the long ride home

Entries tagged as ‘mar roxas’

taking the higher ground…

September 17, 2009 · Leave a Comment

so eto ang stand ni megastar sharon sa drama ni korina…

this was published sunday from the philippine daily inquirer.

Sharon stands by Kiko in backing Noynoy – INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Ignores Korina issue

By Bayani San Diego Jr.
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 17:10:00 09/13/2009

Filed Under: Politics, Elections, Eleksyon 2010, Entertainment (general)

 

MANILA, Philippines — Singer-actress Sharon Cuneta has refused to get dragged into a word war with broadcaster Korina Sanchez over the support extended by her husband, Sen. Francis Pangilinan, to the presidential bid of Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III, instead of Korina’s fiance, Senator Mar Roxas.

“I don’t even want to respond to it,” Cuneta quipped. “There is no reason to fight.”

Aquino, Roxas and Pangilinan are all Liberal Party members . Roxas gave way to Aquino following a snowballing campaign to have him drafted as the LP standard bearer in 2010. 

Pangilinan was on the receiving end of an on-air tirade from Sanchez, a day after Roxas backed out of the presidential race to give way to Sen. Noynoy Aquino.

Apparently, Sanchez felt that Pangilinan supported Aquino in his rise to power, which resulted in Roxas’ perceived slide down to the vice-presidential slot.

In a radio interview, Sanchez implied that Pangilinan “betrayed” Roxas and was an “ingrate” because she helped him get work in ABS-CBN.

But Cuneta, fondly called ‘Shawie,’ ‘Megastar’ or simply Mega by fans, said she and her husband have been “taking the higher ground.” “Even my husband declined to comment . . . because he’s a gentleman.”

In two separate interviews, Cuneta further clarified: “What makes me sad is that there is no need to lose friends at this point. Even if you don’t agree with someone, it doesn’t mean you’re betraying him or her.”

She asserted: “I feel that we, as the wives and partners of senators, shouldn’t get involved in issues concerning the senators. They are intelligent and educated men and can very well resolve problems on their own . . . without our interference.”

With the tact of a diplomat and the aim of a sharpshooter, Cuneta pointed out: “We are not rude people. We have a track record. We’re not perfect, but the public knows my husband and I are upright people. We are certainly not known for ‘betraying’ our friends.”

Cuneta insists that her husband’s support of Aquino’s presidential bid should not be considered an act of duplicity by anyone from Roxas’ camp.

“It’s just that Kiko shares Noynoy’s principles,” she explained. “When we support or help people, we never expect anything in return. That’s precisely why my husband ran as an independent in the last elections . . . because he wanted to steer clear of the politics of compromise.”

Although she believes in her husband’s capabilities, she is not disheartened by his decision to give up his vice-presidential bid.

“I’m not too excited about it anyway . . . Yes, Kiko wanted to run for higher office, but it’s a question of motivation. People have different reasons for running. In Kiko’s case, it’s for the greater good. We both love the country and we don’t want to give up on our country in spite of our many problems,” she said.

Case in point, she said, was her support for her husband’s advocacy to increase the number of absentee voters among overseas Filipino workers.

With her husband and friends actress Judy Ann Santos and TV host Ryan Agoncillo, she recently visited Hong Kong to encourage OFWs to register and vote in the May 2010 elections.

“What is most meaningful is doing our best in the here and now,” she explained. “So that when our kids ask us what we did for our country, we’ll be able to give them the right answer.”

Cuneta said she’s not rushing to move her family to Malacañang. “We’re very happy to live in our own house,” she said, in jest, adding It’s a home they built with their own hard-earned savings.

In any case, Cuneta noted: “Kiko is still young . . . In end, we trust in the Lord. Wherever He chooses to take us, we would go there. Wherever we would be most effective, we would be there.”

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very well said mega :)

Categories: babasahin · current affairs
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if you have to tell people you are…

September 5, 2009 · 2 Comments

warning : this post is long… but still please read it :-)

Thursday as i read my daily dose of news via inquirer.net, i checked on the page one newspaper print mismo and check on the ones i want to read… this article about korina sanchez caught my attention and while reading i was gigling! truly i am.. it’s like reading an article entitled : “how to ruin your fiance’s political career in 1 day”  

i had to share it to friends so i posted it on my facebook account.

Picture1

i was as well intrigued how mar roxas’ PR group would remedy this so i kept myself posted of anything new about this. i am not an avid follower of conrado de quiros but i like him and i would read what’s on his mind given that i have enough time, so as i was recalling his previous articles i missed, i came into this column by him…

Power – INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Theres The Rub
Power

By Conrado de Quiros
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 00:12:00 08/27/2009

Maria Montelibano told me this story: It was the hardest thing in the world to persuade Cory Aquino to relocate to Malacañang after Edsa. She began by holding office at the Cojuangco Building, then went back to Times Street. Her aides pleaded with her to abandon her old home as it was a security nightmare. She finally did, but refused to move to the office Ferdinand Marcos had occupied in his time. She would have nothing to do with it. She moved instead to the Guest House, defending her decision by saying, “I am a guest of the Filipino people.”

