Thursday, March 25, 2021

Coronavirus Lockdown: World's Longest COVID-19 Lockdown, Travel Bubble, and More!

More news about how the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines is being handled by the public and the government. 

Yes it has been a when year since the lockdowns began. They are still going on as cases surge.


https://time.com/5945616/covid-philippines-pandemic-lockdown/

Edd Gumban sleeps on a foldout bed in an office in central Manila. The 57-year-old photojournalist has a wife and a home in Bulacan, part of the commuter belt 14 miles north of the Philippine capital, but he is too afraid to go there. The Philippines began imposing stay-at-home orders last March, in a bid to halt the spread of COVID-19. There are confusing variations in rules from locality to locality, however. The armed police that man checkpoints have also, at times, been encouraged by President Rodrigo Duterte to shoot lockdown violators dead.

At the very least, Gumban risks being detained, or even beaten, if he finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time. So rather than commute each day, he only risks the journey every few weeks, when he needs to pick up some things or grab new clothes. The rest of the time, home is a corner of the press office of the Manila Police District. But even there, it seems, he can get no clarity

“Everything is confusing,” Gumban tells TIME. “There are no clear cut policies to follow. The national government says one thing and local governments impose another.”

Such is life in what must now be one of the world’s longest and strictest lockdowns. The first community quarantine, as it is locally called, was imposed on the island of Luzon on Mar. 16, 2020, when its 53.3 million people—including the capital’s 12.8 million residents—were ordered to stay at home. Since then, community quarantine orders of varying severity have been rolled out across the other islands of the Philippine archipelago.

The climate of fear is undeniable. TV operators in the Philippines used to reserve late-night slots for crime tales and horror shows. These days, they allocate the time to equally grim fare: weekly COVID-19 “updates” from Duterte, shown at the head of a table of military top brass.

Lockdowns are happening to one degree or another across the country on a rotating basis as LGUs see fit to contain the spread. There are calls to put the whole of Metro Manila back under a strict lockdown but DOH Secretary Duque says no for now.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III is not recommending a strict lockdown for Metro Manila despite the surge of COVID-19 cases. However, he is not discounting the possibility of it happening in the future.

Duque on Wednesday said he thinks localized lockdowns being implemented by local governments are “starting to yield some positive outcomes.”

“As of now, I don’t,” Duque said in an interview over ABS-CBN News Channel when asked if he would recommend placing Metro Manila under a stricter lockdown.

“Hopefully the reversal of spikes will be observed in the next few days,” he added.

The reversal did not happen. On March 22nd the nation recorded a single day record of more than 8,000 cases. In response to the rising cases the National Capital region has been placed on a GCQ lockdown for two weeks.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1134377

The national government will be imposing additional restrictions in Metro Manila and other areas under general community quarantine (GCQ) status from March 22 to April 4, 2021, MalacaƱang announced Sunday. 

In a virtual presser, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque said additional restrictions were approved by President Rodrigo Duterte through Inter-Agency Task Force Resolution No. 104 due to a spike in coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) cases in the country. 

Starting Monday, Roque said Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna and Rizal will be joining Metro Manila under the GCQ classification. 

Under IATF Resolution No. 104, he said only essential travel into and out of Metro Manila, Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal will be allowed. 

Roque described this as a “travel bubble” where residents will only be allowed to travel within the said areas.  

Traveling into and out of Metro Manila and the provinces of Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal will be prohibited. We will have a sort of bubble in NCR, and the provinces of Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal,” he said.

Travel of authorized persons outside their residences (APORs) such as essential workers, health and emergency frontline services personnel; government officials and government frontline personnel; duly-authorized humanitarian assistance actors; persons traveling for medical or humanitarian reasons; persons going to the airport for travel abroad, returning overseas Filipinos and overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) will be unimpeded for as long as they show their respective work identification cards.

"Travel bubble" is a strange term for "lockdown." This is practically back to square one. The NCR is now in the same situation it was a year ago even if it is only for two weeks. And who can guarantee that?

Duque's predecessor says the government is actually 10 steps behind square one in its handling of the pandemic.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/03/18/21/philippines-10-steps-back-from-square-one-in-addressing-covid-19-ex-health-chief

The coronavirus situation has worsened in the Philippines, and the country is 10 steps backward from the time it initially addressed the pandemic last year, a former Health Secretary said Thursday.

"Talagang nag-worsen kumpara sa (It has really worsened, comparing) March 2020 at (and) March 2021," Dr. Esperanza Cabral told ABS-CBN's TeleRadyo.

In a statement released Wednesday, Cabral said, "We are not back to square one. We are ten steps back from square one," as she recalled the challenges, especially of the health sector, when the country first confronted the pandemic.

