Saturday, October 31, 2020

Family Appointment with El Shaddai in High Definition (HD)

 

After twelve years and nine months of broadcasting in Standard Definition (480i, 4:3 SDTV) format, The weekly Family Appointment with El Shaddai held at the Outdoor Stage, Amvel City or at the Quirino Grandstand, Rizal Park and Tuesday fellowships at the Cuneta Astrodome or at the Rizal Baseball Stadium or at the El Shaddai International House of Prayer switched to High Definition (1080i, 16:9 HDTV) and Ultra High Definition (3840p 16:9 UHDTV) starting on January 3, 2004.

On January 6, 2007, DBS TV switched to MPEG-4 AVC for its satellite broadcasts.

A scene from the three-in-a-half hour healing message by the Servant-Leader during the Family Appointment with El Shaddai at Quirino Grandstand, Rizal Park, Manila where the millions of prayer partners had their opened umbrellas inverted to catch El Shaddai miracle hankies being dropped from a helicopter.




The Buhay Makulay Productions 4K HDR outside broadcast truck is located at the north wing of the grandstand.

The live TV coverage of the Weekly Family Appointment with El Shaddai is aired over:
  • SkyCable Metro Manila Channel 155 (SD) and 251 (HD)
  • SkyCable Bacolod, Baguio, Cebu, Davao, Dumaguete, General Santos and Iloilo Channel 53
  • SkyCable Balayan, Tanauan and Zamboanga Channel 2
  • SkyCable Bulacan Channel 4
  • SkyCable Dagupan, Urdaneta, Naga and Lipa Channel 6
  • SkyCable Laoag Channel 12
  • Cablelink Metro Manila Channel 5
  • A&L Cable Television Silang, Cavite Channel 3
  • AB Bejrano Cable TV Tuba, Benguet Channel
  • Accutronics System, Inc. Odiongan, Romblon Channel __
  • Aclan Cable Network, Inc. Lemery, Batangas Channel __
  • Agoncillo Cable TV Agoncillo, Batangas Channel __
  • Air Cable Tarlac City Channel 3
  • Aklan Cable TV Kalibo Channel 4
  • Alamada Cable Vision Corporation Alamada, Cotabato Channel __
  • Allen Closed Circuit Television System Channel __
  • Allied Cable TV Systems Corporation Naga City Channel __
  • Alpha Vision Cable Corporation Bustos, Angat and Norzagaray, Bulacan Channel 2
  • AMS Paracale CATV System Paracale, Camarines Norte Channel __
  • ANH CATV Gubat, Sorsogon Channel __
  • Astra Cable Candon City and Narvacan, Ilocos Sur Channel __
  • ATD Community Cable Vision, Inc. Balamban, Cebu Channel __
  • Atimonan CATV Services, Inc. Atimonan, Quezon Channel __
  • Bago City Cable TV Bago City, Negros Occidental Channel 24
  • Bakun CATV Bakun, Benguet Channel __
  • Balayan Cable Network, Inc. Balayan, Batangas Channel __
  • Bambista Cable TV, Inc. Bautista and Bayambang Pangasinan Channel __
  • Banahaw Utilities Corporation Lucban, Quezon Channel 3
  • Beam Cable Network Aringay, La Union Channel __
  • Bicol CATV System, Inc. Camarines Norte Channel 7
  • Bicolandia Cable TV, Inc. Ligao City Channel __
  • Biliran Tele TV Network Corporation Naval, Biliran Channel __
  • Binangonan Cable TV Corporation Binangonan, Rizal Channel 2
  • Bislig City Cable TV Bislig City, Surigao Del Sur Channel __
  • Blackstone Cable TV Corporation Maitum, Sarangani Channel __
  • Bogo Cable TV, Inc. Bogo City Channel __
  • Bohol Community Cable TV Systems, Inc. Tagbilaran City Channel __
  • Bonari 203 Multi-Purpose Cooperative Rizal, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Bongabong Cable Network & Development, Inc. Bongabong, Oriental Mindoro Channel __
  • Broad Cable Communications Inc. Arayat and Magalang, Pampanga Channel
  • Buenavista Cable TV, Inc. San Jose de Buenavista, Antique Channel 8
  • Buhi Satellite TV-RO System Buhi, Camarines Sur __
  • Bukidnon Z5 Cable Maramag, Bukidnon Channel __
  • Bulan Satellite TV, Inc. Bulan, Sorsogon Channel __
  • Bulusan Cable Television Network, Inc. Bulusan, Sorsogon Channel __
  • C.P. CATV Cable Corporation Luisiana, Laguna Channel __
  • Cable Star, Inc. San Mateo, Rizal Channel 2
  • Cable Television Network, Inc. Real, Quezon Channel __
  • Cabletronics Batangas Cable System Nasugbu, Batangas Channel __
  • Cablevision Systems Corporation Sta. Cruz, Laguna Channel __
  • Caceres Cable TV Corporation Naga City Channel __
  • Cadiz Community Satellite Link, Inc. Cadiz City, Negros Occidental Channel __
  • Calapan Cable Center, Inc. Calapan City Channel 8
  • Calauag CATV System Calauag, Quezon Channel __
  • Calbayog Cable TV and Entertainment Services Calbayog City, Western Samar Channel __
  • Camarines Cable TV Vinzons, Camarines Norte Channel __
  • Camiguin Island CATV Corporation Mambajao, Camiguin Channel __
  • Candelaria Cable Television, Inc. Candelaria, Quezon Channel __
  • Capitol CATV & Communications System, Inc. Sta. Cruz, Occidental Mindoro Channel __
  • Castillo Via Satellite CATV Kasibu, Nueva Vizcaya Channel __
  • Catanauan Credit and Development Cooperative Cable TV System Catanauan, Quezon Channel __
  • Catubig Satellite and Cable TV System Catubig, Northern Samar Channel __
  • CATV Puerto Princesa Cable Inc. Palawan Channel 8
  • Cavite Cable Corporation Kawit and Rosario, Cavite Channel __
  • Cebu Cable TV Management Corporation Cebu City Channel 6
  • Celebrity Cable Network Tayabas City, Quezon Channel 12
  • Celestron Cable San Pablo City, Laguna Channel 10
  • Central Luzon Cable Television Network, Inc. Hagonoy, Bulacan Channel 3
  • Channel Plus Cable Network, Inc. Gloria, Pinamalayan and Socorro, Oriental Mindoro Channel __
  • Charles CATV Systems, Inc. Masbate City, Masbate Channel __
  • Cibi International Cable Network Bato, Camarines Sur Channel __
  • Cine Vision Cable TV Corporation Zarraga, Iloilo Channel __
  • Civicon CATV Services General Luna, Quezon Channel __
  • Clare Cable Television Taal, Batangas Channel __
  • CMD Cable Vision Cauayan City, Oriental Mindoro Channel 1
  • Community Cable Vision Corporation Liliw and Los Banos, Laguna Channel 8
  • Concepcion Pay TV Network, Inc. Capas and Concepcion, Tarlac Channel 3
  • Continental Cable Network Calabanga, Camarines Sur Channel __
  • Cotabato Cable Television Network, Inc. Cotabato City Channel 5
  • Countrywide Telecom, Inc. San Carlos City, Negros Occidental Channel __
  • Cuenca Cable TV System Cuenca Rosario, Batangas
  • Cuyapo Cable Network, Inc. Cuyapo, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • D’ Leopard’s Cable TV Services Catbalogan City, Western Samar Channel __
  • D’ Metro Cable System Daet, Camarines Norte Channel __
  • Dalisay Video Network Calauag, Quezon Channel __
  • Dapitan City Cable TV Dapitan City Channel __
  • Dare Communication Network Floridablanca, Pampanga Channel __
  • Dasca Cable Services Dasmarinas City Channel 2
  • Datelsat CATV Network Pampanga Channel __
  • DCN Cable TV Bolinao, Pangasinan Channel __
  • DCTV Cable Network Albay And Sorsogon Channel __
  • DearBC Cable Network-Plantation Libona and Manolo Fortich, Bukidnon
  • Delmendo Cable TV Network Asingan and San Manuel, Pangasinan Channel __
  • Diamond Cable TV Lawaan, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Discovery Cable TV Services Balayan, Batangas Channel __
  • Dolores Cable TV Corporation Dolores, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Don Carlos Cable TV Inc. Poblacion, Don Carlos, Bukidnon Channel __
  • E & E Electronics & CATV Services, Inc. Bayawan City, Negros Oriental Channel __
  • E.M. Herrero Television Network Program Baggao, Cagayan Channel __
  • Eagle Vision, Inc. Ilocos Sur Channel __
  • East Manila Cable Cainta, Rizal Channel 16
  • Eastcoast Cable TV Network Baganga, Davao Oriental Channel __
  • EFG CATV Irosin, Sorsogon Channel __
  • Sabangan Cable Network, Sabangan, Mountain Province Channel __
  • ESTV Cable Network Albay and Sorsogon Channel __
  • Excel Cable Network, Inc. La Union Channel __
  • Excelite Cable Network Company San Miguel, Bulacan Channel 18
  • Exsat Multi-Tech Industries, Inc. Pikit, North Cotabato Channel __
  • Fiesta Cable, Inc., Southern Leyte Channel __
  • Fil-Products Service Television, Inc. Ozamiz City, Misamis Occidental Channel __
  • Fil-Products Service Television, Inc. Tacloban City Channel 40
  • FilStar CATV Service Paranas, Samar Channel __
  • Filvision, Inc. Roxas City Channel __
  • First Golden North Cable Vision Corporation Naguilian, Isabela Channel __
  • First Integrated Cable TV Corporation San Jose City, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Focus Cable TV Guagua, Pampanga Channel __
  • Franz Cable System Tulunan, North Cotabato Channel __
  • Freeport Cable, Inc. Subic Bay Freeport Zone Alexis Channel __
  • G.R. CATV Services Sta. Cruz and Torrijos, Marinduque Channel __
  • Galaxy Cable Corporation GBox Digital Batangas Channels 2 and 6
  • Gemsat Cable TV Network, Inc. Pulilan, Bulacan Channel __
  • Gemstar Cable TV San Francisco, Agusan del Sur Channel __
  • General Luna Cable TV General Luna, Surigao del Norte Channel __
  • Goa Cable TV Goa, Camarines Sur Channel __
  • Grapheld-B Cable TV Sapang Dalaga, Misamis Occidental Channel __
  • Gulf Cable 2000, Inc. Lingayen, Pangasinan Channel __
  • Headway Cable TV Bataraza, Palawan Channel __
  • Hinigaran Entertainment Systems, Inc. Hinigaran, Negros Occidental Channel __
  • HipTV Rizal Channel 1
  • Hi-Tech Cable TV, Inc. Tarlac City Channel __
  • Home Vision Cable Television San Ricardo, Southern Leyte Channel __
  • Homechoice Cable TV Calumpit, Bulacan Channel 3
  • Home-Lipa Cable, Inc. Lipa City, Batangas Channel __
  • Infanta Cable Television Network, Inc. Infanta and Nakar, Quezon Channel 6
  • Intele San Esteban CATV Sta. Maria, Ilocos Sur Channel __
  • Inter-Island Cable & Communications Network Inc. Juban, Sorsogon Channel __
  • Ipil Cable Television System, Inc. Ipil, Zamboanga Sibugay Channel __
  • Isla Cable TV Services, Inc. Tanauan City, Batangas Channel __
  • Jade Cable TV Systems, Inc. Cagayan de Oro City Channel __
  • Jagna Cable TV Network, Inc. Jagna, Bohol Channel 1
  • JDS CATV Services Calbayog City, Western Samar Channel __
  • JMD Cable Network, Inc. Rizal Channel 2
  • Jolo Cable Television Network, Inc. Jolo, Sulu Channel __
  • JP Cable City, Inc. San Carlos City, Pangasinan Channel __
  • JVL Star Cable TV, Inc. South Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat Channel __
  • Kabayan Cable TV Batangas Channels 1 And 2
  • Kalamansig-Lebak Cable System, Inc. Lebak, Sultan Kudarat Channel __
  • Kalibo Cable Kalibo, Aklan Channel 23
  • Kiamba Development Cooperative Kiamba, Sarangani
  • Kismet Cable TV. Inc. Pagadian City Channel __
  • L & S Cable Television, Inc. San Jose, Occidental Mindoro Channel __
  • Labason Cable Television System Labason, Zamboanga del Norte Channel __
  • Laguna CATV Network, Inc. Cabuyao City, Paete, Pakil, Pangil, Siniloan, Mabitac, Famy and Sta. Maria, Laguna Channel __
  • Lamitan Star Network Corporation Lamitan, Basilan Channel __
  • Las Navas CATV Las Navas, Northern Samar Channel __
  • Lead Cable TV Bongabong, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Leyte Cable TV Network, Inc. Tacloban City, Burauen, Carigara and Abuyog, Leyte Channel __
  • Liloy Cable Television System Liloy, Zamboanga Del Norte Channel __
  • LJ Cable Pangantucan, Bukidnon Channel __
  • Love Net TV Tagum City Channel 1
  • Lucky Seven Cable Services Corporation Marinduque Channel __
  • Maasin Cable Television Maasin City, Southern Leyte Channel 1
  • Macalelon Cable System Macalelon, Quezon Channel __
  • Magic Vision Cable Television Bangued, Abra Channel __
  • Maguindanao SKYcable CATV, Inc. Cotabato City Channel __
  • Mahatao Cable Television Cooperative, Inc. Mahatao, Batanes Channel __
  • Makilala Cable TV Kidapawan City, Cotabato Channel __
