Tuesday, March 10, 2015





Palo, Leyte Landing Memorial
Palo, Leyte Landing Memorial

San Juanico Bridge
             "TRAVEL to TACLOBAN" 

         Tacloban, officially the City of Tacloban and often referred to as Tacloban City, is the capital and seat of government of the Eastern Visayas, Philippines. I'd been to this place in the summer of my fourth year in high school during our National Population Quiz show. This place was the chosen host. After the contest I was able to visit some of the memorable places like the San Juanico bridge (the longest bridge I'd seen so far)

which connects Samar and Leyte and the beach where Mac Arthur together with Quezon and other Americans first landed after he left the words 'I shall return' to claim back Philippines from the Japanese occupation. There were huge statues built in memories of Mac Arthur's, Quezon's and the others right after the breathtaking beach  that becomes more beautiful, serene and breathtaking for me during sundown.

Reflection on how ICT affects our lives:

           Information and Communication Technology or ICT is an indispensable tool that affects our lives, the way we learn and play. It helps us in many ways we can`t even begin to count. From my experience, during my travels on different places, it is indeed helpful. It can be used on documenting pictures and for lasting memories of  certain events we want to cherish, places we want to remember and people we want to see  or feel again even at the pictures. Thus, it is not too much to say that "I can't imagine a life without ICT!

Bad argument No. 1

"Gay marriage is a basic human right."
There are huge differences between constitutional rights with few restrictions (such as the rights to life or free speech) and other rights with important restrictions, which do not carry the right of universal access. We already recognize that not everyone has the right to enlist in the army, but that one must be of the proper age, physical condition, citizenship, and philosophy—anarchists and pacifists need not apply. We also agree that certain persons do not have the right to marriage—children, multiple partners, family members, and those already married.

Bad argument No. 2

"Gay marriage is a civil right."
This is based on the false assumption that homosexuality is the same sort of human difference as race. But while the difference between sexual orientations is profound (one desires the opposite sex and procreates while the other does neither), racial difference has no intrinsic bearing on love and marriage. This is why philosophically opposed African American leaders such as Shelby Steele and Jesse Jackson agree that "gay marriage is simply not a civil rights issue."

Bad argument No. 3

"Opposition to gay marriage is discrimination."
Let's not mistake rational restriction for unconstitutional discrimination. Just as we rightly restrict marriage against polygamists, there is no constitutional reason why we cannot continue to restrict marriage to what all civilizations have defined for millennia: the union of a man and woman. This does not deny anyone the "equal protection of the laws," since this restriction applies equally to every individual.

Bad argument No. 4

"Marriage has changed through the centuries, so gay marriage would be just another development in its ever-changing definition."
True, our understandings of sex and the role of women in marriage have grown. While these changes are important, they are trivial when compared to the agreement across time and from East to West that the social institution of marriage is about the union of sexual opposites for, primarily, the procreation of children, as well as intimate companionship.

Bad argument No. 5

"Opposition to gay marriage is a violation of the separation of church and state."
It is true that Western marriage and family law stem in part from the Judeo-Christian tradition, as do many of our other laws. But the separation of church and state (assured by constitutional law) is different from the enforced separation of religion and politics, which is forbidden by the First Amendment.

Bad argument No. 6

"Marriage is necessary for gays to gain important legal benefits."
Homosexuals don't need marriage to gain most significant legal benefits. For example, hospital visitation depends on the wishes of the patient. If families disagree about medical treatment, even marriage won't solve the problem, as the Terry Schiavo case has demonstrated. The answer is medical power of attorney, which is open to anyone regardless of sexual orientation. Another example is Social Security benefits. Children's benefits are not dependent on the marital status of their parents, and the only certain benefit is a one-time death benefit of $255. A wife can access her deceased husband's Social Security, but if she has had her own work history, her Social Security benefit would usually be higher than the survivor's benefit—and she must choose one or the other. Most other benefits are based on work history.

Bad argument No. 7

"There is no proof that gay marriage would change the marriages of heterosexuals."
If marriage is all about fulfilling human desires and not parenting (as many proponents of gay marriage argue), it makes sense to dissolve marriages that don't seem fulfilling. Recent experience in Scandinavia suggests that when a society reduces marriage to this minimalist definition, families dissolve more quickly. British demographer Kathleen Kiernan has shown that since gay marriage came to Scandinavia in the early '90s, the out-of-wedlock birthrate has leaped significantly, and the family dissolution rate has risen. Only where the gay marriage movement had little success has the out-of-wedlock birthrate remained low. Marriage has virtually disappeared in the most gay-friendly districts of Norway, formerly the most conservative of the Nordic countries.

