journeying through life with a hop, a skip and a blindfolded jump while humming a dirge and singing an ad
Wednesday, June 03, 2009
HR 1109 belongs to the dung heap
The country needs change. The constitution needs change. But definitely not at this time. And not from the hands of a group of trolls with thick hides masquerading as congressmen from the majority who think nothing of using their money, power and influence for their selfish interests. And who else but GMA herself will benefit the most from this.Now anything is possible for her.
Who can still believe in democracy at this display of willful railroading by so-called representatives of the people?
HR1109 belongs to the dung heap, together with all those ugly mountain trolls.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Hi-tech Crime via Your Home PC
Recently, BBC showed just how at risk PCs are of being taken over by hackers. Hijacked home PCs are being used by hackers to send out millions of spam e-mails. In a special broadcast last March 14, BBC demonstrated how this is done.
Hackers use slave home PCs to bombard its target website with requests for access to make it inaccessible.High-traffic websites with big revenues are a "massive target" for this. Hackers can 'disable' a website and cause it to exceed its bandwith. According to the BBC, these high-trafic websites end up paying "ransom" money to hackers so that they would stop their attacks.
We have to make necessary steps to ensure that our home PCs don't become hackers' "toys". There are no visible signs that our PC is being controlled by someone else, we really can't tell. Our PCs can be compromised by visiting an infected web page or by opening an e-mail containing a virus as an attachment. Protection systems really need to be switched on and kept updated all the time to prevent being taken over by these cyber-criminals.
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Tribute to women
International Women's Day, celebrated during March 8, is an occasion marked by women's groups around the world. This date is also commemorated at the United Nations and is designated in many countries as a national holiday.
When women on all continents, often divided by national boundaries and by ethnic, linguistic, cultural, economic and political differences, come together to celebrate their Day, they can look back to a tradition that represents at least nine decades of struggle for equality, justice, peace and development.
This is a day when ordinary women are remembered as part of those who made history. It is rooted in the centuries-old struggle of women to participate in society on an equal footing with men. In ancient Greece, Lysistrata initiated a sexual strike against men in order to end war; during the French Revolution, Parisian women calling for "liberty, equality, fraternity" marched on Versailles to demand women's suffrage.
As a tribute to all the women in my life, I will share this poem written by Lilia Quindoza Santiago (with my own translation in English --I hope it suffices):
Isang Tugon kay Elynia: Ang Pagiging Babae [In Response to Elynia: On Being a Woman
Ayaw kong isumpa ang pagiging babae I don't want to curse my being a woman
Sa panahong ito, kabarong makata, during these times, co-poetess
Kahit pa sugatan ang lahat ng sulok though wounds scar each and every corner
Ng puso ko't kaluluwa. of my heart and soul.
Ayaw kong isuko ang kayariang I don't want to give-up the identity
Ako rin ang bumubuo. that I myself carved.
Di ko ipamimigay I will not give away
Ang mumunting butil ng diwang even a small grain of consciousness
Ako rin ang bumubuhay. that I myself gave birth to.
Totoong "kasumpa-sumpa True, "to be a woman in this time of war is
ang maging babae sa panahong ito" to be cursed"
Kung panatag nating aakuin If we peacefully accept
Ang hinulmang pagkatao the image that was carved for us
Sa mga nagdaang siglo through the past centuries
Nang walang pagtangi sa sarili without arguing for our own identity
O walang pagsalungat sa pang-aapi. or without fighting against oppression.
Ngunit sa ganang akin But in my opinion,
Ang pagkababae'y marami pang kahulugan being a woman has many more meanings
Bukod sa pagtutol sa kostumbre't kaugalian than contradicting norms and customs
Ang pagiging babae'y pagkatha being a woman is creating
Ng mga tulang di pa nalilikha; poetry that has never been created;
Ang pagiging babae'y pag-awit being a woman means singing
Ng di pa naririnig songs that have never been heard
Ang pagiging babae'y pagtuklas being a woman means discovering
Ng daigdig na di pa natutuklasan, a world undiscovered as yet,
Ang pagiging babae'y paghubog being a woman means molding
Ng mundong di pa nabubuo a world not yet fully formed
Ang pagiging babae'y pagluwal being a woman means giving forth
Ng buhay na di pa nararanasan. a life that has not yet been experienced.
