Dutertopia-DU30 thread - Containment

Since there's a lot of stuff on the current president of the Philippines, we should put them here. He encourages people to kill drug addicts, told Obama to go to hell and likens himself to Hitler

Here an article about this guy


http://www.esquiremag.ph/politics/duterte-100-days-dutertopia-a1515-20161007-lfrm3

POLITICS
100 Days in Dutertopia
by CLINTON PALANCA | 4 DAYS AGO
13.6K Shares

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Duterte100days000MAIN_main.jpg

ILLUSTRATOR Warren Espejo


The most popular president in living memory has just passed his first milestone. What the first three months has revealed about Duterte as a leader, and about us as a nation, is truly frightening.



* * *

How long must we go on being outraged? This is not a rhetorical question: being outraged is hard work. We wake up in the morning, check our social media feeds, check the news, read the comments sections. Our blood begins to boil. We feel rage, frustration, and helplessness. But the day’s work must be done, and so we put our feelings on the back burner and go about our business, until something else—the futility of sitting in traffic, the mendacity of the clerks at the post office, the indignity of being sideswiped by a black SUV bristling with bumper stickers declaring their love of guns and allegiance to the new president—reminds us that we now live in Dutertopia. If the Japanese have kaizen, the philosophy of continuous improvement, we have the opposite, whatever it is called: things just get worse every day.

The news is not good. At the top of the list are the extrajudicial killings, often abbreviated snazzily as “EJK,” which makes it sound harmless, like a medical condition. But to press a point, ours is a country without a death penalty, so there is no such thing as a judicial killing. These are murders, pure and simple. They continue, every day; many news outlets have been keeping a running tally. This, and other aspects of Mr. Duterte’s obsession with drugs and drug addicts in general, are chilling. He has said, during the State of the Nation address, no less, that methamphetamine addicts have shrunken brains and are beyond rehabilitation. Drug addicts, furthermore, are “contagious” and turn into pushers who get their friends hooked on drugs. Photos of overcrowded prisons have started to circulate, which further bolsters his solution: to simply kill them, like carriers of a plague.

Duterte100_clinton_section01.jpg



ILLUSTRATOR Warren Espejo


The news is not good. At the top of the list are the extrajudicial killings, often abbreviated snazzily as “EJK,” which makes it sound harmless, like a medical condition. These are murders, pure and simple. They continue, every day.

We tend to think that our friends think like us: that’s why they’re our friends, after all. So when intelligent, kind, generous people, with whom we have shared many meals and laughter, declare that they are not just okay with the new politics of violence, but that it’s good for the country, we can’t help but feel betrayed. It’s like discovering that they believe the world is flat. And then we begin to discover that more people than we think believe that this president is a great man, and that what he is doing is beneficial and the sight of a dead “drug lord” is a beautiful thing. This is the point at which we begin to wonder if we’re the only sane people left in the country, and whether the walls of the madhouse are to hold us in or keep the world outside.

This is the dark side of our people’s ability to quickly form collective movements; 30 years ago the empathetic euphoria took on a dictator, successfully, and was given the term “People Power.” It is the same ability to convince ourselves and others that gave a candidate, who won with less than 40 percent of the official vote, the mandate of a 91 percent trust rating in a survey done shortly after his proclamation.

And then we begin to discover that more people than we think believe that this president is a great man, and that what he is doing is beneficial and the sight of a dead “drug lord” is a beautiful thing. This is the point at which we begin to wonder if we’re the only sane people left in the country, and whether the walls of the madhouse are to hold us in or keep the world outside.

Even by the standards of a newly elected president, these are high numbers. The presidential communications team has had no hesitation in trumpeting these numbers to their advantage, nor in casting detractors as an #EnemyofChange. (The coming polling numbers in October is likely to bring a less buoyant vision, but the more ardent supporters can be somewhat selective in their choice of which facts to highlight.)