Bad argument No. 8

"Social science shows that gay parenting is no different from heterosexual parenting."
Many studies have claimed this, but, according to University of Chicago's emeritus professor of ethics and social sciences Don Browning, none of these studies was rigorous or large-scale. Stephen Nock, scholar of marriage at the University of Virginia, writes that every study on the subject of gay parenting "contained at least one fatal flaw," and "not a single one was conducted according to generally accepted standards of scientific research." Other studies show that children raised by homosexuals were more dissatisfied with their own gender, had homosexual experiences more frequently, and suffered a greater rate of molestation by members of their families (Adolescence, 1996; Archives of Sexual Behavior, 1986; American Sociological Review, 2001).

Bad argument No. 9

"The fact that many married couples do not have children proves that marriage is not intrinsically related to procreation."
Yet the fact remains that most married couples either have had or will have children. The exceptions prove the rule: Being married tends to prevent a person from having a child with someone other than his or her spouse. In all cultures, even if some couples are childless, marriage as an institution is principally concerned with children and, therefore, society's future.

Bad argument No. 10

"Heterosexuals have done a terrible job at marriage. Who are they to speak?"
It is true that half of all new heterosexual marriages end in divorce. But far more than half have succeeded, if you count marriages established before the divorce boom of the '70s and '80s. Yet the point is not how many are successful, but what marriage means. To accommodate gays, marriage would have to change into something it has never been: an institution for same-sex love without the biological possibility for children. It will probably not require sexual fidelity, which even the majority of unfaithful heterosexuals have conceded is the ideal. Some of the most prominent proponents of gay marriage, such as Andrew Sullivan, say the ideal needs to change, since gay understanding of fidelity includes other sexual liaisons.

Bad argument No. 11

"The resistance to gay marriage is motivated by fear and loathing for homosexuals."
While no large group is free of hate-mongers, the vast majority resist because they strongly believe in the positive features of traditional marriage. They have experienced the benefits of the lifelong union of two persons who are complementary in many important ways—biological, psychological, temperamental, and spiritual—and who, because of this complementarity, have a unique capacity to bear and nurture children. It is appreciation for the unparalleled success of this complementarity—not fear or hatred for gays—that motivates most Americans to oppose gay marriage.

Bad argument No. 12

"Those who resist gay marriage are irrational, Neanderthal, and bigoted."
The gay marriage movement is only a few decades old. Could it be that billions of people who for millennia upheld traditional marriage were really irrational and bigoted? On the contrary, we would argue that a common-sense understanding of life leads in the direction we have argued. Further, it seems clear that reason without religious vision misses the depth dimension of human life. It tends to dissolve basic human institutions into contracts between persons who make whatever they want of them, to the detriment of children and society.

Bad argument No. 13

"The legal issue of gay marriage ought to be left up to the states."
Quite the opposite, we need a national definition of marriage. Without a public definition embodied in a constitutional amendment, activist judges at various levels will undo the conviction of the vast majority of Americans. Some already have, in defiance of state defense-of-marriage acts. Precedent for a national definition is ample—the federal government outlawed polygamy in the 19th century and the Supreme Court has ruled in the 20th century on many cases regarding marriage.
In sum, there are many bad reasons for supporting gay marriage. In contrast, there are many good reasons for protecting historic understandings of marriage, a public institution whose fate will determine the future of our society.
# these arguments came from somewhere...