  • Malangas Cable TV Network Malangas, Zamboanga Sibugay Channel __
  • Mambulao Cable Television Jose Panganiban, Camarines Norte Channel __
  • Mambusao Cable TV Network Mambusao, Capiz Channel __
  • Mamuric TV Network Station Solano, Nueva Vizcaya Channel __
  • Mansalay Cable Television, Inc. Mansalay, Oriental Mindoro Channel __
  • Marbel Cable V&L Digital Cable Koronadal City, South Cotabato Channel 18
  • Marbel Services & Television System Inc. Koronadal City and Polomolok, South Cotabato Channel __
  • Margos Vision Cable TV Network Margostubig, Zamboanga Del Sur Channel __
  • Marinduque Cable Television, Inc. Boac, Marinduque Channel __
  • Master Cable TV Network, Inc. Bulakan, Bulacan Channel 7
  • Mauban Credit and Development Cooperative CATV Mauban, Quezon Channel __
  • Mayan Cable TV Services Batanes Channel __
  • MCC LAJ Cable Network Bontoc, Mountain Province Channel __
  • MCTV Digital Cable TV Maasin City Channel 1
  • Megen Corporation CATV - Kalingawan Cable TV Barili, Cebu Channel __
  • Mendez Cable TV, Inc. Indang, Cavite Channel __
  • Metro Dagupan CATV, Inc. Dagupan City Channel __
  • Midsayap Cable Vision Corporation Midsayap, Cotabato Channel __
  • Milkywaycablevision Services Inc. Digital Tv Iloilo Channel 1
  • Mindanao Cable TV, Inc. Zamboanga City Channel __
  • Mindoro Wireless Cable Network, Inc. Naujan, Oriental Mindoro Channel __
  • Misamis CATV Network, Inc. Misamis Occidental Channel 5
  • Morning Star Cable TV Tandag City Channel 6
  • Mountain Province Cable Network Bontoc, Mountain Province Channel __
  • Mountaintop Cable TV Network Tagaytay City Channel __
  • Mountainview Satellite Corporation Baguio City Channel __
  • Mt Cable Television Network Dupax Del Sur And Aritao, Nueva Vizcaya Channel __
  • Mt. Malasimbu Cable TV Corporation Dinalupihan, Bataan Channel __
  • Multi-Cable System of Guimba, Inc. Guimba, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Multi-Network CATV Cabanatuan City Channel 1
  • Multi-Service Enterprise CATV Sulat, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Munoz Satellite TV System, Inc. Science City of Munoz Channel 3
  • MyCATV Nueva Vizcaya Channel 6
  • Nabunturan Cable TV Network Nabunturan, Compostela Valley Channel __
  • Naic Cable TV Corporation Naic, Cavite Channel __
  • NBB Television Cable System Aroroy, Masbate Channel __
  • NCTVN Cable Network Corporation Cotabato Channel 1
  • NECA CATV Corporation Liloan, Cebu Channel 2
  • Negros Cable Television, Inc. Silay City Channel __
  • New Bacolod Cable Television Inc. Bacolod City Channel __
  • New City Cable System Isabela City Channel __
  • New City Cable System Santiago City Channel __
  • New Island Media Vision, Inc. Bauan, Batangas Channel __
  • New Maharlika Cable System, Inc. Ibaan and San Juan, Batangas Channel __
  • New Vintar Cable Network Vintar, Ilocos Norte Channel __
  • New Vision Satellite Network Inc. Aparri, Cagayan Channel __
  • New World CATV, Inc. Marilao, Bulacan Channel __
  • North Star Cable Vision Cauayan City, Isabela Channel __
  • Northern Star CATV, Inc. Badoc, Pinili and Currimao Channel __
  • NVC Maharlika Cable Systems Inc. San Juan, Batangas Channel 1
  • Octagon Cable Services, Inc. Oton, Tigbauan, Guimbal, San Joaquin, Tubungan and Igbaras, Iloilo Channel __
  • Orient Cable & Telecommunications, Inc. Dipolog City Channel __
  • Oriental Cable Television Network Diffun, Quirino Channel __
  • Ormoc Cable Ormoc City Channel 14
  • Otucan Farmers MPC Bauko, Mountain Province Channel __
  • Oway Cable Ventures, Inc. Janiuay, Iloilo Channel __
  • Pacific Cable and DTU Systems, Inc. Cabuyao, Laguna Channel __
  • Pagadian Cable Television, Inc. Pagadian City Channel __
  • Pagsanggiran MPC Cable Television Bacarra, Ilocos Norte Channel __
  • Pakil Cable International Company Pakil and Siniloan, Laguna Channel 8
  • Palapag Cable TV Multi-Purpose Cooperative Palapag, Northern Samar Channel __
  • Panabo Satellite Cable TV Panabo City Channel 1
  • Panguil Bay Media Ventures, Inc. Kolambugan, Lanao Del Norte Channel __
  • Paradise Cable Television Network, Inc. Aklan Channel 19
  • Parasat Cable TV, Inc. Cagayan De Oro City Channel 24
  • Patricio-Asiain Communications Service La Castellana Negros Occidental Channel __
  • Peninsula Cable TV System Mulanay, Quezon Channel __
  • Persian Cable TV Network Maddela, Quirino Channel __
  • Pilar Cable TV and Broadband Services Pilar, Sorsogon Channel __
  • Pioneer Cable Vision, Inc. Baybay City and Inopacan, Leyte Channel __
  • Planet Cable, Inc. Bacoor City Channel 1
  • Planet Cable, Inc. Cabatuan, Iloilo Channel __
  • Plus Cable Network, Inc. Bacoor City Channel __
  • Polaris Cable Vision Inc. Ilagan City, Isabela Channel 4
  • Prime Cable Vision, Inc. Sindangan, Zamboanga Del Norte Channel __
  • Primecast Cable TV Network Tarlac City Channel 1
  • Psalms Cable Isabela Channel 6
  • Quadrillon Cable TV Network Services Calubian, Leyte Channel __
  • Quezon CATV, Inc. Lucena City Channel __
  • Quinapondan Cable TV Services Quinapondan, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Quirino Cable TV Network Saguday, Quirino Channel __
  • R & V Satellite Network Corporation Mlang, Cotabato Channel __
  • R.A. Omega Cable TV Corporation Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Rainbow Cable TV Plaridel, Bulacan Channel __
  • Rainbow Cablevision, Inc. Socorro, Oriental Mindoro Channel __
  • RB CATV, Inc. Rosario, Batangas Channel __
  • RBC Cable Master System Tuguegarao City Channel 9
  • RBC Videocom Cable TV Network, Inc. Bambang, Nueva Vizcaya Channel __
  • Redpoint Cable Systems, Inc. San Jose, Romblon Channel __
  • Regal Cable TV Network Santiago City Channel __
  • Reliance CATV & Entertainment Services Company Borongan City, Guiuan And Maydolong, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Rising Sun Cable TV Garchitorena, Camarines Sur Channel __
  • RJJ Cable Networks, Inc. Tiaong, Quezon Channel __
  • RMA Cable TV Oroquieta City, Misamis Occidental Channel __
  • Rodolfo Tan CATV Services Llorente, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Romicomm Network, Inc. Roxas, Oriental Mindoro Channel __
  • Roska CATV Service Plaridel, Quezon Channel __
  • Royal Cable Laguna Channel 6
  • Royal Multimedia System Binalbagan Channel __
  • Rustic Clear Cable Corporation Victoria and Alaminos, Laguna Channel __
  • Sagada Multi-Purpose Cooperative Cable Network Sagada, Mt. Province Channel __
  • Salcedo Cable Salcedo, Ilocos Sur Channel __
  • San Agustin Cable Antenna Corporation San Agustin, Romblon Channel __
  • San Clemente Cable Network Inc. Camiling, Tarlac Channel __
  • San Miguel Cable Network, Inc. Jagna, Bohol Channel __
  • San Nicholas Cable Network San Nicholas, Batangas Channel __
  • San Vicente Cable Television Network Barcelona, Sorsogon Channel __
  • Satellite Cable Network, Inc. City of San Fernando Channel 18
  • SATV San Narciso, Zambales Channel __
  • Scorpio Cable Vision Isabel, Leyte Channel __
  • Sea Star Cable Banayoyo, Ilocos Sur Channel __
  • Seapark Cable TV Caramoran and San Andres, Catanduanes Channel __
  • Seaview Cable Network, Inc. Gumaca, Quezon Channel __
  • Semco Cable Network Semirara, Antique Channel __
  • Shama Cable Technologies La Union and Pangasinan Channel __
  • Sharp Viewing Entertainment Corporation Cable TV Gapan City Channel 18
  • Shrine City Cable Antenna Television, Inc. Dapitan City Channel __
  • Silago Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Inc. Silago, Southern Leyte Channel __
  • Sinai Sky Cable TV Corporation Sinait, Ilocos Sur Channel __
  • Siocon Cable System Corporation Channel __
  • Siquijor Island Cable TV Systems Corporation Siquijor Channel __
  • Skyline CATV Industries, Inc. Carmona and Jala-Jala, Rizal Channel __
  • Skyline Community Network, Inc. Bayugan City, Agusan Del Sur Channel __
  • Skywatch Cable Malolos City Channel 18
  • SMS Lopez CATV System Company Lopez, Quezon Channel __
  • Sogod Cable Television Sogod, Southern Leyte Channel __
  • Soreco II Electric Cooperative Cable TV Channel __
  • Southeast Cable TV Corporation Mauban, Quezon Channel __
  • Southern Cablevision, Inc. Iligan City Channel __
  • Southern Leyte Star Cable Inc. Hindang, Leyte Channel __
  • Southern Samar Cable Tv Company Gen. Mcarthur, Eastern Samar Channel __
  • Southwoods Cable TV Broadband Network Inc. GMA, Cavite Channel 9
  • SPC Cable TV City of San Jose Del Monte, Marilao and Meycauayan City, Bulacan Channel 11
  • St. Joseph Cable Visions, Inc. San Jose, Batangas Channel __
  • St. Lawrence Cable System Buenavista, Quezon Channel __
  • Sta. Catalina Cable TV System, Inc. Pagbilao, Quezon Channel __
  • Star Cable Hagonoy, Bulacan Channel __
  • Star Viewing Network, Inc. Sagay City Channel __
  • Starnet Cable Corporation Teresa, Rizal Channel __
  • Starnet Ventures San Francisco, Southern Leyte Channel __
  • Startrek Cable Network Bangued, Tayum and Pidigan, Abra Channel __
  • Subic CATV, Inc. Subic, Zambales Channel __
  • Summit Cable TV Network Guimba, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Sun Cable Systems Davao, Inc. Channel __
  • Sunshine Cable Network, Inc. Laoag City Channel __
  • Superior Cable TV Bacnotan, La Union Channel __
  • Surigao Cable Television Surigao City Channel 6
  • T.B. Sales Cable Vision, Inc. Bangui and Pagudpud, Ilocos Norte Channel __
  • Tadian Municipal CATV Tadian, Mountain Province Channel __
  • Talavera Cable System Talavera and Sto. Domingo, Nueva Ecija Channel __
  • Tala-Vision Cable, Inc. Panganiban and Bagamanoc, Catanduanes Channel __
  • Tamaraw Vision Network, Inc. Calapan City and Puerto Galera, Oriental Mindoro Channel 10
  • Tangkawayan Cable TV System Tangkawayan, Quezon Channel __
  • Tanjay Cable TV, Inc. Tanjay City, Negros Oriental Channel __
  • Taurus CATV Services Philippines Company Bobon, Northern Samar Channel __
  • Tayabas Resources Ventures Corporation Tayabas, Quezon
  • Telmarc Corporation Laguna and Rizal Channel 8
  • Three Aces Cable Network Calbiga, Western Samar __
  • Titay Cable Television Network Titay, Zamboanga Sibugay Channel __
  • Toledo Cable TV, Inc. Toledo City Channel 7
  • Treasure Cable TV, Inc. Cuyo, Palawan Channel __
  • Trece Cable TV Corporation Trece Martires City, Cavite Channel __
  • Triartvision Cable TV Guinobatan, Albay Channel __
  • Trinity Cable TV Network San Isidro, Davao Oriental Channel __
  • Ultimate Viewing Cable TV, Inc. San Jose, Occidental Mindoro Channel 12
  • Ultra-Cable Network Paracale, Camarines Norte Channel __
  • Ultravision Cable TV Tabaco City, Albay Channel __
  • UniCableTV Cebu City Channel __
  • Unique Cable Network, Inc. Dumalinao and Tukuran, Zamboanga Del Sur / Tangub City, Misamis Occidental Channel __
  • USATV Pangasinan Channel 6
  • Valencia Cable TV Network, Inc. Valencia, Bukidnon Channel __
  • Value Vision Cable TV System, Inc. Kabasalan, Zamboanga Sibugay Channel __
  • Vicormin Telecommunications System, Inc. Victoria, Laguna Channel __
  • Videocom Satellite System, Inc. Nasugbu, Batangas Channel __
  • Villa Santiago Multi-Purpose Cooperative CATV Aglipay, Quirino Channel __
  • Vision Prime Cable TV Bato and Iriga City Camarines Sur Channel __
  • Wesfardell Cable Services Roxas City, Capiz Channel 2
  • Zafra Cable HD Panglao, Bohol Channel 1
  • Zamboanga Del Sur Agricultural College Integrated Multi-Purpose Coop. Channel __
  • Zenergy Cable Internet Butuan City Channel 17
  • Z-Energy CATV Network, Inc. Buenavista, Agusan Del Norte Channel __
  • Zoomsat, Inc. Gingoog City Channel __

