Friday, March 13, 2020

Retards in the Government 145

It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption in the Philippine government. 


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1237796/cebu-town-police-chief-arrested-for-sleeping-beside-female-inmate
The chief-of-police in Argao town, Cebu was in hot water after he was found “sleeping” beside a 23-year-old female inmate inside his room at the municipal police station, while another female inmate was sleeping inside his office. 
In a report submitted to Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Gen. Archie Gamboa, but was released to media on Friday, P/Col. Ronald Lee, acting director of the PNP-Integrity Monitoring and Enforcement Group (IMEG), identified the police official as Maj. Ildefonso Miranda Jr., who was arrested by anti-scalawag operatives in a raid Thursday. 
“Major Miranda and (the female inmate) were found sleeping in one bed, while the other female inmate was deep in her slumber at the police chief’s office. This won’t be tolerated,” Lee said 
“Reports had it that the 46-year old police official is having sexual relationship with the female inmate in exchange for her privilege to sleep in his air-conditioned office,” read an IMEG report.
The police chief was sleeping with the inmates. Now the whole department is being investigated.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/292336/policemen-assigned-to-argao-police-station-to-be-investigated
According to Mariano, they will be investigating why no one from the police station reported about the unusual detention of Villanueva. 
(All PUPCS should be in the denention cell. They should be accounted for. They should check in the morning and even before they sleep. So why didn’t they report this if this was going on for so long?) 
Mariano expressed his dismay as there were constant inspection and reminders given to  uphold the integrity of policemen in the province.
Probably didn't report it because they don't want to end up dead.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/03/06/1998445/pangasinan-village-chief-shot-dead
A barangay chairman of this town was gunned down on Wednesday. 
Richard Roldan, 44, of Barangay Zone 2, was on a motorcycle on his way to Alcala town when he was fired upon by unidentified assailants in a gray Toyota Innova in Barangay Ketegan.
Another LGU official assassinated but this time the modus operandi is backwards.  The victim was on a motorcycle while the assassins were in a car.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095856
Police have launched a manhunt to find two motorcycle-riding gunmen who ambushed and injured a town councilor of Mamasapano, Maguindanao on Friday. 
Lt. Col. Henry Banias, Mamasapano town police chief, said Councilor Mastura Bedtigilan Kamidsa, 47, of Barangay Tuka, was driving his Toyota Innova vehicle from the town hall heading for adjacent Shariff Aguak municipality when gunmen opened fire on him using M16 rifles at past 3 p.m.  
Although injured, Kamidsa managed to continue driving his vehicle towards an Army detachment where he sought help. Soldiers rushed him to the Maguindanao provincial hospital in Shariff Aguak town.  
“Responding soldiers and policemen found 14 empty shells for an M16 rifle at the ambush site,” Banlas said
Another LGU official almost assassinated.


The Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) Executive Director Mel Georgie Racela told a Senate hearing last Thursday that P14 billion worth of transactions by POGOs from 2017 to 2019 were related to suspicious activities. 
Most of the activities violated the E-Commerce Act while others involved drug trafficking, lack of legal or trade obligations, deviations from clients' profiles, funds not commensurate to the business or personal capacity of a client, lack of proper client identification, and fraud. 
Despite the controversies surrounding POGOs, President Rodrigo Duterte still believes that the Philippines needs the revenues raised from the operations of the gambling entities. 
"He (President Duterte) will not suspend it nor will he stop it," Panelo said in a radio interview. 
"He told me the report of the PAGCOR (Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp.) head was good, so OK. We need the funds coming from them," he added. 
Panelo said several government projects and expenditures require funding including the higher salaries of nurses and teachers. He said revenues from POGOs may also be used to combat the spread of the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19). 
"Ngayon meron na naman tayong problema sa coronavirus, pwede rin nating pagkuhanan yun (Now that we have a problem due to the coronavirus, we can get funds from that)," the Palace spokesman said. 
"All of these are possible. The money we can get from whatever source, that is supposed to be for the government. So the government can use that in any undertaking," he added.
The Philippines needs dirty Chinese money to fund the government but does not need American soldiers working alongside the AFP to fight terrorists.

A policeman was shot dead in Barangay East Rembo, Makati City on Monday morning. 
According to Makati City Police chief Police Colonel Rogelio Simon, the victim was identified as Police Major Jeffrey Dalson. 
Based on initial investigation, Dalson was inside his parked vehicle when a gunman riding a motorcycle fired at him.
Another cop assassinated.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1238669/youth-council-chair-survives-gun-attack
A youth council chairman from the town of Las Navas, Northern Samar survived a gun attack by still unidentified men on Sunday (March 8). 
The regional police said the target of the attack, Antonio Cubalan, 21, and youth council chairman of Santo Tomas village in Las Navas, was on his way home on his motorcycle when he and the suspects, who were on board another motorcycle, went on a race.
Another attempted assassination on an LGU official.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/03/09/1999392/locsins-twitter-locked-tweeting-activists-are-communists-who-should-be-shot
Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr., the Philippines' top diplomat and an active Twitter user, might have some of his account features limited as his social media account has been locked, according to an activist whose group he said should be shot. 
Bayan secretary-general Renato Reyes Jr. posted a screenshot of a notification from Twitter Support after reporting Locsin's tweet against the group. 
"Teddyboy Locsin, DFA secretary, has his Twitter account locked for this offensive and threatening tweet accusing Bayan as communists that deserve to be shot," Reyes tweeted Monday morning. 
Locsin's last tweet was at 6:39 p.m. on Sunday. 
A few days ago, the DFA chief reacted to an article where Bayan questioned why the Balikatan exercises would push through in May despite the termination of the Visiting Forces Agreement with the United States. 
"These are fucking Communists. You shoot them. You don't listen to them," Locsin tweeted March 5.
DFA Secretary finally crossed the line on Twitter. But he'll be back and tweeting in no time.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095949
Police arrested on Sunday afternoon a 32-year-old man who yielded over PHP1.3 million worth of shabu in Barangay Tampilong, Marawi City. 
Col. Madzgani Mukaram, director of Lanao del Sur Provincial Police Office, said suspect Walid Nasser Usman, is supposed to be a jail guard of the Lanao del Sur Provincial Jail in Marawi based on the identification cards seized from the suspect. 
Mukaram said Usman was intercepted at a checkpoint on a motorcycle with plate number 1017-8076340. 
He said operatives of the Regional Drugs Enforcement Unit (RDEU) 10 had been tailing Usman from Iligan City after receiving reports that he was transporting a big volume of shabu to Marawi.
A police officer included in the drug list of President Duterte was shot dead by motorcycle-riding assailants in Makati yesterday morning.  
Maj. Jedfrey Dalson was sitting in his car parked at the corner of J.P. Rizal street and 29th Avenue in Barangay East Rembo when he was killed at around 7 a.m. 
Probers have yet to determine the motive for the killing.
Just a wild guess but the motive probably has something to do with the man being on the drug list of President Duterte!