She was utterly convinced of that, and lived by it. Everything there, the furniture, the paintings, the treasures—indeed all the power and opulence the Palace resonated with, or reeked of—she said, belonged to the people. She would admonish her apos against playing with the bric-a-brac, saying it wasn’t theirs to play with, it was the people’s. The admonitions were such that at one point one of them, upon finding a chocolate bar on a table, asked innocently: “Can I eat this? Or does this also belong to the people?”

I remembered this story when I saw that article some days ago about Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo registering on Forbes magazine as the 44th most powerful woman in the world. Forbes, of course, is clear that the list does not confer a positive note on power. Indeed, the explanation for why Arroyo is powerful is not altogether flattering. It includes: “A potential power grab is in the works…. Congressional allies are pushing through changes to the Constitution that would see the Philippines adopt a parliamentary system; then Arroyo could … become prime minister.”

But the infinite danger of calling someone powerful, notwithstanding the apparent lack of judgment about its being good or bad, is that it does give a luster to her or him. It’s the same thing with Time Magazine’s Person of the Year. The caveats are also plentiful: The title is meant to be judgment-free, the Person of the Year can be both good and bad. But the grant of prominence by itself does surround the person with an aura of being larger than life, subverting the qualification.

All of it makes you wonder about the true meaning of power.

Where I stand at least, what being powerful means is being responsible for power. Or quite heroically, as in Cory’s case, recognizing that power, particularly the kind reposed on leaders, emanates not from yourself but from the people. You are only as good a leader as you are recognized by your followers. And you are only as good a leader as you give your followers reason to do so. By earning their trust, by keeping their trust.

That is certainly not done by gorging on P1-million dinners. What gives that a bitterer taste is the contrast between the way Cory treated public property while she was president and the way Gloria does while she is non-president. Made even bitterer by the contrast in justifications. Cory was not unlike the activists of my days, when revolution still drew idealists to its fold like a beacon in a storm-tossed sea, who believed that taking a single piece of thread from the masses was an epic crime. Cory held the same thing, give or take a bar of chocolate or two.

Gloria? Well, let’s just say, may araw din kayo.

Just as well, where I stand, what being powerful means is being distrustful of power. That insight comes from Oriana Fallaci who interviewed the world’s most powerful men in her time, from Henry Kissinger to the Shah of Iran, from Yassir Arafat to Deng Xiaoping. The only way to deal with power, she said, is to be distrustful of it. It’s the only way to keep yourself sane, it’s the only way to remain human. The truly powerful men and women did so, and were so. The rest were just bastards.

Cory did so, and was so. You can’t have anyone who was more distrustful of power, who was more uncomfortable with power. From start to end, she took only as much power as she needed to mend a tattered country, to heal a wounded land. To the extent that she knew how, heaven knows she wasn’t perfect, though heaven knows too some are less imperfect than others. Her friends continue to talk of how during the harshest challenges to her government, which were the coups, she never once thought to declare emergency rule or, heaven forbid, martial law. She had the stoutest defense of all, she said. It wasn’t a loyal military, it was a loyal people. It wasn’t the power of the soldiers’ arms, it was the power of the people’s love.

Armed with the same power, she left power willingly, quietly, gracefully.

Gloria? Well, read Forbes’ explanation again about why she is powerful.

Forbes has its own world, and its own system of reckoning of the people that inhabit it. I have my own. In my book, the truly powerful people on this earth, past and present, are the likes of Mother Teresa, Mahatma Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King, Albert Einstein, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Joe Burgos—and Corazon Aquino.

These were (are) people who never sought power the way misers seek riches, but sought only to do good as best they knew how. These were people who never hoarded power the way misers hoard gold, counting the coins by candlelight every night and dreaming of more, but shared themselves with others as best they knew how.

In the final reckoning, whatever the mirage and sheen and illusion of the present, only good is really larger than life, evil is just smaller than life. Look at Marcos and Cory and ask yourself who was, or is, the colossus that straddled the world. Look at Gloria and Cory and ask yourself who is larger than life and bigger than death.

Margaret Thatcher once said: “Being powerful is like being a lady: if you have to tell people you are, you aren’t.”

Some people are ladies, some are just ladies of the night.

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conrado de quiros may not be an expert in assessing women but he made a good definition of what a lady is in this article. i then asked myself after reading, am i a korina, a gloria or a cory (i hope i’m not the first 2…).

Categories: babasahin · current affairs
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philippine daily inquirer ngayon – 11.21.08

November 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

pic-11210410500233

na naman?!!!

hindi pa ba nagsasawa ang mga nag-aatempt? alam ko na change is often good. pero ano namang proof natin na ang change na mangyayari e para mga tao nga at hindi sa mga binoto ng tao?

tama yan. huwag paliparin at pigilan ang gustong bumuhay ng issue na ito.

(kunwari serious… nakita ko kasi sa status message ni Mar Roxas sa facebook, na take note is one of network friends, kuno… na – Mar Roxas… is pensive about the new chacha rumblings…)

Categories: babasahin · current affairs
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