Sunday, October 24, 2021

Let’s end 56.5 years of kleptocracy
By: Hector Tarrazona

Kleptocracy, according to Wikipedia, “is a government whose corrupt leaders use political power to appropriate the wealth of their nation, typically by embezzling or misappropriating government funds at the expense of the wider population.”


From Dec. 30, 1965, when Ferdinand Marcos became our president, to June 30, 2022, when a new president will have been elected, it will be exactly 56.5 years. This is a dark period of kleptocracy in our history from dictator Marcos to our worst president, Rodrigo Roa Duterte.


In between Marcos and Duterte, we had Corazon Aquino, Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and Benigno Aquino III, all weak leaders with varying degrees of mediocrity. They all failed to stop thievery in government. In Estrada’s case, he was kicked out from Malacañang by Edsa People Power Revolution 2 because of brazen plunder involving $78 million to $80 million.


If we are suffering now, it is mainly because of the unabated corruption in our government caused by the insatiable greed of our government officials. We now know that even the money for the COVID-19 pandemic was channeled to Pharmally, whose owners are more loved by President Duterte than the 110 million suffering Filipinos.


We can end our country’s 56.5 years of kleptocracy by electing one of the two most qualified presidential candidates, Sen. Ping Lacson or Vice President Leni Robredo. Either one of them can minimize, if not totally eradicate, corruption in government.


With all due respect to the rest of the 97 presidential candidates, I would like to humbly advise them to withdraw from the presidential race and help campaign for Senator Ping or VP Leni instead. It is a great sacrifice on their part, but it would be for the good of our country and all of us, especially the future generations.


Instead of running for president, my unsolicited advice for former senator Bongbong Marcos is to apologize to the Filipino people on behalf of his father who “embezzled $5 billion to $10 billion” from 1972 to 1986, according to Transparency International’s Global Corruption Report 2004. Then, he must return the money and other properties that belong to the government.


These two actions would somehow assuage the pent-up emotions of people, especially the victims of martial law. They would also lessen the guilty feelings of the Marcoses, even as they remain in complete denial to this day.


Should Bongbong Marcos refuse to withdraw his candidacy for president, let’s give him zero vote in our respective precincts. The son of the dictator and the direct heir and beneficiary of the Marcos loot does not deserve to be our president. If the Marcoses were in another country, some members of the family would have been languishing in jail, or all of them could have been killed by an angry mob during the 1986 revolution.


But we are in the Philippines where most of our elected leaders and decision-makers are suckers for tyrants. In addition, our misplaced kindness is also the injustice that oppresses us.


Again, let us stop kleptocracy by voting Senator Ping or VP Leni for president in May 2022. And let us all pray to our God in heaven for this to become a reality, so that we could end our miseries and sufferings as a people.


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Hector Tarrazona is a 1968 PMA graduate, a member of MDM batch 1991 and scholar of AIM, and a jet fighter pilot. He was No. 3 in the hit list of Malacañang in 1985-86 as an original member of RAM’s 11-man ad hoc steering committee. As the most senior officer left in Fernando Air Base, Lipa City, he stopped its officers and men from joining the 1989 coup attempt that almost toppled the government of President Corazon Aquino.

 Lacson: Mayor Bistek a Revelation, Deserves Senate Seat

October 24, 2021 - Former Quezon City Mayor Herbert Bautista is a revelation who deserves a Senate seat.


Sen. Panfilo M. Lacson stressed this late Saturday after hearing Bautista speak on the need to empower local government units (LGUs) to deal with disasters and other problems.


"Mayor Herbert 'Bistek' Bautista was a revelation in our regular 'Online Kumustahan' with the great people of Antipolo City this afternoon. Hearing him speak for the first time is one great opportunity for me to know the man better. He deserves to be in the Senate," Lacson said on his Twitter account.


Bautista is one of the senatorial bets of the Lacson-Sotto tandem who joined the regular "Online Kumustahan" in Antipolo City. He is running under the Nationalist People's Coalition which Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III chairs. Also joining yesterday’s virtual rally were Dr. Minguita Padilla and Paolo Capino under Partido Reporma, which Lacson chairs.