Two members of the Philippine National Police-Highway Patrol Group (PNP-HPG) were arrested for alleged extortion on van and truck drivers in Agusan del Sur. 
In a report submitted to PNP chief, Gen. Archie Gamboa on Tuesday, Integrity Monitoring and Enforcement Group (IMEG) chief, Col. Ronald Lee identified the suspects as Staff Sgt. Eddie Manguilimotan, 54, of Mankilam, Tagum City, Davao del Norte; and Cpl. Ralfe Meraflor, 33, of Purok 13, Poblacion in Prosperidad town. 
The suspects, who belong to the Agusan del Sur Provincial Highway Patrol Team of the PNP-HPG, were the subject of complaints mostly coming from drivers of delivery trucks and vans who claimed they were forced to shell money by the two each time they pass in their areas.
More cops arrested for extortion.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/293141/charges-to-be-filed-against-barangay-councilor-from-bohol
Charges of drunkenness, resistance of arrest, and disobedience will be filed against a barangay councilor from Bohol who created a scene in a hotel along Escario Street, Cebu City, at Tuesday dawn, March 10, 2010. 
Police Major Elisandro Quijano, station chief of Abellana Police station, said that Claver Joseph Duhig, a councilor of Barangay Poblacion 1, Tagbilaran City, Bohol, was arrested at around 1 a.m. after receiving reports from hotel staff that he started to break things in the hotel’s bar. 
Quijano said that when the police responded in the said hotel, they found a drunk Duhig, who, when being collared by police, also resisted by punching the arresting policeman, Police Staff Sergeant Jover Batucan.
A drunk and disorderly barangay councilor.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/729088/sotto-vows-senate-independence-after-seeking-sc-ruling-on-its-role-in-treaty-abrogation/story/
Senate President Vicente Sotto III on Tuesday stressed that Senate independence must be upheld above political alliances, a day after he led the filing of a petition at the Supreme Court seeking to clarify the role of the upper chamber in the abrogation of treaties. 
“Personal interests should never outweigh public welfare. I will always choose to fight for the independence of the Senate," Sotto said in a statement on Tuesday. 
On the other hand, Duterte said he could not be compelled to seek the Senate’s concurrencebefore he can terminate the VFA. 
“They cannot compel me. I refuse to be compelled. I have terminated it, tapos ang problema ko,” he said.
For the past three years the Senate has allowed Duterte to do what he will and has gone with the flow.  Now that the nation's security has been put at risk with the termination of the VFA Senate President Sotto vows an independent Senate. What a joke! 

President Rodrigo Duterte on Monday night shrugged off the money laundering allegations being linked with the controversy-hit Philippine offshore gaming operators (Pogos), stressing that he refused to shut them down because the government needed the money they were generating. 
Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) Executive Director Mel Georgie Racela told a recent Senate hearing that at least P14 billion worth of transactions by Pogos were related to suspicious activities. 
Duterte also explained that he could not prohibit Chinese from entering the country.
A vast majority of Pogo workers are Chinese nationals.
 
“We cannot bar Chinese nationals from entering the country because they allow us to enter China also and even work in Hong Kong,” he said.
Despite all the evidence to the contrary Duterte refuses to believe there is corruption in the POGO industry.  Where is his "not one whiff of corruption" policy now?

The former budget officer of Maguindanao was found by the Sandiganbayan guilty of graft over fraudulent transactions from 2008 to 2009. 
In a decision promulgated Feb. 14, 2020, the court sentenced Datu Ali Abpi, Al-Haj to imprisonment of 8 to 12 years, and ordered him to pay a fine of P14.25 million, which is equivalent to the amount of unlawful purchases made using government funds. 
In the information filed by the Office of Ombudsman in 2017, Abpi, Al Haj was accused of conspiring with other provincial officials to make it appear that various medicines were bought from a supplier named Farmacia Minda, found later to be fictitious. 
In its decision, the court said payments were made by the provincial government to Farmacia Minda even before disbursement vouchers were issued. 
The prosecution was also able to establish that the Special Audit Team of the Commission on Audit was not able to locate Farmacia Minda, and that no business permits were issued to the company. 
“These cumulatively serve to support the prosecution’s charge that the accused conspired to make it appear as if medicine was legitimately procured from Farmacia Minda when, in fact, it was a fictitious entity that could not have participated in any bidding, much less deliver the goods required by the provincial government,” the court said in the decision penned by Associate Justice Bayani Jacinto, with the concurrence of Division Chairperson Alex Quiroz and Associate Justice Reynaldo Cruz.
P14 million in fraudulent transactions with a company that did not even exist.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1239444/public-service-act-story
With 136 affirmative votes, 43 negative votes, and one abstention, the House of Representatives approved House Bill No. 78, which seeks to amend the Commonwealth Act No. 146 also known as the Public Service Act. 
Under the 1987 Constitution, ownership, operation, control, and management of public utilities should be given to Filipino citizens or to firms that are at least 60 percent owned by Filipinos. 
The proposed law now limits the definition of a public utility to electricity distribution, electricity transmission, and water pipeline distribution or sewerage pipeline system. 
It also distinguishes “public service,” whose definition under the law is retained, from “public utility.” 
Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman earlier said the bill was is “fatally violative” of the 1987 Constitution, further arguing that there is no distinction between “public utility” and “public service.” 
“It is well-settled that public service is an indispensable attribute or element of a public utility, and the two are synonymous and interchangeable, so much so that there is no sound reason for making a distinction to justify defiance of the Constitution by allowing the non-compliance of ‘public service’ enterprises with the requirement of Filipino citizenship,” Lagman said in a statement.
Why would any nation want to allow its public utilities to be owned by foreigners? How is this bill beneficial to the Philippines?