Since then, Mr. Duterte has parlayed his political capital into a public acceptance of his war on drugs; he has overcome formidable resistance both in government and in the populace to allow Marcos’s burial in the National Heroes’ Cemetery; and he’s begun a process of charter change that would break the Philippines up into self-governing states (i.e., federalism) and change the government to a parliamentary system, albeit one with an elected president. He has also goaded the military to try and come at him with a coup d’etat, threatened to impose Martial Law in response to a rebuke by the Supreme Court, and called the U.S. ambassador a putangina on public television.

Duterte100_clinton_section02.jpg



ILLUSTRATOR Warren Espejo


At a certain point all the handwringing eventually peters away, because our wrists are exhausted; all the keyboard warriors stop typing because their fingers are numb; all the voices of dissent stop shouting because there’s no one shouting with them.

Fewer people (than one would have thought) are disturbed by this. At a rally against the Marcos burial only a few thousand—reported by the New York Times as “hundreds”—showed up, an embarrassingly poor showing that further weakened the opposition. At a certain point all the handwringing eventually peters away, because our wrists are exhausted; all the keyboard warriors stop typing because their fingers are numb; all the voices of dissent stop shouting because there’s no one shouting with them.

This gradual acceptance of the status quo is a slow plummet to the bottom. Only automatons can go on without a break; only true zealots don’t stop to question themselves. We begin to wonder if popular wisdom has been right all along. Perhaps this really is what the country needs. Human rights are for sissies and the squeamish, and a purge is a necessary sacrifi ce to rid the country of the twin vices of drugs and corruption. We have been blind, so blind all along, to how China and the previous administration was turning this country into a narco-state. It’s probably just rival gangs offing one another, so even if it’s bloody it’ll be the good guys who are left standing. The US and other prim finger-wagging first world countries know nothing of the realities of our grinding poverty and the grim reality of drug use that have broken up families and turned good men into murderers.

This gradual acceptance of the status quo is a slow plummet to the bottom.Only automatons can go on without a break; only true zealots don’t stop to question themselves.

When frustration and futility turn to indifference, the self-justification starts to kick in. Look, Marcos’s body isn’t even a body, it’s just a wax figurine, and it’s all just symbolic, after all. Let it be done, so we can get on with our lives. Allow the president his personal obsession if he can deliver on his promises to instill the fear of God in the predatory government bureaux who make our lives hell. Maybe he’ll even succeed, and heaven knows, there is nothing to like about crystal meth. This is change worth pursuing. How wonderful, how blissful it feels to surrender, to stop fi ghting it, to accept the premises of Dutertopia. It feels, ironically, like letting morphine course through the body: no more anger, no more frustration, let daddy take care of things. He’s on your side and he’ll keep the bad people away.

In a warped, oddball way, this is finally the idea-based politics that the Philippines has been lacking. We don’t actually have a divide between Democrat and Republican, between Liberal and Conservative, between far-right and socialist. Yes, our parties do have platforms, perfunctorily, but our election politics is largely personality-based. But the main fault line in our democracy is the polarization between people who believe in government institutions who operate within a system of checks and balances, and those who believe in a more efficient, autocratic, authoritarian system of government. And the failure of institutions during the previous administration has swung the pendulum toward authoritarianism.

Duterte100_clinton_section03.jpg



ILLUSTRATOR Warren Espejo


They are unable to understand that opposition is an integral part of how running a country works, and that those who disagree are just as much patriots as them, and simply see a different path out of the woods.

To a certain extent I understand the supporters of Mr. Duterte. Most of them want the same things that I do: safe streets, trains that run on time, and a sense of sovereignty. They believe in the “Singapore model” of discipline, order, and hierarchical leadership. I could even come to an agreement with them on some points if only Mr. Duterte’s administration were not one of such grinding stupidity, and his tactics so bullying, and his most outspoken supporters so vile. They are unable to understand that opposition is an integral part of how running a country works, and that those who disagree are just as much patriots as them, and simply see a different path out of the woods.