 Officials and analysts attribute the current surge in COVID-19 cases to increased mobility of people, non-compliance with health protocols, and the presence of more transmissible COVID-19 variants.


         (We could have been faster in our response, and covered more. I think that was our problem.)


         (We have deficiency in terms of contact tracing, border control and now, the vaccine rollout.)


"Assuming that there is a steady supply of vaccines, 'pag ang speed ng vaccination ay katulad ngayon (if the speed of the vaccination is the same as now), it will take us more than 12 years bago matapos 'yong 70 million (before we finished the 70 million)," Cabral said.


Asked if her remark is harsh to government, Cabral, said: "'Yan ang palagi kong sinasabi sa mga kasama ko sa DOH dati (This is what I always say to my colleagues before in DOH). I know you are doing your best. You have to do more than your best, because it's not good enough at this point."

Despite her remarks and other negative viewpoints such as Moody's Analytics which is forecasting herd immunity might be achieved in the Philippines by 2023 the government thinks things are going well.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1408400/govt-target-in-2021-a-better-christmas-herd-immunity-galvez

The Philippine government is targeting to reach herd immunity this year amid its battle against COVID-19 as it hopes for a “better Christmas” for Filipinos, vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr. said Thursday.

Galvez said this can be achieved if there will be a stable supply of COVID-19 vaccines in the country.

“Ngayon ang aming declaration is we will have a better Christmas this year. Kailangan ‘yun ang target namin na we will have a better Christmas. We will inoculate 70 million at nakita namin kaya natin ito kapag nagkaroon tayo ng steady supply ng [vaccine],” Galvez said in an interview with ABS-CBN News.

“Ang target pa rin natin si yung 50 to 70 million. Talagang ang target natin ngayong year is herd immunity,” he added.

Should the Philippines reach its goal of herd immunity this year, the target for 2022 is for the country’s “exit strategy” to eliminate COVID-19, said Galvez.

Meeting their goals depends on the vaccine.  A few vaccines have been mishandled and were leaking or did not contain enough doses per vial. There has also been a lack of testing which has contributed to likely inaccurate death counts. Even after a year there is much to be done.

There are a few variants of COVID-19 going around but the Philippines does not want a namesake.

The Philippines changed tune in using the place of origin to name novel coronavirus variants after a new one was detected on a patient from the country. 

Local health authorities used to call the other coronavirus variants United Kingdom and South Africa. 

It used to call the coronavirus variant from Brazil as “so-called Brazilian variant.” 


Early this March, the Department of Health confirmed that a new coronavirus variant was detected on a male traveler in Japan came from the Philippines. 

Japanese authorities were the first to announce this on March 13. Japan Times reported that the variant its health ministry found was distinct from the ones discovered in UK, South Africa and Brazil. 

The DOH stated that there are already 98 cases of P.3 in the country.

To prevent discrimination  

In a briefing on the same day, Dr. Anna Ong-Lim of the DOH technical working group on COVID-19 variants said that they assigned P-3 to this variant to avoid discrimination of the residents who live in these places. 

“They’ve come back to us and told us na ito nga ay bagong variant and they are assigning it the P-3 lineage—or the designation of P-3 ‘no, iyon po ‘yung ating tawag doon,” said Ong-Lim. 

Kasi iyon nga eh, medyo ayaw na natin iyong practice na ginagamit iyong pangalan ng isang lugar to assign the name of the virus or the variant kasi nga medyo nakaka-cause ng discrimination doon sa mga nanggagaling sa bansang iyon when in fact puwede naman siyang nakikita rin sa ibang lugar,” she added. 

The health official also reiterated that they are veering away from the Philippine variant name in formal speeches, citing it an unacceptable practice.

“We want to do away nga with referring this as the PHL variant of the Philippine variant kasi nga hindi acceptable practice iyong ganoon na we assign place names, we’re trying to veer from that,” she said.

The Philippines does not want a COVID variant named after them. Hilarious!

Do you wear a mask?  How about two masks??

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2021/03/18/2085330/treatment-czar-urges-double-masking-enhanced-precautions-vs-covid-19

The country's COVID-19 treatment czar on Thursday encouraged the public to practice enhanced health standards, including the wearing of two face masks, as he admitted that the transmission of the virus is getting out of hand.

Health Undersecretary Leopoldo Vega said OCTA Research Group's forecast that the daily COVID-19 cases in the Philippines would swell to as much as 11,000 by the end of March would materialize if nothing is done to contain the virus.

"So, the way I look at it, these are alarm bells...And if you do nothing, we would fall into that, and the assumption is only based on mathematical projections. But more important is how we are going to respond to the increasing crisis right now," Vega said at a press briefing.