https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1240154/cebu-town-councilor-slain-outside-municipal-hall
A lady councilor in Ginatilan town, southwest Cebu was gunned down by still unidentified assailants outside the municipal building on Wednesday. 
At past 1 p.m., Ginatilan Councilor Maria Liza Toledo was seen going out of the municipal building after attending the weekly session. 
As she walked towards her car, the perpetrators shot the councilor several times.
Another city councilor gunned down. Police say she was likely shot by a sniper as security cameras showed no gunmen on the CCTV footage.
According to Tadique, it is possible that a highly-trained professional killer or a sniper killed the councilor since no one was seen approaching or passing by near her prior to the shooting as shown on the CCTV footage. 
Also, no empty shells were found in the area of the incident, said Tadique.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/293473/ginatilan-councilor-may-have-been-killed-by-a-sniper-police
It also appears she had links to the drug trade.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/293698/police-confirms-ginatilan-town-councilors-links-to-illegal-drugs-trade-looking-also-into-other-motives
Police Brigadier General Albert Ignatius Ferro confirmed that the slain Ginatilan town councilor had links with the illegal drug trade. 
At a press conference on Thursday, March 12, 2020, Ferro announced to reporters that Ma. Liza Toledo’s name was found in the drug matrix involving drug lords now jailed in the New Bilibid Prison. 
Ferro said Toledo was previously in a relationship with a certain Norbert Antiquando, now locked up in New Bilibid Prison since 2001 for drugs. 
“I believe she was listed because of her association with her boyfriend,” he said. 
They are also probing into the possibility of politics behind Toledo’s killing. 
“We received information that the victim filed a case against one of her relatives who attempted to run for election in the same position as hers,” said Ferro. 
“We are also looking into politics considering the presence of political rivalry there,” he added.
Whether the motive was drugs or politics it is no surprise that a city councillor has been assassinated. It's a standard job hazard in the Philippines.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/03/11/1999925/duterte-calls-fil-ams-vote-trump
“To the Filipinos (in America)... if this comes out, vote for Trump. And they say that I am interfering? Of course, I am interfering,” he said. 
In endorsing Trump, Duterte said he was intentionally interfering with America’s politics as a way of getting back at US legislators who have been meddling with the Philippines’ internal issues. 
“Tell that to the Americans that Duterte is insisting on interfering. You know why? Do you know why I’m interfering? Because they did it first. They (accuse us of) extrajudicial killing 70,000 (people),” he said.
"You started it, wheeeee!" Very, very childish.  

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1239675/that-fucking-country-briefing-did-duterte-manage-to-assure-pinoys
The President’s “rambling, divisive” statements when he faced the media on Monday night, supposedly to abate the public’s concern over the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, was lamentable, according to political analysts. 
Duterte’s reference to the Philippines as a “fucking country” drew strong criticism, including from commentators online, as an “unpresidential” remark that was inappropriate for a nation in crisis. 
He used the occasion to turn his ire on rich people, who he said did not need the government’s help despite the coronavirus threat throughout the country. 
“They do not need the police, mayors, senators because on their own, they can survive. And to think that the richest people in this country, in this fucking country, were the ones who are milking the most out of our resources,” the President said. 
He said the government had the money to “defeat that son of a bitch virus,” but did not say how much. 
“This will not last long. I am confident that we will survive this contagion,” he said. 
Duterte compared COVID-19 to other pandemics that swept the world, like the bubonic plague and the Spanish flu. 
“The so-called Roman empire. You have read the Inquisition? If you have a birthmark, you are a witch and you are burned at (the) stake,” he said.
It seems very rambling and incoherent. Typical Duterte speech.

A former member of the Philippine National Police (PNP) was arrested in a buy-bust operation in the Davao del Sur town of Sta. Cruz Tuesday. 
Maj. Crisaldo Gaila, Sta. Cruz OIC-police chief, identified the suspect as Ronald Notarte Baderas, 36, a resident Barangay Barayong, Magsaysay town. 
Gaila described Baderas as a street-level pusher, based on the list from the PNP's Directorate for Intelligence. 
Police said Baderas was recently released from jail through a plea-bargaining agreement after he was previously caught selling illegal drugs.
Another ex-cop turned drug dealer.


https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/729408/sandiganbayan-osg-left-ill-gotten-wealth-case-vs-marcos-associates-unattended-since-jan-2019/story/
The Office of the Solicitor General (OSG)—for the past one year, two months and counting—has not taken a legal action on an ill-gotten wealth case against the 20 individuals who allegedly held 3,305 shares of stock in Eastern Telecommunications Philippines, Inc. for the benefit of former President Ferdinand Marcos and his wife Imelda, a Sandiganbayan court resolution showed. 
The Sandiganbayan Fourth Division, in a resolution for Civil Case 0178 dated February 28 this year, said that the OSG led by Solicitor General Jose Calida has yet to inform the court of any legal action it took or if it is still pursuing the ill-gotten wealth case to this day.
Obviously the OSG is preoccupied with more important matters like attempting to shut down ABS-CBN.

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Picture of the Week: Body Temperature

If it's not enough to be frisked and have your bags searched to enter the mall now your body temperature must be scanned. Talk about invasive! What gives Barney Fife here the right to peer inside my body?


This picture was taken at Ayala mall. Funny enough they day I took this picture none of the other entrances had a security guard taking temperatures. I understand that all the doors are covered now so there is no escaping the body temp gun. Is this necessary? If you have a high temperature what will they do? Turn you away? Escort you to a quarantine zone? We might think this is ridiculous and silly now but who knows what is coming down the pipe when some people are advocating martial law to control the spread of the coronavirus.


Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Hi, my name is...15

I always wanted this series to be about foreigners behaving badly or dying in the Philippines and that is what the majority of this edition of "My name is..." consists.

