Disastrous disaster capitalism

Church for the Workers

Anne Marxze Umil  January 14, 2020
Graphics by Justin Umali/Bulatlat
What this is, in simple terms, is disaster capitalism: the commodification of crisis in order to generate greater profits. What others would call “supply and demand” is actually sellers preying on fear, anxiety, and sometimes even safety in order to generate profit.

By JUSTIN UMALI | Bulatlat.com

Crises are always unpredictable regardless of preparation. The current Taal eruption has given us multiple stories – haphazard responses from the national government, heartwarming acts of kindness, and heartbreaking tales of animals left behind in the evacuation.

But none are as infuriating as reports businesses, and corporations putting their personal profit above the needs and safety of other people.

One example is how retailers bumped up the price of face masks in light of the ash fall. Old prices of P25-50 suddenly spiked to P200, P300, or even P500 in a single day. Even regular cloth face masks, which usually sell for far less, have risen to what can only be described as criminal levels.

It’s easy to dismiss this behavior as “the law of supply and demand” in action, implying that it is as natural as the next sunrise. But the truth of the matter is that “supply and demand”, and the profit-driven force behind it, is anything but natural.

What this is, in simple terms, is disaster capitalism: the commodification of crisis in order to generate greater profits. What others would call “supply and demand” is actually sellers preying on fear, anxiety, and sometimes even safety in order to generate profit.

Disaster capitalism goes beyond retail. Despite laws meant to protect worker occupational safety and health, call center agents from BPO firms in Santa Rosa and Tagaytay had to brave harsh winds and dangerous ash fall as they were required to report for work.

Other companies don’t fare better. Some are allowing their employees to work from home, essentially profiting from their workers’ labor-power while putting the burden of other costs on them: electricity, water, food, and so on.

The less than stellar government response also reeks of greed. The Duterte administration is more than happy to slash as much as 11 billion pesos off the calamity fund, while the Department of Interior and Local Government conducts itself like an NGO by calling for donations during times of crisis. The Department of Agriculture, meanwhile, is offering a P25,000 loan to fishermen affected by the eruption while the President pledges a P50,000 bonus for birthday celebrants in the Marines.

Because at its core, disaster capitalism isn’t just retailers engaging in price gouging. It is an entire system that dehumanizes human suffering and puts a premium on increasing profit margins. Beyond commodifying crisis, disaster capitalism extends to prioritizing capital over rights, safety, and other needs.

It is a foreign BPO firm, stubbornly refusing to give their workers a day off despite heavy ash fall. It is the modern worker, taking false pride in their ability to brave the weather and declare themselves “weatherproof”. It is the government, dangling loans to the poor while the military who kills them gets a bonus.

Disaster capitalism is a disaster of capitalism, because it exposes the ruling class’ lack of interest in affairs that don’t affect them. No landlord lives in the Taal volcano island; only tourist guides, tilapia farmers, and horses.

It thus falls on the people to unite against this disaster. While corporations count their earnings for the day, the urban poor have elected to give what little they have in the name of humanitarian aid. Students, professionals, and workers from all over the nation are organizing relief operations while the DILG and DSWD sit on their thumbs.

Even the Communist Party of the Philippines, and the people’s democratic government in the countryside it represents, has tasked its members and all revolutionary mass organizations to assist in relief efforts where needed.

Stories like these make it clear who serves who. Big businesses and out of touch government officials care only about their own needs. It is the people – the street vendors, the urban poor, the students and workers providing relief, the guerrillas in the countryside, and everybody else, who serve the needs of those who need it most.

Because “serve the people” must, and will only, come from the people themselves. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

Lipa prelate calls for prayers, aid amid volcano unrest

People evacuate from Talisay, Batangas after Taal volcano eruption Jan. 13, 2020. Courtesy of Fr. Jazz Siapco/Lipa Archdiocesan Social Action Center

By CBCP News
January 13, 2020
Manila, Philippines

A Church official appealed for prayers and help Monday for thousands of people displaced by a volcanic eruption near Manila.