Instead of debate and dialogue, disagreement and dissent are dealt with using the tactics of the schoolground bully: threats, sometimes carried out, of physical harm, rape, murder. Online, they engage in the worst possible behavior, swarming the feeds and accounts of their dissenters with ad hominem attacks; they use lies and half-truths to fuel their arguments, and they are impervious to considering opposing views. “So what are you going to do about it? Oh, are you going to cry? Go on, run to the Commission on Human Rights, run to the UN and hide behind their skirts.”

But why would they act otherwise, when their hero employs these tactics himself and carries himself with sarcastic braggadocio and channels Hugo Chavez in his dealings with diplomats, when he lashes out at critics by calling out their personal lives. Worryingly, he has alienated the Philippines’ biggest strategic ally, the United States, not just by insulting their president, but forgoing important bilateral talks in a childish sulk. He has also lashed out at the UN and the EU for daring to criticize the effectiveness and methods of his drug war.

But why would they act otherwise, when their hero employs these tactics himself and carries himself with sarcastic braggadocio and channels Hugo Chavez in his dealings with diplomats, when he lashes out at critics by calling out their personal lives.

In every conflict it is worth looking for the humanity in one’s adversaries, and I would like to think that most of Mr. Duterte’s supporters are people who have the country’s best interests at heart, but see a different, darker, harsher form of government than the one I want. At the far end of the spectrum are the trolls and extremists, rumored to be paid to use social media to attack, but perhaps—and I’m honestly not sure which is worse—not paid, and simply hateful people dripping with vitriol and willing to stoop to the lowest depths of dirty trickery and foul language to keep dissenters in line. At the moment there is simply no communication going on between the factions of those who support the president and his administration, and those who are critical of it. To even dare raise objections gets one labeled as an “enemy of change,” and are punished by online shaming and harassment—and they are no less hurtful for being online.

For those who support the president and his methods, I must ask: Where is your moral compass? Where is your basic sense of decency and humanity? Do you believe that the end justifies the means? Because if so then I have news for you: This is not the story arc of a television show. There is no end in politics: it goes on and on and turns into history. The various means available to do things: the way we build a society, the way we disagree, the way we choose to solve problems; these are all we have.

He is a bully and a narcissist; he has no regard for human life and basic morality; his obsession with the war on drugs precludes his involvement in other pressing internal and external matters that bore him and will be delegated to the incompetent or the corrupt; and he brings out the worst in both his supporters and his detractors. He is simply the wrong man for the job, and even his most fanatic devotees should pause for a moment and check in with their humanity at the most basic level.

Those of us who believe that government should be run as a set of institutions that collide because they must, and impose checks and balances against one another can very well see the merits of the opposing point of view that a single strong leader with a compliant government could work in certain circumstances, with the right person.

But Mr. Duterte is not that person. Even as he reaches his first 100 days, this is patently obvious. He is a bully and a narcissist; he has no regard for human life and basic morality; his obsession with the war on drugs precludes his involvement in other pressing internal and external matters that bore him and will be delegated to the incompetent or the corrupt; and he brings out the worst in both his supporters and his detractors. He is simply the wrong man for the job, and even his most fanatic devotees should pause for a moment and check in with their humanity at the most basic level.

Worryingly, while the outraged middle classes are busy being aghast at the incivility of it all, and fighting ideological battles about the Marcos burial, he has quietly been amassing more power for himself. His first executive order as president is a reorganization of the Executive Department that creates a narrow hierarchy with one of his closest aides at the top. He has proposed a tenfold increase in the budget of the Office of the President. He has also asked Congress to sign off on a fuller reorganization act of the various bureaux and departments of the government—an alarming proposition, given his alliances and intents. This has happened only four times in the past: 1935, 1946, 1972, and 1987; if you think about those dates closely you will understand the kind of sea change that is imminent. And not least of all, hovering over all of this, is his plan to move toward a federal and parliamentary system of government; again, I am open to the idea, but under different circumstances: this is not the right time, and this is not the right man.