"You have to enhance it (minimum health standards), if there is a double masking, you have to double mask, you have to do all of the things that the minimum health standard requires plus the executive power of the local government units to provide what they call granular lockdowns or zonal containment because this is very effective, and we have seen this last year," he added.

Vega clarified that his proposal to wear two face masks is just his personal recommendation, not an official stand of the health department. He said a change in behavior towards health and safety measures would allow one to contribute for the common good of the community. 

Hopefully this recommendation remans his personal opinion and does not become mandated.

 The OCTA is seeking a return to a hard lockdown as cases surge.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/03/19/21/octa-group-suggests-hard-gcq-metro-manila-covid-19-surge

The government must implement a "hard GCQ (general community quarantine) to address the continued increase in COVID-19 cases, which may exceed records of 2020, the OCTA Research Group on Friday said.

This, as the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) on COVID-19 announced the 2-week closure of some industries in areas under general community quarantine, including Metro Manila, to help curb the spread of the virus.

“The status quo is not enough. We need more mobility restrictions,” said Prof. Ranjit Rye of the OCTA Group during a virtual forum.

“We are in a surge that is very different and is more serious than the last surge,” he said.

The “Hard GCQ” suggested by the group includes discouraged social gatherings and indoor dining and a more significant work-from-home set-up for industries that can implement it. For workers who are still required to work outside, quarantine pass will be required and mass transportation should be available.

Contract tracing has been pushed as a fundamentally necessary way to curb the spread by tracking all those who the infected come into close contact with. The DILG now admits that proper contract tracing is impossible.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/780546/dilg-admits-1-30-contact-tracing-ratio-virtually-impossible-to-achieve/story/

The Department of the Interior and Local Government on Sunday admitted that the ideal contact tracing ratio is "virtually impossible" to achieve amid the rising number of COVID-19 cases in the country.

In a "Dobol B TV" interview, DILG spokesperson Undersecretary Jonathan Malaya reacted to the statement of contact tracing czar Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong, who lamented the low national contact tracing efficiency ratio.

Magalong said the ideal ratio for urban setting is 1:30 to 37, while for rural area is 1:25 to 30.

But Malaya said that the set ideal contact tracing ratio of 1:30 is hard to achieve, much less the 1:37 ratio, in the current rate of COVID-19 infections.

Malaya explained this by illustrating that for every COVID positive person, contact tracers will reach out to 30 of his close contacts. But when one of those close contacts turned out positive as well, another 30 of his close contacts should be looked out for, so on and so forth.

"So exponential yung pagtaas and we do not have that many na tao na nagko-contact trace," he said.

Of course its impossible to trace everyone. But what's more important is now they have everyone scanning cards just to get into the shopping mart! Maybe that was the real purpose all along?

The health authorities have once again reminded the public why they should not take the vaccine.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1134432

In an interview on Monday, PHO chief Dr. Anna Ma. Teresa de Guzman said even though the country has started its vaccination program against the dreaded Covid-19, the vaccines do not give full immunity.
 
De Guzman said all kinds of vaccines do not guarantee an individual who was inoculated would not acquire any diseases or infect other people.
 
“The objective of the vaccination program is to give additional protection to your body to fight the virus but it does not guarantee you not to acquire nor transmit the virus,” she said.
 
De Guzman encouraged the public to properly wear face masks, face shields, and religiously observe physical distancing, as well as frequent hand washing and coughing etiquette.

This admission likely does not even apply to the many variants which the government has finally admitted are driving the surge.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1410147/doh-virus-variants-driving-metro-surge

The Department of Health (DOH) on Monday said two highly contagious variants of the coronavirus had been detected in all cities in Metro Manila and these may be driving the rapid increase in COVID-19 cases in the metropolis in the past few weeks.

The DOH conceded that the presence of the highly transmissible variants in Metro Manila is a factor in the faster increase in daily cases than at the height of the pandemic in July and August last year.

“We saw that in all the cities (in Metro Manila) we have either the UK variant or South Africa variant. In other cities, there are both the UK and South Africa variants,” Health Undersecretary Maria Rosaria Vergeire told reporters on Monday.

“So, yes, we can say the variants are here and yes [their presence] has contributed to the increase in the number of cases, how they increased very fast. But that is not the only factor,” Vergeire said.

She said the root of the problem was the public’s failure to comply with health measures and some “institutional gaps.”

The DOH still can't help but to blame the public even though surveys show the public is complying with all the protocols including masks and shields.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/octa-research-survey-filipinos-wear-masks-wash-hands-prevent-covid-19

As COVID-19 cases continue to rise in the country, a survey of Octa Research showed majority of Filipinos are complying with the minimum health standards set by the Department of Health (DOH).