Hi, my name is Carolus Andrianus Henricus de Leeuw and I am a Dutchman living in the Philippines. The police came to my house with a warrant and found my cache of weapons.
During a search at his rented house at the boundary of Barangays Okiot and Capiñahan around 9:40 a.m. to 12:47 p.m., the police operatives confiscated one unit Norinco .45-caliber pistol; one unit Taurus caliber .380 pistol; two standard magazines for caliber .45 pistol fully loaded with live ammunition; a magazine for caliber .380 pistol; and more than 200 rounds of ammunition of various caliber. 
Also confiscated were four expired firearms license cards under the name of Amelia Lourdes U. Mendoza; two expired Permit to Carry Firearm Outside of Residence, also under the name of the same woman; and one black plastic firearms case.
Now I am in jail awaiting charges.
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1093575

Hi, our names are Lawrence Ikegwuruka and Michella Augustine. We are both Nigerians living in Cavite.  It seems the cops have had us under surveillance for a few months now unbeknownst to us. The PNP set us up in the usual way by having us sell to an undercover officer. They nabbed our 10 kilos of shabu worth P68 million and our orange Toyota Wigo. But we won't need it where we are going.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/02/12/1992338/2-africans-yield-p68-million-shabu

Hi, my name is Kohei Kobashi. I am an 80 year old Japanese man and I love diving. That is why I came to the Philippines. I went out with a group of four people on a motorbanca and as soon as we arrived at Apo Island we all dived right in.  But I quickly got separated from the group and I drowned. My face also got all bloody as I scrapped across some corals. At least I died doing what I love.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/288222/japanese-man-found-dead-2-hours-after-he-went-diving-in-waters-of-apo-island

Hi, my name is Zhou Zhiyi. That's me in the white t-shirt looking at the ground. How did I get here you ask? I was out driving when the cops tried to pull me over! I wasn't having it so I did my best to evade them. I even ran over a few motorcycles! Well they finally got me and I spit at the cop who arrested me. They found shabu in my car and also found out I had been overstaying my 30 day tourist visa by a few months. Now my new home is the BI detention facility and after doing time for my crime I will be deported.


Hi, my name is Joseph Daniel Arian. I met this chick in the bar of the hotel we were staying at and we had a good time getting drunk. She was such a nice girl that I followed her upstairs to her room. It was very late 2 am. We had sex of course. But when she woke up she was so hungover that it took her until 5pm to allege that I raped her. 


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/289350/cops-looking-for-swedish-national-accused-of-allegedly-raping-27-year-old-woman-inside-cebu-city-hostel

Hi, my name is Vincent Degula. I'm an engineer from Cebu. I found a metal cylinder container and started working on it with my grinder. I was sure it contained gold.  My friend told me over and over that I had better be careful because it might be a bomb. I thought he was just being greedy and didn't want me to have any gold. Little did I know he was right. While he left to get some coffee the bomb exploded and killed me.

https://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2020/03/engineer-killed-trying-to-open-vintage-bomb-in-southcot/

Hi, my name is Christopher John Erickson. A court in the US charged me with child abuse so I hightailed it out of there. Where else to go but the Philippines? For the past eight months I have been hiding out in Dumaguete. But they finally caught up with me and now I will be deported to the US to face the music.

Hi, my name is Papi Sarr.  I am a Cameroonian who has been playing basketball in the Philippines for Adamson University for the past five years. But recently I got kicked off the team!  Not because I had played too many seasons and was past my graduation date but because I violated curfew nine times and didn't follow their rules! I got real mad so I did what anyone would do.  I made violent threats to a school official and tried to stuff my dismissal letter down his shirt. The police arrested me "for unjust vexation and light threats." Now the BI is investigating and I might be kicked out of the country.

Hi, my name is Klaas Haagsma. I am an Australian living out my last years in the Philippines. Three years ago I married a Cebuana and then moved here. Turns out she was already married and left me. Life has not been so great for me in the Philippines. It could be better. Especially if I got a bigger pension. You see I ran out of money and my pension had not come so I nicked some cheese and fish from the supermarket. Last time I shoplifted the management declined to press charges because of my age which is 74. Now they want to press charges. 


Hi, my name is Veronica Engle Weisenberg. I am a German visiting my husband in the Philippines. I went to confront him at his apartment and he started harassing me so I went to the cops to file a complaint. I told the cops I had run out of money for food and they allowed me to stay "within the vicinity of the police station" while me and my husband ironed out our difficulties. To thank them I stole two cell phones, two chargers, and P500. Of course they arrested me.


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/293054/german-accused-of-taking-cops-phone-charged

Hi, my name is David Krauer. I am from Switzerland.  Me and my friends were getting high on shabu when all of a sudden the cops bust down the door!  Now I am cold sober in jail.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1238381/swiss-national-5-filipinos-nabbed-in-drug-den-in-subic

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Insurgency: Credible Armed Forces

The AFP has been hard at work for the past 50 years battling both communists and Islamic terrorists and well as their bad public image as human rights abusers. Now the AFP can confidently say the war has been won. 
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1236966/sws-afp-enjoys-rising-satisfaction-rating-shedding-bad-image-of-the-past
Public satisfaction rating of the Philippine military is on the rise since 2015, said Vladimyr Joseph Licudine, Social Weather Stations deputy director, at a forum on Wednesday (March 4). 
One of the key drivers of increasing satisfaction with the AFP was its victory against terrorism in Marawi City in 2017. 
“Marawi had a great impact on them,” Licudine said of the AFP’s rising satisfaction rating. The military’s retaking of Marawi “has something to do with their image right now,” he said. 
The war on terror in Marawi, he said, gave the AFP “appreciation” and “sympathy.” 
The military’s role in saving lives during disasters and calamities also helped boost public satisfaction with it. 
“A big part of the image of the AFP is disaster operations,” said the SWS official. Some of the most well-known disasters in which the AFP played a big role in rescue and evacuations were supertyphoon Yolanda, the Mindanao quakes and trapped miners. 
Local television dramas that portray life in the military had also helped draw a positive public image for the AFP, Licudine said. 
“You will also notice the trend in our TV stations,” he said. “The last two years there are so many teleseryes that depict the military in a good light, etc.,” Licudine said. 
AFP spokesperson Brig. Gen. Edgard Arevalo, at the same forum, said the high ratings can be attributed to the AFP’s commitment to excellence and professionalism. 
“This is a departure from the previous image of the AFP as oppressors and human rights violators,” he said.
Just like the PNP the AFP have used television to improve their image. This same survey reveals that many believe the AFP can defeat the NPA and the Muslim terrorists.
Licudine said 79 percent of respondents had expressed confidence that the military can defeat the New People’s Army, while 4 percent are pessimistic and 17 percent are undecided. 
On terrorism, 75 percent of respondents expressed confidence the military could beat terror groups, like the Abu Sayyaf, while 6 percent has little confidence and 19 percent is undecided.
On what basis do they place such confidence in the AFP to defeat the insurgents? Do Filipinos know that the AFP had prior knowledge of the Marawi siege? That since 2014 when ISIS began making inroads into the country the AFP denied that ISIS was in the Philippines until they were forced to acknowledge their presence because of the Marawi siege? That even after the siege the AFP continued to downplay the threat of ISIS? That the AFP was unprepared for the Marawi siege because the DND dropped urban warfare combat from AFP training??
"It's a skill we used to have but we lost along the way because we didn't use it. We keep training our people in what we call the military operations in urban terrain, MOUT.  But we seldom use it, we never use it, so we stopped teaching our people at the Marawi camp. So now we have to reacquire that skill plus the necessary equipment that goes with it.
https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2018/06/martial-law-no-ready-reserve-ammunition.html
It's understandable if most Filipinos are ignorant of the facts because the media does not dwell on them at all. They drop a bombshell story like prior knowledge of the Marawi siege and then they never follow up on it. The Philippine media keeps people ignorant. You have to stay on your toes and look behind the news to get the bigger picture. Who has time for that?

