Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Buying A Lamp

I wanted a lamp for my room.  Something to put next to the couch so I can read easier at night. So I went to the lamp store, picked out a model, tried it out, and decided to buy it. The salesman said to wait downstairs.  

He came down about five minutes later with not the lamp but a box containing parts of a lamp which he was going to assemble!!!


I said, "Hold on what are you doing? Just give me the floor model."

I did not have time to wait for this guy to assemble a lamp and then test it out to make sure it works.  That was the whole reason I went upstairs to test the floor model! It's already put together and I know it works. Of course I want to buy that. And this guy wants to put one together from scratch which includes all the wiring and connections?? Gimme a break! Electric work done in the Philippines is always shoddy. Why take the risk?

He was genuinely surprised that I wanted the floor model. 

Ridiculous. Where else in the world do you go to the store, try the floor model, and then have the guy put one together in front of you instead of selling the floor model which you just tried out? Imagine going to a car dealership and test driving a car and then the salesman says, "Ok we will put in an order for this car and they will build it for you in no time." Or how about testing some speakers and then the salesman says, "Ok let me put one together for you."

Only in the Philippines.

Here is how the lamp looks in my room.

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Martial Law: Stalemate

August 30th, 2017 marked the 100th day of the Battle of Marawi and of martial law in Mindanao. An auspicious occasion to be sure.  Everyone is tired of the conflict and ready for it to be over.  Any day now right?
http://www.msn.com/en-ph/news/national/afp-preparing-for-one-final-push-vs-isis-maute-in-marawi-city/ar-AAqOWIY
Government forces are preparing for one final push against the ISIS-inspired Maute Group after the bandits reportedly have been confined in a small portion of Marawi City, the Armed Forces of the Philippines said on Monday.  
He said the Maute would fight it out until the very last.  
He cannot say when the final battle will be but he expressed confidence that the troops on the ground already knew what to do.

One final push that could come at anytime. And the Maute fighters won't go down without a fierce fight.  After all, the AFP killed their father!
http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2017/08/28/restituto-padilla-cayamora-maute-intensify-fight-marawi.html

BJMP Spokesperson SInsp. Xavier Solda said the Maute patriarch was rushed to the Taguig-Pateros Hospital. He had hypertension, type 1 diabetes, and hepatitis.

Well he died in their custody anyway. Surely they can't let that pass. They are going to need more men to fight the AFP.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/08/29/1733789/10-maute-men-killed-trying-enter-marawi-war-zone

The dead were initially identified as Muktar, Abu Talib, Ismael, Samson and Nidal, all adolescents.
Young men with nothing to lose.  Basically children. There are many such cases. Sad.

Consider the following:

Maute is cornered.

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/regions/623688/maute-group-hapilon-cornered-in-500-square-meter-area-afp/story/
And running low on supplies.

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/08/31/1734390/afp-maute-running-low-food-ammunition
What better time to push right in and blow them away?

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/926796/marawi-siege-melquiades-ordiales-mapandi-bridge-rolando-joselito-bautista 
The military stepped up airstrikes and mortar attack on the 500-square-meter pocket of the city on Tuesday to soften resistance from the Maute and Abu Sayyaf gunmen holed up in buildings there and clear the way for the government troops’ final push, Brig. Gen. Rolando Joselito Bautista, commander of the 1st Infantry (Tabak) Division, said on Wednesday.  
“[I]t took us about two months to reach this bridge. [I]t took us one week to take it [and] be able to cross [to] this street. And we had so many casualties. We had a hard time in this very small space. We had a hard time crossing this bridge because the enemies had positioned themselves well,” Ordiales said. 

Petinglay said the situation was complicated by the presence of civilians among the
terrorists. 
The terrorists were still holding about 50 civilians as hostages, she said.
Two months to reach the bridge and one week to take it. Progress but slow progress. Duterte told them to take their time because of the civilian hostages.  But listen to what the MILF has to say.

The government has to end the conflict soon, or the residents of Marawi who have been displaced by the fighting may become more restive, according to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the largest Moro insurgent group in Mindanao that has signed a peace agreement with the state.  
“Failure to do so by [the] government will perpetuate the conflict in Mindanao,” the MILF said on its website, luwaran.com., on Wednesday. 

