The Education Agenda: A Laiko Online Conversation

November 16, 2021

To: All LAIKO Members: Arch/Diocesan Councils of the Laity & National Lay Organizations

Dear Brother and Sisters:

Good day!

As communicated before, the Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas will be conducting a series of follow-thru conversations this November to highlight the areas of concerns in the Resolutions of the recently concluded LAIKO National Convention.

For this Saturday, November 20, 2:00pm to 4:00 pm, we are pleased to invite you to the Online Conversation on “The Education Agenda” Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP). Speaker is Fr. Thadeu Enrique Balongag.

Kindly invite the members of your organizations to join us too. Below is the link to the event. To register, please email/inform Mr. Joseph Jesalva at laiko_phils@yahoo.com.ph.

CBCP-LAIKO is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: LAIKO CONVERSATION ON EDUCATION
Time: Nov 20, 2021 02:00 PM
Meeting ID: 851 2931 0973
Passcode: 153040

Thank you very much.

Sincerely in the service of the Lord, 

Christian Engagement in Politics Today

07 November 2021

Dear Networks of the Clergy Discernment Group,

Greetings from Religious Discernment Group.

The Season of Advent will soon be in our midst. This year’s celebration of the seasons of Advent and Christmas is well within the context of the Filipino people’s preparation for the May 9, 2022 elections. elections. When “the Word became flesh and pitched his tent among us” (John 1:14) humanity found hope in him. Our nation longs to see hope for our country in the coming 2022 elections.

The RDG has planned a series of online discussions on politics in the country and elections in 2022. The first conference was held last October 16 with the theme, “Philippine Politics in Context”. It proved to be a fruitful discussion and sharing.

The RDG is planning for its second conference on 04 December 2021, Saturday at 9:00-11:30 AM. The theme is “Christian Engagement in Politics Today”. The objective of this second conference is to present and clarify the participation of Christians in politics: why we must participate and engage in politics and how we can work for a “better kind of politics” (Fratelli Tutti, 154).

In this regard, may we invite you to attend the second webinar?

The speakers who confirmed their participation are Most Reverend Broderick Pabillo, D.D. of Apostolic Vicariate of Taytay, Palawan and Rev. Fr. Dionito Cabillas of Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI).

Please pre-register at this online link: https://forms.gle/1eQgXq9ydkCCdRXF9 .

Please contact our secretariat through the email address: religious discernment @gmail .com or mobile number 09966193538, for any questions.

Thank you very much and we are looking forward to your generous and positive response.

Pope Francis on World Day of the Poor: Be ‘tireless builders of hope’ amid suffering

Pope Francis offers Mass for the fifth World Day of the Poor on Nov. 14, 2021. | Vatican Media/CNA

 
By Courtney Mares
Vatican City, Nov 14, 2021

On the World Day of the Poor, Pope Francis urged Christians to be “tireless builders of hope” amid the darkness and suffering in the world.

“The World Day of the Poor which we are celebrating, asks us not to turn aside, not to be afraid to look closely at the suffering of those most vulnerable,” Pope Francis said in his homily on Nov. 14.

“Let us ask ourselves: what is demanded of us as Christians in the face of this reality? We are required to nurture tomorrow’s hope by healing today’s pain,” he said.

The pope offered Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica in the presence of 2,000 people living in poverty and the volunteers who assist them, according to the Vatican.

In his homily, Francis emphasized the importance of making “concrete gestures” and drawing close to the poor to “sow hope.”

“The hope born of the Gospel has nothing to do with a passive expectation that things may be better tomorrow … but with making God’s promise of salvation concrete today. Today and everyday,” he said.

Vatican Media
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Statement of Support to the Position Paper on the RCEP Trade Agreement

The Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas supports the position and appeal of the representatives of farmers, fishers and the private sector who unanimously oppose the ratification of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) trade agreement. We join them in urging the Senate to withhold its concurrence on the treaty.

The RCEP agreement, including its legal text and schedule of Philippine commitments, was finalized without consulting the agri-fisheries stakeholders, many of whom are directly affected by the treaty’s trade rules and concessions. Since there is no more opportunity to modify these commitments, at the detriment of our own economy and people, we strongly ask you our Senators not to give your concurrence.

In this same breath, we call upon our legislators to establish, fund and implement dedicated and sustained programs to improve the competitiveness and profitability of our farmers, fishers, traders, processors and exporters. This is what we truly need in order for us to recover from the economic impact of the current pandemic.

We trust that you will protect the genuine interests of the real economic builders of our society… our agri-fisheries heroes.

For the CBCP Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas Board,

Position Paper on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) Trade Agreement

We – the undersigned representatives of farmers, fishers, workers, civil society organizations and the private sector – unanimously oppose the ratification of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) trade agreement and urge the Senate to withhold its concurrence on the treaty.

The RCEP agreement, including its legal text and schedule of Philippine commitments, was finalized without consulting agri-fisheries stakeholders, many of whom are directly affected by the treaty’s trade rules and concessions. Moreover, no more opportunity exists today to modify our commitments or the legal text of the agreement.

We have not seen any clear and consistent basis for classifying agricultural tariff lines in the country’s schedule of tariff concessions. Joining RCEP now means that 75% of our 1,718 agricultural tariff lines will be set at zero. About 15% of tariff lines will be subjected to tariff reduction, while 9% will be exempted from any tariff change. A more detailed breakdown and evaluation of our obligations are necessary to ensure that no mistakes have been made, and that sufficient policy space remains to protect sensitive commodities.