The AFP is always telling the public they are up to the job of putting down the insurgency. "Irrelevant," they crow over and over about the NPA. "Six more months to defeat Abu Sayyaf," they predict. Of course the NPA continues to remain relevant and Abu Sayyaf isn't going anywhere soon. That's not to say the AFP doesn't do good work in occasionally stumbling upon weapons caches and disrupting whatever violent attacks the commies and Muslims have planned.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095921
Intensified military and police operations against insurgents resulted in the discovery of war materiel and food cache of the New People's Army's Komiteng Larangang Guerilla (KLG) on Friday and Saturday in the hinterlands of Sitio Dayap, Barangay Punglo, Maria Aurora, this province. 
Lt. Col. Reandrew P. Rubio, acting commander of 91st Infantry “Sinagtala” Battalion (91IB), Philippine Army, said the combat strike operations were conducted following the revelation of a former rebel that there is an NPA lair in the said area. 
“The NPA lair can accommodate more or less 50 persons and believed to have been abandoned five months ago and what was found were two containers with rice approximately 50 kilos,” Rubio said. 
He said while the troops were conducting clearing operations on Saturday, they discovered two drums containing 16 short magazines for M16, seven long magazines for M16, six magazines for AK47, six bandoleers, and two backpacks. 
“I am commending the effort of the former rebel for providing relevant information that led to the recovery of said war materiel,” Rubio said.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095931

The Army’s 6th Infantry Division (ID) has recovered more explosives in areas where the military and the Daesh-inspired Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) clashed the past week, an Army official said Monday.
 
Maj. Gen. Diosdado Carreon, the 6ID commander, said four improvised explosive devices, bomb-making components, and mobile phones were seized during continuing combat clearing operations on Sunday in Barangay Salman, Ampatuan, Maguindanao. 
Soldiers under the 601st Infantry Brigade (601st IBde) also recovered at the clash site war materiel such as fatigue uniforms, empty shells for M16 rifles, face masks, medicine, and mobile phones. 
“We continue to hunt them, there’s no letup," said Col. Jose Narciso, commander of the 601st IBde.
The PNP also say they are now ready to fight terrorism.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/291429/cops-ready-to-deal-with-insurgency-threats
The regional director of the Police Regional Office in Central Visayas (PRO-7) assures Boholanos and Cebuanos that the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) are prepared to protect them from the insurgents and insurgency threats. 
Police Brigadier General Albert Ignatius Ferro made the assurance amid the recent encounter in Bilar town, Bohol Province on Saturday, February 29, 2020, between the military and suspected rebels where one soldier and a suspected member of the New People’s Army (NPA) were killed.
Ferro said in a text message that in Cebu, there were no longer armed rebels because the government and the community had rejected their presence long before Bohol became insurgent-free. 
“Cebu will remain insurgent free because the Cebuanos and their leaders will never be threatened by the CTG (Communist-Terrorist Groups) to be terrorized by them,” said Ferro.
The mantra of "public vigilance" in order to defeat the communists continues to be chanted throughout the nation as a key component to finally ending the insurgency.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095820
“I am asking the local government leaders to be wary of NGOs and CSOs disguising as service-oriented groups. They will give services especially in the far-flung communities but the main agenda is to persuade and entice them to be part of the rebel group,” Uy said.
https://pia.gov.ph/news/articles/1035720
Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte  urged Dabawenyos to cooperate with authorities to prevent incidents like the Old Davao Airport Terminal Bombing Incident which is commemorated on its 17th year anniversary today. 
She said it is the reason why the culture of security is being promoted in the city. 
Duterte  stressed that a terror attack can victimize anyone now and in the future and that cooperation with the people in authority is a must. 
Duterte  said the Task Force Davao and the Davao City Police Office must be aware of any terror plot through the information coming from the people.

https://www.panaynews.net/indignation-rally-staged-vs-violence-terrorism/
Hundreds of Negrenses from various localities in the province staged an indignation rally to denounce the atrocities of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s (CPP-NPA). 
The gathering at the La Carlota City Public Plaza, which was supported by the Philippine Army and the Philippine National Police, coincided with the interment of Captain Efren Espanto Jr., a Negrense policeman who was killed during an encounter with NPA rebels in Janiuay, Iloilo last Feb. 12. 
On Feb. 25, a similar activity was held in Bago City, where a wake for Espanto was held. About 300 Negrenses have paid tribute to the slain police captain and rallied to condemn the atrocities committed by the terrorist group. It was held in front of the Manuel Y. Torres Coliseum.
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095685
As we celebrate National Women's Month, we are reminded of how our nation’s women have played an indispensable role in the Philippine peace process,” he said. 

Galvez also hailed the women who exhibit the courage to break “barriers and stereotypes.” 

