if everyone works hard for Korea, and the President of Germany
got the strong impression on them and lent money to Korea. So,
President Park was able to build many factories in Korea. He always
asked Koreans to love their country from their heart. Many Korean
scientists and engineers in the USA came back to Korea to help
developing country because they wanted their country to be well off.
Though they received very small salary, they did their best for Korea.
They always hoped that their children would live in well off country.
My parents always brought me to the places where poor and physically
handicapped people live. They wanted me to understand their life and
help them. I also worked for Catholic Church when I was in the army.
The only thing I learned from Catholic Church was that we have to love
our neighborhood. And, I have loved my neighborhood. Have you cried for
the Philippines? I have cried for my country several times. I also
cried for the Philippines because of so many poor people. I have been
to the New Bilibid prison. What made me sad in the prison were the
prisoners who do not have any love for their country. They go to mass
and work for Church. They pray everyday. However, they do not love the
Philippines. I talked to two prisoners at the maximum-security
compound, and both of them said that they would leave the Philippines.

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FILIPINO might DETERIORATE

In an archipelagic country like the Philippines, being a colony of other countries or empires is very much anticipated. History reveals that our beloved (well, it really is to me) country was colonized by the Americans, the Spanish group (it was already an empire during that time) and all the other colonizers who were once the masters and trend-setters of the Filipino people.

 

The various colonizers had so much an impact to our country’s present traditions and cultures. What we have now is a piece of inheritance which dates back to the Australo-Melanesian settlement 30, 000 years ago. Included in the piece of inheritance we were given (in legal terms at least) is the most important and most permeable concept of language.

 

The Filipino language (as I believe it) is one of the richest languages in present-day situation. Even if we are not one of the so-called tiger economies, our language is something that has become what it is now tested through time. The importance of Filipino as our language is not seen by many among us (extremely terrible) yet it is one of the strongest concepts that prove our identity and existence. What concerns me the most these months is not the continuous oil-price hike but the issue, and I might say that it has become a fact, that the Filipino language, my beloved language, is slowly deteriorating. Not slowly but increasingly.

 

“Nagwoworry kasi ako baka may magsteal ng wallet ko e.”

 

“Sir, kasi, feeling ko ganito yun.”

 

“Classmates alam niyo yun? It’s like, you know.”

 

“Nag-eat na ba you?”

 

PLEASE. Shoot me now if I’m not making sense. I mean, HELLO. What the hell. Why do you have to make words more complicated by combining two languages in a single word? Why can’t you just say na nag-aalala ka instead of nagwoworry ako? Why can’t you just get your tongue straight up and ask kumain ka na ba instead of nag-eat na ba you? If these things will continue to happen, years from now, what would be left of the rich language produced by the numerous years of colonization, torture and hope, are nonsense and useless (when alone) syllables (see… not even words) like nag, mag and all those others I failed to mention.

 

You might hate me now for I am writing these texts in the country’s second language (I assume) which is English. I am not a perfect Filipino speaker or writer but I have the heart for our language. I could not express my abhorrence in this issue if I speak in my native tongue but I can speak Filipino without any mixtures of other languages in it and I don’t use the Filipino syllables combined with the English verbs. My point is, English is OKAY. Spanish is OKAY. Italian and Korean are OKAY. But ENGGALOG and TAGLISH, OH PLEASE.

 

Is it just our language that’s deteriorating? Or even our sense of nationalism and patriotism?

 

OR ARE THE FILIPINOS DETERIORATING?

 

SPEAK YOUR LANGUAGE. LOVE YOUR COUNTRY.

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