At the "Online Kumustahan," Bautista stressed that Lacson's advocacy to empower LGUs is at no time more needed than now, during the time of disasters and the Covid pandemic.


"Nasa isip niya yung kagalingan ng mga local governments. Alam na alam niya na ang mga lokal na pamahalaan ay may mga pangangailangan. Alam na alam niya na ang mga lokal na pamahalaan ay mga kagalingan naman. Yung mga tao diyan, yung mga nasa departments, magagaling yan, mga equipped yan. Yung mga mayor, vice mayor, konsehal, barangay officials ay may mga kanya-kanyang kakayahan nguni't may kakulangan sa pondo (Lacson believes in local governments and their ability to address their own needs and priorities, so long as they are properly equipped with enough funds)," Bautista, who served as Quezon City mayor, said at the "Online Kumustahan" with residents of Antipolo City's second district.


The former mayor said empowering LGUs will be especially useful now that the country is dealing not just with the Covid pandemic but also with disasters from typhoons.


Bautista, who studied at the University of the Philippines- NCPAG and National Defense College of the Philippines, also cited his experience as mayor where anticipation and planning are key.


"Sa pagsasaayos ng pondo o ang tinatawag na ni President Lacson na budget reforms ay bababa po yan hanggang sa barangay para yung pagtugon sa mga pangangailangan po talaga ng mga barangay, kung ano man yung nagiging suliranin nila sa kanilang mga lugar (With budget reforms, much-needed funds will go down to the local governments to address their needs and priorities)," he said.


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Lacson: 2022 Election Not About Personalities But Solutions

October 24, 2021 - The May 2022 general elections should not be about personalities but about finding solutions to the enormous problems facing the country, Sen. Panfilo M. Lacson said Saturday.


Lacson, addressing residents of Antipolo City's second district, said this would require competence, experience and integrity in public service.


"Ang eleksyon sa May 2022 is not about personalities or those running for different elective positions either sa national or local. It is more about knowing the enormous problems and offering solutions. It is more about competence, experience, and loyalty in public service," he said at his and Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III's "Online Kumustahan."


"Ayusin natin ang gobyerno para maayos ang buhay ng Pilipino. Hindi ito kaya gawin ng isa, dalawa o sampung Pilipino lang (We should fix the ills of government to improve the lives of Filipinos. This cannot be done just by one, two or 10 Filipinos)," he added.


He reiterated the people should not look at personalities or "gimmicks," but instead at the seriousness of the problems especially amid the pandemic.


Lacson, who is running under Partido Reporma, also reiterated that while the problems facing the country - including a huge debt, corruption, the effects of the Covid pandemic, and sovereignty in the West Philippine Sea - are due to bad government, the solution also lies in good government.


He said it is important to restore trust in the government - something he intends to do through policies, including disciplining the bureaucracy through leadership by example.


Also, he said the solutions to the problems must be based on data, science and research, even as the government must work more closely with the private sector and local government units instead of engaging in overregulation.


"Dapat maibalik ang tiwala sa liderato. At yan ang aming pagsisikapan (We should restore trust in our leadership. That is what the Lacson-Sotto tandem intends to do)," he said.


"The biggest problem of this country is government - bad government. Ang solution hindi lalayo sa problema. It lies in the face of the problem itself. Government ang solution, good government," he added.


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 Lacson: Tama Na Ang Lockdowns

Ipinangako ni Partido Reporma Presidential bet, Senador Panfilo “Ping” Lacson na tatapusin na ang paulit-ulit na lockdowns sa Pilipinas kapag siya ang naging Pangulo sa 2022. 


“Sa nakikita ko, kailangan may balanse sa pagbubukas ng negosyo sa pamamagitan ng pagtanggal ng lockdowns,” sabi ni Lacson sa pangalawang bahagi ng Online Kumustahan ng tambalang Lacson-Sotto sa Antipolo. 


Pero ayon kay Lacson, hindi dapat gawin ng basta-basta ang pagtitigil ng lockdown.  Bumuo na sina Lacson at Sotto ng mga grupo ng eksperto na magpaplano kung paano ito mabilis at maayos na maipatupad.


