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
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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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 want to see the asshats who have been worshipping this guy explaining him palling around with Muslim terrorists.
Maybe the general populace is getting bored with killing "drug users" and he needs to bring in some fresh blood?
 
Again he is trying to buddy up to everybody in a very, very , very overdone fashion.

He has basically became that "Do you all like me now? Please senpais like me" person from being the super duper edgelord he was.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Marvin
More words from former president Ramos:

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/obviously-wrong-full-t-philippine-195727305.html

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has maintained a significant level of public supportsince taking office this summer, despite the bloodshed caused by his drug war and his often erratic behavior on the world stage.

But there is at least one high-profile Filipino who's exasperated by the brusque pronouncements of President DU30, as Duterte is known.

"In his consistently frequent insulting diatribes against the US, EU, and the UN, in which President Du30 also keeps complaining against the December, 2015, Paris Agreement on Climate Change (crafted by 195 nations, the Philippines included), he is unwittingly shooting himself in the mouth, and also all of us, 101.5 million Filipinos," Fidel Ramos, Philippine president from 1992 to 1998, wrote last week in the newspaper Manila Bulletin.

"He may claim that to be more 'insulting than friendly' to our long-established allies is part of his God-given 'destiny,'" Ramos continued. "But, this is obviously wrong, and full of S…. T !!!."

Ramos was inveighing against Duterte's attitude toward the international agreement to address climate change made in Paris late last year, which the current Philippine president has called "stupid" and "absurd."

https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/XmtYOsMR_tJd.V8RHPSMaQ--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTQ4MDtxPTc1O3NtPTE-/http://globalfinance.zenfs.com/en_us/Finance/US_AFTP_SILICONALLEY_H_LIVE/This_is_obviously_wrong_and-5ad9a9fef95ed1ed5f550050d646d41d(Former Philippine President Fidel Ramos speaks to journalists during a trip to Hong Kong, China, after a Hague court's ruling over the maritime dispute in South China Sea, August 12, 2016.REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo)

Duterte said his government would not honor the deal, as it would hinder the country's industrial growth, according to the Inquirer.

Ramos had served at Duterte's special envoy to China before stepping down this week in the wake of Duterte's trip to Beijing, which appears to have yielded some progress on Manila's access to Scarborough Shoal, a longstanding point of contention between the two countries.

Despite his role of envoy, Ramos has lashed out at Duterte before.

In early October, the former president wrote, "we find our team Philippines losing in the first 100 days of DU30's administration — and losing badly."

"This is a huge disappointment and let-down to many of us," Ramos went on.

Duterte, in Ramos' estimation, had failed to get results on issues like alleviating poverty, improving quality of life, and enhancing public security in his first 100 days in office — which he could've addressed "if he had hit the ground running instead of being stuck in unending controversies about extra-judicial killings of drug suspects and in his ability at using cuss-words and insults instead of civilized language."

Ramos, who also headed the Philippine armed forces, bashed Duterte for the latter's hostility toward US-Philippine military cooperation.

This_is_obviously_wrong_and-5f2ce89fb0c53485d9ce7fa8bedbe762
(President Rodrigo Duterte, center, clenches a fist along with other Philippine Air Force (PAF) officials during the 250th Presidential Airlift Wing (PAW) anniversary at the Villamor air base in Pasay City, metro Manila, Philippines, September 13, 2016.REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco)

"Are we throwing away decades of military partnership, tactical proficiency, compatible weaponry, predictable logistics, and soldier-to-soldier camaraderie just like that?? On P. Du30's say-so???" Ramos wrote in early October.

Other Philippine politicians, particularly those in the legislature, have criticized Duterte for his policies, especially his ongoing violent crackdown on drugs and drug use. But Ramos' stature may make his continued denunciations of the current president more salient — and more costly for Duterte.