The survey, conducted from January 26 to February 1, said 9 out of 10 Filipinos use face masks and wash their hands with soap and water or alcohol and sanitizer to avoid contracting COVID-19.

"The use of face mask and regular cleaning of hands using water and soap or alcohol top the measures Filipinos practice to avoid contracting COVID-19, with 91% and 90% of Filipinos practicing each, respectively," the report said.

The survey released on Tuesday, March 9, also found 89% of Filipinos use face shields. Further, 67% observe social distancing while 60% stay at home when it is not necessary to go out. 

So why does the DOH insist on continuing to blame the people for the surge?

If you thought health officials, doctors, would be the best people to lead the response to the pandemic then you are not thinking like Duterte.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1134594

MalacaƱang on Tuesday insisted that retired military officers are the best people to lead the government’s Covid-19 response and vaccination rollout because of their expertise in logistics.

Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque made this remark after an opposition senator called for an overhaul of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID), saying that it should be led by public health officers and not ex-military officers.

Aside from their knowledge in logistics, Roque explained that ex-military officers were leading the IATF because they were also appointed as members of President Rodrigo Duterte’s Cabinet.

(No one has been appointed to the IATF outside of the secretaries and heads of office. It’s true that there are a lot of military who are members but one reason why the President trusts them is because the military excels in logistics),” he said in a virtual press briefing.

Roque pointed out that National Task Force (NTF) Against Covid-19 chief implementer Carlito Galvez, who is also vaccine czar, also possesses an impressive set of qualifications.

(If we’re talking about the fast delivery of vaccines when 80 percent of countries have already pre-ordered vaccines of course the President and I think that the best person for the job is an ex-military, ex-chief-of-staff, and hero of Marawi, Secretary Carlito Galvez),” he added.

Logistics are important in getting the vaccine distributed but that's not the only thing that matter in responding to the pandemic. Let the Palace stop denying that their response has been militarized. 

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Filipinos Beaten, Slashed, Shot, Assaulted, Yelled At, and Killed in the USA

Lately in the USA there has allegedly been an uptick in crimes against people of Asian descent since the COVID-19 pandemic began in March 2020. Talking heads will tell you this is all due to Donald Trump referring to the Chinese-in-origin, it literally came from Wuhan, virus as the China virus. They will also tell you these attacks are deeply rooted in White supremacy. Filipinos have not been spared by this violence. But do the attacks have anything to do with Donald Trump and the China virus or White supremacy?

The first notable attack was back in February on the NYC subway.

https://news.yahoo.com/mans-face-slashed-nyc-subway-203314003.html

A 61-year-old man was on his way to work on the L subway train when he got into a dispute with another man and was slashed across the face on Wednesday morning. What happened: Noel Quintana claimed the man was kicking his backpack during the commute, according to ABC7. When Quintana asked him to stop, the man attacked him and ran away when the train stopped at First Avenue and 14th Street.

A series of subway incidents: As the New York Post reports, this incident is the latest in a series of subway crime problems. Speaking to ABC7, Mayor Bill de Blasio, however, dismissed the crime problem.

This is a very cut and dry case. It involves no Donald Trump, no China virus, and no White supremacy. The next case is equally open and shut and involves an elderly Filipino in Arizona.

https://coconuts.co/manila/news/hate-crime-alleged-killer-of-elderly-filipino-arrested-by-arizona-police/

The suspect behind the killing of a 74-year-old Filipino in Phoenix, Arizona has been arrested, the police announced last week.

Filipino Juanito Falcon was attacked by the suspect, Marcus Williams, near 17th Avenue and Bethany Home Road, the Phoenix police said in a tweet. Falcon died two days later from the injuries. The police said it was still unclear why Williams attacked the elderly Filipino.

Williams allegedly punched Falcon in the face, which caused the latter to fall and hit his head. Williams fled but witnesses were able to identify his car before he sped away. Falcon was also able to tell the police the last two numbers of the vehicle’s license plate. Williams was found about three miles from the crime scene with his girlfriend; both of them refused to answer the cops’ questions.

Advocates say that the attacks against Asian-Americans were reminiscent of “yellow peril,” a racist ideology that arose in the 19th century that sees Asians as a threat to the Western world. Such crimes are allegedly linked to the spread of the coronavirus, which was first discovered in Wuhan, China in late 2019.

Again there is no link to the China virus, Donald Trump, or White supremacy. The attack was random and the attacker was black.

The next two cases are just like this one in that the victims were both randomly punched. The difference is that the authorities decided not to release mugshots of the suspects. In the case of the San Fransisco Police Department they decided to stop releasing mugshots in 2020 "as part of an effort to stop perpetuating racial stereotypes." That means we will never see the face of Jorge Devis-Milton who randomly punched Danny Yu Chang, a Chinese Filipino.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/crime/article/Nothing-is-safe-here-in-California-16034222.php#photo-20755789

Danny Yu Chang was walking through San Francisco’s Financial District, clutching a packaged lunch from Trader Joe’s, when an assailant struck him from behind. 

