There’s No Easy Way: Peace and Its Price

This entry is part 20 of 20 in the series The Cost of Peace: BJE MOA on AD

"There is nothing easier than lopping off heads and nothing harder than developing ideas." -- Fyodor Dostoevsky

"I like to believe that people in the long run are going to do more to promote peace than our governments. Indeed, I think that people want peace so much that one of these days governments had better get out of their way and let them have it."

"Wars are seldom caused by spontaneous hatreds between people, for peoples in general are too ignorant of one another to have grievances and too indifferent to what goes on beyond their borders to plan conquests. They must be urged to the slaughter by politicians who know how to alarm them." Henry Mencken

"There is no such thing as a good war and there is no such thing as a bad peace." Benjamin Franklin

"Short-circuiting the long-established principles of patient negotiation leads to war, not peace." Jimmy Carter

I miss the good old days -- when things weren't as complicated as they are now. It seemed rather peaceful then (or so I thought). Fact is, the world in general has not been truly peaceful at any time. Wars are as constant as change. And this world has seen one too many wars. There will always be small wars fought in certain parts of the world for all sorts of reason. I think humankind has a penchant for wars -- probably part of what makes us human -- to be hostile at times when certain boundaries are crossed. Continue reading →

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There’s No Turning Back

This entry is part 19 of 20 in the series The Cost of Peace: BJE MOA on AD

With all that's been written about the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity MOA on Ancestral Domain (BJE MOA on AD), it is as if the issue gets more and more tiring to discuss and write about everyday. It's September 2. Two days more and the SC TRO celebrates(?) its one month anniversary. To this day, although the BJE MOA on AD seems to be good as dead -- or "comatose" as others have called it -- the issue just wouldn't die a natural death. And why not? Freedom(?) or self-determination and the struggle for it is something far more important than the struggle for survival. If you don't believe it, ask yourself why we have heroes now. Ask yourself why Jose Rizal, the Ilustrado that he is or Andres Bonifacio, the poor guy that he is -- the two of them doing their own style of revolt had no second thoughts about putting their lives at risk for something they believed was above them or of their preoccupations -- the vision of a free Philippines. They know first-hand how a lot more difficult it is to survive and yet be enslaved or put more objectively, be under the rule of a colonizer. It is every man's instinct to fight for freedom -- for self-rule. Continue reading →

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Perception vs. Reality

This entry is part 18 of 20 in the series The Cost of Peace: BJE MOA on AD

I find it inexplicable why the BJE MOA on AD is being considered at odds with our constitution, hence this TRO and oral arguments, when a member of the MILF peace panel, MOHD. MUSIB M. BUAT in his article "A new formula in resolving the Mindanao conflict—Mohd. Musib M. Buat" at the abs-cbnNEWS.com website, said:

"But subsequently in February 2008, information was received by the MILF Peace Panel through the Malaysian facilitator that the GRP had decided to have the draft MOA-AD first reviewed by a panel of legal experts to ascertain whether or not the draft agreement would meet a constitutional test if challenged before the High Court. It took the government more that 100 days to conduct the "due diligence review" of the draft MOA-AD."  Continue reading →

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Live and Let Live: The Non-Negotiable Solution

This entry is part 17 of 20 in the series The Cost of Peace: BJE MOA on AD

Today's article at abs-cbnNEWS.com "From Brink of Peace to Brink of War" by Atty. Soliman M. Santos, Jr. brings to mind my long-held stand on the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (BJE MOA on AD). Continue reading →

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Eyes On The Prize

This entry is part 16 of 20 in the series The Cost of Peace: BJE MOA on AD

I need not elaborate. I'm sure any of you reading this have heard the news -- endless and hopeless as it may seem. Fighting continues in Mindanao. Ambush here. Strafing there. Evacuations here and there. Oral arguments re: unconstitutionality of BJE MOA (which, by the way, has been extended Firday once more, August 29) happened today. Sol. Gen. Devanadera submitted a petition for the SC citing GRP's decision not to sign the MOA, thereby rendering the petition filed against it "moot and academic". Torion, the petitioner's counsel, on the other hand insists on a court decision saying regardless of the BJE MOA being signed or not, SC's ruling is important so as to create a "guideline" for the GRP on it's expected "renegotiation" or "furthering of negotiations" and subsequently assure compliance to the constitution.

There are certain points in the oral arguments I'd like to comment on, as follows:

Continue reading →

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Just Thinking Out Loud

This entry is part 15 of 20 in the series The Cost of Peace: BJE MOA on AD

MLQ3's recent post "Berserkers and a breather" in Inquirer.net's "CURRENT" is an enlightening article. Unlike most widely-read posts spawned by bloggers mainly from Manila and other parts of Luzon -- which tend to rely heavily on news reports -- therefore, unintentionally appearing or turning-out one-sided and half-baked, this one gives us a more comprehensive coverage -- a bird's eye view of the recent events in Mindanao -- coming from the people who experience the news first-hand. The research and insight that come with articles of this sort is a compelling read, and I consider myself privileged to have read this.

As Real As It Gets

Stories blogged from Iligan and other parts of Mindanao are as real as can be. Sentiments expressed from all those blogs paint a picture so vivid that anyone who reads it can hardly ignore. In essence, it tells us how devastatingly and horrifyingly real this war is -- which, many of us who blog from a distance can only sympathize with but never actually "feel". Collectively, everyone wants this war to end so they can go on with their lives -- plain and simple. They approach the issue from different perspectives but eventually arrive at the same sentiment and wish -- if you may, which is peace.

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Two blogs quoted in the above article struck me:  Continue reading →

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