LIVE: TV Patrol livestream Weekend | October 31, 2020 Full Episode

EDITORIAL - Gerrymandering in a pandemic

Not even a pandemic, it seems, can stop politicians from carving out fiefdoms at taxpayers’ expense. With the next three generations of Filipinos now buried up to their necks in debt incurred to finance the pandemic response, precious public funds will have to be spent for a plebiscite to subdivide Palawan into not just two but three provinces.


Earlier this month, the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases spent time to come up with the health protocols for the conduct of the plebiscite in the first quarter of 2021. The plebiscite is needed to ratify the gerrymandering of Palawan, as provided under Republic Act 11259 that President Duterte signed into law in April last year.


When the law was signed, the joke was that the three provinces would be called Palawan, Palatu and Palatri – a play on one, two and three – but taxpayers aren’t laughing. If ever the plebiscite approves the gerrymandering, public funds will have to be added, in perpetuity, to the annual national expenditure program. A new province will need its own congressional representation, a governor, vice governor and provincial council – with the additional infrastructure and bureaucracy to support the new offices.


Improving public service is supposedly the reason for gerrymandering. Does this mean the current service is not satisfactory? Why is it that when the country is faced with underwhelming service, the answer is to create a new executive department, or a new province or congressional district?


The COVID-19 pandemic has sent the economy into an unprecedented recession. From impoverished families to middle-class professionals to micro, small and medium enterprises, everybody is in dire need of government assistance to get back on one’s feet. Even certain wealthy industrialists are taking a heavy hit in their bottom line, impairing their capacity to provide jobs and contribute to economic growth.


What does the government do? It moves to further bloat the bureaucracy, and prepares to add to the ever-growing list of lawmakers fighting over personal control of people’s money. Don’t we have better and definitely more urgent uses for acutely limited public funds? In this terrible public health crisis, gerrymandering is where our taxes will go.


https://www.philstar.com/opinion/2020/10/31/2053537/editorial-gerrymandering-pandemic

Is Culture Right Or Wrong?

Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him.  1 John 2:15


"What is culture?" asks an article in National Geographic magazine.  Answering the question, the writer says, "Even anthropologists struggle to define the word. Food, dress, tools, dwellings, laws, manners, art, myths--culture can be described as the manifestations of human existence that are transmitted from one generation to the next, a pool of the collective intellect and memory."


I think of culture as the background and frame of a painting, the subject of which is your life and family.  Culture is powerful.  It is a vast network of threads, and colors, ideas, and thoughts which are never static.  Some anthropologists believe that our world is experiencing a "mass extinction" of cultures, a crisis they believe to be as profound as the loss of biological diversities.


Since the end of World War 2 our world has experienced cross-pollination of cultures as the result of the emerging media which has reduced our world to a global village, using the term Marshall McLuhan made popular. Art, music, films, fashions, and languages have blended.  If you question that, notice how the French have fought unsuccessfully to inoculate their language against English expressions and idioms, yet English has succeeded as the lingua franca of science, commerce, diplomacy, and pop culture.  In every language, today, there are hundreds of cross-over expressions which are now accepted in every day use--hence, the blending of cultures into a kind of pastel sameness.


It is this powerful backdrop of culture in which you find yourself often asking, "Is this right or wrong?"  One painting with a background of brilliant white stands out in stark contrast to ninety-nine with dark backgrounds.  That expression "everybody's doing it" may well describe the ninety-nine which make you different, even odd, and certainly unique.