Duterte100_clinton_section04.jpg



ILLUSTRATOR Warren Espejo


Worryingly, while the outraged middle classes are busy being aghast at the incivility of it all, and fighting ideological battles about the Marcos burial, he has quietly been amassing more power for himself.

The popularity of the president and the willingness of his supporters to abandon common sense and openness to debate and dissent has become a magnet for a power play among the political elite that will change the landscape of Philippine politics for generations. The most obvious is, of course, the move toward a dictatorship; this will not be opposed by the majority of the politicians as long as they have a seat at the table. The ousting of Leila de Lima as justice committee chairperson in the Senate proves that Mr. Duterte and the oligarchic coalition behind him have the numbers for it.

More importantly, he has if not the support, then at least the consent, of the people. Through a clever use of propaganda, fake news, appeals to emotion, distortion of facts, and simply making things too confusing for people to follow and understand, there is popular support for authoriarian rule. It is amazing how quickly things have moved: we are just approaching the new president’s first 100 days, and Dutertopia is already here. Was our democracy so weak, that it be so easily felled in one quick blow? Was our resentment at the elite so strong and so easily channeled? Are we so blind, so easily swayed by rhetoric of violence, so easily cowed, so quick to fall in line and obey?

Through a clever use of propaganda, fake news, appeals to emotion, distortion of facts, and simply making things too confusing for people to follow and understand, there is popular support for authoriarian rule.

How long, then, must we go on being outraged? How long before we act? We can take it lying down, or we can take it on our knees; either way, we’ll be screwed, just in a different way. The only way not to be is to be on our feet and fighting; but the opposition is scarce and scraggly, we don’t have the numbers, and we don’t have a leader behind whom we can rally. The safest recourse is to wait, and make feeble protests, the kind we make when someone else offers to pay for the bill.

But the safest option might not be the best one, and even as a despot shows his true colors he is less and less easily unseated. We will grow less safe, our government less democratic, our country less civil.

Previous threads about him:

https://kiwifarms.net/threads/philippines-pm-duterte-to-obama-go-to-hell.24729/

https://kiwifarms.net/threads/philippines-leader-likens-himself-to-hitler.24628/


https://kiwifarms.net/threads/ex-philippine-president-ramos-says-duterte-government-a-letdown.24906/
 
I honestly think that Trump may be better suited to negotiate with him. As much as I wish Trump would win, he is a douche, and he knows how to handle other, lesser douches.

If it is Lizard queen as it is all likely.... well than I don't want the US having any allies in the first place. Also, she would fuck any negotiation up easily.
 
I think the reason Duterte is really angry when it comes to US is because his application for US visa got rejected a long time ago.


That's just petty of him if that's why he's severing ties with US. The Philippines elected a child-in-chief.

That's a spectacularly stupid theory. Duterte shit talks the U.S. because it makes him look like a strongman to the Filipino public. Standing up to the big bad American imperialists is a hit with voters anywhere outside the West. It's not that Filipinos hate Americans (the opposite, in fact) but they've suffered so much from poverty and corruption they have no more sympathy or moralism left. This makes them highly vulnerable to bold nationalist sentiments about shaking off allegedly negative foreign influence.

The U.S. is a great target for nationalist demagogues because the U.S. never retaliates diplomatically. 21st century American foreign policy is careful about effacing respect, maturity and moral righteousness, notwithstanding America's strategic interests in the South China Sea that make the Philippines important. Duterte is like a shitty autistic poodle nipping at the ankles of the big dog that knows it can't bite back because it'd validate the poodle's rhetoric that it's evil and domineering.
 
His visits are now getting some other places in that region worried:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/dutertes-asia-tour-adds-edgy-uncertainty-already-tense-140858182.html

About 100 US Army special operation troops on the southern island of Mindanao to help with counterterrorism efforts. An additional 6,400 US troops have participated in two joint military exercises in the Southeast Asian nation since April.

But if President Rodrigo Duterte gets his way, they’ll all be gone in two years.