He also lauded them for being actively involved in “all aspects of peace-building,” which include conflict prevention and resolution, negotiation and signing of agreements, and social healing and reconciliation.
The Philippines is not the West but its fortunes are inextricably tied to the West so it is no surprise that they would celebrate National Women's Month which was organized back in the 1970s by an Austrian Jewess who was also an active member of the Communist Party of the USA (CPUSA) and a founding member of the National Organization of Women (NOW) named Gerda Lerner. I am sure if we look hard enough we will see that the Philippines has been swallowing the same social program as that which is being force-fed to the West which is ironic seeing as the Philippines has also been battling a 50 year war against communists. Just like the West the Philippines now has women at the frontlines fighting terrorism.


https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/03/04/1998033/army-now-deploys-women-frontlines
Women members of the male-dominated Philippine Army (PA) are no longer confined to performing desk jobs but are actually doing combat duties, either as frontliners or as field commanders. 
Current Army records show that six female officers are assigned as battalion commanders. They are among the 795 female officers and 3,777 women-soldiers in the PA. 
Col. Ramon Zagala, Army spokesman, said the women’s deployment and assignment in top posts highlight the key role that the female officers and enlisted personnel play in the PA as it celebrates National Women’s Month. 
“No woman should be left behind. Let us cultivate a space where women are confident to build on their potentials, enhance their skills, make their own choice,” Gapay said. 
As Malacañang joins in the celebration of International Women’s Month, presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo said the Duterte administration has already “made significant strides to empower our women.” 
What's next for the AFP? Are they going to have a Rainbow Pride Battalion like the Americans? Lower standards so women can pass the tests and join special forces? Were standards lowered for the three ladies who recently topped the PNP SWAT course?

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1095877
Three female police officers of the Police Regional Office of Caraga Region (PRO-13) topped the recently-concluded Special Weapons and Tactics Course (SWAT Course). 
In the graduation ceremony held on Friday (March 6), PRO-13 director, Brig. Gen. Joselito T. Esquivel Jr. cited Pat. Peachtche T. Cepeda, Cpl. Ginalyn S. Sanchez and Cpl. Romelyn T. Berido for their "excellent performance" during the course.
A total of 48 police officers from the entire region graduated from the Special Weapons and Tactics Course. 
Cepeda received the Award of Excellence for having obtained the highest rating in class; Sanchez was awarded for obtaining the highest rating in individual practical drills both in pistol and rifle; and Berido for attaining the highest rating in a physical fitness test and other physical training during the course.
Esquivel commended the new graduates and urged them to "serve the people" and reminded them to live up with the motto “death before dishonor.”
Stunning and brave!

The military and police need to focus less on inclusion and more on fighting communists and Islamic terrorists. As it is they are playing catch up.

https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2020/1/21/afp-felimon-santos-jr-military-new-technology.html
In hopes of being a credible line of defense, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief-of-Staff Lt. Gen. Felimon Santos, Jr. admitted that the military still needs to catch-up with the latest technology. 
“Magkakaroon tayo ng lahat ng...with the advanced technology, we are trying to catch up,” Santos told Politics as Usual on Tuesday. 
[Translation: We will have all of the equipment with the advanced technology, we are trying to catch up.] 
“We have to be a credible Armed Forces,” said Santos. “With all of this modernization program. Hopefully, we’ll attain that objective.”
Is the AFP Chief admitting that the AFP is not a credible Armed Forces? That's what it sounds like to me. What does it sound like to all those surveyed who expressed confidence that the AFP can defeat the NPA and the Islamic terrorists? 

Monday, March 9, 2020

The God Culture: Philippine Gold Jewelry Found in 1st Century Egypt

The God Culture claims that Philippine gold jewlery has been found in 1st century Egypt. This claim is just one of the many Timothy Schwab and his gang have made in order to prove that the Philippines is the land of Ophir, the Garden of Eden, and that Filipinos are members of the lost tribes. Here is the original unedited screenshot from their video Clue #3 in the 100 Clues Series.



It is important to use this unedited screenshot because it lists all the sources they use to substantiate their claim.
1. Laszlo Legeza, "Tantric Elements in pre-Hispanic Philippines Gold Art," Arts of Asia, July-Aug, 1988, pp 129-136 
2. J.T. Peralta, "Prehistoric gold ornaments from the Central Bank of the Philippines," Arts of Asia 1981, no.4, p 54 
3. Ramon N. Villegas, "Ginto: History Wrought in Gold", Manila: Bangko Central ng Pilipinas", 2004
These same sources are also cited across the internet on various blogs which make the same sorts of claims about the Philippines as the God Culture does. These blogs include the following:
http://ancientphilippines.blogspot.com/2013/07/the-lost-tribe-of-israel-is-found.html 
https://mythworld.fandom.com/wiki/Chryse 
https://sightedmoon.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/The-Philippines-is-the-ancient-Ophir.pdf 
http://moments-salamera.blogspot.com/2013/02/philippines-old-name-is-it-ophir.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chryse_(placename) 
This post will therefore not be directed towards the God Culture alone but to all who utilize these three citations to assert that Philippine gold jewelry has been found in first century Egypt.

All three sources are out of print. In each of the above blogs source 2 is cited incorrectly and none of them, including the God Culture, show what is in these sources to verify their assertion that Philippine gold jewelry has been found in first century Egypt. Source number three is also cited in all places aside from the God Culture in the following way:
"Legeza, Laszlo. "Tantric Elements in pre-Hispanic Philippines Gold Art," Arts of Asia, July-Aug. 1988, pp.129-136. (Mentions gold jewelry of Philippine origin in first century CE Egypt)" 
What I aim to do in this post is set the record straight by revealing what these sources actually say.  I  ordered the two out of print articles from Arts of Asia and have in my possession PDF files of these documents. I also have a PDF file of the relevant material from "Ginto: History Wrought in Gold." They are available upon request.



Send me an email using the contact form on the sidebar and I will send them to you for the low, low price of a "please" and "thank you." Do they give proof of Philippine gold jewelry being found in first century Egypt? Do they say something else entirely? Let's find out.

I will start with source number 3 and work backwards to Legeza which is the most important source allegedly having the strongest proof of Philippine gold jewelry being found in Egypt.