Is culture right or wrong?  It is righteous or sinful?  Or do those terms even apply?  I'm convinced that culture is amoral, neither right nor wrong in itself apart from its relationship to what God has revealed in His Word.  And it is at this point that we have a sure measure by which we evaluate our cultures, and then come down on one side or the other of the issue.


In a sense you are like the actor on the stage, and the lights and backdrop are the culture which changes, and as it does it makes you appear in a different light entirely.


If God has not revealed His will for your personal life, then you should go with the flow of culture in that your sexuality, your business ethics, your personal expression as to what clothing you wear or what body art may adorn your exterior are all reflections of your culture.


If, however, culture is part of that broader context of "the world"--the one which John said we are not to love nor be part of, then how we live as the children of God must, of necessity, contradict the culture in which we live.


From the days of Lot, Abraham's nephew who lived in the ancient city of Sodom, to the present, the person who seeks to please God will constantly wage war with his culture, and feel that he walks out of synch with the vast majority of his contemporaries.


If your back is to God, then the dark shadow of culture won't bother you much, but if you walk towards the light, you must put aspects of our culture strictly behind you and separate yourself from them.  This requires decisions which may be out of vogue, tough ones which make you stand apart from the crowd.


Ours is a changing culture, but presiding over the changes is a changeless God who still speaks to His children saying, "This is the way; walk ye in it."  Think about it.


Resource reading: Genesis 19:1-29


https://www.guidelines.org/devotional/is-culture-right-or-wrong/

Friday, October 30, 2020

3 Covid-19 vaccines under pre-screening for clinical trials: FDA

 By Raymond Carl Dela Cruz


At least three potential vaccines for the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) are under pre-screening but none authorized yet to administer clinical trials in the country, an official of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said on Friday.


In a virtual presser, FDA Director General, Undersecretary Eric Domingo said these vaccines are sponsored by Netherlands-based Janssen Vaccines & Prevention (Janssen), China’s Sinovac Biotech (Sinovac), and most recently, Clover Biopharmaceuticals (Clover) from Australia.


Both Janssen and Clover’s vaccines, Domingo said, are currently being evaluated by the Vaccine Expert Panel (VEP) while Sinovac’s is currently undergoing an ethics review and evaluation by the FDA.


“Yung most advanced [Sinovac] is still undergoing evaluation and we hope to have a decision on that within one to two weeks para malaman kung pasado siya o hindi (The most advanced, which is Sinovac’s, is still under evaluation and we hope to have a decision within one to two weeks to know whether it would be approved),” Domingo said.


He noted that Russia’s Gamaleya Institute and its Sputnik V vaccine would also soon be evaluated by the VEP.


“Yung Gamaleya yata meron pang mga tanong at hinihinging information yung VEP (For Gamaleya, I think there are still questions and some information that is being asked by the VEP) and when they submit that, then the formal evaluation of the vaccine expert panel will start,” Domingo said.


Once approved for clinical trial, he said these companies will be allowed to test their vaccines on thousands of human subjects in the Philippines, or up to 40,000 individuals from several different countries.


“We regulate this to protect human rights to make sure that the safety of human subjects is assured. And dapat syempre yung clinical data, yung integrity nun hindi make-question--sigurado tayo (And of course the clinical data, its integrity should not be questionable—we must be sure of it),” Domingo said.


No Covid-19 vaccines approved for sale


Following reports that some Chinese “clinical trial vaccines” for Covid-19 are being sold for up to PHP50,000 per dose, he said the FDA has conducted an investigation and found no vaccines in the reported facility.


“Kahit nagki-clinical trial ang mga produkto sa Pilipinas or sa ibang bansa (Even if these products are undergoing a clinical trial here in the Philippines or in other countries) and it's not a registered product, they cannot be promoted as safe and effective and definitely they cannot be sold,” Domingo said.


He noted that even medical products that have been donated to the country and approved for use by the FDA and the Department of Health (DOH) would need to undergo a separate evaluation and approval process before these can be sold in the country.


“We just want to remind everybody that there are still no registered Covid-19 vaccines in the Philippines. Kung meron po kayong nakikita na naga-advertise, nagbebenta, at sinasabi na meron na (If you find someone advertising, selling, or saying that it’s available), please report them directly to us,” Domingo said.


Earlier, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque warned the public of Covid-19 vaccines that are being sold but not approved by the FDA.


He noted that those found attempting to sell these vaccines through chain messages or other marketing methods will be punished under the law.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1120285

Proposed OFW dept to cover all needs of migrant workers: DOLE

An official of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) on Friday said the creation of the proposed Department of Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) would be able to cover all the needs of Filipinos working abroad.


“But this time under one roof, you will see a Department that will protect not only the rights but especially, during pre-employment. We think this is the most important, the pre-employment situation, both in terms of regulation, in terms of welfare and in terms of really protecting them and giving all the benefits and the information they need for them to be successful Filipino citizens abroad,” Labor Undersecretary Joji Aragon said in a Laging Handa briefing.


Aragon, however, said this does not mean promoting overseas employment for Filipinos as a national policy.


"But can you imagine, bundling all of the services, programs, and policies of the government, which is kind of scattered, (is important),” she added.


She also reported that DOLE Secretary Silvestre Bello has informed the senators that he fully supports the creation of the new department.


“Secretary Bello last night sent another letter to the Senate, saying that he supports 100 percent the creation of Department of OFW, on whatever version they have. Let’s remember, the boxing is over, finally approved at the Lower House. In the Senate, it’s on the committee level and we can be sure, we were informed, it might be certified as urgent this 18th Congress,” Aragon said. “We believe that the creation of the Department of OFW, authored by Senator Bong Go and supported by practically all, will strengthen not only sea-based but also land-based.”


Aragon also reiterated the request of Bello for the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) and Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) to be part of the new Department.


“We hope that the POEA’s regulatory powers and quasi-judicial functions will be preserved and the OWWA who is in charge of the welfare side will likewise be preserved. We also have labor attachés, or POLOs (Philippine Overseas Labor Offices), in-charge on our half way homes, the so-called centers will be presented...” she added.


Aragon is hoping that the new Department will be formed this year or early next year.


In a public address on Tuesday, President Rodrigo Duterte renewed his call for the passage of a law creating a Department of Overseas Filipino Workers, saying the welfare of OFWs should be handled by a separate department other than DOLE.


He also promised the OFWs that there will be a more thorough review of policies for the protection of their rights.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1120271

Ipagdiwang ang Araw ng mga Santo - Kape't Pandasal kasama si Rissa Sings...

Here’s The Secret To Doing Everything Well

 Commit to the LORD whatever you do, and your plans will succeed.  Proverbs 16:3


Some have called it "the Protestant work ethic!"  But it isn't, really.  It is simply the application of several phrases found in Scripture which can be paraphrased, "If it's worth doing, it's worth doing right; so give it your best effort!"


Four times in the Bible you find a phrase that says, "whatever you do" and emphasizes a relationship between you and God.  The first is found in the Old Testament wisdom literature, specifically the book of Proverbs, mostly written by Solomon.  "Commit to the LORD whatever you do," says Proverbs 16:3, "and your plans will succeed.”  In this same context, the writer says that we as mortals make our plans, but the Almighty, not simply our scheming, determines their outcome.  That first "whatever you do" forges a link between your efforts, God, and success.  Application: When you really take Him as your partner in life--whether it is business or a marriage--what some think of as luck, the Bible says is really the blessing of God.


The second whatever you do is found in Paul's letter to the Corinthians where he wrote, "So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God" (1 Corinthians 10:31).  To understand the context of this advice, you need to know that the Corinthians were party animals, to use a contemporary expression.  They were debauched, immoral, and, depraved.  Successful merchants, yes, and proud of their accomplishments.  Personal pleasure was at the top of their leisure list.


Paul's advice to these new converts who had grown up in that culture was, whatever you do, whether it is what you say or what your actions are, strive to glorify God--not yourself.  Did his counsel run contrary to their habits and life-style?  Yes, 180 degrees.  Application: When you live a life of integrity and principle, your example is going to run counter to your culture.


When Paul wrote to the Colossians, whose city was an old but fading commercial center, he used that whatever you do expression twice. He first urged them to do whatever they did in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and to give thanks to Him no matter what the result (Colossians 3:17).  Then Paul's second use of this same expression is this:  "Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men" (3:23).


The context of his remarks was labor relations, putting in a full day's worth of work for a full day's pay.  He reminded slaves that God expects more of his own children—that what counts is giving your best effort, realizing that ultimately God rewards your faithful service.


A closing thought.  Whatever you do includes everything you do--nothing excepted.  Sloppy work is no credit to those who claim to be followers of Jesus Christ.  The Bible makes it clear that whatever you do is a reflection on Him who called you to serve Him, and when you do less than your best, you dishonor your Father in Heaven.


Although the truth has been bent out of shape by some who link prosperity with how much you give, there is a definite link between success and the blessing of God in your life.  He's the unseen factor that can tilt the scales in your favor.  Take time to read Psalm 1, where as a preface to the entire book, the writer announces, "Blessed is the man [the person] who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked or stand in the way of sinners or sit in the seat of mockers.  But his delight is in the law of the LORD" (Psalm 1:1-2).


That phrase whatever you do is all-inclusive!  It's amazing how great is God's interest in--yes, whatever you do.


Resource reading: Psalm 1:1-6


https://www.guidelines.org/devotional/heres-the-secret-to-doing-everything-well/

Thursday, October 29, 2020

The World Tonight | ANC (29 October 2020)

Bukas ang Tahanan ng Diyos - Kape't Pandasal kasama si Fr Kali Llamado

BTA passes Bangsamoro Administrative Code

COTABATO CITY, Philippines — The 80-member Bangsamoro interim parliament has approved the proposed Regional Administrative Code essential to the setting up of an efficient autonomous government covering the five provinces of the region.


The approved Bill 60 of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority shall define the procedural principles of governance in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which covers Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur, Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi.


The Regional Administrative Code (RAC) encompasses all Bangsamoro ministries and all other non-portfolio entities under the office of BARMM’s chief minister, Ahod 'Al Haj Murad' Ebrahim.