Archbishop Gilbert Garcera of Lipa has asked Catholics to join him in praying for the safety of everyone amidst the Taal volcano eruption on Sunday.

The volcano spewed massive ash clouds, forcing the evacuation of thousands of residents.

The archdiocese’s parish churches have opened their doors to evacuees as the volcano continued to increase its volcanic activity.

The Society of the Divine Word (SVD) Seminary and other religious institutions are also accepting evacuees in Tagaytay City.

Ashfall from the explosion also reached Metro Manila and could possibly spread to Central Luzon.

“Aside from prayers, we are appealing for donations in cash or in-kind for the archdiocese’s ongoing relief operations,” Garcera said over Radio Veritas.

At least 15,000 people have fled their homes in Batangas province as of Monday, according to an initial report from the local disaster risk reduction and management office.

Archbishop Garcera said they are currently assisting more than 3,000 evacuees who are in need of food and water.

Thousands more evacuees who sought refuge in dozens of evacuation centers were reported in Batangas and Cavite provinces.

The archbishop said church workers and volunteers are working round the clock to ensure that the evacuees’ basic needs are met.

The Lipa Archdiocesan Social Action Center also said that more people need face masks, medicine, blankets, towels, flashlights, and fuel.

For inquiries and donations to the Lipa archdiocese, please refer to the following contact numbers: (043) 404-8057 or +63 9255595968.

Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila and other bishops also offered prayers amid the volcano eruption.

Urgent Appeal for Aid to Homonhon & Manicani

Dear PMPI Partners,

Our partners in Eastern Visayas Cluster is asking for your earnest help and support. Please see the attached infographic for full details.

Also, please let the Secretariat and/or PMPI local staff in Guiuan, Carmi Macapagao the amount you’ve donated so that we can monitor the funds coming in.

The Witness of Martyrs: 29 Missionaries Killed Worldwide in 2019 According to Fides

Photo by Agenzia Fides

January 02, 2020
Anita Bourdin

According to the Vatican’s missionary agency Fides, 29 missionaries were killed in the world in the year 2019: six laymen, two women religious, two men religious, one Permanent Deacon and 18 priests.

In Africa, 12 priests were killed, one religious, one nun, one seminarian and one layman (15); in America, six priests were killed and one Permanent Deacon, one Religious and four laymen (12); in Asia, one layman (1) and in Europe one nun (1).

“After eight consecutive years, during which the highest number of missionaries killed was recorded in America, since 2018 it’s Africa that is in the first place of this tragic classification,” states Fides.

Fides also notes that there is a sort of “globalization of violence.” “If in the past, the missionaries killed were largely concentrated in one nation or geographic area, in 2019 the phenomenon seemed more generalized and widespread,” in 10 countries of Africa, eight of America, one of Asia and one of Europe.

In this context, Fides quotes Pope Francis’ words for the Extraordinary Missionary Month of last October. “I desire that the 100 years celebration of (Benedict XV’s Apostolic Letter) Maximum Illud constitutes in the month of October 2019, a propitious time so that prayer, the witness of so many saints and martyrs of the mission, biblical and theological reflection, catechesis and missionary charity contribute to evangelize first and above all the Church, so that having rediscovered the freshness and ardour of the first love for the crucified and Risen Lord, she is able to evangelize the world with credibility and evangelical efficacy.” It was in these terms that Pope Francis, on addressing the General Assembly of the Pontifical Missionary Works, on July 3, 2017, referred to the witness of so many missionaries who gave their life for the Lord Jesus, as one of the four dimensions to take into account in the celebration of the Extraordinary Missionary Month of October 2019.”