3. Ramon N. Villegas, "Ginto: History Wrought in Gold", Manila: Bangko Central ng Pilipinas", 2004




I was unable to get hold of a physical copy of this book so I did the next best thing. I found a place on the internet where the text is searchable, I searched for the words Egypt and Egyptian, and then I went to my local library and had the librarian contact the library in Manila where a physical copy is and send me pictures of each of those pages.  Surprisingly there were only two pages where the word Egypt showed up, 45 and 48, and one where Egyptian showed up, 78. Chryse does not show up at all.

pg. 45
Some of the non-Indian borrowed designs found only in their original sources and in the Philippine area suggest direct linkages with other cultural currents from the Indian Ocean. Among these are kamagi necklaces (Aldred 1978: 105) and penannular, barter rings which both show Egyptian influence (Aldred 1978: 20, 94). The earliest insular Southeast Asian products reached the Mediterranean through a port on the Arabian Gulf, which were transported overland to the headwaters of the Nile, then shipped down to Alexandria. Austronesian traders are also known to have reached Madagascar (Miller 1969; Taylor 1976), so the African connection is an established fact.
pg. 48
A related Philippine aesthetic principle was articulation, or the movement of joined parts. A prime example is the penannular earring with multiple pendants of floral forms. Ear ornaments constructed on the same principle, made of glass beads and similar cut-out forms in shell and sheet metal, are still made and worn by isolated mountain groups in northern Luzon, and eastern and central Mindanao (Ellis 1981: 234, 244, 246, 248; Rodgers 1985: 306-68). Very similar barter ring and pendant types are also found in Egypt (Aldred 1978: 111.94; Wilkinson 1971: ills. XLV and XLVI).
pg. 78 
This spread: Massive pennular gold farther runs. Rings, also in other metals, were used for exchange since Egyptian times in Africa. The form reached the other side of the Indian Ocean, up to East Asia. The great value of these barer runs suggest a major transaction, perhaps a dowry for a royal wedding. Note the wave-like engraving reminiscent of the sea.
Not one of these citations from "Ginto: A History Wrought in Gold" says a word about Philippine gold jewelry being found in Egypt. Taken as a whole these three brief statements tell us only that Egyptian influences made their way to the Philippines and were incorporated into Philippine gold art. Page 45 does make the claim that Austronesian traders had reached Madagascar and that the connection between Africa and Southeast Asia via trade routes is an established fact but says nothing about what was traded or how it was traded. We are certainly not told that Philippine junks sailed to Egypt which is a claim Timothy Jay Schwab of the God Culture makes.
How did the gold get there? Well, you will know by the end of this series because the Philippines had ancient ships that are gonna blow your mind.
https://youtu.be/Sc6sJB3t_As
Actually they don't make the exact and specific word-for word claim that Filipinos sailed to Egypt but it is explicitly implied that such is the case. What they do claim is that Filipinos had large ocean going ships and traded with China which is disputed by neither me nor anyone else.

https://youtu.be/Sc6sJB3t_As

The video for Clue #3 does not prove that Filipinos sailed to Egypt or explain how Philippine gold jewelry ended up in Egypt or that Philippine gold jewelry was even found in first century Egypt. All in all it's a rather pointless video that does not fulfill its promise.

Likewise "Ginto: History Wrought in Gold" does not support the claim that Philippine gold jewelry has been found in first century Egypt either. Admittedly we can infer from it that there might have been because of the trade routes mentioned but anything definite cannot be drawn from this book.


2. J.T. Peralta, "Prehistoric gold ornaments from the Central Bank of the Philippines," Arts of Asia 1983, no. 4, p. 51 




This article does not mention Egypt whatsoever. Instead Peralta discusses trade between China and the Philippines. Filipinos trading with the Chinese is an established fact and is not under dispute.


3. Laszlo Legeza, "Tantric Elements in pre-Hispanic Philippines Gold Art," Arts of Asia, July-Aug, 1988, pp 129-136 



There are two references to Egypt in this article.

pg. 129
Historically, our starting-point has to be a brief reference to the rich sources of natural gold in many Philippine islands, like Mindanao and Samar, and the desperate search, mainly by Indian maritime traders, to find fresh sources of gold as the Hellenistic Roman empire's resources ran dry in West Asia by the first century A.D. Hellenistic trade beads of West Asiatic and Egyptian origins found in early burials in many places in the Philippines, prove that such early trade contacts, no matter how irregular, existed between the Philippine archipelago and West Asia by the first centuries of the first millennium A.D. The earliest Carbon 14 date of A.D. 320 for one of the Butuan balangays (native seafaring boats) provides evidence of early Filipino participation in this trade.
pg. 131
Apart from India and China, Butuan is known to have had extensive trading connections with Arabia and in all probability with Sumatra and Java. The locally produced gold necklaces comprising of dentate interlocking beads seem to have reached Egypt, later to be mistakenly identified by European collectors as Egyptian.
Legeza is in agreement with Villegas in discussing established trade routes between Southeast Asia, West Asia, and Arabia. They also agree in telling us that Egyptian gold made its way to the Philippines. While Villegas only mentions Egyptian influence on Philippine gold art Legeza tells us that actual artifacts of Egyptian origin are to be found in Philippine burial sites.

The claim for Philippine gold jewelry being found in first Egypt rests solely on a cursory reference on page 131. But Legeza does not write that Philippine gold necklaces were found in Egypt, only that they seem to have been found. While he does state that trade contacts were established between the Philippines and West Asia by the first centuries of the first millennium A.D. he does not give a date for the jewelry allegedly found in Egypt. He provides no support for his claim. There are no references and no pictures to back up what he writes. The whole assertion that Philippine gold jewelry has been found in first century Egypt is based on a single sentence, or rather two sentences pages apart, which has no proofs. That is a very shaky foundation on which to make this claim.

Given that there was a trade connection between Southeast Asia and the Roman Empire it is likely that Philippine gold jewelry did make its way to the West. But that is only to be inferred from these two sources. Absolute proof of Philippine gold jewelry being found in first century Egypt as well as an explanation of how it got there such as Filipino junks sailing to Egypt or Philippine artifacts being traded across Asia until they reached Egypt will have to be looked for elsewhere. I will not be expanding beyond the bounds of these three sources.

It is not my intention to speculate here in order to prove the claims of the God Culture and others. My intention is only to look at the three sources commonly cited to prove that Philippine gold jewelry has been found in first century Egypt. Anyone who has read these sources could not honestly use them alone to support that claim. Even if the claim were true that does not prove the Philippines is Ophir.

It is beyond dispute that the Philippines is a land full of gold. There is much testimony to that fact. But is the Philippines really the mythical islands of gold and silver, Chryse and Argyre, as Timothy Schwab of the God Culture claims? Reading through Legeza and Peralta's articles we find that it is Mindanao where most gold has been found. Butuan in particular is a source of many golden artifacts. That would mean of all the islands in the Philippines Mindanao is the isle of gold. However Timothy Schwab says the opposite.