"In one of its basic principles and policies, the Bangsamoro Administrative Code provides that the Bangsamoro Government, in pursuit of moral governance, shall maintain honesty, integrity, transparency, and accountability in governance and take positive and effective measures against graft and corruption," Ebrahim said in a post on the Bangsamoro government's website.


"This salient point speaks of our earnest desire to leave a system that adheres to the concept of amanah, where leadership and responsibilities are not just titles or positions, but more importantly a trust given by the Almighty," he added.


The bill was filed in plenary in July, prompting the parliament's Committee on Rules to form a panel headed by Member of Parliament Raissa Jajurie for public consultations on the proposed administrative code.


Aside from members of the BARMM Cabinet and employees of the BARMM ministries, consultations held in August included local government leaders and non-government organizations.


Also included in the public consultations were sectoral representatives from "the education sector, women sector, youth, farmer and fisherfolks, labor groups, non-Moro Indigenous People, settler communities, civil society organizations, Bangsamoro representatives residing outside the BARMM, and other stakeholders," the regional government said.


The panel also considered position and policy papers for its report to the Committee on Rules.


The committee approved the report on the bill on October 22 and brought it to the parliament in plenary on October 27 for interpellation and amendments.


BARMM's public information director, Andrew Alonto, said Thursday 26 members of the regional parliament voted in favor of the bill during a session Wednesday while 32 others manifested support for its passage via online Zoom. There were no negative votes nor abstentions.


"Tonight, I and my fellow members of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority, sitting as the interim Bangsamoro parliament, finally passed the Bangsamoro Administrative Code. This code will serve as the blueprint of the regional bureacracy. This is one of the mandated tasks of the interim government," MP Amir Mawallil said in a Facebook post on Wednesday.


He also thanked Jajurie, who is deputy majority leader, for her work on the committee report and for seeing the bill brought to the parliament in plenary. "Your candor, and for always being open to the ideas of your colleagues. We may not always agree on things, but you will always have my respect," he said.


"And, lastly, to my fellow members in the Minority Bloc: You participated actively in the deliberations from the panel stage, to the committee level, all the way to the plenary session. This proves that every one of us is here because we are determined to work together for the success of this transition period." — The STAR/John Unson


https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/10/29/2053141/bta-passes-bangsamoro-administrative-code

Comelec considering 2-day plebiscite in Palawan

 The Commission on Elections (COMELEC) is now considering to hold the plebiscite in the island province of Palawan for two days. 


This, as the Commission expects that the COVID-19 situation in the country will linger until next year.


“One of the things that the COMELEC is considering for Palawan is the possibility of holding the plebiscite in two days,” COMELEC Spokesman James Jimenez said in a virtual media forum.


But he clarified that the matter is not a done deal yet.


“It is still being studied,” he added.


The possibility of holding a two-day plebiscite is part of the poll body’s precautionary measures to also avoid overcrowding inside polling precincts.


Jimenez said the Commission is looking into options, including dividing voters based on their surnames. They are also looking at dividing voters by gender, separating the voting days for males and females.


The poll official also said that they are also studying the feasibility of dividing voters based on their polling precinct numbers. 


By virtue of Republic Act No. 11259, the poll body has been tasked to conduct a plebiscite for the division of the island province and making it Palawan del Norte, Palawan Oriental, and Palawan del Sur.


The plebiscite is supposed to take place last May 11 but, in a Memorandum dated April 7, the COMELEC ordered the postponement of the event because of the pandemic.


The Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) then approved the holding of the Palawan plebiscite in the first quarter of 2021.


https://mb.com.ph/2020/10/28/comelec-considering-2-day-plebiscite-in-palawan/

Comelec eyes 2-day Palawan plebiscite

 The plebiscite to ratify a law dividing Palawan into three provinces may be held for two days.


Commission on Elections (Comelec) spokesman James Jimenez said they are studying the feasibility of holding a two-day plebiscite to prevent crowding of people in polling precincts.


Jimenez said it is not the first time for the poll body, citing the experience for the Bangsamoro Organic Law in 2019.


He clarified that the two-day plebiscite is “not a done deal yet.”


Jimenez said their other option is to divide voters based on their surnames.


He admitted that this could pose a challenge, noting that the distribution of surnames in the Philippines is “not even remotely equal.”


Jimenez said they are also looking at dividing the voters by gender and polling precinct.


Palawan will be divided into Palawan del Norte, Palawan Oriental and Palawan del Sur under Republic Act 11259, which President Duterte signed in April 2019.


The plebiscite was supposed to be held on the second Monday of May, but was reset to the first quarter of next year due to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic.


https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/10/29/2052998/comelec-eyes-2-day-palawan-plebiscite

When You Want To Quit

 The brothers there had heard that we were coming, and they traveled as far as the Forum of Appius and the Three Taverns to meet us. At the sight of these men Paul thanked God and was encouraged.  Acts 28:15


Have you had the experience of starting something...you really poured your body and soul into a cause, and then you began to wonder whether it was really worth the time and effort?  We describe it as "discouragement."  Webster defines it as "that which causes one to weaken."


This malady known as discouragement is a prelude to one of the most devastating of all maladies, known as "QUIT‑ITIS."  If you recognize the symptoms of this virus of the heart, you can do something about it.  This commentary is dedicated to all of you who are discouraged and feel like quitting, no matter where you are.


Notice, first of all, that discouragement almost always comes when you are physically fatigued.  Can you honestly remember ever being discouraged when you were physically on top of life–when you were feeling at your best?  Of course not!  But you can recall many times when you were weary; then this enemy of progress called discouragement sets in.


Years ago, a fiery prophet by the name of Elijah met the prophets of Baal and thundered forth the judgment of God.  He won single‑handedly, yet when he was tired physically as the result of the conflict, he turned and ran to the wilderness of Horeb.  Discouragement turned to quit‑itis as he said, "Lord, just let me die.  I am no better than the prophets before me."  With Elijah you can score one for humility but zero for yielding to discouragement.


Second, notice that discouragement is extremely contagious.  Charles Jones, better known as Charles Tremendous Jones, was an extremely successful businessman.  In a few years he sold more insurance than many men sell in a lifetime.  When Jones was asked if he ever got discouraged he replied, "Sure, I do, but I can't afford to let you know.  Then we'll just discourage each other."  When one man allows himself to become discouraged he will discourage everybody he comes in contact with.  Remember the ten spies sent out by Joshua of old discouraged an entire nation.  Discouragement is a luxury you just cannot afford.


Here is the third:  Discouragement is an enemy which does battle with faith.  Martin Luther defined faith as "a lively, reckless confidence in God."  Faith says, "I can visualize what I want to accomplish, or I am willing to trust God for..." Discouragement cries out, "It is not worth it."  Let me share several ways to deal with discouragement:


1) Recognize that it is no sin to be discouraged.  Spiritual giants and other men of great accomplishments have all battled it.  The sin is yielding and listening to discouragement's deadly voice which cries, "Go ahead and quit!"


2) You can deal with your discouragement by bringing it to your Heavenly Father and asking Him for new courage and strength.  Do you remember when Jesus faced the temptation in the wilderness and was successful?  God sent angels to minister to Him, and God still meets the one who will bring his discouragement to Him.


3) Let me remind you of the Apostle Paul, who found himself on the way to Rome where he was almost certain of execution.  Paul had a long journey across the stormy Mediterranean from Caesarea in Israel to Rome.  Physically he was weary when he began the journey from the port of Puteoli.  As he came towards Rome, three fellow believers came to meet him and he "thanked God and took courage."


If you are struggling with this monster called discouragement, take the upward look.  Thank God for what He has done and take courage.  As Paul wrote to the Galatians, "We will reap in due season if we faint not" (Galatians 6:9).  It is the upward look that brings courage for successful living.


Resource reading: Acts 27: 13-44


https://www.guidelines.org/devotional/when-you-want-to-quit/

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

The World Tonight | ANC (28 October 2020)

Maguindanao bills set to split province

 The Senate Committee on Local Government chaired by Sen. Francis Tolentino has approved bills seeking to divide Maguindanao into two separate provinces, Northern Maguindanao and Southern Maguindanao.


Tolentino said the current undivided Maguindanao, with a total population of 1,173,933 as of 2015, remains to be one of the poorest provinces in the country despite being blessed with abundant natural resources.


“Reforms must be done in order to remedy this predicament and one way to ensure this is by splitting the province into two,” Tolentino said during the hearing. 


But Maguindanao Rep. Esmael “Toto” Mangudadatu, in a manifestation, called on the Senate leadership to instead support House Bill 6413, which he authored, through the adoption of a substitute bill.


“While we respect and appreciate Senator Ramon Revilla Jr. for sponsoring and filing respective counterpart Senate bill toward the realization of a separate but better capacitated and empowered Maguindanao, we would like to request Senator Francis Tolentino, our committee chair, that our prayers and provisions illustrated in HB 6413 be adopted in a substitute bill,” he said.


The House bill and Senate Bills No. 1824 and 1714 authored by Tolentino and Sen. Cynthia Villar, respectively, all seek to partition Manguindanao into two separate provinces under the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).


Under the Senate proposals, 11 towns will comprise Northern Maguindanao, with the capital based in Sultan Kudarat. Southern Maguindanao will carry 25 municipalities, with Buluan as its administrative capital.


For the purpose of this section, Cotabato City shall have its own legislative district effective upon the election and qualification of its representative to be held on the second Monday of May in the year 2022. The incumbent Representatives of the present Province of Maguindanao shall continue to represent their respective legislative districts until the expiration of their term of office.


In the proposed law it stated “Any municipality that may hereafter be created within the jurisdiction of their provinces shall automatically form part of its constituent units.”


The House passed on third and final reading House Bill No. 6413, but it provides for Datu Odin Sinsuat as capital of Northern Maguindanao.


Mangudadatu said with a smaller province, local resource management and the delivery of basic public services would be more efficient, since majority of the local officials and employees could focus on working on programs and projects that would best serve the interests of their constituents.


“As the cliché goes, it is much easier to keep and maintain a smaller house as compared to a huge one. Public service can be made more accessible, closer to the people,” he said.


The Department of Finance’s Bureau of Local Government Finance greenlighted the proposed legislations to divide Maguindanao into two separate provinces, saying the partition is financially compliant under Republic Act No. 7160 or the Local Government Code of 1991.