 In a contest between the desires of some homosexuals and the needs of all children, we cannot allow the children to lose.
            To the honourable adjudicators, to the moderator, the time keeper, to our opposing team, friends, ladies and gentlemen, a pleasant afternoon. The first speaker of the negative side has discussed to you our first two arguments. Now, I will be discussing our third argument, enlightening you that marriage isn’t only about adults but most especially, the welfare of the children.
3. Same sex marriage confuses children about gender roles and expectations of society.
 Children can`t entirely succeed in life without a male and a female role model at home. The building blocks of our society and the thing that makes it strong is the traditional family of man, woman, and children. In fact, we`ve proven this for almost a lifetime. Aren`t we raised in a family where the composition is heterosexual? The main reason our culture and values have started to crumble is the weakening of families since family is the basic social institution of the society. Introducing another form of "family" would only make the situation worse. Not only this, but it confuses children about gender roles and expectations of society.
Since parents are always the primary basis of life hood learning and development for young children, gradually more and more children will adopt their parent's views on same sex marriage. As they grow older, they will inevitably be choosing the same path as their parents did. So, the confusion between what is right or wrong then comes. Because during the psychosocial stages of children`s   development, they start to face different psychosocial crises like the identity diffusion and ask who are they. They will start asking their parents as to why they differ in the normal construction of family and start to be confused as to who is the mother and the father. And even if same-sex parents would introduce as who the father or mother is, still what children hear from the environment cannot possibly be taken for granted. Since a child`s mind is a blank slate, known as tabula rasa, the combating information and explanation of both their parents and the environment provides will confuse them more.
Take this into consideration ladies and gentlemen, the most vulnerable are children. Same-sex marriage may be in the best interest of adult homosexuals who yearn for social and legal recognition of their unions, but it’s not in the best interest of children. Proponents of same-sex marriage believe love is all children really need, but children need more than love. They require the distinctive qualities and complementary natures of a male and female parent.
The ideal family structure for children is a two-parent, mother-father family. This structure consistently shows that children raised in such families are more likely to thrive- psychologically, mentally, and physically—than children reared in any other kind of family configuration. Mothers and fathers simply aren’t interchangeable. Two women can both be good mothers, but neither can be a good father. One-sex parenting, whether by a single parent or a homosexual couple, deprives children of the full range of parenting offered by dual-sex couples. Only mother-father families afford children the opportunity to develop relationships with a parent of the same, as well as the opposite sex. Relationships with both sexes early in life make it easier and more comfortable for a child to relate to both sexes later in life.
     According to Mark D. Pena and I quote, the society we live in is a prison where the hearts of the people are the judges, and their eyes are the cold bars. Let us not defy reason and logic ladies and gentlemen. Thank you, I am now ready to entertain questions. 






Friday, August 30, 2013

"VENGEANCE IS NOT OURS,IT`S GOD`S"




"VENGEANCE IS NOT OURS,IT`S GOD`S"

(An award winning declamation piece that will touch your brain!)


Alms, alms, alms. Spare me a piece of bread. Spare me your mercy.  I am a child so young, so thin, and so ragged. Why are you staring at me?  With my eyes I cannot see but I know that you are all staring at me. Why are you whispering to one another? Why? Do you know my mother? Do you know my father? Did you know me five years ago?

Yes, five years of bitterness have passed. I can still remember the vast happiness mother and I shared with each other. We were very happy indeed.

Suddenly, five loud knocks were heard on the door and a deep silence ensued. Did the cruel Nippon’s discover our peaceful home? Mother ran to Father’s side pleading. “Please, Luis, hide in the cellar, there in the cellar where they cannot find you,” I pulled my father’s arm but he did not move. It seemed as though his feet were glued to the floor.

The door went “bang” and before us five ugly beasts came barging in. “Are you Captain Luis Santos?” roared the ugliest of them all. “Yes,” said my father. “You are under arrest,” said one of the beasts. They pulled father roughly away from us. Father was not given a chance to bid us goodbye.

We followed them mile after mile. We were hungry and thirsty. We saw group of Japanese eating. Oh, how our mouths watered seeing the delicious fruits they were eating,
Then suddenly, we heard a voice call, “Consuelo. . . . Oscar. . . . Consuelo. . . . Oscar. . . . Consuelo. . . . Oscar. . . .” we ran towards the direction of the voice, but it was too late. We saw father hanging on a tree. . . . dead. Oh, it was terrible. He had been badly beaten before he died. . . . and I cried vengeance, vengeance, vengeance! Everything went black. The next thing I knew I was nursing my poor invalid mother.
One day, we heard the church bell ringing “ding-dong, ding-dong!” It was a sign for us to find a shelter in our hide-out, but I could not leave my invalid mother, I tried to show her the way to the hide-out.

Suddenly, bombs started falling; airplanes were roaring overhead, canyons were firing from everywhere. “Boom, boom, boom, boom!” Mother was hit. Her legs were shattered into pieces. I took her gently in my arms and cried, “I’ll have vengeance, vengeance!” “No, Oscar. Vengeance, it’s God’s,” said mother.

But I cried out vengeance. I was like a pent-up volcano. “Vengeance is mine not the Lord’s”. “No, Oscar. Vengeance is not ours, it’s God’s” these were the words from my mother before she died.

Mother was dead and I was blind. Vengeance is not ours? To forgive is divine but vengeance is sweeter.  That was five years ago, five years. . . .