"The primary risk is that Duterte will open up power struggles on too many fronts and find himself at odds with too many powerful enemies," regional-analysis firm Stratfor wrote in late August, roughly two months into Duterte's term.

This_is_obviously_wrong_and-42ce8247d8b72dfd8dd6c438161f9b6a
(A member of the Philippine National Police (PNP) stands guard while residents look on near the scene where two suspected drug pushers were killed during a police operation, in metro Manila.Thomson Reuters)

This, Stratfor argued, could lead "to political instability such as that which plagued the Philippines from the late 1980s through the early 2000s."

A survey in September put Duterte at a +64 net approval rating, meaning he had widespread public support.

And, more recently, Duterte's apparently successful engagement with China over Scarborough Shoal seems to have won Philippine fishermen renewed access to the waters there.

But Scarborough may yet prove to be a lightening rod: Should the nascent Manila-Beijing detente in the South China Sea fall apart, and Manila's position on matter worsen, Duterte may find himself facing backlash from both Ramos and many of their countrymen.
 
Now he calls Putin his idol, Hillary will be a good president, and says Trump is a good candidate:

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/idol-philippines-bombastic-president-offers-150103747.html

https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/9MBUSQ0rXe.ycVAzy64xCA--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTQ4MDtxPTc1O3NtPTE-/http://globalfinance.zenfs.com/en_us/Finance/US_AFTP_SILICONALLEY_H_LIVE/My_idol_The_Philippines_bombastic-6c36fb8c87745b5452a2477ad0132145(Philippine presidential candidate and Davao city mayor Rodrigo 'Digong' Duterte gestures while delivering a speech during a May Day campaign rally in Manila, PhilippinesThomson Reuters)

Rodrigo Duterte has proven adept at hurling invective. But in a clip of a recent interview with Al Jazeera, the Philippine president was much more complementary of some of his counterparts on the world stage.

When Steve Chao, a correspondent and host for Al Jazeera, asked Duterte his thoughts on the US Democratic presidential nominee Hillary, the Philippine leader replied, "She'll make a good president."

Asked about Donald Trump, to whom the brash Philippine leader has been compared, Duterte said, "A good candidate."

But Duterte offered perhaps the most effusive praise for Russian leader Vladimir Putin, whom the Philippine president called "my idol."

"He has no illusions about himself. He knows that he was not trained for politics. Nor to be a statesman. He acts just like a president," he said.

"My characterization of Putin," Duterte added, "is how I describe myself."




Days before US elections, the controversial Philippine leader, #Duterte, gives his take on Clinton, Trump... and Putin?! pic.twitter.com/tJ89jIm2sU

— Steve Chao (@SteveChaoSC) November 4, 2016
This is not the first time Duterte has spoken highly of the Russian president. In late October, when asked who he favored in the US presidential election, Duterte demurred, eventually concluding his answer with, "My favorite hero is Putin."

His warmth toward Putin is part of a realignment Duterte has pushed since talking office, in which he has repeatedly scorned the US and its longstanding relationship with the Philippines, instead embracing China and Russia.

"I've realigned myself in your ideological flow and maybe I will also go to Russia to talk to Putin and tell him that there are three of us against the world — China, Philippines, and Russia. It's the only way," Duterte said on October 20.

https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/eweumBCJQbK2B2c9HfvNhg--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTQ4MDtxPTc1O3NtPTE-/http://globalfinance.zenfs.com/en_us/Finance/US_AFTP_SILICONALLEY_H_LIVE/My_idol_The_Philippines_bombastic-bc841605837bd0f6881f9bec62a1ecb1(Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, shake hands after a signing ceremony held in Beijing, China, October 20, 2016.Reuters/Ng Han Guan/Pool)

It's not surprising to see Duterte praise Putin as an outsider, either. The Philippine president has cast himself in the same light, positioning himself as an the leader to upset the status quo and challenge an entrenched elite.