Bureau of Local Government Finance Director Ma. Pamela Quizon said the two proposed provinces would meet the income requirements under the Local Government Code.


Tolentino explained that unlocking Maguindanao’s potential is not just vital to help the people living in the province but to bring down poverty in the entire country.

https://manilastandard.net/lgu/mindanao/337972/maguindanao-bills-set-to-split-province.html

Senate panel OKs bill splitting Maguindanao into 2 provinces

 A bill seeking to divide Maguindanao into two provinces was approved by the Senate committee on local government on Monday.


The Senate panel approved House Bill 6413, which seeks to split the province into Northern Maguindanao and Southern Maguindanao.


Committee chairman Sen. Francis Tolentino said a technical working group would discuss where to place the seat of government in the two provinces.


Datu Odin Sinsuat is being eyed as the capital of Southern Maguindanao and either Buluan or Shariff Aguak in Northern Maguindanao.


Maguindanao Rep. Esmael Mangudadatu, one of the principal authors of the measure, said Southern Maguindanao will be composed of 25 towns while Northern Maguindanao will have 11.


For the purpose of this section, Cotabato City shall have its own legislative district effective upon the election and qualification of its representative to be held on the second Monday of May in the year 2022. The incumbent Representatives of the present Province of Maguindanao shall continue to represent their respective legislative districts until the expiration of their term of office.


In the proposed law it stated “Any municipality that may hereafter be created within the jurisdiction of their provinces shall automatically form part of its constituent units.”


”Not all redistricting is harmful... Politically motivated gerrymandering will worsen wastage of public resources while economically motivated gerrymandering will lead to improved provision of public services,” Mangudadatu said.


https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/10/28/2052757/senate-panel-oks-bill-splitting-maguindanao-2-provinces

How To Think About Yourself

 To the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved.  Ephesians 1:6, King James Version


C.S. Lewis once wrote that when errors come into the world they come in pairs, as people are driven to one extreme or another.  For example, think of yourself more highly than you ought to and we say you are stuck on yourself–full of pride, arrogant and haughty.  On the other hand, if you constantly belittle yourself, your self‑image crumbles, you're insecure and withdraw from others.


Do you know someone who is actually very capable but has to be constantly assured that she really is skilled and wonderful at her job?  She hasn't learned to accept herself; she cannot stand up for what she really needs and constantly has to be encouraged to cope with her feelings of insecurity.  What about your friend who has gone from job to job because inevitably somebody gets more recognition than he does, and he cannot cope with it.  He is easily offended; and when he is, it is good‑bye.  Pride, or feelings of inferiority–they're both ends of the same pole, both outcomes of struggling with thinking rightly about ourselves.  This is actually a very old human problem.


More than 2,000 years ago, the Apostle Paul wrote to some men and women in the city of Rome and gave them some advice.  He said, "This I say through the grace given to me to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think, but to think soberly...." (Romans 12:3).  Writing to the Corinthians, Paul warned of the dangers of pride resulting from feelings that you have "arrived."  He said, "If anyone thinks he stands or is secure, let him take heed lest he fall," (1 Corinthians 10:12).


It is a great relief when you realize that you can bring your feelings to God and learn that He accepts us on the basis of what Jesus Christ did when he gave His life for us.  The Bible says, "God has made us accepted in the beloved," who is Christ (Ephesians 1:6).  When He accepts us, as we become His children through faith, we then enter into a new relationship with Him.  In short, God has a will for the lives of His followers and what happens in our day to day is the outworking of His plan.  It is when we refuse to believe that He has a plan that we are uptight in pushing ourselves forward and nursing our fractured egos when somebody else does better.  We forget the truth of the Psalm which says, "For promotion comes neither from the East nor from the West, nor from the South, but God is the judge; He puts down one and sets up another" (Psalm 75:6).  If someone gets a promotion you wanted, thank God that He has accepted you and put you exactly where He wants you.  This is why Paul wrote, "In every situation, learn to be content" (Philippians 4:11).


At the same time, we aren't to belittle ourselves, thinking that we are worthless.  Take nothing and add Christ to it, and you have something touched by the Divine that is of eternal value.  We cheapen God's grace when think less of ourselves than God does.  God forgave us, so we can forgive ourselves; God loves us, so we can love ourselves; God cares for us so we can trust Him to work His will in our lives.  We can be real with others about who we are and what God has done for us.


Neither pride nor feelings of inferiority produce the kind of men and women who are happy and purposeful in life; but learning to accept the circumstances of life, and trusting God to work His will through them, is the key to contentment with ourselves.


Resource reading: Romans 12: 1-7


https://www.guidelines.org/devotional/how-to-think-about-yourself-2/

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

The World Tonight | ANC (27 October 2020)

NEW MALL NEAR QUIAPO CHURCH! ( SOON TO RISE!! ) - Infinity Square

Maguindanao to be Split Into Two Provinces Under Proposed Law

Maguindanao province, long a hotbed of political and religious violence, will be split into two, under a bill that passed in the Senate on Monday.


The Senate Committee on Local Government approved the bill that originated from the House of Representatives. It seeks to divide the province into Northern Maguindanao and Southern Maguindanao. The head of the panel, Sen. Francis Tolentino, said a technical committee would thresh out the details.


Due to its size, Maguindanao should be split, said Sen. Bong Go, a long-time aide of President Rodrigo Duterte. It will allow authorities to focus on leadership at the municipal level, he said.


The House bill was filed by Maguindanao Rep. Esmael Mangudadatu, the widower of the Maguindanao massacre, the world's single worst political attack on journalists. Fifty-seven people were killed in the carnage on November 2009 when Mangudadatu's rivals tried to stop his wife and supporters from filing his certificate of candidacy.


At that time, Mangudadatu was challenging the Ampatuan clan, whose members were convicted of the massacre in 2019.


Mangudadatu's bill wants the Southern Maguindanao capital moved to Bulan, where he once served as vice mayor, from Shariff Aguak, citing the threat of armed groups near the area.


The incumbent governor, Mangudadatu's cousin, Bai Mariam Sangki-Mangudadatu, wants the capitol to stay where it is.


In recent years, new provinces were carved out of existing ones, allowing more politicians to get elected to guberntorial or congressional posts. These include in recent years Davao Occidental, Dinagat Islands, Zamboanga Sibugay, Davao de Oro and Sarangani.


https://www.reportr.world/news/maguindanao-to-be-split-into-two-provinces-under-proposed-law-a4693-20201026

Bills that seek to divide Maguindanao backed

SENATORS on Monday voiced support to the passage of measures that seek to split Maguindanao into two provinces.


Senators Maria Josefa Imelda Marcos, Ronald dela Rosa, Sherwin Gatchalian, and Christopher Lawrence Go pushed for the approval of Senate Bill (SB) 1714 and SB 1824 authored by Senators Cynthia Villar and Francis Tolentino, respectively.


Tolentino, chairman of the Senate Committee on Local Government, sought to divide the province into Northern Maguindanao and Southern Maguindanao.


He said the province had vast natural resources, but was one of the poorest.


The lawmaker stressed that one way to bring down the poverty level was to divide the province into two.


“With this new set-up, government officials of each new province would be able to more properly focus their efforts in assisting lesser constituents and lesser territorial jurisdiction.


The government of each province will now be able to create projects and programs that would better address the intricacies and special needs of their respective jurisdictions,” Tolentino said.


Under the bill, the province of Northern Maguindanao shall be composed of the municipalities of Barira, Buldon, Datu Blah Sinsuat, Datu Odin Sinsuat, Kabuntalan, Matanog, Northern Kabuntalan, Parang, North Upi, Sultan Kudarat, Sultan Mastura.


The Province of Southern Maguindanao shall include the municipalities of Ampatuan, Bulua, Datu Abdulah Sangki, Datu Anggal Midtimbang, Datu Hofier Ampatuan, Datu Mon-tawal, Datu Paglas, Datu Pi-ang, Datu Sa-libo, Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Datu Unsay, Gen. Salipada K. Pendatu, Guindulungan, Mamasapano, Mangudadatu, Pagalungan, Paglat, Pandag, Rajah Buayan, Sharif Aguak, Sharif Saydona Mustafa, Sultan sa Barongis, Talayan, Talitay and South Upi.


For the purpose of this section, Cotabato City shall have its own legislative district effective upon the election and qualification of its representative to be held on the second Monday of May in the year 2022. The incumbent Representatives of the present Province of Maguindanao shall continue to represent their respective legislative districts until the expiration of their term of office.


In the proposed law it stated “Any municipality that may hereafter be created within the jurisdiction of their provinces shall automatically form part of its constituent units.”


“Clearly with the size and population of Maguindanao, it’s about time that it be split, provided that it has complied with all the requisites of the Local Government Code,” Marcos said.


Go, in explaining his support to the bills, said the division of Maguindanao would not separate the people, but rather help them flourish and rise as one.


“Maguindanao is so large that it is only fitting to divide it so all the municipalities will be given enough attention. Giving voice to the voiceless is the essence of democracy,” he added.


Villar sought the approval of her bill as requested by Maguindanao Gov. Bai Mariam Sangki-Mangudadatu and as a counterpart measure of House Bill 6413, the consolidated version of the bills authored by Representatives Datu Roonie Sinsuat Sr. and Esmael Mangudadatu.


Gatchalian moved that the measures seeking to divide Maguindanao be approved on the committee level subject to the creation of a technical working group that will determine the capital of the new provinces.


With reports from JAVIER JOE ISMAEL


https://www.manilatimes.net/2020/10/27/news/top-stories/bills-that-seek-to-divide-maguindanao-backed/786931/

Why You Should Hurt, When Your Brother Hurts

 There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. Galatians 3:28


A young man described by Luke, the physician, as "a man full of God's grace and power" did great wonders and miracles among the residents of Jerusalem shortly after Christ's ascension to heaven.  But the religious leaders of the day didn't like it.  He was taken before the Sanhedrin.  When the high priest asked him if these charges were true, Stephen proceeded to preach to the crowd, but his sermon didn't sit well with them, either.  "When they heard this," says Luke, they were furious and gnashed their teeth at him."  Eventually, they "dragged him out of the city and began to stone him."