Ngunit higit sa lahat, ang pagiging babae'y But most of all, being a woman is
Higit pa sa lahat ng ito more than all of these
Na tayong kababaihan lamang bilang tao That only us women as people
Ang tanging makakatanto. can truly understand. ]
Thursday, February 05, 2009
Questions on the Safety of the BNPP
Support the campaign in opposing the recommissioning and operation of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant. Sign the online petition at http://www.petitiononline.com/
(last part of "Misrepresenting Science")
Dr. Rodolfo further stresses that none of the "top geologists" with an intimate knowledge of Bataan has called Napot Point "safe." As an example, he cites Dr. Ronnie Torres, formerly with the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology and now at the University of Hawaii, who warned of volcanism and faulting at the site in 1992: "Natib volcano does not erupt very often but could still erupt." Says Dr. Rodolfo, "as a rough rule of thumb, the longer a volcano is in repose, the more time it has to store eruptive energy".
"In short," charges Dr. Rodolfo, "our science is being abused by a person in governmental authority, either deliberately or out of sheer geological ignorance." That's heavy.
Beyond geological considerations, there are other issues related to nuclear power in general and the BNPP in particular. These include the risks of operational accidents, the high toxicity of materials handled, the stringent measures required to avoid radiation contamination of surrounding communities, the danger of radioactive material being stolen and used by terrorist elements, and the lack of a satisfactory solution for the final disposal of the tons of radioactive waste created. All these are compounded by the absence of a safety culture and the presence of a corruption culture in the country.
Obviously, serious questions on this matter need to be considered. But for us the public, the question we must first answer is, whose answers should we listen to? Those who represent science, or those who misrepresent it? Scientists or politicians? Well, what do we want the answer to 2 plus 2 to be?
Plans to revive the BNPP are on a roll!
(continuation of the article "Misrepresenting Science" by Rene B. Azurin)
For now, let's focus on the science. Dr. Kelvin Rodolfo, professor emeritus of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences of the University of Illinois at Chicago and a balik-scientist who now teaches at the National Institute of Geological Sciences of the University of the Philippines in Diliman, says that those who are trying to justify the activation of the BNPP have been guilty of "abusing scientific data." In particular, he says that Mr. Cojuangco is "dangerously misrepresenting" the scientific data contained in a paper authored by Dr. Joan Cabato, Dr. Fernando Siringan, and himself and in another written by Dr. Ernesto Sonido and Mr. Jesse Umbal, both on the geology of the BNPP site.
Dr. Rodolfo says that they were "dismayed to find that the explanatory note to the bill cites our work as certifying the safety of the Bataan nuclear plant site." He quotes from said note: "Top geologists have evaluated Bataan and, with the exception of Mt. Natib which is a dormant volcano whose last eruption was estimated to have been between 11.3 [and] 18 thousand years ago (Cabato et al. 2005) and which is ten kilometers (10 km) from the BNPP, could find no anomalies in locating the plant there."
Dr. Rodolfo takes vigorous issue with Mr. Cojuangco's statements and says, first, that "the BNPP is not 10 kilometers away from Natib, it is on Natib, which constitutes the entire northern half of the Bataan peninsula." Next, he says that they did not estimate the age of Mt. Natib's last eruption in their paper. What he says they actually wrote was:
"A breach in the caldera of Mt. Natib is the most likely source of a presumed pyroclastic deposit in the eastern bay that is associated with sediments about 11,300 to 18,000 years ago, indicating that a Natib eruption occurred much more recently than previously documented for this volcano." Finally, further quoting from their paper, he says that ".the youngest [faults] show that movements occurred about every 2,000 years, most recently about 3,000 years ago." Thus, concludes Dr. Rodolfo, "judging from the geologic evidence, Subic Bay is well overdue for an episode of faulting and earthquakes."