“Kailangan data-driven, science-based. Pero kailangan talaga buksan na ang ekonomiya kasi baka hindi na tayo tumagal. Ito na ang pinakamalaking tulong na maibibigay natin sa bawat pamilyang Pilipino na nawalan ng ikinabubuhay sa ilalim ng pandemya” ani Lacson.


Pinakaimportanteng hakbaang ang pagpapabilis ng rollout ng bakuna, na magagawa naman sa tulong ng mga lokal na pamahalaan at pribadong sektor. Dagdag ni Lacson, isa sa mga nagpapagal ng bakunahan sa bansa ay ang pag-ipit ng nasyonal na gobyerno sa supply ng bakuna. 


“Ang daming pahirap. Ang isang solusyon ay less government intervention, ‘wag tayong mag over-regulate.” Diin ni Lacson.


Nauna nang sinabi ni Lacson na bukod sa paulit-ulit na lockdowns, ang nagpapalala sa COVID-response ng Pilipinas ay korapsyon sa Covid response. 


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Friday, October 22, 2021

Lucy Torres says Lacson-Sotto tandem is bonded by peace and order platform


MANILA, Philippines — Leyte 4th District Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomez expressed her admiration for the 2022 tandem of Senate President Vicente Sotto III and Sen. Panfilo Lacson, as she touted the relevance of their campaign platform to families living in the provinces, especially rural areas.

“I admire very much the duo of Sen. Ping and Sen. Sotto because they bonded together under a platform of peace and order, and countryside development, which are issues very close to the heart of a probinsyana like me,” Torres-Gomez said.

Lacson is running for president, while Sotto is vying for the vice presidency in the 2022 national elections.

The pair had initially included Torres-Gomez in their senatorial slate, but the Leyte lawmaker opted to seek the mayoralty seat in Ormoc City, which will be vacated by her husband, incumbent Mayor Richard Gomez, who in turn is seeking to replace his wife at the House of Representatives.

Torres-Gomez also praised how Lacson and Sotto “conduct themselves in a stately manner, standing on their strengths and shared vision as they offer themselves as candidates for the coming 2022 elections.”

Lacson and Sotto were the first to officially announce their 2022 political plans, a decisive move that proved their determined and serious desire to further serve the Filipino people beyond the walls of Congress.

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Lacson takes lessons from 2004 loss for fresh presidential bid

Sen. Panfilo Lacson files his certficate of candidacy for the 2022 presidential elections at the Harbor Garden tent of the Sofitel Hotel in Pasay City on October 6, 2021. Jonathan Cellona, ABS-CBN News


MANILA— Sen. Panfilo Lacson has set his sights on the presidency for the second time in his half-century career in government, this time more optimistic in securing a victory, thanks to "lessons learned" from his failed presidential bid nearly a decade ago.

Lacson, who lost to Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in the 2004 race, is the lone repeat contender in the upcoming 2022 presidential elections.

"I've learned a lot in the 2004 run," Lacson said in an online forum weeks after he filed his certificate of candidacy for president under the Partido para sa Demokratikong Reporma (Reporma).

When asked what was his biggest takeaway from his previous loss, Lacson said: "Do not run as an orphan."

In 2004, the former Philippine National Police (PNP) chief was forced to campaign with only a few allies after the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) was spilt into two factions, with former Sen. Agapito "Butz" Aquino backing Lacson's candidacy and the late Sen. Edgardo Angara supporting the bid of actor Fernando Poe Jr.

"Back then, we felt like an orphan," Lacson said.

"Ang liit ng grupo namin (Our group was very small) but these are very competent and qualified people," he said.

Among those who campaigned with and for Lacson was Aquino, San Juan City Rep. Ronaldo Zamora and former House Minority Leader Carlos Padilla.

"We were a very cohesive group then but talagang napakaliit (it was very small)," he said.

Unlike his 2004 presidential bid, Lacson said his fresh campaign for 2022 is backed not just by one but a coalition of at least 3 political parties.

Lacson's Reporma has coalesced with the National Unity party (NUP) and the Nationalist People's Coalition, which is chaired by Senate President Vicente Sotto III, Lacson's vice presidential candidate.