"I want them out," he told a group of Japanese and Filipino businessmen in Tokyo on Wednesday. He also reaffirmed his pledge to not participate in future joint military exercises with the United States. The most recent war games took place earlier in October. “This will be the last maneuver, war games, between the US and the Philippine military.”

The outspoken president didn’t stop there. He said he was willing to “revise or abrogate agreements,” presumably those signed with the United States, a longtime treaty ally.

Analysts say Duterte’s aggressive push to distance the Philippines from the US has injected new uncertainties into a region already brimming with tension. China has been increasingly assertive in recent years in its claims of sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, constructing military facilities and artificial islands in the area. That has angered many of its neighbors, including Vietnam, Malaysia, and, until now, the Philippines. The US has also intensified its pushback, conducting four "freedom of navigation" patrols over the past year to challenge China's claims – most recently on Oct. 21.

But for now, amid the confusion over Duterte's true intent as he woos China, other major powers in the Pacific are being forced to wait cautiously – and avoid exacerbating tensions by overreacting to the abrupt change in tone from the Philippines' tough-talking new president.


“He is a hard bargainer in trying to reposition the Philippines in the South China Sea,” says Zhu Feng, executive director of the Center for Collaborative Studies of the South China Sea at Nanjing University. “The problem is we have to see how far he’s willing to go. How his rhetoric will turn into real action is still a big question mark.”

In Japan, concern over whether Duterte might chew gum in front of the emperor when the two were scheduled to meet Thursday quickly gave way to deeper fears over the balance of power in the Asia-Pacific. (The meeting was later canceled because of the death of Emperor Akihito’s uncle.)

“The Japanese are no doubt worried,” says Zhang Baohui, a professor of international relations at Lingnan University in Hong Kong. “Japan, like the US, wants the Philippines to play a role in weakening Chinese legitimacy in the South China Sea, and until Duterte, it had done that very well.”

Professor Zhang says few countries care as much about the South China Sea issue as Japan. The Japanese government views the Philippines as an important counterweight to China’s growing military assertiveness in the region. Much to Tokyo’s disappointment, however, Duterte has refused to pursue what was a major victory for his country: an international tribunal’s ruling in July that said China had violated international law by interfering with the rights of Filipino fishermen around the Scarborough Shoal, which both countries claim.

For Japan, which agreed this week to supply the Philippines with two patrol ships to protect its interests in the South China Sea, the dispute is also personal. Tokyo doesn’t want any precedents set in its own territorial dispute with Beijing over a chain of islands in the East China Sea (see map here).

On Thursday, Duterte told reporters his country could hold joint military exercises with Japan while reiterating that he will not conduct them with the US.

As a staunch US ally and the Philippines’ largest trading partner, Japan is in a unique position to help Manila mend its strained relationship with Washington. But Duterte appears uninterested, and he continues to cozy up to China and pull away from the US.

His remarks Wednesday provided the clearest signal yet that he wants to renegotiate a 2014 security deal signed under his predecessor. The agreement gives the US access to five military bases in the Philippines, including one on an island about 100 miles from the disputed Spratly Islands, where China has built three military outposts. The deal’s unraveling would be a major coup for Beijing, which has long viewed it as an effort to contain China.

Duterte’s approach to foreign policy is a source of widespread confusion in the US and Japan. Officials in both countries have struggled to determine his true intentions. For now, the White House has resorted to classifying his statements as political rhetoric that have yet to be supported by any official policy shifts.

“We haven’t received any formal notification or communication from the Filipino government that they're planning to make any changes to our relationship,” White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Wednesday at a news briefing in Washington.

Following Duterte’s speech on Wednesday, Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay told reporters in Tokyo that Manila had no intention of severing diplomatic ties with Washington. But he explained that joint military exercises hindered its ability to foster friendly relations with Beijing.

Indeed, Duterte’s eagerness to improve relations with China has emerged as one of the few constants of his foreign policy since he took office in late June. Prior to his trip to Japan, he signed some $24 billion in investment and cooperation deals during a four-day state visit to Beijing last week.