In reality, the Philippine leader is himself part of one of the Philippines many political dynasties. Duterte's own family is closely related to two of the most powerful political clans in the Philippines' Cebu province.

His father was mayor of Davao City, a major urban center in the southern Philippines, from 1959 to 1965. The younger Duterte then held that office or the vice mayorship for 30 years up until his election as president in 2016. With Rodrigo Duterte now governing in Manila, his daughter now holds the mayorship of Davao, with his son as vice mayor.
 
Here's an article on why he wants to give Ferdinand Marcos, a former president/brutal dictator a hero's burial:

http://m.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2016/1105/Why-Duterte-wants-to-give-Marcos-a-hero-s-burial

1012255_1_1105-duterte-marcos_standard.jpg

In Manila, Philippines, a supporter of the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos holds a mask of President Rodrigo Duterte as other supporters display their message in October while awaiting the Supreme Court's ruling on the petition to give Marcos a hero's burial. The Philippine court ruled to extend its decision on whether the late dictator will be buried at the Heroes' Cemetery until November 8.

Filipinos are waiting to learn how history - and the Supreme Court - will view their former dictator. The result could be significant for none other than Rodrigo Duterte, the country’s current "strongman" president.

The Supreme Court of the Philippines is expected to rule Tuesday on a proposal that would see former dictator Ferdinand Marcos interred in the Cemetery of Heroes, where the country’s war veterans are buried. President Rodrigo Duterte has been pushing for the reburial since before he was elected in May, but several groups brought cases objecting to the plan after he announced it in August, leaving the Philippines waiting for a final judgement from the nation’s highest court.

Opponents argue that giving Marcos a hero’s burial would effectively whitewash the past, ignoring the suffering of many Filipinos under the dictator. Marcos was president from 1965 to 1986 (and ruled under martial law from 1972 to 1981). But Mr. Duterte has made no secret of his belief that Marcos deserves to be buried as a hero. And his stance seems to be echoed by his supporters, who see "strongman" behavior – violent though it may be – as the key to maintaining order within the country.

“It is the law. He was a soldier. He is not a hero? Fine. But he was a President. And nobody can deny that,” Duterte said in August, according to CNN Philippines.

This is not the first time that a hero’s burial has been proposed for Marcos, whose 20-year rule saw thousands of political opponents killed and tens of thousands more tortured. Marcos died in the US in 1989 after fleeing the Philippines three years earlier during the People Power revolution. In 1993, his widow Imelda successfully petitioned to bring his body back to the Philippines, but her request to bury him in the Cemetery of Heroes was turned down. Instead, Marcos’ body is currently displayed at the Ferdinand E. Marcos Presidential Center in Batac.

For Duterte, reopening the issue may be simply a question of ensuring that the law is followed, as he indicated. But perceptions of Marcos may influence attitudes toward his own presidency.

Analysts contend that Filipinos, tired of high crime rates in their country, now see Marcos’ dictatorship as the "glory days" of the country. Voting for Duterte, these analysts suggest, was a way back to this perceived glory.

“For my whole life I’ve witnessed a tendency among Filipinos to elect people who pose as saviors. We long for a disciplinarian,” Miguel Syjuco, author of the novel ‘Ilustrado’, lamented in The New York Times.

Imee Marcos, daughter of the former dictator and now the governor of Ilocos Norte Province, where the Marcos family is from, painted Duterte as the natural successor to her father. She also implied that recognizing Marcos as a hero would allow the country to move forward.

“[The reburial] is an opportunity to erase the hatred, conflicts and discord in our society,” she said at a pro-Marcos rally outside the Supreme Court in October. “The healing presidency of President Duterte will take over and we as one nation will be great again,” CNN reported.

Cementing the former dictator as a hero may help maintain support for Duterte’s similarly authoritarian policies, notably a crackdown on drugs and criminality that has led to the deaths of an estimated 3,700 people in the four months since he took office. So far, pushback has primarily come from international human rights organizations. But last week, Philippines anti-crime organization Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption called for the president to address the high death toll, saying many of the killings are unnecessary.

