Monday, December 1, 2008

Tagged!: The State, Technology, and Intelligence Gathering


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Here is the presentation I prepared supposedly for an RTD with the Foundation for Media Alternatives. Unfortunately for me, it turned out to be a more informal talk than a series of presentations from invited attendees.
Tagged!
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: security state)

I used wikipedia and about.com extensively in researching some details on SIGINT. Hope this will be useful to all.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Comments on the G20 Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy


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I was interviewed by Judith Prescott of Radio France Internationale regarding the social movements' reaction on the G20 summit, particularly on the Philippines. It was on the context of the Freedom from Debt Coalition (FDC) mobilization on the US embassy (see details here, and RFI's article here) in response to the global call to action against the summit.

Here is the interview:

Comment: James Miraflor of Freedom from Debt coalition in Manila


15/11/2008 by Judith Prescott



Prime Minister Stephen Harper, right, chats with his Finance Minister Jim Flaherty as Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown chats with aides prior to Saturday's start of the G-20 summit on the world economy in Washington.
(Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)


Here is the article:

World financial crisis
Finance summit to discuss boosting world economy
http://www.radiofranceinternationale.fr/actuen/articles/107/article_2147.asp

Article published on the 2008-11-15
Latest update 2008-11-15 15:24 TU

Sarkozy (L) Bush (C) and Barroso at the White House(Photo: Reuters)

Sarkozy (L) Bush (C) and Barroso at the White House
(Photo: Reuters)


Leaders of the G20 group of the world's dominant economies meet in Washington on Saturday to discuss how to tackle the world economic crisis. They are expected to commit themselves to stimulate their economies and tighten up financial regulation but discussions are expected to continue for several months.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Back to the Nation-State


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Excerpted from the first draft of Fight Back: Reclaim and Expand the Lost Social and Economic Gains, Surge Forward Towards a New Economic Platform, a Freedom from Debt Coalition analysis paper written by the Debt and Public Finance Team (James Miraflor and Emman Hizon).

Directions for the System 

Now that the neoliberal system is going haywire, two directions are being presented in the status quo. The first direction, reasoning that it is not the direction but the intensity of pushing forward that is the problem, pushes us towards further market fundamentalism and advances the neoliberal project towards its completion – the total global economic integration and the absolute dismantling of the remaining free trade barriers.


We are now seeing how this paradigm works on how the rice crisis managed to do what trade talks failed to do – a unilateral reduction of crop tariffs of several countries – a solution forwarded by IMF-WB. Neoliberalism is still being presented as a solution, and in fact the problem is being portrayed as the half-hearted effort in implementing this philosophy of governance. This portrayal may not seem so obvious now, but it had been obvious before the collapse of main US investment and insurance houses.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Fiscal Dictatorship


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The Scarcity of Fiscal Democracy in Post-EDSA Philippines

By James Matthew Miraflor
Researcher, Debt and Public Finance Campaign
Freedom from Debt Coalition


The Post-EDSA regimes are usually contrasted with the undemocratic rule of late strongman Ferdinand Marcos. An important testament to this claim of post-EDSA democracy is the so-called “power of the purse” – the power to allocate national resources – granted to the legitimate proxies of the people, the elected members of House of Representatives. This is supposed to be a marked divergence from the Marcosian authoritarian power over the budget, a power that was eventually wielded for crony-patronage and dreams of grandeur.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Wat’tup Cuba: Thoughts on the Cuba, Revolutionary Socialism, and the Filipino Youth


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By James Matthew Miraflor

Note: These are only a few chapters of an unfinished paper based on my presentation (of the same title) during the Philippines-Cuba Cultural and Friendship Association (PHILCUBA) of the Moncada Attack last July 26, 2008 in the University of the Philippines Manila, Little Theater.




"The argument is this. The only way to know if the people genuinely chose socialism as a model of political and economic governance is on the presence of other modalities – other ideologies outlining other ways of organizing societies. If socialists are indeed confident of the superiority of their socialist model, as all socialists should be, and if they are confident that the masses also believe so, then they need not be afraid of contesting the democratic space from those with other ideologies, as organized through other parties."


Monday, June 2, 2008

Group wants debt moratorium, 6% GNP education spending


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06/02/2008 | 10:56 AM
MANILA, Philippines - With one week to go before classes start, militant anti-debt youths demanded that President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo follow the United Nations' benchmark to spend six percent of gross national product on education.



The Youth Against Debt (YAD) also reiterated the call for a moratorium on paying "illegitimate" debts, instead of having President Arroyo calling for a freeze in tuition hikes.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

10 Reasons Why Electricity Bills Are High


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By the Freedom from Debt Coalition
Sunday, 11 May 2008 12:05

A position paper submitted to the:
Joint Congressional Power Committee (JCPC)



For the latest Philippine news stories and videos, visit GMANews.TV

May 12, 2008

After MERALCO, the country’s largest electricity distributor and supplier, announced last April an increase in its generation charges by 51.88 centavos per kilowatt hour (kWh), rumors of a brewing government takeover began spreading like wildfire. Signals are there, experts say, as shares of both the government and the Lopezes each jumped to more than 30%, with the Lopezes having a slight fractional advantage.