“I want to be friends to China,” Duterte said Wednesday.

The question for Japan, the US, and other countries in the region is how much that friendship will cost, and, more important, how much Duterte is willing to pay.
 
Now China will build four artificial islands near Mindanao, closer to Duterte's city:

http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2016/10/china-will-create-four-artificial.html?m=1

A Chinese state-owned company said to have been involved in Beijing's island-building in the South China Sea signed a deal to construct islands for rival claimant the Philippines as its President Rodrigo Duterte visited last week.

CCCC Dredging will create four artificial islands totaling 208 hectares of reclaimed land in Davao, the port city on the southern island of Mindanao where Duterte was mayor, the Beijing Youth Daily reported.

The islands will spread along eight kilometers of coastline and be used for government buildings, commercial spaces, residences, ports and industry in a project to be completed by 2019, it added.

UPDATE - More details on China's dredging fleet and the Philippine island deal and plans



The four new artificial islands appear to be planned around Davao. They will be developed for mixed-use, business and residential purposes along the coastline under a P39-billion reclamation project that city government plans to undertake with a major private developer.





SOURCES- Spacewar, Jnquirer.net
 
Now Duterte claims God spoke to him and told him to stop with the swearing. Uh huh:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippines-duterte-says-god-warned-him-off-swearing-083224434.html

MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has promised to stop swearing, saying God spoke to him on a flight from Japan on Thursday, warning him the plane would crash if he kept using bad language.

The maverick former mayor, famous for profanity that has included outbursts aimed at Pope Francis and U.S. President Barack Obama, said he heard a voice and realised it was God, telling him to clean up his act.


"I was looking at the skies while I was coming over here ... everybody was asleep, snoring, but a voice said that, 'you know, if you don't stop epithets, I will bring this plane down now'," Duterte said at a news conference late on Thursday upon arrival in his home city of Davao.

"And I said, 'who is this?' So, of course, it's God. OK.

"So, I promise God ... not to express slang, cuss words and everything."

Duterte, a former outspoken city mayor, emerged as a brash, crass, alternative candidate in a May election which he won by a big margin, owing much to his earthy style and promises to tackle problems important to ordinary people, like drugs and crime.

Advice to act more presidential once he took office was not heeded for long, however, and he resumed his eruptions of profanity with gusto when he started hearing foreign criticism of his deadly drugs war.

He has called U.S. President Barack Obama a "son of a bitch" and chose the same words when criticising the pope.

He told Obama to "go to hell", called U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon a "devil" and said "fuck you" twice to the European Union, while raising his middle finger.

In Tokyo on Tuesday, Duterte used the same language when speaking about his anger with foreign criticism of his drug war.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner declined to say whether Duterte's vow might make dealing with him easier, but added: "He's certainly entitled to his views about his own relationship with a supreme being."


It was not the first time Duterte has spoken of his connection with God, whom he said had made him president.

Alan Peter Cayetano, Duterte's vice-presidential running mate and now his foreign affairs adviser, said Duterte was tired and appeared pensive during the flight back from Japan.

"He felt it was a message from God," Cayetano told reporters on Friday.

"I've always felt he's a deeply spiritual person. He's not religious, but he believes in God."

The Philippines is predominantly Roman Catholic.
 
I can't help but wonder: how bad was the drug problem and government corruption in the Philippines that this guy was considered (at least for a time) by the voters to be the lesser evil?
 
Now Duterte claims God spoke to him and told him to stop with the swearing. Uh huh:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippines-duterte-says-god-warned-him-off-swearing-083224434.html

MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has promised to stop swearing, saying God spoke to him on a flight from Japan on Thursday, warning him the plane would crash if he kept using bad language.

The maverick former mayor, famous for profanity that has included outbursts aimed at Pope Francis and U.S. President Barack Obama, said he heard a voice and realised it was God, telling him to clean up his act.