Polls suggest that many Filipinos are supportive of the proposal to rebury Marcos — perhaps because, in a country where the median age is 23, they have little personal experience of the leader and his policies. Instead, they know only what they have heard from candidates like his son, Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr., a tremendously popular senator who missed out on becoming vice president by just 0.64 percent of the vote in May.

The senator, who called himself “a beneficiary of the good work that was done in my father’s time,” received 34 percent of the vice presidential vote in May. He is legally challenging the result of the vote, which he alleges was rigged. Duterte has since expressed his support for Bongbong Marcos’ candidacy, introducing him to Chinese officials as his potential vice president during a recent state visit.

Allowing Marcos to be buried in the Cemetery of Heroes could further strengthen his connection with the Marcos family and their supporters, perhaps assuring him political influence for years to come.

The run-up to the court ruling has seen sizable protests from groups on both sides of the issue. A petition against the burial garnered 30,000 signatures. There have also been allegations that the Marcos family bribed Duterte to support the move.

For his part, Duterte vowed in August to respect the Supreme Court’s ruling, whatever it may be. If the reinterment were to go ahead, it’s not clear how big the current president’s role would be: Duterte said he might go to the ceremony, if there were “no pressing matter to attend to.”
 
The Trump of Asia congratulates the American Trump. Now two Trumps are presidents of a country:

http://globalnation.inquirer.net/149298/duterte-softens-stance-on-us-after-trump-defeats-clinton

(UPDATED: 9:59 p.m.) KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — “I don’t want to quarrel anymore, Trump is already there,” President Rodrigo Duterte said on Wednesday before members of the Filipino community here.


Duterte seemed to softened his stance against the United States the day Republican candidate and business tycoon Donald Trump won as America’s 45th president.


He congratulated Trump after his win over Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, whom President Barack Obama actively campaigned for.

“We are both foul-mouthed. We curse even the smallest things,” he added.

In his previous speeches, Duterte repeatedly lashed out at the US, threatening to sever the country’s ties with its longtime ally.

In an ambush interview, Duterte said he expects Trump to fulfill his promises to the Americans.

“I would like to congratulate President Trump for his victory and I wish he will govern the way he promised the American, people,” he said. “Mabuhay ka.”

On the future of the Philippines-US treaties, Duterte also expressed optimism. “I never wanted quarrel with anybody so I wished President Trump that he will honor our obligations and treaties with the US,” he said.

Asked if the Philippines’ relationship with the US under a Trump presidency would be improved, Duterte said, “I really don’t know because it would depend on the US.”

 
As one demagogue to another, he knows he can't pull the same shit against Trump that he's managed against the leading cucks of other countries.
 
Here's his congratulations to Trump. From one Trump to another:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippi...-trump-wants-together-minister-081601534.html

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte congratulated Donald Trump on his election win and said on Wednesday he now wishes to stop quarrelling with the United States, recalling his anger at the Obama administration for criticising him.

The maverick leader, dubbed "Trump of the East" for his unrestrained rants and occasional lewd remarks, has repeatedly hit out at Washington in recent months, threatening to cut defence pacts and end military joint drills.

"I would like to congratulate Mr. Donald Trump. Long live," Duterte said in a speech to the Filipino community during a visit to Malaysia.

"We are both making curses. Even with trivial matters we curse. I was supposed to stop because Trump is there. I don't want to quarrel anymore, because Trump has won."

Duterte won a May election by a huge margin and is often compared with Trump, having himself been the alternative candidate from outside of national politics.

He campaigned on a populist, anti-establishment platform and struck a chord among ordinary Filipinos with his promises to fix what he called a broken country.

But the biggest surprise of Duterte's presidency so far has been his hostility toward the United States, shown during near-daily eruptions of anger over its concerns about human rights abuses during his deadly war on drugs.