"We have very good and competent individuals na malaki 'yung grupo (that belong to a big group)," he said, noting that he now has more fire power and ground troops for the upcoming national polls.

"I hope our grassroots organizations will really pull through. 'Yun ang aming (That's our) effort," he said.

WINNING STREAK AND SOLID BASE

Candidates who seek the presidency again after losing their first bid tend to have worse results on their second or third attempts at bagging the country's top elected post, according to data from the Commission on Elections (Comelec).

Late Sen. Mirian Defensor Santiago ranked 2nd in the 1992 national elections, with 19.73 percent of votes. She placed 7th in the 1998 polls with only 2.96 percent of votes.

In the 2016 elections, Santiago improved her 1998 numbers and placed 5th with 3.4 percent of votes. The standing, however, was still a far cry from her maiden run for the presidency.

Former first lady Imelda Marcos landed in 5th place in the 1992 presidential elections with 10.32 percent of votes. She tried her luck again in 1998, but withdrew from the presidential race after getting less than 2 percent of votes.

In the 1998 polls, late Sen. Raul Roco placed 3rd with 13.83 percent of votes, but dropped to 4th place with 6.45 percent in his second attempt in 2004.

Evangelist Bro. Eddie Villanueva placed 5th in his first presidential bid in 2004, with 6.16 percent of total votes. He had the same showing in the 2010 national elections, but his share of votes dipped to 3.12 percent.

"A candidate who has lost once will have very little to no chance of winning," communications expert Joyce Ramirez told ABS-CBN News.

"To convince people for the top post, there should be a record of consistent winning. Otherwise, it does not entice confidence if one has a record of loss," she said.

A winning streak "will always be at the back of the minds of voters" when it comes to presidential races, Ramirez explained.

Candidates who do not have a solid base of supporters would also find it difficult to win a presidential race regardless of their win-lose record, she said.

"It is important for any candidate to have that rabid following or bailiwick then let it multiply, said Ramirez, who has handled several political campaigns and private sector branding projects over the years.

"The presidency is an emotionally-charged race. There is very little chance at winning if one doesn't have a solid base."
'NOT HELPLESS'
In Pulse Asia's September 6 to 11 polls, only 6 percent of respondents said they would vote for Lacson, placing the police chief-turned-senator behind 4 other presidential contenders.

But Lacson's team shrugged off these numbers, saying their standard bearer's "steady, slow burn" trajectory towards Malacañang is "a good sign at this point."

"Para siyang tinatawag na slow burn, steady. Two, naging four. Four tumaas sa eight. It keeps going up," said Reporma spokesperson Minguita Padilla.

(It's like a slow burn that's steady. Two became four. Four became eight. It keeps going up.)

"Hindi ‘yung mataas tapos biglang naging parang shooting star, ‘yung ganoon, na nawala ang shine... 'yung iba, either it’s a plateau or bumababa," she said.

(He's not like other candidates who are like shooting stars that would suddenly lose their shine... others either plateau or decline.)

Lacson still has enough time to "increase his public presence," said Dennis Coronacion, who chairs the University of Santo Tomas Department of Political Science.

"Ngayon hindi pa maka-connect sa kaniya (Lacson) ang tao," he told ABS-CBN News.

(As of now, people have yet to establish a connection with Lacson.)

"Hindi totally helpless si Lacson. He can do something about it. Puwede niya pang ayusin 'yan," he said.

(Lacson is not totally helpless. He can do something about it. He can still fix that.)

The Reporma standard bearer needs to have a clearer stance on issues because he seems to be "trying to cast an image as a candidate that can draw votes from the Duterte supporters and can draw votes from the anti-Duterte supporters," Coronacion said.

"Namamangka sila sa dalawang ilog (they are navigating two rivers at once)... Let's see if that's going to work," he said.

Lacson can find refuge in the initial failure but eventual success of US President Joe Biden, political analyst Ramon Casiple said.

Biden first ran for US president in 1988, but eventually withdrew his candidacy after his campaign was marred by several issues including allegations of plagiarism and false claims over his educational attainment.

Over 3 decades later, Biden snagged the presidency from re-electionist Donald Trump.