“Clearly, the Maute group does not enjoy popular support for now. But the civilians are caught between two evils, the Maute group’s terrorism and the massive destruction caused by artillery bombardment and aerial bombing. Add the heightening perception of the people that the government is going to drive them away, because the city is sitting on mostly military reservation,” it added. 
“Add also the perceived lukewarm attitude of the government and the [House of Representatives] in fast-tracking the passage of the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law,” it said.
Is this supposed to be some kind of blackmail?  Who do this group think it is that they can force the government to do anything? The conflict in Mindanao has been perpetuated because of Islam. That is the driving ideology that has been fueling the conflict since the Spanish settled the area 500 years ago. They really want an Islamic State (BBL) established in Mindanao. Only a fool would think that passing the BBL would quench hostilities. 

So they want the conflict ended soon? Get in line! Even Duterte is tired of the war.  So much so that he has now reversed course on his decision to not bomb any mosques.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/180658-duterte-allows-military-bomb-marawi-mosques-terrorists-hostages
On the 100th day of the Marawi siege, President Rodrigo Duterte said he won't stop the Philippine military from bombing the remaining strongholds of terrorists in the city, including mosques where hostages are also likely being kept.  
"The option is already yours, because we cannot have stalemate for over one year. Kung makiusap tayo na lumabas na lang (If we can talk so they are released), 'Free the hostages, do not harm them, do not cut their heads,'" he said on Wednesday, August 30. 

But Duterte said he will still try to save the hostages. He has sent an emissary to convince terrorists in the city to release their captives. 
"I have sent somebody na (already), if we can save the day for all of us," the President said. 
The plan to bomb terrorists' hiding places, and in so doing "sacrifice" the hostages, had been suggested by the military weeks before but Duterte instructed them to "wait it out.""Matagal na 'yan on deck na talagang gustong bobombahin ang mosque to capture or kill the leaders there and in the process sacrifice 'yung mga hostage," he said. 
(That plan has been on deck for a long time – to bomb mosques to capture or kill the leaders there and in the process sacrifice the hostages.) 
"But I have my limits, even if I'm president, hanggang diyan lang ako (that's my limit), I cannot go beyond that," he added.
But even if all the Maute are dead and the city is freed martial law is not going to be lifted anytime soon.
http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2017/09/02/duterte-martial-law-mindanao-terror-threat.html
President Rodrigo Duterte on Friday said he has considered lifting martial law in Mindanao but a possible spillover of the terror crisis held him back.  
"I was thinking that we could, you know, lift it earlier. But the way it looks, parang may spillover na sa ARMM eh. Sa Buldon (It seems there's a spillover in Buldon in ARMM)," Duterte told members of the Eastern Mindanao Command during their founding anniversary celebration in Davao City.  
Buldon is a town in Maguindanao over 130 kilometers south of Marawi City, the provincial capital of Lanao del Sur and battleground of government troops and terrorists for more than three months. Both are in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).  
Duterte said while he is "leaving it to the military and the police to solve the problem," he might still end military rule depending on the situation on the ground.  
"Let us see. If it is to the interest of the country that I will lift it, I will lift it. But if not, then we'll just have to continue with the martial law," he said.  
The military earlier said they have prevented any possible spillover of the Marawi crisis.
If there really is a threat 130 kilometres south of Marawi then that is not spillover. That is a whole new threat. Wouldn't it be terrible if fighters heeded the call ISIS put out to go to Mindanao and fight? 
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/927329/president-duterte-islamic-state-maute-group-milf-maguindanao-armm

President Rodrigo Duterte’s claim of around 100 fully-armed Islamic State-inspired militants being sighted in hinterlands of Buldon, Maguindanao had been verified, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) said on Friday.  
Duterte, in a speech before soldiers in Davao City on the same day, said he feared a spillover of the Marawi crisis because of the sighting of the armed men in Buldon, a Maguindanao town near Lanao del Sur. 

Von Al Haq, the MILF spokesperson, told the Inquirer by phone they asked their men to immediately verify Duterte’s claim and it turned out positive.
Is the Philippines now relying on enemies of the state, and MILF is a terrorist group which is an enemy of the state, to gather intelligence? Is MILF reliable? Can they be trusted? This is the same group that killed 44 special forces troops back in January 2015. Is the AFP going to independently verify this claim?
http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2017/09/02/marawi-spillover-maguindanao-maute-conflicting-reports.html 
Western Mindanao Command (WesMinCom) commander Lt. Gen. Carlito Galvez Jr. said on Saturday confirmed President Rodrigo Duterte's assessment that the ISIS-inspired terrorist group Maute already has already extended its influence outside Marawi.  
"We agree with the President na talagang yung Maute-ISIS group, their influence has also extended to Southern Mindanao. That's why the MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front) are now doing their best to contain the situation in Maguindanao," Galvez told CNN Philippines. 