Alms, alms, alms. Spare me a piece of bread. Spare me your mercy. I am a child so young, so thin, and so ragged. Vengeance is not ours, it’s God’s. . . . It’s. . . . God’s. . It’s…

Summary:

           "Vengeance is not  ours,it`s God`s" is a story of a Filipino boy(named Oscar) experience together with his family who was caught under the Japanese invasion in the Philippines during 1942-1945 (Filipino-American vs. Japanese war).The boy`s father was arrested by the Japanese military and was found dead,hanging on a tree and badly beaten the next morning.He asked for vengeance on that time and all he wanted was revenge for everything.The next thing he knew was that he was nursing his invalid mother when suddenly  the church bell rang signalling  them to find a hide out but while carrying his poor invalid mother they were caught on a bloody war which caused his mother`s(Consuelo)leg to shattered into pieces and died and left him blind.Again with a hateful heart he asked for vengeance.All he wanted was vengeance.His mother said before she passed that 'vengeance is not ours,it`s God`s' but for him,who felt that was nothing left ,to forgive is divine but vengeance is sweeter.And that was all five years ago and now this poor Juan was left unaided asking for help to survive.

Reflection:

           The first time I heard these declamation was when I was on my first year in high school during our English festival at Misamis University,Ozamiz City.I was really touched by the declamation and was able to felt the reality of this even though there were no statements saying that this really occurred in the past because if I will try to assess it in accordance with my deceased grandmother`s (Maxima Conception Calupaz-Calunsag)story,many cases of cruelty happened in the past ,during the different countries invasion in the Philippines and up until now.So,you see even if the Philippines  is not literally invaded still the colonized minds and the greedy minds of some Filipinos are still there sucking the country`s blood little by little.I really hope that we`ll stop fighting our co-fellows and start helping  one another for the best.It hurts to hear stories,here and abroad,about Filipinos crabbing and backstabbing one another for an idiot reason.We should all love instead of condemn and this is not for Filipinos only but for the people throughout the world.Yeah ,vengeance is sweet but it will lead us to nothing.It`s just like planting a bomb on your own body and waiting for self-destruction!!!
 "Vengeance is not ours,It`s God`s."

Hehe...sorry for that,I guess I`m being so opinionated  and rude but that`s how I assessed it.And if we will only admit ,then that would not be that rude ,after all that was a fact and not a mere judgment and illusion.Everybody,peace!!! *_________*

~Maria Janice C. Jarito~

 checked..
   approved....
      certified........


Lukaret!!!
XD;lol @__@
by the BFF Sociedad...
(Hey!U can be one too...join my community now,and let`s chika ur issues)
i mean concernzzz!!!ahahaha...


To Sir Ket,
I hope for good ratings here sir!
Aye,Aye captain!



fifteenpurpleshades.blogspot.com

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Where`s the Patis?



          Yo..!I`m Maria Janice C. Jarito,nice for short,but of course you can only call me that if we`re friends ...ano close tayo...weee di nga.?okay sige na nga...friends na tayo..tae..ang bait ko kasi..XD..hehe.Anyway last meeting our english teacher gave us an assignment where in we are going to provide a summary and reflection of what we had read..what is summary by the way???ahahaja...okay reminder muna pala si ako..:.ppPTSSSS!!!.walang gaya2x ng assignment huh?pakain ko kayo sa buwaya niyan eh....this is it...!

"WHERE`S THE PATIS?"