Friday, April 25, 2008

In the Shadow of Debt


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by Walden Bello




By Walden Bello*

*President of Freedom from Debt Coalition, senior analyst at Focus on the Global South, and professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines. The author would like to thank James Matthew Miraflor and Bobby Diciembre of the Freedom from Debt Coalition for their assistance.

Assaulted on all sides owing to its entanglement in the ZTE-NBN corruption scandal, the administration has confronted its critics with the image of an economy that is purring along, that is doing just fine except for the rise in the price of rice, for which it says it is blameless.

Deconstructing "Growth" in 2007

But the state of the economy, even some of the administration's friends have pointed out, is a thin reed on which to rest. In a recent article, Peter Wallace, an influential consultant, deconstructed the 7.3 per cent growth rate recorded for the Philippines in 2007, showing that the figure is actually a statistical fluke that stems from the way the measure Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is computed. The figure actually masks something negative: the fall of imports by 5.4 per cent. "So because we had less imports, GDP looked good," Wallace says. "From where I sit, that does not indicate a strong, growing economy, the best in 31 years."i With no less irony, the World Bank agrees: "Remarkably, weaker import growth made the largest arithmetical contribution to the growth acceleration in 2000-07 compared to 1990-99." It added that this was not "consistent with sustained fast growth in the longer term."ii

Sunday, April 6, 2008

ZTEwwww!


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A Primer on the Anomalous National Broadband Network Project and other Disgusting Illegitimate Deals and Debts of the Philippines

by the Freedom from Debt Coalition


What is the ZTE NBN deal?


http://sikwati.files.wordpress.com/2007/09/zte.jpg
It is a $ 329 million loan from the China Export and Import Bank to finance the infrastructure project between the Philippine Government and the China-based Zhong XingTelecommunication Equipment Company Limited (ZTE). The said project aims to develop a telecommunications infrastructure that will deliver voice, data, and internet services to all government offices and municipalities nationwide.


Saturday, March 15, 2008

An Empowered Argument for a People Power


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by Joy Aceron



On an “Alternative” to People Power Proposal


There is an alternative to people power which is being proposed: “have Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo as the president for the remainder of her term,” for her staying there “presents our nation with a golden opportunity to change in a deeper, more meaningful and more lasting manner.”

Let me say at the onset that at this point of the political crisis, this proposal is not anymore an alternative, a new or a middle proposal. The progression of the on-going debates and dynamics points to fact that this is the same solution being offered by Malacañang obviously to be able to survive yet again a formidable challenge to its authority. As stated rather eloquently by a pro-Gloria protester covered by the media (who was basically echoing the administration’ s line), the country should just wait for the 2010 elections since that is only about one year and eight months away. “Bring the case to the courts and let all those who are responsible be punished.”

Class Struggle and the Radicalizing “Middle Class”


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Working class in a changing landscape [1]

By Emmanuel M. Hizon and James Matthew Miraflor

Starbucks caramel waffle

“When political analysts ask, ‘Where are the middle forces, they who triumphed at the two Edsas [people power uprisings]?’ I am tempted to answer: At Starbucks, drinking an iced venti latte."

-Raul Pangalangan, Starbucks and
the Class Struggle

Rationale

Now that another political uprising, on the tradition of EDSA, is slowly gaining ground, brought about by the aborted ZTE NBN deal implicating once more Mrs. Arroyo, the role of what had been dubbed as the “middle class” or the more politically correct term “middle force” in such an upheaval is again slowly entering social discourses. Regardless of how we define the nature and composition of such middle class, its potent capacity to introduce change is already assumed in many progressive and reform-oriented circles, so much so that formations such as the Black and White movement (B&W) explicitly labels itself as a group which has its purpose to organize the disgruntled members of the middle class in its effort to oust the “evil” Arroyo regime.

But how do we characterize the middle class and its members?

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Bring us back to the barracks - Soldiers


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From Danny Lim and company, as excerpted from http://www.sundalo.bravehost.com/Index.htm.

-----------------------------

GMA MUST GO!

Please bring us back to the barracks

We are soldiers. We are also citizens. We, together with our families, are so much a part of the community more than our beloved organization. We are not faceless automatons incapable of thinking, feeling and discernment. We feel the pain of our neighbors as much as their anger. We see their oppression and sense their hopelessness. Of course, their happiness is ours too. But they are not!

We, too, can distinguish good from evil, a truth from a lie, an honest one from a cheat and a thief. But it would be our most grievous sin if we tolerate and do nothing about it.


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8a/Philippine_revolution_flag_magdalo.png