"I was looking at the skies while I was coming over here ... everybody was asleep, snoring, but a voice said that, 'you know, if you don't stop epithets, I will bring this plane down now'," Duterte said at a news conference late on Thursday upon arrival in his home city of Davao.

"And I said, 'who is this?' So, of course, it's God. OK.

"So, I promise God ... not to express slang, cuss words and everything."

Duterte, a former outspoken city mayor, emerged as a brash, crass, alternative candidate in a May election which he won by a big margin, owing much to his earthy style and promises to tackle problems important to ordinary people, like drugs and crime.

Advice to act more presidential once he took office was not heeded for long, however, and he resumed his eruptions of profanity with gusto when he started hearing foreign criticism of his deadly drugs war.

He has called U.S. President Barack Obama a "son of a bitch" and chose the same words when criticising the pope.

He told Obama to "go to hell", called U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon a "devil" and said "fuck you" twice to the European Union, while raising his middle finger.

In Tokyo on Tuesday, Duterte used the same language when speaking about his anger with foreign criticism of his drug war.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner declined to say whether Duterte's vow might make dealing with him easier, but added: "He's certainly entitled to his views about his own relationship with a supreme being."


It was not the first time Duterte has spoken of his connection with God, whom he said had made him president.

Alan Peter Cayetano, Duterte's vice-presidential running mate and now his foreign affairs adviser, said Duterte was tired and appeared pensive during the flight back from Japan.

"He felt it was a message from God," Cayetano told reporters on Friday.

"I've always felt he's a deeply spiritual person. He's not religious, but he believes in God."

The Philippines is predominantly Roman Catholic.
:story:
 
Now China will build four artificial islands near Mindanao, closer to Duterte's city:

http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2016/10/china-will-create-four-artificial.html?m=1

A Chinese state-owned company said to have been involved in Beijing's island-building in the South China Sea signed a deal to construct islands for rival claimant the Philippines as its President Rodrigo Duterte visited last week.

CCCC Dredging will create four artificial islands totaling 208 hectares of reclaimed land in Davao, the port city on the southern island of Mindanao where Duterte was mayor, the Beijing Youth Daily reported.

The islands will spread along eight kilometers of coastline and be used for government buildings, commercial spaces, residences, ports and industry in a project to be completed by 2019, it added.

UPDATE - More details on China's dredging fleet and the Philippine island deal and plans



The four new artificial islands appear to be planned around Davao. They will be developed for mixed-use, business and residential purposes along the coastline under a P39-billion reclamation project that city government plans to undertake with a major private developer.





SOURCES- Spacewar, Jnquirer.net


So they want to fix the sea dispute by giving the Phillippines more land? That's.... crazy ambitious... but it may just work!
 
So they want to fix the sea dispute by giving the Phillippines more land? That's.... crazy ambitious... but it may just work!

His strategy begins to make more sense. He'd better hire his own guys, though, to check on the feasibility of this shit and whether China is just going to build them a bunch of garbage that sinks back into the sea in a few years.
 
Now the man that persuaded Duterte to run for president is distancing himself from him and resigning as his envoy to China:

http://qz.com/825274/the-very-man-w...-has-quit-his-team/?utm_source=YPL&yptr=yahoo

When Rodrigo Duterte was considering whether to run for president in the Philippines, it was a respected former president, Fidel V. Ramos, who persuaded him to try. But Ramos, having seen Duterte’s first four months in office, is now distancing himself from the very man he helped bring to office.

Last night (Nov. 1) Duterte confirmed that he received a resignation letter from Ramos, whom he had appointed as a special envoy to China in July. Ramos, who had established a good rapport with Beijing in years past, helped Duterte’s administration break the ice with China’s leadership after years of growing tension over the South China Sea. Last month Duterte and a large business delegation visited Beijing on a state visit that resulted in numerous deals and agreements.

Ramos did not join them, and on Oct. 31, he announced his resignation, to the surprise of Duterte’s cabinet.