History identifies him as the first Christian martyr.  Stephen, however, was not the first to be a victim of religious persecution.  From the book of Genesis to the latest edition of your news, history chronicles religious persecution.  Daniel was in the lion's den and eventually exiled to Babylon.  Jeremiah was harassed and eventually thrown into a slime pit where he nearly died.  The book of Hebrews, chapter 11, is a gallery of the deeds of great men and women who were persecuted for what they believed and did.


Today, more Christians than at any time in history (with the possible exception of the first century) are on the receiving end of persecution.  "So, what's new?  Shouldn't that be expected because there are more Christians today than ever before?"  It's that mentality, that kind of indifference, which contributes to the problem confronting us today.


On the day Stephen was stoned, do you suppose that some of the Christians in the crowd thought, "This isn't any of my business.  Besides, I can't do anything to change this, so I think I'll just go home."  Surely what happened to Stephen shook them to the core.  They knew the tide had turned and many packed and left for other places, not understanding that persecution would follow as surely as do hunger and thirst.


When you read of churches being burned, how do you respond?  Do you tend to say, "That's a long ways from where I am, and besides, I've got enough to worry about myself."


"Why are you helping me?" or "Why do you care about us?" is a question I am often asked overseas when I have done something for someone or some group.  "We're family," I respond, adding, "You are my brother," or "You are my sister!"


How so?  If you believe the Bible, you can think nothing else.  It contends that God's children are brothers and sisters, adopted into the body of Christ where there is neither race, gender, rank or social status.  Please make a study of Galatians chapters 3 and 4, Romans 8, Romans 12:5 and Ephesians 4.  Romans 12:5 says, "In Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others."


Do you hurt with Christians--brothers and sisters who are in pain somewhere else in the world—people you have never met nor probably ever will meet?  Is it your business when a Christian dad somewhere in the world knows that practicing his faith will mean his son can never get a university education?  Yes, I know you can't fight every injustice in the world, but when you realize that we are one body, that we have one Father, that we have one faith, then all who have been redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ lose their ethnic identity, their gender, and their culture to become brothers and sisters, belonging to each other.


In His prayer in Gethsemane, shortly before the cross, Jesus prayed that His own—His children—might be one, even as He and the Father were one.  Persecution helps forge that bond, a painful yet persuasive way of helping us to understand that what binds us together is more powerful than what separates us.


Resource reading: Acts 6:8 – 7:60


https://www.guidelines.org/devotional/why-you-should-hurt-when-your-brother-hurts/

Monday, October 26, 2020

Senate panel OKs splitting Maguindanao into 2

 THE Senate is on track to tackle for plenary deliberations a counterpart bill splitting Maguindanao into two provinces following initial approval of the enabling legislation by the  Committee on Local Government.


The committee, chaired by Sen. Francis Tolentino, endorsed the division of Maguindanao, which has a total population of 1,173,933 as of 2015.


Justifying the split, Tolentino noted that Maguindanao “remains to be one of the poorest provinces in the country despite being blessed with rich and abundant natural resources.”


He stressed that “reforms must be done in order to remedy this predicament and one way to ensure this is by splitting the province into two.”


Enabling legislations are embodied in House counterpart bill No. 6413 authored by Rep. Esmael Mangudadatu; and Senate Bills No. 1824 and 1714 separately authored by Tolentino and Sen. Cynthia Villar, respectively, all seeking to partition Manguindanao into two separate provinces under the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).


As proposed, 11 towns will comprise Northern Maguindanao, with the capital based in Sultan Kudarat; while Southern Maguindanao will be composed of 25 municipalities, with Buluan as its administrative capital.


Proponents of the enabling law noted that the Department of Finance’s (DOF) Bureau of Local Government Finance greenlighted the proposed measures to divide Maguindanao into two separate provinces, noting the partition is financially compliant under Republic Act No. 7160 or the Local Government Code of 1991.


Tolentino reported that Director Ma. Pamela Quizon of the Bureau of Local Government Finance affirmed that the two new provinces to be carved out of Maguindanao have met the income requirements under the Local Government Code if the proposed partition will proceed.


The senator asserted that “unlocking Maguindanao’s potential is not just vital to help the people living in the said province but to bring down poverty in the entire country.”


https://businessmirror.com.ph/2020/10/26/senate-panel-oks-splitting-maguindanao-into-2/

The World Tonight | ANC (26 October 2020)

Senate committee OKs Maguindanao split

COTABATO CITY – The Senate Committee on Local Government has supported the proposal to divide Maguindanao province into two areas, a Maguindanao lawmaker said Monday.


This, as the Senate committee, chaired by Senator Francis Tolentino, approved on the same day House Bill (HB) 6413 that seeks to divide Maguindanao into Northern and Southern Maguindanao provinces pending the recommendation by the Technical Working Group (TWG) to determine the center of government in the “would-be” Southern Maguindanao.


The bill, which has hurdled its third and final reading in the House of Representatives, designates Buluan town as the provincial seat of government for the South while Datu Odin Sinsuat town will represent the North.


After the recommendation of the TWG, a Senate committee report will be submitted to the plenary, and it will be used as a basis for a bicameral meeting before the anticipated passing into law of the proposition.


HB 6413 is sponsored by Maguindanao 2nd District Rep. Esmael Mangudadatu along with Tarlac 3rd District Rep. Noel Villanueva and Maguindanao 1st District Rep. Roonie Sinsuat Sr. while Senate Bills 1714 and 1824 were filed by Sen. Cynthia Villar and Tolentino, respectively.


In his manifestation to the Senate committee, Mangudadatu urged the Senate leadership to support House Bill 6413 by adopting a substitute bill following the content and design of HB 6413 and SB Nos. 1714 and 1824 concerning SB No. 1274 filed by Sen. Ramon Revilla Jr.


All three legislations similarly seek the creation of Northern and Southern Maguindanao provinces, including the naming of Buluan and Datu Odin Sinsuat as provincial seats of government, while SB 1274 filed by Revilla pursues the creation of Western Maguindanao instead.


“While we respect and appreciate Sen. Revilla for sponsoring and filing a counterpart SB towards the realization of an empowered Maguindanao, we would like to request Sen. Tolentino that our prayers and provisions illustrated in HB 6413 be adopted in a substitute bill,” Mangudadatu said in a statement Monday.


Mangudadatu said that with a smaller province, local resource management and the delivery of basic public services would be more efficient as most local government officials and employees will work and focus on programs that will best serve the interests of their constituents.


He said the division of Maguindanao aims to make public service more accessible and closer to the people.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1119711

Tolentino bats for division of Maguindanao into 2 provinces to speed up development

Senator Francis Tolentino, chairman of the Senate local government committee, today pushed for the division of Maguindanao into two provinces.


This followed a hybrid public hearing on bills creating local government units (LGUs), including his Senate Bill (SB) 1824, seeking to divide Maguindanao into two provinces, namely: Northern Maguindanao and Southern Maguindanao.


Maguindanao has been endowed with rich and abundant natural resources which that other provinces would be right to envy.


Despite the existence of this vast potential, the province ironically remains one of the poorest provinces in the country.


Tolentino said that reforms must be done in order to remedy this situation as unlocking Maguindanao’s potential is not just vital to help the people living in the province but also in bringing down poverty in the entire country.


“In order to achieve this goal, one solution would be to focus on socio-economic development activities in the province and making sure that these programs actually reach (the) majority of the people,” he pointed out.


The lawmaker said that one way to ensure this is through the enactment of SB 1824 and splitting the province into two.


“With this new set-up, government officials of each new province would be able to more properly focus their efforts in assisting lesser constituents and lesser territorial jurisdiction. The government of each province will now be able to create projects and programs that would better address the intricacies and special needs of their respective jurisdictions,” Tolentino said.


Under the bill, the Province of Northern Maguindanao shall be composed of the following municipalities: Barira, Buldon, Datu Blah Sinsuat, Datu Odin Sinsuat, Kabuntalan, Matanog, Northern Kabuntalan, Parang, North Upi, Sultan Kudarat and Sultan Mastura.


The Province of Southern Maguindanao shall include the foillowing municipalities: Ampatuan, Buluan, Datu Abdulah Sangki, Datu Anggal Midtimbang, Datu Hofier Ampatuan, Datu Montawal, Datu Paglas, Datu Piang, Datu Salibo, Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Datu Unsay, Gen. Salipada K. Pendatun, Guindulungan, Mamasapano, Mangudadatu, Pagalungan, Paglat, Pandag, Rajah Buayan, Sharif Aguak, Sharif Saydona Mustafa, Sultan sa Barongis, Talayan; Talitay and South Upi.

 

The hearing which was attended virtually by LGU officials, also discussed other bills seeking to redistrict certain areas, create and separate barangays, and declare local holidays in ten provinces.


https://mb.com.ph/2020/10/26/tolentino-bats-for-division-of-maguindanao-into-2-provinces-to-speed-up-development/

Bills dividing Maguindanao into two get Senate panels’ OK

Various measures seeking to split the existing province of Maguindanao into two were approved on Monday by a Senate joint panel.


Upon Senator Sherwin Gatchalian’s motion, the Senate committee on local government joined with electoral reforms and people’s participation approved House Bill No. 6413 and several counterpart bills in the Senate that would divide the province into two — Northern Maguindanao and Southern Maguindanao.


Under the proposals, 24 of 36 municipalities of the province would be under the Southern Maguindanao while the remaining 11 municipalities would be covered by Northern Maguindanao.


The province of Southern Maguindanao will be composed of the following: Ampatuan, Buluan, Datu Paglas, Datu Piang, Pagalungan, Shariff Aguak, South Upi, Sultan sa Barongis, Talayan, General S. K. Pendatun, Mamasapano, Sultan Sumagka, Datu Montawal, Paglat, Guindulungan, Datu Saudi-Ampatuan, Datu Unsay, Datu Abdullah Sangki, Rajah Buayan, Pandag, Mangudadatu, Datu Anggal Midtimbang, Datu Hoffer Ampatuan, Datu Salibo and Shariff Saydona Mustapha.


The 11 municipalities under the Northern Maguindanao would be the following: Barira, Buldon, Datu Blah T. Sinsuat, Datu Odin Sinuat, Kabuntalan, Matanog, Northern Kabuntalan, Parang, Sultan Kudarat, Sultan Mastura and Upi.