January 02, 2020

Peace as a Journey of Hope: Dialogue, Reconciliation and Ecological Conversion

Pope’s Message for 53rd World Day of Peace – January 1st (Full Text)

‘The grace of God our Father is bestowed as unconditional love’

January 01, 2020

Here is the text of Pope Francis’ message for the World Day of Peace, which is celebrated today, January 1, 2020, on the theme: “Peace as a Journey of Hope: Dialogue, Reconciliation and Ecological Conversion.”

The text was presented Dec.12, 2019, the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, in the Holy See Press Office. Here is Pope Francis’ message for peace:


Pope Francis leads a Mass marking the World Day of Peace in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican, January 1, 2020. REUTERS/Remo Casilli

1. Peace, a journey of hope in the face of obstacles and trial

Peace is a great and precious value, the object of our hope and the aspiration of the entire human family. As a human attitude, our hope for peace is marked by an existential tension that makes it possible for the present, with all its difficulties, to be “lived and accepted if it leads towards a goal, if we can be sure of this goal, and if this goal is great enough to justify the effort of the journey”.[1] Hope is thus the virtue that inspires us and keeps us moving forward, even when obstacles seem insurmountable.

Our human community bears, in its memory and its flesh, the scars of ever more devastating wars and conflicts that affect especially the poor and the vulnerable. Entire nations find it difficult to break free of the chains of exploitation and corruption that fuel hatred and violence. Even today, dignity, physical integrity, freedom, including religious freedom, communal solidarity and hope in the future are denied to great numbers of men and women, young and old. Many are the innocent victims of painful humiliation and exclusion, sorrow and injustice, to say nothing of the trauma born of systematic attacks on their people and their loved ones.

The terrible trials of internal and international conflicts, often aggravated by ruthless acts of violence, have an enduring effect on the body and soul of humanity. Every war is a form of fratricide that destroys the human family’s innate vocation to brotherhood.

War, as we know, often begins with the inability to accept the diversity of others, which then fosters attitudes of aggrandizement and domination born of selfishness and pride, hatred and the desire to caricature, exclude and even destroy the other. War is fueled by a perversion of relationships, by hegemonic ambitions, by abuses of power, by fear of others and by seeing diversity as an obstacle. And these, in turn, are aggravated by the experience of war.

As I observed during my recent Apostolic Journey to Japan, our world is paradoxically marked by “a perverse dichotomy that tries to defend and ensure stability and peace through a false sense of security sustained by a mentality of fear and mistrust, one that ends up poisoning relationships between peoples and obstructing any form of dialogue. Peace and international stability are incompatible with attempts to build upon the fear of mutual destruction or the threat of total annihilation. They can be achieved only on the basis of a global ethic of solidarity and cooperation in the service of a future shaped by interdependence and shared responsibility in the whole human family of today and tomorrow”.[2]

Every threatening situation feeds mistrust and leads people to withdraw into their own safety zone. Mistrust and fear weaken relationships and increase the risk of violence, creating a vicious circle that can never lead to a relationship of peace. Even nuclear deterrence can only produce the illusion of security.

We cannot claim to maintain stability in the world through the fear of annihilation, in a volatile situation, suspended on the brink of a nuclear abyss and enclosed behind walls of indifference. As a result, social and economic decisions are being made that lead to tragic situations where human beings and creation itself are discarded rather than protected and preserved.[3] How, then, do we undertake a journey of peace and mutual respect? How do we break the unhealthy mentality of threats and fear? How do we break the current dynamic of distrust?

We need to pursue a genuine fraternity based on our common origin from God and exercised in dialogue and mutual trust. The desire for peace lies deep within the human heart, and we should not resign ourselves to seeking anything less than this.

2. Peace, a journey of listening based on memory, solidarity and fraternity

The Hibakusha, the survivors of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, are among those who currently keep alive the flame of collective conscience, bearing witness to succeeding generations to the horror of what happened in August 1945 and the unspeakable sufferings that have continued to the present time. Their testimony awakens and preserves the memory of the victims, so that the conscience of humanity may rise up in the face of every desire for dominance and destruction. “We cannot allow present and future generations to lose the memory of what happened here. It is a memory that ensures and encourages the building of a more fair and fraternal future”.[4]

Like the Hibakusha, many people in today’s world are working to ensure that future generations will preserve the memory of past events, not only in order to prevent the same errors or illusions from recurring, but also to enable memory, as the fruit of experience, to serve as the basis and inspiration for present and future decisions to promote peace.