The WesMinCom confirmed there had been clashes between the MILF, who is siding with the government, and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) in Maguindanao, who are supporting the Maute group. 
However, authorities in Maguindanao have denied the presence of Maute members in Buldon. 
Buldon police chief Insp. Sandro Ampad, members of the 37th Infantry Batallion led by Lt. Col. Jun Pulitod, and 6th Infantry Division chief Maj. Gen. Arnel Dela Vega all said their intelligence-gathering efforts yielded no reports on the presence of the terror group in Maguindanao.
The source of these conflicting reports is very easy to spot.  BIFF is siding with ISIS and Maute but they are not Maute.  They are BIFF.  Since BIFF is siding with ISIS they are to be considered Maute or ISIS fighters.  But the authorities in Maguindanao deny the presence of Maute fighters neglecting the fact that even though BIFF is not Maute they are ISIS and Maute sympathisers. So technically they are correct in saying there is no Maute members in the area. And that is why intelligence gathering in the Philippines is a losing game.  

But what about this: "the MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front) are now doing their best to contain the situation in Maguindanao."  This is a terrorist group who is threatening to continue it's fight with the government if the BBL is not passed. They are enemies of the state.  And now they are doing the job of the AFP in containing the situation and gathering intelligence? 

The absurdities of the conflict in Mindanao are getting to be too much. But don't worry there will be more to come. 
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/09/04/1735663/marawi-crisis-stalemate
“It is a stalemate now because of my asking the military to slow down,” Duterte, likening the situation to a chess game, said at the birthday party of Davao City Rep. Karlo Nograles late Saturday.
Stalemate? I thought the AFP were going forward with their final push.  That they had retaken the Grand Mosque.  That Maute was now cornered into 500 sq km. That now they had authority to bomb mosques if so needed. That the AFP was finally starting to win. What's this business about a stalemate?

A chess game? If Duterte means all these soldiers are pawns in his game then sure. The whole situation in Mindanao is part of his chess game of which the end goal is a revolutionary government and new constitution.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/926553/duterte-floats-idea-of-revolutionary-government-for-ph
“For me, my advice to a President who wants to change [is] do not go for martial law,” Duterte said in his speech. “They will just make an issue of it. Go for a revolutionary government so that everything will be finished.” 
The President said he was “not joking” but added that he was “not into it.” 
“For the Philippines to really go up, I said: What the people need is not martial law. Go for what Cory did – revolutionary government. But don’t look at me. I cannot go there.”
Don't believe him when he says, "I can't go there."  It's the same thing he said about martial law and yet now Mindanao is under martial law.  Revolutionary government has been his goal from the beginning.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/696757/duterte-to-declare-revolutionary-govt-once-elected
Even without direct admission that he will join the presidential race in 2016, Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte on Sunday declared he would not hesitate to place the country under a “revolutionary government” to rein in lawlessness should he become the next President. 
“If I am the President, [and] I cannot achieve the reforms I want within six months or one year, I will declare a revolutionary government,” Duterte told over 1,500 multisectoral representatives who attended the National Peace, Development and Federalism Symposium held in one of the malls here. 
Duterte reiterated that the presidency is God’s destiny. But he quickly added: “If God makes me the President, God will the first one to cry.” 
The crowd responded with wild applause.
It is best to take Duterte's word seriously but not to believe a thing he says.  Remember when he said before that the crisis would be over in a three days?
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/927722/duterte-sees-end-of-marawi-crisis-by-december
The Marawi crisis should end soon so that the government can deal with other problems that could erupt into bigger troubles, President Rodrigo Duterte said on Saturday. 
Mr. Duterte was referring to the peace process with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, whose members are becoming restive over the delay in the passage of the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law in Congress. 
“I have until the end of the year to contain this thing,” Mr. Duterte told reporters here late on Saturday after attending the birthday celebration of Davao City Rep. Karlo Alexei Nograles.
“I have until the end of the year to contain this thing.” This "thing" has been ongoing for 500 years now. If he thinks he will be able to end the Moro conflict by December then there's a bridge in Brooklyn someone wants to sell him.

Monday, September 4, 2017

Dogs Tied Up Outside

The worst creature one could be in the Philippines is a dog.  
They do not care for any domestic animal—dog, cat, horse, or cow. They only care, and too much so, for the fighting cocks.
http://www.philippinehistory.net/views/1720sanagustin.htm 
That statement is as true today as it was when it was first written 300 years ago.  Dogs are not taken care of at all in the Philippines.  