More worrisome are proposed RCEP rules that will significantly hamper the application and effectiveness of trade remedies. These measures, such as safeguard duties, will be the only legal recourse to address import surges and other problems engendered by freer trade under RCEP. Any form of quantitative restriction (QR) – like suspending sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) import clearances during harvest periods – is strongly discouraged by RCEP and is also prohibited by our Rice Tariffication Law (RTL), although World Trade Organization (WTO) rules allow for temporary QR imposition under certain critical situations.

RCEP limits the allowable safeguard duty to the difference between a country’s applied most favored nation (MFN) tariff at any point during RCEP implementation and the RCEP tariff in effect when the safeguard remedy is invoked. For example, if the applied MFN tariff for a product is 35%, and our tariff commitment under RCEP is down to 25% when an import surge occurs, we can only impose a safeguard duty not exceeding 10%. Hence, sensitive products like rice, corn, and some fishery and livestock products – to be exempted from any tariff reduction under RCEP – might ironically be deprived of any safeguard protection, since their tariff at any time during RCEP implementation could already equal their applied MFN tariff.

This is a big departure from WTO rules, which permit the levying of any remedial duty necessary to prevent or rectify serious injury to a particular sector. Additionally, imports from least developed countries (LDCs) – such as Myanmar, Cambodia and possibly Vietnam – cannot be subjected to safeguard duties under RCEP rules. No such exemption exists under WTO rules.

We question the rosy projections on benefits from RCEP membership, and the purported losses if we stay outside the trade bloc come January 2022. We have heard such claims before, starting with the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)-Uruguay Round Agreement and the various regional and bilateral trade agreements that followed. We still have to see evidence that these optimistic forecasts have materialized. Performance data instead show a continuing deterioration in our terms of trade – minimal increases in exports, no expansion beyond traditional commodities, ballooning imports, and widening trade deficits. Nor is there any indication that our prospects will improve under RCEP. We therefore deem the claims regarding benefits from RCEP membership as overly presumptive, highly misleading and manifestly deceptive.

Not content with their imbalanced and exaggerated prognostications, some RCEP advocates are warning the Senate that “we will be left behind” should we fail to join RCEP by year end, although it is uncertain that the RCEP bus will actually bring us to our desired destination.

The agri-fisheries sector has generally not benefited from business opportunities arising from free trade agreements, while our competitors have increasingly dislodged us from export markets with superior and cheaper products. In turn, our entry into these trade pacts has forced us to open up our economy, even as we have failed to prepare for trade threats – resulting in import surges, price depressions, and displacement of local production.

We will never gain from RCEP and similar arrangements unless we establish, fund and implement dedicated and sustained programs to boost the competitiveness and profitability of our farmers, fishers, traders, processors and exporters. It is also nonsensical to push for RCEP membership when the benefits from this “good agreement” are essentially theoretical or imagined, whereas its dangers are real and proven by previous experience.

There is no urgency in joining RCEP today. We can always join later, when we have adequately understood the treaty’s ramifications and are ready to use RCEP membership to our advantage. Trade is not a race of countries to a finish line. Ultimately, trade is only a means to elevate people’s lives. Governments must thus exercise care and deliberation, so that trade agreements deliver on their promises, while minimizing harm to vulnerable sectors of society.

Meanwhile, our bilateral and regional free trade agreements with all RCEP member- countries will remain in force. We will still enjoy trade opportunities available outside RCEP. We can continue negotiating with our Free Trade Agreement (FTA) partners to secure additional advantages that are comparable to those contained in RCEP on the basis of equality, reciprocity, mutual benefit and national interest.

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Join a Nationwide Ringing of Church Bells: Marcos No Hero!

On-ground and Social Media Campaign

November 17, 2021 
Mass/Prayers for Justice at 8AM
Nationwide Ringing of Church Bells at 8:30AM

November 18, 2021
Multi-sectoral Caravan Motorcade, 10am

“I tell you,” he replied, “if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out.”

(Luke 19:40)

RING THE CHURCH BELLS!  
Ring out Justice.

RING THE CHURCH BELLS!
Honor the martyrs and heroes of the dark days of the Marcos’ Martial Law.

RING THE CHURCH BELLS!  
Ring out solidarity with the victims and survivors.
Drink in their inspiration and burn with the passion of their activism, that could neither be quenched nor extinguished,

RING THE CHURCH BELLS! 
Let them resound throughout the land.

RING THEM LOUD AND CLEAR, 
so the world will know:

MARCOS IS NO HERO!

On November 18, 2016, President Rodrigo Duterte buried the last dictator Ferdinand Marcos, Sr. in the Libingan ng mga Bayani.  This was an affront to survivors of the Marcos’ Martial Law. Every Filipino who is still paying the debt from the billions of pesos stolen by the Marcos family should be disturbed by such efforts of historic revision.

Now that Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. is running for president likely together with Sarah Duterte as his vice-president partner in the campaign, it is urgent for Church people to remind the public of the truth about the despotic leadership during the Marcos Martial Law and the Duterte administration (that also invoked Martial Law in Mindanao).

Now is a Kairos moment for the Christian faithful to rise with the nation 
To SPEAK TRUTH and RING OUT THE CRY FOR JUSTICE! 
We refuse to forget the misery of the dark days of the Marcos’ Martial Law.

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