What is more, memory is the horizon of hope. Many times, in the darkness of wars and conflicts, the remembrance of even a small gesture of solidarity received can lead to courageous and even heroic decisions. It can unleash new energies and kindle new hope in individuals and communities.

Setting out on a journey of peace is a challenge made all the more complex because the interests at stake in relationships between people, communities and nations, are numerous and conflicting. We must first appeal to people’s moral conscience and to personal and political will. Peace emerges from the depths of the human heart and political will must always be renewed, so that new ways can be found to reconcile and unite individuals and communities.

The world does not need empty words but convinced witnesses, peacemakers who are open to a dialogue that rejects exclusion or manipulation. In fact, we cannot truly achieve peace without a convinced dialogue between men and women who seek the truth beyond ideologies and differing opinions. Peace “must be built up continually”;[5] it is a journey made together in constant pursuit of the common good, truthfulness and respect for law. Listening to one another can lead to mutual understanding and esteem, and even to seeing in an enemy the face of a brother or sister.

The peace process thus requires enduring commitment. It is a patient effort to seek truth and justice, to honour the memory of victims and to open the way, step by step, to a shared hope stronger than the desire for vengeance. In a state based on law, democracy can be an important paradigm of this process, provided it is grounded in justice and a commitment to protect the rights of every person, especially the weak and marginalized, in a constant search for truth.[6] This is a social undertaking, an ongoing work in which each individual makes his or her contribution responsibly, at every level of the local, national and global community.

As Saint Paul VI pointed out, these “two aspirations, to equality and to participation, seek to promote a democratic society… This calls for an education to social life, involving not only the knowledge of each person’s rights, but also its necessary correlative: the recognition of his or her duties with regard to others. The sense and practice of duty are themselves conditioned by the capacity for self-mastery and by the acceptance of responsibility and of the limits placed upon the freedom of individuals or the groups”.[7]

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Disasters turn young Filipinos into ‘climate warriors’

LICAS.News
Ronald O. Reyes, Philippines
January 6, 2020

Climate activist and Super Typhoon Haiyan survivor Joanna Sustento holds a lone protest in September 2019 in front of the Philippine headquarters of Shell to call for climate justice. (Photo courtesy of Greenpeace)

A typhoon survivor in the central Philippines has turned herself into a “climate warrior” after losing her parents and most of her family members to disasters in recent years.

Joanna Sustento, 28, said her climate advocacy is what matters to her now.

She’s worried that even her dream of one day having her own family will be taken away “by the same monster that took away my family.”

“I cannot allow my future family, my nieces, nephews, and godchildren to experience what I’ve been through,” she told LiCAS.News.

The climate campaigner for environment group Greenpeace said fossil fuel industries are to blame for the climate crisis “because (they) did not give us an alternative.”

She said going after “big polluters” is a way of calling out to them “to own up to their responsibility for the climate crisis.”

“They knew of the catastrophic impacts, but they decided to discredit the science and deceive the world because of profit at the expense of the people and the planet,” she said.

In a “perfect world,” Sustento said she would “probably spend days on the beach and bury my face in books, sleep or play with my nephews, nieces and godchildren.”

She was 22 years old when Super Typhoon Haiyan devastated the central Philippines, leaving about 7,000 people, including Sustento’s loved ones, dead and thousands of others missing.

“If Haiyan did not happen, I would have been managing my own business, maybe a restaurant,” she said. “That’s how simple my dream was,” said added.

Her dreams were torn apart with the death of her parents. A 3-year-old nephew, Tarin, remains missing.