But it shouldn’t have come as a surprise. Ramos has repeatedly expressed dismay over Duterte’s actions as president.

In an Oct. 11 interview with television channel ANC, Ramos objected to Duterte crudely insulting world leaders, including US president Barack Obama and United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-moon. (Duterte complained they were “disrespectful” to him for questioning his war on drugs, which has involved thousands of extrajudicial killings.)

Ramos has also criticized Duterte forspending too much energy on his war on drugs while neglecting poverty, the environment, and rising living costs.

In an Oct. 21 column in the Manila Bulletin looking at the first 100 days of Duterte in office, Ramos said that the Philippines is “losing badly. This is a huge disappointment and let-down to many of us.” He also questioned why Duterte felt it necessary to alienate the US. “Are we throwing away decades of military partnership, tactical proficiency, compatible weaponry, predictable logistics and soldier-to-soldier camaraderie, just like that? On [Duterte’s] say-so?”

Ramos, a West Point graduate, has deep ties in the Philippine military. While Duterte has approved a large pay increasefor police and members of the military, some believe Ramos’s displeasure with Duterte could represent similar displeasure from the military.

“There’s some worry about Duterte in patriotic circles in the Philippines,” said Anders Corr, a risk consultant based in New York. “They’re not sure why he’s doing what he’s doing. They’re not sure why he doesn’t like the US so much. It concerns a lot of people there.”
 
The flippity flop is hard to pull off. Even for long career politicians who are born liars.
 
Now he is meeting with a well known Muslim rebel leader:

https://www.google.com/amp/indianex...t-rodrigo-duterte-3735760/lite/?client=safari


nur-misuari-759.jpg
Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) leader Nur Misuari celebrates with Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Jesus Dureza, after a court suspended a warrant for Misuari’s arrest, at Jolo, in southern Philippines November 3, 2016. (REUTERS)
An influential leader of the Philippines’ decades-long Muslim separatist insurgency voiced support today for peace efforts after rebellion charges against him were suspended and he held a surprise meeting with President Rodrigo Duterte.

Moro National Liberation Front founder Nur Misuari was flown on a government-commissioned plane more than 900 kilometres from his southern jungle stronghold to Manila for the meeting with Duterte at the presidential palace.


“I came here to thank him for restoring my freedom, if only partially,” Misuari said.

“Should he need our cooperation in his campaign for peace, you can count on us.”

Misuari, 77, had been in hiding since his forces allegedly launched attacks on civilians in the southern city of Zamboanga in 2013, leading to a three-week battle against the military that claimed about 200 lives.

The government of Duterte’s predecessor, Benigno Aquino, filed rebellion charges against Misuari, but he was able to remain on his southern island stronghold of Jolo under the protection of his armed followers.

Misuari, a charismatic scholar, founded the MNLF in 1972 to wage a guerrilla war for a separate Islamic
state in the south of mainly Catholic Philippines. Most of the nation’s Muslim minority live in the southern region of Mindanao.

The conflict, which also involved other rebel groups, is believed to have claimed more than 120,000 lives and contributed to Mindanao remaining the nation’s poorest region.

Misuari signed a peace agreement with the government in 1996 in return for the creation of a Muslim autonomous area of which he became governor.

However the conflict persisted as the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, a splinter organisation with more than 10,000 armed followers, continued the rebellion. The MILF in recent years also began negotiating for peace.

Misuari allegedly orchestrated the 2013 Zamboanga attacks because he felt the MNLF was being sidelined under the planned MILF peace deal with Aquino.

Duterte is aiming to forge a final peace agreement with both groups, although he has not announced concrete plans on how he would do that or settle their rivalries.

It also remains unclear how many armed followers Misuari still has, and how much control he continues to hold over the MNLF.

Misuari yesterday insisted he remained a powerful force, and that thousands of men from other rebel groups had switched to become his followers.
 
Wow he really wants to be everybody's favourite buddy. I want to rate him optimistic.
 
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