Tim designates Luzon as the island of gold and Mindanao as the island of silver. Tim puts a lot of faith in the existence of the non-existent mythical islands of Chryse and Argyre as being proof that the Philippines is Ophir and Tarshish. They both play a key role in his list of proofs. Chryse and Argyre are essential puzzle pieces in the God Culture's mythology. In a recent video Tim uses, along with the descriptions of Dionysius Perigetes, Martin Behaim's map of 1492 to prove that Chryse and Argyre are the Philippines.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chryse_and_Argyre

On this map we see the same mistake that Mindanao (Argyre) is the island of silver while Luzon (Chryse) is the island of gold. Mindanao is also erroneously placed below the equator. But dare I say that Martin Behaim was not thinking at all of the Philippines or depicting them because they had not yet been discovered by Magellan? Behaim had never even been to this part of the world. Undoubtedly what was in his mind was not the Philippines but Chryse and Argyre as known in legend and myth. He also contradicts Mela's map by placing them in a very different location, much further to the East. Aside from depicting these two mythical islands his map also includes the equally mythical St. Brendan's Island and the dragon's tail which is a non-existent peninsula in East Asia. Needless to say Martin Behaim's map is worthless for telling us about the real world.

Instead of relying on old and unreliable maps to give us a true picture of our world let us quote the words of a man who has actually been to Chryse and Argyre. That is Sir John Mandeville.
"On the East there are two islands near this one, of which one is called Oriell and the other Arget [Pliny's Chryse and Argyre]; in those two isles the earth is full of gold and silver ore. And they are near the Red Sea, where it enters the Great Sea Ocean. And in those isles no stars can clearly be seen shining, except for one they call Canapos [Canopus]; nor can the moon be seen there except in the second quarter."
The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, translated by C.W.R.D. Moseley, Penguin Books, pg 182-183 
No stars shine in the islands of Chryse and Argyre and the moon is only seen in its second quarter. Every night the stars shine big and bright over the Philippines. The moon is also seen in each of its stages as it passes overhead. Does Mandeville's description of Chryse and Argyre's night sky match that of the Philippines? As Tim would put it: " Ugh. Nope, that's not it! So really this is not rocket science folks."

This same Sir John Mandeville also tells us the exact location of the lost tribes!
In this same land are the hills of Caspian which are called Uber [ubera aquilonis, ‘breasts of the north wind’, the Caspian mountains]. The Jews of the Ten Lost Tribes are shut up in mese hills; they are called Gog and Magog, and they can get out on no side. King Alexander drove them here, for he intended to shut them up with the work of his men. When he saw he could not, he prayed to God that He would finish what he himself had begun. And although he was a heathen, God of His special grace heard his prayer and closed the hills together, and they are so big and high that they cannot be passed. And on the other side is the Caspian Sea; but no one can escape on that side because the sea comes up out of the earth under these hills, and runs on one side of the country through a great desert, reaching as far as the land of Persia. 
Even if it is called a sea, it is not one in fact, but a lake, the biggest in the world. So if the folk that are enclosed there desired and attempted to cross that sea by ship, they would not know where they would arrive and would not understand [any language except their own. And so they cannot get out]. And know that now the Jews have no land of their own to live in in all the world except among those hills. Even so they pay tribute to the Queen of the Amazons, and she has those hills guarded very well so that they do not cross them into [her] country, which borders those hills. Nevertheless it sometimes happens that one of them climbs over those hills and gets out, but no great number of them could climb out together because of the great height and the difficulty of the climb. And there is no other way out except by a little [path] made by men’s diligence. That track is about four miles long, and then there is a great desert where no water or shelter is to be found for men because there are dragons and snakes and other poisonous animals; so except in winter no man can travel that way. 
This narrow path they call Clyrem; and as I said the Queen of the Amazons has it guarded very carefully. If it should happen that any of them get out, they can speak no language except Hebrew and so cannot speak with other men when they come among them. Folk in the country nearby say that in the time of Antichrist those Jews will sally out and do much harm to Christian men. And so all the Jews in the different parts of the world learn to speak Hebrew, for they believe that the Jews who are enclosed among those hills will know that they are Jews (as they are) by their speech when they arrive. And then they will lead them into Christendom to destroy Christian men. For those Jews say they know by their prophecies that the Jews enclosed among the hills will issue out and the Christians will be under their sway, just as they have been under Christian domination. And if you would know how they will find a place to get out, I shall tell you what I once heard said. 
In the time of Antichrist a fox will make his earth in the very place where King Alexander had the gates of the hills shut up, when he enclosed this people. And this fox will dig for so long in the ground that at last he will emerge among those people. When they see him, they will marvel at him greatly, for they never before have seen an animal like that. (Nevertheless they have all kinds of animals except the fox among them.) They will be so intrigued by this fox that they will chase him hither and thither; and they will pursue him until they come to the hole whence he came out. Then they will dig after him for so long that they will come to the gates that Alexander had stopped up with great stones and cement, and then they will break down these gates and find the way out.
The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, translated by C.W.R.D. Moseley, Penguin Books, pg. 165-167 
Is Timothy Schwab ready to give credence to Sir John Mandeville? Columbus did. Even Leonardo da Vinci had Mandeville in his library. Mandeville is the first to mention a possible route to circumnavigate the globe so it is certain that Magellan read him and took him to be truthful.

Today we know Mandeville's description of the world is utterly fantastic. It is only people like Timothy Schwab, Anna Rose Lipshy, and the God Culture who, unlike the rest of the world, but just like Dionysius Perigetes, Sir John Mandeville, and Martin Behaim, grasp at the legends of Chryse and Argyre as being true. Why doesn't Tim use Sir John Mandeville as a source to prove his claims about the Philippines being Ophir and Filipinos being part of the lost tribes? Because his eyewitness descriptions do not conform to Tim's agenda.

It's better if Tim forgo Mandeville and every other legendary travelogue altogether for some good old fashioned common sense.
For to endeavor to determine the first settlers of these lands, whence and how they came, whether they were Carthaginians, Jews, Spaniards, Phoenicians, Greeks, Chinese, Tartars, etc., is reserved for God, who knows everything; and this task exceeds all human endeavor. And if such study obtain anything, it will amount only to a few fallible conjectures with danger of the judgment, and without any advance of the truth or of reputation.
The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803, Vol. 40, pg. 296-297 
Indeed Timothy Schwab’s wild and unfounded speculations about the Philippines and Filipinos amount only to fallible conjectures without any advance of the truth.