“Tarin would have been nine years old by now if not for the storm that snatched him away from the arms of his mother,” said Sustento.

More than six years after that tragedy in November 2013, the people of Tacloban and the province of Leyte in the central Philippines continue to demand justice.

“I can no longer remain silent if it is already the lives and livelihood of people in my community being sacrificed for corporate profits,” she said.

In her advocacy, the young lady said she found “a stronger version” of herself, support, and strength.

“I may have lost my family to the storm, but I am not losing to this climate crisis,” she wrote in a letter to Shell Philippines, one of the big oil companies in the country.

From her pioneering protest ride on an oil rig in Norway’s Arctic sea in 2017 to her lone and silent protests in front of offices of oil companies in Manila, Sustento persevered.

“The story of Haiyan speaks not just for Tacloban, it speaks for the other climate-impacted communities globally,” she said.

Young climate activists hold a demonstration in Manila during the Christmas holidays to call attention to the state of the environment. (Photo by Jire Carreon)

‘David vs Goliath’

More than six years after Haiyan, full rehabilitation of devastated communities in the central Philippines remains wanting.

“I move forward with the intention of pursuing a purpose that is bigger than myself,” said Sustento.

As discussions on climate crisis heat up following a call last year from 16-year old Swedish girl Greta Thunberg, Sustento said it is “interesting” that climate issues are being discussed by young people.

“It’s ‘David and Goliath,’” she said. “It’s to prove that even if we do things alone, we can spark inspiration for other people to follow.”

Ronan Renz Napoto, another young climate advocate from the city of Tacloban, said more young people now are becoming aware of climate change issues.

He said youth-led climate actions “clearly send a message to everyone that it is a serious threat that everyone should care about.”

“When kids are out there taking their stand, demanding for actions, we know something is wrong,” he said, adding that young people “are here to do what adults should have done before.”

The 21-year-old lead convenor of Youth Strike for Climate Philippines in Tacloban said the crisis “excuses no one.”

“Our next generation will suffer more if we don’t act now,” he said. “This is our future that we are talking about.”

“It is our time to fight for our future because the adults have failed to do this, and we can’t keep on relying from their inaction and silence,” he said.

Like Sustento, Napoto is postponing his personal plans for his advocacy.

“This is very personal,” he said, adding that people in the central Philippines who were affected by Super Typhoon Haiyan “have felt the worst impact of climate change.”

“Haiyan is more than enough reason to make this fight personal,” said Napoto who recently received his diploma in Industrial Engineering at a local university.

But the young man said he is giving more time for his advocacy works and volunteer activities.

In the city of Tacloban, Napoto and his group are demanding from the government stronger climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction and management policies.

They are also calling for the immediate phaseout of coal and other fossil fuels and a transition to the use of renewable energy.

In a message to the U.N. Climate Action Summit last year, Pope Francis called on people around to world “to cultivate three great moral qualities: honesty, responsibility and courage.”

“While the situation is not good, and the planet is suffering, the window of opportunity is still open,” said the pontiff.

Responding to the pope’s call, Napoto said he will continue to take responsibility and to raise the environment’s voice in his own little way.

As another year starts, Sustento and Napoto vowed to persist as “climate warriors” no matter how long and arduous the battle ahead.

Filipinos welcome 2020 ‘with hopes rather than with fears’

Mark Saludes, Philippines
LICAS.NEWS
January 2, 2020

Advocates for indigenous peoples’ rights share food and stories with displaced tribal children to mark the start of the new year. (Photo by Mark Saludes)

A survey conducted at the end of 2019 revealed that despite difficulties they have encountered Filipinos continue to remain hopeful about the future.

Results of a survey done by independent pollster Social Weather Stations showed that 96 percent of respondents are “entering 2020 with hopes rather than with fears.”

“Hope gives me the energy to move on and pursue my dreams for my community,” said Lodema dela Cruz Doroteo, a teacher, when asked about the survey results.