by Carmen Guerrero Nakpil

Travel has become the great Filipino dream. In the same way that an American dreams of becoming a millionaire or an English boy dreams of going to one of the great universities, the Filipino dreams of going abroad. His most constant vision is that of himself as tourist.
To visit Hongkong, Tokyo and other cities of Asia, perchance, to catch a glimpse of Rome, Paris or London and to go to America (even if only for a week in a fly-specked motel in California) is the sum of all delights.
Yet having left the Manila International Airport in a pink cloud of despedidas and sampaguita garlands and pabilin, the dream turns into a nightmare very quickly. But why? Because the first bastion of the Filipino spirit is the palate. And in all the palaces and fleshpots and skyscrapers of that magic world called "abroad" there is no patis to be had.
Consider the Pinoy abroad. He has discarded barong tagalong or "polo" for a sleek, dark Western suit. He takes to the habiliments from Hongkong, Brooks Brothers or Savile Row with the greatest of ease. He has also shed the casual informality of manner that is characteristically Filipino. He gives himself the airs of a cosmopolite to the credit-card born. He is extravagantly courteous (specially in a borrowed language) and has taken to hand-kissing and to plenty of American "D'you minds?"
He hardly misses the heat, the native accents of Tagalog or Ilongo or the company of his brown-skinned cheerful compatriots. He takes, like a duck to water, to the skyscrapers, the temperate climate, the strange landscape and the fabled refinements of another world. How nice, after all, to be away from good old R.P. for a change!
But as he sits down to meal, no matter how sumptuous, his heart sinks. His stomach juices, he discovers, are much less neither as apahap nor lapu-lapu. Tournedos is meat done in a barbarian way, thick and barely cooked with red juices still oozing out. The safest choice is a steak. If the Pinoy can get it well done enough and sliced thinly enough, it might remind him of tapa.
If the waiter only knew enough about Philippine cuisine, he might suggest venison which is really something like tapang usa, or escargots which the unstylish poor on Philippine beaches know as snails. Or even frog legs which are a Pampango delight.
But this is the crux of the problem  where is the rice? A sliver tray offers varieties of bread: slices of crusty French bread, soft yellow rolls, rye bread, crescents studded with sesame seeds. There are also potatoes in every conceivable manner, fried, mashed, boiled, buttered. But no rice.
The Pinoy learns that rice is considered a vegetable in Europe and America. The staff of life a vegetable!
And when it comes  a special order which takes at least half an hour  the grains are large, oval and foreign-looking and what's more, yellow with butter. And oh horrors! - one must shove it with a fork or pile it with one's knife on the back of another fork.
After a few days of these debacles, the Pinoy, sick with longing, decides to comb the strange city for a Chinese restaurant, the closest thing to the beloved gastronomic county. There, in the company of other Asian exiles, he will put his nose finally in a bowl of rice and find it more fragrant than an English rose garden, more exciting than a castle on the Rhine and more delicious than pink champagne.
To go with the rice there is siopao (not so rich as at Salazar) pancit guisado reeking with garlic (but never so good as any that can be had on the sidewalks of Quiapo) fried lumpia with the incorrect sauce, and even mami (but nothing like the down-town wanton)
Better than a Chinese restaurant is the kitchen of a kababayan. When in a foreign city, a Pinoy searches every busy sidewalk, theatre, restaurant for the well-remembered golden features of a fellow-pinoy. But make it no mistake.


Where`s the Patis?

         Nga pala do you have any idea why this was entitled where`s the patis?Sus!for sure wala `yaN..joke!Bueno I had an idea...di ba nga patis is a unique Filipino ingredient? ...di yata yan uso sa states noh?and bingo...korek ateh !it`s  just a clue or parang figure of speech kumbaga that the story talks about the Filipino cuisines that every true Filipino will miss if they are in an alien country.Gets n`yo nah?well it`s just look like that to me...but on deeper thoughts it doesn`t really only talk about food but the reality every Filipino gone through including the transformations and their evolutions like pikachu to raichu whenever napapadpad sila in the foreign places...tabil ko noh?ahijiji...!BTW pwede n`yo narin `tong iconsider as my reflection...pero may iba pa kasi akong reflection sa baba eh...raming idea noh?sana may makasdiscover sa `kin...ahehehehefifteenpurpleshades.blogspot.comfifteenpurpleshades.blogspot.com!



Summary:(hey!datz my summary `kay?alawng basagan ng pirt!!!)

           Where`s the Patis is a story of a Filipino who travels  abroad and in the process is influence and westernize in many ways, in the mode of dressing,delivery of accents and even a change in language patriotism,attitudes and values.But as he seats down for meal, he still misses and longs for Filipino cuisines that makes his mouth waters.Poor Juan tries to search for these foods and wishes in every restaurant he bump in `if only the waiter knew enough about Philippine cuisines`.So with sick longing he decided to settle with the  company of other exile Asian Restaurants instead as a closest thing to the beloved gastronomic country.In a foreign city,poor Juan is still in search for golden features of a fellow-pinoy in every places he gone by.


Reflection:

           Many Filipinos gamble to go abroad for many reasons,and among these is the dream of  finding a good paying jobs to provide and uplift their families welfare.But no matter how these dreams seems to be wonderfully perfect some just turn into Que horror...a nightmare!Even so ,there are those Filipinos that no matter how hard things may seem, still , able to smile and lend their helping hands to others.And that`s what makes a "FILIPINO worth dying for"!I`m so proud of them...and I`m so proud to say that I`m one of those Filipinos across the globe that are worth dying for...And before I end this ,all I can say is that there is really no place like home,wherein you could just be yourself and be what you really are...!

.XD;lolzzz..



Note:
Sir Ket, alam ko na meaning ng web address mo...ayeiiiii.!!!....kaya naman pala may no.15 eh noh?...no. pala `yan ng crush mo..sayang !sana nagkatuluyan nalang kayo sir...ahaha..