The blows were swift and brutal, Yu Chang recalled Wednesday afternoon, two days after a man knocked him unconscious at Market and Montgomery streets. 

Former President Donald Trump’s inflammatory racial rhetoric about the coronavirus had helped create a toxic undertow, which has frequently bubbled to the surface as economic pressures and bitter emotions set in. A report released Tuesday by the national coalition Stop AAPI Hate documented 3,795 anti-Asian hate incidents from the beginning of the pandemic through Feb. 28. Of those, 1,691 took place in California. 

A day after the attack, Yu Chang set up a page on the crowdfunding platform GoFundMe, asking supporters to help raise money so he and his wife can move out of state. That evening, police announced the arrest of 32-year-old Jorge Devis-Milton in connection with the battery of Yu Chang and a stabbing half an hour earlier, of a 64-year-old white man at the 16th Street Mission BART Station.

He is now among dozens of victims of violence who have become symbols of a national reckoning over rising hate and despicable crimes of opportunity — both of which have hit the Bay Area’s Asian American communities.

According to the San Fransisco Chronicle this man is not merely the victim of a crime but one of dozens who are now symbols of a nation reckoning over hate crimes against Asian Americans. Could anything be more ridiculous? That the media names the race of Jorge's stabbing victim but not his own race is a rather big clue to what he looks like. How likely is it a White man is named Jorge? The fact is it's not racism. It's regular criminality perpetrated by the criminals who populate the Bay Area. San Fransisco is a city covered in human feces, used needles, and homeless peopleBurglary is up by 57%!! The city has major problems which the local government refuses to address properly. Instead they'd rather conceal mugshots of criminals.

Let's jump down to San Diego where an elderly Filipino woman known only as Lola was punched while riding the trolley.

https://www.10news.com/news/local-news/elderly-filipino-woman-attacked-on-san-diego-trolley-shares-her-story

An elderly Filipino woman who was attacked on the trolley last month shared her story with ABC 10News.

She is being identified only as Lola, a word that means grandmother in the Philippines. She said the attack last month still haunts her.

Through a translator, she said in Tagalog that she still cries when she recalls the incident. Lola said she had just visited a friend and was riding the trolley from Encanto to Downtown San Diego. She thought a fellow passenger was going to transfer trolleys, but instead she became the victim of an unprovoked attack.

“He punched me,” Lola said. “It’s very hard and then I cried… please, please help me!”

Lola said the man tried to grab her. Witnesses helped her until police arrived. She told ABC 10News she is thankful to God she’s still alive.

Police arrested James Winslow in connection with the attack. A police spokesperson said he faces assault with a deadly weapon with an elder abuse enhancement.

The trolley incident was not deemed a hate crime. However, attacks on elderly Asian Americans have been caught on video throughout the country.

After telling the story the reporter notes that this incident is not a hate crime but then adds an "However!" The truth is simply not good enough. The truth is that these two Filipinos who were punched randomly were both likely victims of the knockout game

One does not have to wonder what the agenda of the American media is if they pay close attention. In Vallejo, which is just north of San Fransisco, on February 16th Filipino Marc Quidt was injured when his store was robbed. Rather than report it as a straight crime story reporter Dion Lim, herself of Asian descent,  attempted to find a racial motive.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CLajtq0McWJ/

this video is horrifying and I’ll explain why I am posting it. It shows an armed robbery of an Asian American couple’s store last night.

The reason why I mention they are Asian is that they have seen all of the coverage of attacks on the API community and while we don’t know if they were targeted because they’re Asian...one can’t help but think it could be the reason these days.

How ridiculous! Crime is up in the area, the store has been robbed before, the video shows the usual suspects in these cases, and it is not the white man. Yet this lady just has to stoke fears about anti-Asian violence even as she admits she has no idea if the store was targets because it is owned by Asians! Even the San Fransisco Chronicle wants to tar this common place robbery as a targeted hate crime.

San Jose is not all that far from San Fransisco. On March 10th a Filipina, who only wants to be known as Tiffany, was talking on the phone with her boyfriend when she was suddenly assaulted while waiting for the train.

https://usa.inquirer.net/65586/suspect-nabbed-in-attack-on-fil-am-woman-in-san-jose-train-station

Police arrested a 32-year-old suspect who faces hate crime charges for attacking a Filipino American woman in a Caltrain station in San Jose on Wednesday morning, March 10.

The Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office said on Friday that Johan Strydom, 32, will be charged with “assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury” and “assault with an intent to commit rape and assault” with felony hate crime enhancements. 

The Filipina, a 26-year-old medical worker who requested to be identified only as Tiffany, took the Caltrain at San Jose’s Diridon Station on Wednesday at around 6:30 a.m. on her way to work in Palo Alto, according to KTVU.

Man, identified as Strydom, suddenly grabbed Tiffany neck from behind, reportedly pulling her hair back and cursing at her for her Asian ethnicity.

Tiffany began screaming when Strydom allegedly forced her to the ground and started tossing her back and forth. “He was saying f-u, f-u Asian, this is completely bull,” she said. “All while he was keeping me on the ground with his grip on my hair.”

Bystanders came to her rescue and yelled at the suspect to stop the assault. He tried to run away from the scene. Tiffany was not injured physically, Victoria O’Brien, Caltrain Deputy Director of Safety and Security, told KTVU.

Truly a horrifying ordeal committed by a white man. But does his whiteness have anything to do with it? How about Trump or the Wu-flu? According to his lawyer, "Strydom is allegedly suffering from a mental illness that is intensified by homelessness." Just like San Fransisco, San Jose has a homeless problem that has spiraled out of all proportion. That means more crime.

They’ve reported gun violence, had cars stolen and watched in outrage for months as trash piles up and homeless encampments grow around them. 

Business and property owners in downtown San Jose are demanding the city take action to end vandalism, theft and increasing illegal camping they say is destroying their livelihood.

And they are not mincing words — one man even calling homeless people parasites. 

“We will soon see a hero before us to rid the world of these parasites who infect and destroy life and property,” Arturo Lionetti, plant manager at Airgas, wrote in an email to Councilmember Raul Peralez. 

The email was part of an email thread obtained by San JosĆ© Spotlight to Peralez from five business owners along Coleman Avenue — that started in 2019 — complaining about the problems. The business owners claim the city has turned a blind eye.

“If the city can’t provide the basics — if I have to continue to shoulder the costs to repair the ongoing, almost nightly, acts of vandalism and destruction to me and my customers’ property — I will be out of business by June,” said Rose Garden Auto Care owner George Fota in a Dec. 17 email. 

This is a very old problem. There is even a website, sanjosehomeless.org, with the last update being 2015. According to one website, policyadvice.net, as of February 2021 in the USA 48% of homeless people are white, 61% of them are male, and 25% are mentally ill. It appears Johan Strydom being a mentally ill, white, homeless man is typical of what one would expect to encounter among the homeless. "Straight out of central casting," as they would say. Would anyone expect a mentally ill, homeless man to act like a functioning member of society? Just Google "homeless man attacks" and you will be greeted with plenty of news stories of mentally ill homeless men attacking people. Tiffany was not only the victim of Johan Strydom but also of a government which had been warned of this problem over the years and had done nothing to prevent it from happening. She won't be the last victim of an uncaring San Jose government.

GMA recently published a story with the following provocative title, "Filipino man verbally harassed in another New York subway incident.Alex P. Vidal, the Filipino man in question, was yelled at by a man on the NYC subway who was on a tirade against the Chinese. Instead of leaving like all the rest of the passengers this man stayed seated and began filming. GMA attempts to portray this as a hate crime yet offers no details when this happened and do not provide a link to the film. It is on Alex P. Vidal's blog. It happened at 11a.m. on March 12th.

https://alexpvidal.wordpress.com/2021/03/14/angry-man-inside-a-brooklyn-bound-subway-train-yells-at-me-and-calls-me-a-chinese-amid-upsurge-of-violence-against-asian-americans/

Here is the full text of that 52 second video:

You got the Yemenis, the Saudi Arabians and all these different people so I ask myself, well, why would these people not associate? Why would these people stay away from each other? There must have been a reason for that. Another thing I had to ask is what are the Chinese, once again, doing with the Muslims locked up in their country?  Why do the good Chinese have Muslims locked up in their country? For no reason other than being Muslim, could you answer that? Because you seem to be so ethical and you seem to be such a good Buddhist. For we know that Buddhism is not a Chinese religion, Buddhism is an Indian religion. Why are you going around touting yourself as a good Buddhist person? Why are you telling people Asian's don't marry outside of their race when Asians do marry outside their race? Do you mean you don't marry black people outside of your race? When the highest rate of intermarriage is between White males and Asian women. 

Actually this is not the full text because while this man is spouting off Alex P. Vidal keeps turning the camera toward himself and saying he is alone and being harassed. When this man asks him, "Why do the good Chinese have Muslims locked up in their country?" Alex points the camera at himself and says, "He say I am a Chinese." Alex must not understand English because that is not what the man said at all. He simply asked a question about why the Chinese are rounding up the Uighers and placing them into camps. From the sound of it I would imagine that man is either a member of or familiar with The Five-Percent Nation or some other sect of the Nation of Islam. 