Doroteo belongs to the Dumagat tribe in Tanay town, north of Manila. She is the first to finish college from her poor community.

When she finished her education in 2016, she went back to her tribe and established a school for tribal children.

“We started with nothing,” she said, adding that she used charcoal, stones, and bamboo as writing materials.

She used the power of social media to gather support for the community school. People from the city responded and provided help.

Fear, however, recently enveloped Doroteo’s village when an armed clash erupted between government security forces and communist guerrillas.

When the military operations began, teachers and pupils were prevented from going to school. People were also prohibited to enter the forest.

Doroteo set aside fear and clung to her belief that “only education will give my people the courage to speak out for their rights.”

She continues to open the school despite the threats. She recounted an incident when soldiers accused the teachers of teaching the children how to use guns.

Fireworks welcome the new year in the suburb of Quezon City in the Philippine capital Manila. (Photo by Angie de Silva)

Rebuilding hope to battle fear

In the southern Philippines, an activist group said “hope and space” for tribal education are “diminishing” because of continuous attacks on tribal schools and communities.

“Fear is all over the place,” said Rius Valle, spokesman of the group Save Our Schools Network.

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Philippines’ feast of Black Nazarene off to solemn start

Marielle Lucenio, Philippines
LICAS.NEWS
January 2, 2020

Thousands of people join the annual thanksgiving procession in honor of Manila’s Black Nazarene on Dec. 31. (Photo by Jire Carreon)

Devotees of the Black Nazarene crowded outside the church of Manila’s old Quiapo district on the last day of the year to mark the start of an annual feast that usually attracts millions of people.

An estimated 64,000 crowd joined the thanksgiving procession for the Black Nazarene midnight of Dec. 31.

Philippine authorities said this year’s procession was record-breaking because it was over in only one hour and 40 minutes, compared to previous years when it took more than four hours.

“The longer the time that we spend in the procession, the more it is susceptible to crime, susceptible to threats,” said police Brigadier General Debold Sinas, head of the capital’s police office.

Monsignor Hernando Coronel, rector of Quiapo church, said this year, the image of Jesus carrying a cross was placed on a carroza, or float, instead of on a platform called andas, which was used to be pulled by the faithful during the procession.

“There were no banners, no unruly mob that used to climb the andas,” he noted.

The priest described this year’s procession as “the most solemn and orderly,” adding that even those who followed the event on social media noticed the behavior of the crowd.

This year’s thanksgiving procession also saw changes with devotees following the carroza of the Nazarene. “Everyone had candles and prayed the rosary,” said Monsignor Coronel.

Authorities said the same security arrangement will be implemented during the traslacion procession, or the transfer of the image during actual feast on Jan. 9.

Attending Catholics said their faith continues to be strong despite their failure to touch the image of the Black Nazarene during the thanksgiving procession.

“It is not necessary to touch or to get near the Black Nazarene,” said Elmer, 51, a devotee since he was 15 years old. “I have always believed that he’s just there, anytime I can go to him,” he said.

JR Aquino, 32, said that although some people were disappointed because they failed to touch the image of Jesus, “I don’t mind because I’m here to just give thanks to the Nazarene for everything.

“I still won’t be separated with the Nazarene because he gave me the strength to still be devoted to him, to worship him,” said Romy, a devotee since 1953.

The thanksgiving procession on the last day of the year is held annually ahead of the big religious procession every Jan. 9.

Traslacion, which means transfer, is often referred to as the Feast of the Black Nazarene. It emulates the “solemn transfer” of the image from its original shrine in the old Manila to the Minor Basilica in Quiapo in 1787.

The Black Nazarene is a life-size image of a dark-skinned, kneeling Jesus Christ carrying the cross.

Every year, on Jan. 9, millions of devotees join a procession to re-enact the 1787 transfer. The annual religious event is the largest procession in the country, drawing millions of devotees thronging to touch the icon and lasting 20 hours at the most.