For the purpose of this section, Cotabato City shall have its own legislative district effective upon the election and qualification of its representative to be held on the second Monday of May in the year 2022. The incumbent Representatives of the present Province of Maguindanao shall continue to represent their respective legislative districts until the expiration of their term of office.


In the proposed law it stated “Any municipality that may hereafter be created within the jurisdiction of their provinces shall automatically form part of its constituent units.”


“Not all redistricting is harmful. New jurisdictions may be warranted if the population has grown big enough and that preferences for public goods have become sufficiently heterogeneous,” Maguindanao Rep. Esmael “Toto” Mangudadatu, one of the proponents of the measures, said in his manifestation during the hearing.


Senator Francis ‘Tol’ Tolentino, meanwhile, lamented that the existing province, despite its “rich and abundant natural resources,” remains to be “one of the poorest provinces” in the country.


As of 2015, the current undivided Maguindanao has a total population of 1,173,933.


“Reforms must be done in order to remedy this predicament and one way to ensure this is by splitting the province into two,” Tolentino, chairman of the local government committee and one of the authors of the bills in the Senate, said during the hearing.


In moving for the approval of the measures, Gatchalian noted that the bills would still be subject to discussions in the Technical Working Group (TWG), to resolve the issue of where the “capital should be.”


“Just to move the bills forward, I move to approve the said measures and transition to a TWG,” he said.


Tolentino’s press release after the hearing, however, already indicated that Buluan would be the administrative capital of Southern Maguindanao while Sultan Kudarat would be the capital of Northern Maguindanao.


Senator Imee Marcos seconded Gatchalian’s motion, while Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa abstained from voting.


A consolidated measure will then be reported to the Senate plenary for consideration.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1352528/bills-dividing-maguindanao-into-two-get-senate-panels-ok

Anong Puwedeng Gawin Kung Hindi Puwedeng Bumisita sa Yumao? - Kape't Pan...

Friday, October 23, 2020

The World Tonight | ANC (23 October 2020)

「 PNA Newsroom 」 2020.10.23

House minority leader says ABS-CBN can reapply for franchise next year

When can ABS-CBN should re-apply for franchise renewal?


Minority leader and Abang-Lingkod party-list Rep. Joseph Stephen Paduano said in a recent virtual press briefing that the television and radio giant can only file for franchise renewal in 2021, since it was only this year that the House Committee on Legislative Franchises held a series of hearings on the matter.


“Ako personally (For me personally), ABS-CBN has all the time to file its renewal one year after. Kasi (Because) under our rules, they can file it again one year after,” Paduano said.


Last July 10, the Legislative Franchises panel chaired by Palawan Rep. Franz Alvarez voted 70-11-1 (yes-no-abstain) to reject ABS-CBN’s franchise application, which several House members had filed in behalf of the beleaguered network.


This is the standard practice when it comes to franchises. The Lopez-owned network’s erstwhile 25-year operating franchise expired last May 5.


However, there is also an opinion that the congressmen can re-file for the franchise renewal at any time in the current 18th Congress, since a franchise renewal bill is treated just like any other measure filed in the House.“As far as I know, there’s no prohibition on the filing or re-filing of bills that are not favorably acted upon by a committee,” a House member who requested anonymity said.


“Just like any other bill that doesn’t become a law for whatever reason – like it was vetoed, was approved by one chamber but wasn’t by the other chamber, it didn’t reach third reading, or it wasn’t acted upon by a committee – it could be filed again,” he added.


However, he noted that the timing for the re-filing isn’t as important as the practically of re-filing. “The committee that tacked your bill would basically have the same composition as before. You’re talking to the same people, so there’s no certainty of a different result,” he said.


It is rare for the Legislative Franchises panel to hear an application and reject it in the end. But then there was immense pressure from the public to hear ABS-CBN’s case, being a network popular in both its brand of programs and public service.


The recent leadership change in the House of Representatives provides an interesting dynamic to ABS-CBN’s franchise application, since Speaker Lord Allan Velasco may or may not choose to change the existing committee chairmanships. Solons would find it more sensible to re-file the franchise renewal bill if and when the Legislative Franchises panel gets revamped.


Incidentally, Velasco’s office has reportedly commenced an “evaluation” of the performance of the committee chairmen to coincide with the break in the legislative calendar. Congressmen won’t reconvene until Nov. 16.


Marinduque Rep. Velasco took over the helm from Taguig-Pateros Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano last week. Cayetano served as Speaker for 15 months.


https://mb.com.ph/2020/10/23/house-minority-leader-says-abs-can-reapply-for-franchise-next-year/

What nationalism? (Here's the Score by Teodoro C. Benigno)

Suddenly, this word is being nudged into our consciousness and we’ve forgotten what it’s all about. What, honestly and truly, is nationalism?. Okay, the easy answer. It’s love of country. It’s a return to the values of yesteryear when the notion of nation drew us close together, particularly the war years. Fear and loathing of the Japanese invader and occupant. The tramp of his hobnailed boot, the terrors of Fort Santiago. Bataan and Corregidor. The Death March. Filipinos dying by the multitudes. The sword of Dai Nippon plunged ruthlessly into their entrails.

That is the only time I personally remember, outside of the Philippine revolution against Spain and the insurgency against the United States, that many Filipinos were ready and willing to die for this entity called Bayan kong Pilipinas. The Filipino nation. Pilipinas kong mahal. Hundreds of thousands did perish if not a couple of millions. Then and only then did love of country surge into the Filipino soul like molten lava. La patria was the revered fatherland. And a brace of Filipino heroes at the end of the 19th century gave their lives – willingly, courageously, indomitably.

Then the patriotic songs – Bayang Magiliw, Bayan Ko, Pilipinas Kong Mahal.

Lupang Hinirang

Bayang magiliw
Perlas ng Silanganan,
Alab ng puso,
Sa dibdib mo'y buhay.

Lupang hinirang,
Duyan ka nang magiting,
Sa manlulupig,
Di ka pasisiil.

Sa dagat at bundok,
Sa simoy at sa langit mong bughaw,
May dilag ang tula at awit
Sa paglayang minamahal,
Ang kislap ng watawat mo'y
Tagumpay na nagniningning,
Ang bituin at araw niya
Kailanpama'y di magdidilim.

Lupa ng araw, ng luwalhati't pag sinta,
Buhay ay langit sa piling mo;
Aming ligaya, na pag may mang-aapi
Ang mamatay nang dahil sa'yo.

Bayan Ko

Ang bayan kong Pilipinas
Lupain ng ginto't bulaklak
Pag-ibig ang sa kanyang palad
Nag-alay ng ganda't dilag.
At sa kanyang yumi at ganda
Dayuhan ay nahalina
Bayan ko, binihag ka
Nasadlak sa dusa.

Ibon mang may layang lumipad
Kulungin mo at umiiyak
Bayan pa kayang sakdal dilag
Ang di magnasang makaalpas!
Pilipinas kong minumutya
Pugad ng luha ko’t dalita
Aking adhika,
Makita kang sakdal laya!

Pilipinas Kong Mahal

Ang bayan ko'y tanging ikaw
Pilipinas kong mahal
Ang puso ko at buhay man
Sa iyo'y ibibigay
Tungkulin ko'y gagampanan
Na laging kang paglingkuran
Ang laya mo'y babantayan
Pilipinas kong hirang

Ako ay Pilipino

Ako ay Pilipino
Ang dugo'y maharlika
Likas sa aking puso
Adhikaing kay ganda
Sa Pilipinas na aking bayan
Lantay na Perlas ng Silanganan
Wari'y natipon ang kayamanan
ng Maykapal
Bigay sa 'king talino
Sa mabuti lang laan
Sa aki'y katutubo
Ang maging mapagmahal
Ako ay Pilipino, ako ay Pilipino
Isang bansa, 'sang diwa
ang minimithi ko
Sa bayan ko't bandila
Laan buhay ko't diwa
Ako ay Pilipino
Pilipinong totoo
Ako ay Pilipino, ako ay Pilipino
Taas noo kahit kanino
Ang Pilipino ay ako.
Ako ay Pilipino, ako ay Pilipino
Taas noo kahit kanino
Ang Pilipino ay ako.

Panatang Makabayan

Original version

Iniibig ko ang Pilipinas
Ito ang aking lupang sinilangan
Ito ang tahanan ng aking lahi
Ako'y kanyang kinukupkop at tinutulungan
Upang maging malakas, maligaya at kapakipakinabang
Bilang ganti, diringgin ko ang payo ng aking mga magulang
Susundin ko ang mga tuntunin ng aking paaralan
Tutuparin ko ang mga tungkulin ng isang mamamayang makabayan at masunurin sa batas
Paglilingkuran ko ang aking bayan nang walang pag-iimbot at ng buong katapatan
Sisikapin kong maging isang tunay na Pilipino sa isip, sa salita, at sa gawa.

Current version

Iniibig ko ang Pilipinas,
aking lupang sinilangan,
tahanan ng aking lahi;
kinukupkop ako at tinutulungan
maging malakas, masipag, at marangal.
Dahil mahal ko ang Pilipinas,
diringgin ko ang payo ng aking mga magulang,
susundin ko ang tuntunin ng paaralan,
tutuparin ko ang tungkulin ng mamamayang makabayan;
naglilingkod, nag-aaral, at nagdarasal
nang buong katapatan.
Iaalay ko ang aking buhay, pangarap, pagsisikap
sa bansang Pilipinas.

"Ang Pasko ay Sumapit, Christmas in Our Hearts, Star ng Pasko, Thank You Ang Babait Ninyo ayan po ang mga gusto ko pong awiting Pamasko"

Today? The songs still rouse us, sometimes. The memories still rouse us, sometimes. The myth of nationalism and nationhood still rouse us, sometimes. But even when it was supposed to resurge like a great redeeming flood, and set out hearts pounding like triphammers – like EDSA I and EDSA II – it just wasn’t there anymore. When we toppled the dictator Ferdinand Marcos and the pretender Joseph Estrada, it was not because of nationalism. We swept these two dastards out of power because we hated their guts. We didn’t bring out the flags. We pealed no nationalistic bells. There was no notion of nation streaking to the heights like starshells.