For his blogpost dated March 18th Alex P. Vidal insensitively, disgracefully, and disingenuously dared  to compare his being shouted at by a crazy man, who he could have evaded like everyone else, to spa workers who were shot dead in Atlanta by a guy with a sex addiction and to the first man in this article, Noel Quintana, who was sliced across the face.

I STILL consider myself “luckier” compared to those members of Asian community murdered in Atlanta on March 17 in another wave of hate crime perpetrated against Asian Americans amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic.


The massacre in Atlanta occurred five days after a lunatic man verbally abused me on F train bound for the Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York City at 11 am on March 12 for being “a Chinese.”


The bloody carnage in Atlanta happened almost a month after another Filipino-American, Noel Quintana, 61, was slashed across the face from cheek to cheek inside the L subway train while on his way to his job in Manhattan. 

It’s not safe to be an Asian nowadays while there is still a pandemic. We still need to be extra careful in public and shouldn’t lower our guards down. 

Quintana, who had been in a confrontation with another man while the two were riding on the train, said the emotionally disturbed man was kicking his backpack and when he asked him to stop, the suspect attacked him and fled when the train stopped at First Avenue and 14th Street. 

Unlike Quintana, I wasn’t harmed but was a little bit frightened visibly.


I didn’t react violently and, thank God, I managed to “escape” unscathed physically.


https://alexpvidal.wordpress.com/2021/03/18/im-luckier-than-those-killed/

Is this "independent journalist" unaware that the Atlanta shooting was not motivated by hatred towards Asians or the pandemic? The shooter was a frequent customer of those spas. He had a sex addiction he could not overcome and in his frustration he shot those people. The REAL STORY there concerning crime and violence against Asians is that those spas were functioning as brothels. All across the USA there are Asians who have been trafficked by other Asians, particularly Chinese and Koreans, to work at such places. Those people are real victims and they remain invisible to society at large. The New York Times did a write up about these places in 2019.

"Thank God I managed to escape??" Alex P. Vidal could have escaped easily along with everyone else when they heard the man coming. Instead he chose to play the victim and not just remain seated in fear but record the man as he spit some knowledge and intersperse it with his own commentary about, "I am alone and being harassed." Just look at the fear in Alex P. Vidal's eyes as he bravely records the moment of his victimhood.


What a joke. What else could we expect from a man who admits that he falls asleep on the subway even though he knows he should not due to safety precautions? 

AS an Asian, I am guilty of being the No. 1 violator of the unwritten rule among Asian Americans in the United States, particularly in New York City nowadays: “Don’t sleep while inside a subway train.” 

Mea culpa, I fell asleep for a few minutes on my way to Brooklyn morning on Friday, February 26. it’s a good thing I was safe. 

And, oops, I did it again on my way back to Queens past noontime. 

We have been supposedly warned to be careful while in public, especially inside the bus and the subway train now that hate crimes involving Asian Americans have soared in these past weeks. 

I travel from Queens to Brooklyn vice versa via subway train four times a week and my travel time normally takes one hour and 15 minutes from 90th Station in Queens to Avenue I going Coney Island in Brooklyn. 

After 10 to 15 minutes of each travel, I usually fall asleep as most passengers do. I wake up about five stations before my final stop. 

Not anymore since three weeks ago after a 61-year-old Filipino passenger Noel Quintana, who looked like Chinese like me, received almost 100 stitches after he was slashed across the face by another passenger on the New York City subway on February 3. 

Most of us have been alerted that Quintana’s case could be linked to the upsurge of hate crimes perpetrated recently against mostly Chinese nationals referred to as “Asian Americans” in the media.

https://alexpvidal.wordpress.com/2021/03/11/oops-i-did-it-again/

Maybe he should just pack it in and return to Iloilo.

Let's look an one more story of a Filipino who was recently killed in the USA. The difference between him and all the rest is he died at the hands, or rather the knees, of the police.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/25/us/angelo-quinto-death-police-kneel.html

When Maria Quinto-Collins started filming her son at her home in Antioch, Calif., on Dec. 23, he was already on the floor, unresponsive. 

In the footage, a pair of officers with the Antioch Police Department can be seen rolling the son, Angelo Quinto, from his stomach onto his side. Ms. Quinto-Collins can be heard asking, repeatedly, “What happened?” 

Mr. Quinto, 30, never regained consciousness; he died three days later. Last week, his family filed a wrongful-death claim against the city. It said that the two officers, who had responded to a call from Mr. Quinto’s sister, knelt on Mr. Quinto’s back for nearly five minutes to subdue him and that he had “died as a direct consequence of the unreasonable force used against him.” 