As pointed out by Dr. Rodolfo, an exhaustive analysis of the geology and geohazards of the Subic Bay area was made by Dr. Ernesto Sonido, formerly geophysics professor of the National Institute of Geological Sciences at UP, and Mr. Jesse Umbal, who obtained his masters' degree at the University of Illinois and worked with Dr. Rodolfo during the Mt. Pinatubo eruption. In their paper, Dr. Sonido and Mr. Umbal adjudged Natib as "potentially active." They found Mt. Natib, like Mt. Pinatubo, to be a "caldera-forming" volcano, a type which (Dr. Rodolfo says), "characteristically, have very powerful eruptions separated by long repose periods." The Sonido-Umbal study "documented two Natib eruptions that formed large calderas and estimated the recurrence period for earthquakes of Magnitude 6.4 to 7.0 at 22 years; of Magnitude 7.0 to 7.3 at 59 years; and of Magnitude 7.3 to 8.2 at 157 years."
(to be continued on the next post...)
Revive the BNPP? Scary foolishness...
Strategic Perspective
Misrepresenting science
Know the difference between a scientist and a politician? Ask a scientist "what is 2 plus 2?" and the scientist unhesitatingly answers "4." Ask a politician "what is 2 plus 2?" and the politician furtively looks around, leans closer conspiratorially, then whispers out of the side of his mouth, "what do you want it to be?" OK, OK, that's an old joke, but maybe we should keep it in mind when we hear a politician assuring one and all that the operation of the controversial Bataan Nuclear Power Plant is perfectly safe.
The proponent of House Bill 4631 ("Mandating the immediate re-commissioning and commercial operation of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant") in the House of Representatives, Rep. Mark Cojuangco, has been assuring all and sundry that the operation of the mothballed nuclear plant is completely safe, saying that he "would even take up residence in Morong (the town near where the plant is located) to prove that there was no danger in operating the facility." He did not say how this could constitute such proof.
Anyway, last week, Mr. Cojuangco was reported to have taken a group of his House colleagues on an inspection tour of the Westinghouse-built 619 MW plant "to show that it was still in good condition." Apparently, Mr. Cojuangco also served his colleagues some "scientific data" on the geology of the location plus a lecture on radiation levels and nuclear technology. Reportedly, 190 of his colleagues have already agreed to support his bill.
Let us set aside — for now — the fact that Mr. Cojuangco is the son of the chairman of San Miguel Corporation, a conglomerate that has expressed interest in taking over the BNPP as part of its strategic diversification into the power business. San Miguel, it will be recalled, has also recently acquired major shares in electric power distribution giant Meralco and oil refiner Petron. A big power generation firm fits nicely in the apparent strategic scheme.
(to be continued in my next post)...
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
A video of Nina Simone
Nina Simone was a gifted singer who wrote poetry and songs, composed music ang played the piano. She sang this song - "Young, Gifted and Black" - which became the 'national anthem' of the blacks during the time of Martin Luther King. I can't help but be amazed at her talent and of how her audience reacts to her singing - simply awesome.
Monday, January 05, 2009
Cold mornings...Warmer days
of those days from long ago
when cares were free
and life was complicated
when isaw cost 2 pesos
and rice servings were heaping
when blue books were at 1 peso
and the SU was filled with students
when songs were sung till morning
and jeep fare cost 1 peso
when students joined rallies en masse
and filled 70 jeeps to go to Diliman
when flags waved high and red
and "Serve The People" was held with conviction
when hearts burned warm with nationalist fervor
and fists were held up high
The mornings are cold today
and pockets are burned
hearts are fierce
as more knees are weak from hunger
emotions are burning
as a few wallets are burgeoning with wealth
"..with fervor burning..."
fists are held up high.
Friday, January 02, 2009
one more year, one more chance
So the new year is here. One more chance at life. Time to assess, discover and plan what I want to accomplish for 2009.
And to everyone else out there - I wish your 2009 will be filled with life, laughter and lotsa love to pass around and share.
Happy New Year!