Oh, there may be a few owners who say they love their dogs and do take good care of them. But the vast majority of dog owners in this country couldn't care less about their dogs. Enclosing them in tiny cages. Letting them roam about all day.  Feeding them insufficient food like rice and scraps so that they  have to seek their nutrients from soiled diapers which they dig out of the trash and leave strewn about in the street. 


Mmmm, soiled diapers and trash.  They're a dog's favourite treats!
But this post will focus on a rather curious thing that happens to dogs in the Philippines.

The owners tie them up outside the gate of their house in the street to act as guard dogs!



Look at this fierce dog.  He is ready to bite someone's face off.  He is tied up on a short chain to the tire of his owner's car. Why? To alert him when someone is near? To prevent anyone from approaching the gate? 

It's madness. Anyone who walks by will get the scare of their life when they see that dog attempting to break free and maul them.  It's wholly unneighbourly. And it's bad for the dog. Tied up on a short leash. Falling into a frenzy. Who wants to own a frenzied mad dog?  If the owner let the dog roam around his property the dog would be much more relaxed and less dangerous.

Now take a look at this dog. Here he is tied up at 9:00 in the morning.  A short leash that gives him just enough room to rush out into the street and bark at passers-by or perhaps to get hit by a vehicle. What purpose does it serve to have this dog out in the heat all day tied up to a tree on the street?


Here is the same dog at 4:45 in the morning. 


THEY LEFT THE DOG OUT ALL NIGHT!!

A least the first dog is taken back in the gate during the night. But this dog does not even get that courtesy.

Why do they even own this dog?  How did it come into their possession? This is a new development in the neighbourhood.  It is only this week that the dog has been tied to this tree.  It makes me sad to think that this will be his new home for a long time to come.

What a dog's life.

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Phil Post Opened My Package

Can you believe it? The post office opened a package sent to me and then taped it back up like nothing ever happened. It's not enough that you have to pay 116 pesos to pick up a package from the post office but they also want to visually inspect the contents of random packages. Take a look.



See how they slit the top open and then taped it back together?  Compare it with another package I received which they did not molest.


Notice the difference? In the second photo the flap of the envelope is still intact.  While in the first pic it is sliced cleanly open and then taped back together.

Don't they have x-ray machines? Or drug sniffing dogs? Come to think of it I have not seen one police dog in the Philippines. They exist but I haven't seen one. Kind of odd.

I don't think this has happened before. If it has I haven't noticed since I was too excited about the contents of the package to inspect the envelope or the box.

So what was inside? Books.


If it had been money it's likely the package would have gotten "lost in the mail."

Friday, September 1, 2017

What's That on the Basketball Court

I saw the weirdest thing on the basketball court.  


Pretty strange.  What's with all those tarps?  Let's take a look.



It's rice!

Someone is temporarily storing their rice on the basketball court.  How nice of them.  How did they even get it there? It didn't stay long though. But it should never have been there in the first place! What if someone had wanted to play basketball?  They wouldn't be able to because of the huge tarps of rice all over the court.

One thing about living in the Philippines is people use things inappropriately. Like they use their housing lot in a gated community to have a rabbit, duck, and chicken farm.




Do I need to describe how awful this place smells?  And this is in a gated community!

The basketball court is for basketball. Not storing your dried rice. And a gated housing community is not a farm. But in the Philippines it truly is anything goes.

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Water Turned off in the Middle of A Shower

I was in the middle of a shower when the water cut off. So I shouted down, "Hey I need the water!"  "No one is using the water," came the reply.  That's when it hit me in an instant and everything became clear.  Just an hour ago while walking the dog I saw the water service truck pass by towards the well.  Obviously they were doing some work and had turned off the water.  

Fuming and wet I slid back into my sweaty workout shorts and biked on over to give them a piece of my mind.

"What's going on?  Why did you turn the water off?  I was in the middle of a shower!," I shouted my body now wet with sweat and scummy with dry soap.

"Oh sorry sir.  We turned it off for safety reasons."

"What safety reasons?"

"We are welding sir and need to keep the pump engine safe."


Now what is this guy even talking about?  They are welding a tow latch which has nothing to do with the water pump engine.  Take a look at how far away the engine is from where this guy is working.


It's housed inside a tiny building.

What safety risk is there?  Seems dubious. They often turn off the water for seemingly no reason.  Anywhere from 10 minutes to an hour.

"When will the water be turned back on?", I asked.

"Maybe thirty minutes, sir."

It was a little longer than that but not too long.  Miraculously the water did not run black and greasy when they turned it back on.

Irregular water and electric service.  That is a way of life in the Philippines.

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Jeepney Art 4

Look at what we have here!  It's more Jeepney art.