John Burris, a lawyer for Mr. Quinto’s family, said Wednesday that Mr. Quinto’s mother and sister were traumatized and grieving and that they questioned the decision to invite the police to their home. “They thought that they were calling the police for help,” Mr. Burris said. 

He added that the family was awaiting the results of an autopsy from an independent medical examiner. “We feel pretty strongly that this is an asphyxiation case,” he said. 

According to the wrongful-death claim, Mr. Quinto sometimes struggled with anxiety and depression, and he appeared to be experiencing paranoia on the night of Dec. 23. His sister, Isabella Collins, called the police, expressing fear to the dispatcher. 

When the officers arrived, Ms. Quinto-Collins had been holding her son in her arms to calm him down, the claim said. The officers pulled him away, and Mr. Quinto asked them not to kill him, according to the claim. 

Then, the claim said, he was held on the floor of his mother’s bedroom and handcuffed while the officers — first one, then the other — placed their lower legs against his neck to press him down. Smudges of blood appeared beneath Mr. Quinto’s face.

“At no time while being restrained did Mr. Quinto resist physically or verbally,” the claim said. “After being restrained for almost five minutes, Mr. Quinto became lifeless.”

On December 23rd Angelo Quinto gave his mother and sister a hug that was too hard. Another story says:

The legal claim stems from a chaotic encounter at the family’s home on Crestwood Drive, shortly after 11 p.m. on Dec. 23. Quinto, who family members say suffered from anxiety, grabbed his mother and sister and began hugging them tightly around their heads and shoulders. 

“He was trying to keep us close, and it really freaked us out,” Quinto’s sister, Isabella “Bella” Collins, recalled in an interview Wednesday.

Collins managed to extricate herself and called police, saying her brother was acting erratically and that she feared he might hurt her mother.

When officers arrived, they found Maria Cassandra Quinto-Collins seated on the floor of her bedroom and embracing her son, according to a report from private investigator Juan Sigler, which is based on interviews with the mother and daughter. 

Police took Quinto from his mother, turned him on his stomach and handcuffed him. His mother said Quinto pleaded for his life when officers pinned him down, with one officer holding his legs while the other placed a knee on his neck.

In the cellphone video, which doesn’t capture the initial encounter, Quinto appears unresponsive as police flip him over onto his left side, revealing blood smeared on his mouth and a blood stain on the floor. Photos obtained by the Chronicle show a pool of blood near his body

There are parallels being drawn between this case and George Floyd but they are only superficial. Whereas George Floyd had 20 minutes to comply with the cops before they subdued him with a knee to the neck Angleo Qunito was thrown on the ground and subdued immediately. George Floyd had a lethal dose of fentanyl and other drugs in his system but this man apparently was sober. Angelo also had a pool of blood near his body and his mouth was smeared with blood which indicates something traumatic happened unlike in Floyd's case where there was no blood. He died three days later but the family thinks it is a case of asphyxiation. If he died three days later and not on the spot that would seem to rule out asphyxiation. It is a tragic story and we will likely be hearing more about it especially if the body cam footage is released.

Here you have 8 stories of Filipinos in America. 6 of them were victims of common crimes that the media wants to fan into anti-Asian hate hysteria. The 7th man, Alex P. Vidal, seems to want to be a victim as he could have left but did not. In either case he was not the victim of a crime but willingly sat down and listened to a man pontificate. The 8th man, Angelo Quinto, appears to be the victim of police overreaction. He would not be the first mentally ill person who has died in police custody becasue the police did not know how to handle such a situation properly. Linden Cameron was a 13 year old boy with autism who was killed by the police in 2020.

What we can learn from all this is that Filipinos in America are the victims of crime as much as anyone else. Plenty of white people have been sucker punched by a random stranger in the knockout game. Plenty of white people have been shot by or had to shoot at would be robbers. And plenty of white people have died at the hands of the police. It's nothing new for any group of people in the USA to be victims of crime or of the police. The violence committed against these Filipinos has nothing to do with Donald Trump, the Wuhan virus, or white supremacy.


Koreans protecting their business from looters during the 1992 L.A. riots

What's really needed is to take a good hard look at who the perpetrators of these crimes really are and avoid them as much as possible. We should rely on statistically relevant data and not base our conclusions on outliers. We should also rid ourselves of the fallacious notion that "not all C's are B's" and realize that, statistically, the majority of C's are indeed B's. Without that solid dose of reality the problem will continue and whole groups of people and ideologies which have nothing to do with crimes committed against Filipinos or any other group will continue to be falsely blamed. Creating scapegoats won't make the Filipino community in the USA any safer.