"He (Biden) ran and lost but he ran again because he studied his record. He knows what the people want," Casiple said, noting that Lacson should take a cue from Biden's strategy.

"If you've been judged already by the people, you have to really discern if that judgment is a long lasting one or simply because there was an issue that may have been misinterpreted by the people," he said.

Lacson, known for his brand of discipline in the PNP, was lauded in the '90s for his campaigns against kidnapping and jueteng, but was dragged into the brutal killing of the Kuratong Baleleng gang members, and the murder of publicist Salvador "Bubby" Dacer and his driver Emmanuel Corbito.

The senator denied his involvement in both cases, but fled the Philippines in 2010, months after former police senior superintendent Cezar Mancao II named him as the mastermind of the Dacer-Corbito murder case.

Lacson returned to the Philippines in 2011 after the Supreme Court backed the Court of Appeals' ruling to dismiss the case against him, noting that Mancao was "not a credible and trustworthy witness."

In 2012, the Supreme Court dismissed the Kuratong Baleleng case against Lacson. 

In 2015, Mancao apologized to Lacson and Estrada for linking them in the Dacer–Corbito case, saying he was forced by Estrada nemesis Arroyo, the former president, to implicate them in the crime.

"He (Mancao) went to my office through a classmate of his," Lacson said in a recent interview.

"I readily accepted the apology. I am a very forgiving person pero mahirap ako makalimot sa ginawa sa akin (but I find it hard to forget the wrongs done to me)," the senator said.

The ability to make a political comeback after suffering from bad publicity is "the mark of a leadership of a politician," Casiple said.

"It's a question of reading the people's mind so they put your name on the ballot," he said.

Lacson said his team is disinterested in using issues of the past or controversies surrounding other candidates to boost his survey rankings.

"We will avoid getting down to gutter politics... We will do away with dirty politics, rise on our merits," Lacson said.

"'Yung mga naninira probably they have no merit to speak of kaya sinisiraan na lang nila mga kalaban nila."

(Those involved in mudslinging may have no merit to speak of that's why they just badmouth their opponents.)

Treading the "last leg" of his career as a politician, Lacson, 73, said he would rather tell voters about his career milestones and programs in hopes that this kind of campaigning would make vying for the presidency sweeter the second time around.

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Thursday, October 21, 2021

WHY CAMPAIGN AND VOTE FOR SEN. PANFILO M. LACSON for PRESIDENT

We Need a Decisive Leader and HE Needs Us!


WINNABILITY: He was 3rd overall with 15.5M votes in 2007 and 4th overall with almost 17M votes in 2016 despite running for senator as an Independent candidate, and despite the political persecutions, demolition jobs and character assasination thrown against him.

MATURITY: He has the idealism of the youth and the wisdom of the old. 

HONESTY: He did not enrich himself even when young and until now while in public office. He is not expected to enrich himself in the remaining years of his life, even as president.

EXPERIENCE: He is the only one among the presidential candidates who had held a national office as an executive on top of more than 100,000 officers and men of our national police scattered down to our remotest barangay. 

NATIONAL SECURITY: More than any candidate, he has the training and experience to deal with both our domestic and international security problems, specifically local insurgency  and international terrorism, not to mention our problem with China.

NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT: He is an experienced legislator who studies the details and numbers in our budget in relation to our problems.

He was never partisan and has no political color, but always pro-Filipino. He lives by the motto: “Ang tama ay panatilihing tama at ang mali ay itama”. 

CHARACTER: Most of all, PING LACSON was an officer and is a gentleman who can deal with anybody, from the ordinary man in the streets (his father was a jeepney driver) to the highest officials of foreign governments in the most dignified manner.

Let us tell everyone - our families, our relatives and friends and their relatives and friends, and educate first time voters - what leadership the good senator can bring to this country once elected.

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 PING LACSON OFFICIAL JINGLES FOR 2022!!!

(Please Watch and Share)

👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇


 Palitan ng “Anak ng mga Magnanakaw”

SEN PING LACSON HEADLINES ON NATIONAL NEWS


 

 Artist4Ping - P to the I-N-G (Ping Lacson Rap)

(Please Watch and Share)

👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇


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