He has also threatened repeatedly to severe a military relationship that has been a key element of Washington's "pivot" to Asia.

Duterte on Wednesday told Filipinos how angry he had been at Washington, saying it had threatened to cut off aid and had treated the Philippines like a dog tied to a post.

"They talk as if we are still the colonies," he said.

"You do not give us the aid, shit, to hell with you," he said, recalling comments he had directed at Obama.


Last month Trump told Reuters that the Philippines was a very important strategic location and that Duterte's comments about removing foreign troops showed "a lack of respect for our country."

Teddy Locsin Jr, Duterte's incoming ambassador to the United Nations, said there were a few parallels between Trump, who stunned the world by defeating rival Hillary Clinton in Tuesday's presidential election, and Duterte.

"I remember Trump in the middle of one of his statements, he said 'I will not talk like this after I become president'," Locsin said on TV. "I remember someone who also said the same thing."
 
But it doesn't help that he is still allowing killings, allowing the burial of a brutal dictator in the cemetery for heroes, and if he won't curse the US, he'll always do that to the EU and the UN.
 
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Duterte says if Islamic State comes to the Philippines, forget human rights. Oh, and he suspended habeas corpus.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/duterte-says-islamic-state-comes-philippines-forget-human-083547095.html

MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte warned on Monday that Islamic State militants driven out of Syria and Iraq could set up in his country, and if that happened he would forego human rights obligations to keep his people safe.

Duterte said the southern Philippine province of Mindanao was already a hotbed of rebellion and banditry and he was worried about "looming terrorism" and an influx of extremists who could exploit the insecurity.

"Once the terrorists of the Middle East are deprived of the land area, the real estate area where they can sleep ... they will wander to other places and they will come here and we have to prepare for that," he said during a speech at a law enforcement agency.

"Remember, these guys, they do not have an iota of what is human rights, believe me. I will not just simply allow my people to be slaughtered for the sake of human rights, that's bullshit."

Human rights have been a touchy subject for Duterte, who has vented daily fury at activists and Western governments that have shown concerns about his war on drugs and the high death toll.

A native of Mindanao and mayor of Davao City for 22 years, Duterte said there was a "very strong" Islamist rebellion there and Abu Sayyaf rebels were taking hostages almost every day.

Abu Sayyaf is holding 21 captives, most of them foreign, and despite an ongoing military offensive to wipe them out, its piracy and kidnappings continue unabated.

Duterte said the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia were working closely to keep foreign extremists at bay.

On Friday, he warned that he may use his executive power to tackle lawlessness in the Philippines by suspending habeas corpus, a legal safeguard against arbitrary arrest and detention.

The constitution allows 60-day suspensions "in case of invasion or rebellion, when the public safety requires it" and would permit arrests without warrant and detention without charge for three days.

Duterte mentioned habeas corpus on Friday in the context of both the southern unrest and his war on drugs and said building cases for arresting suspects took too much time and resources.

The president's office on Monday issued a statement saying Duterte was giving a stern warning to those behind violent acts that he could take "more drastic action" to stop them.
 
But it doesn't help that he is still allowing killings, allowing the burial of a brutal dictator in the cemetery for heroes, and if he won't curse the US, he'll always do that to the EU and the UN.

Fuck the EU and the UN is a useless piece of propaganda that's only purpose is to tell the world that no, there is no historical Jewish presence in Israel and especially not in Jerusalem.
 
They got their guns deal with the US back after they scrapped it:

http://www.newsweek.com/philippines...rigo-duterte-u-turn-police-chief-520663?rx=us

The Philippines police will push ahead with the purchase of 26,000 assault rifles from a U.S. supplier, the police chief said Monday, following an about-face by President Rodrigo Duterte, who previously said the deal would be scrapped.

Duterte had a week ago expressed anger at "fools" and "monkeys" in Washington seeking to block the deal and said he would cancel it himself. But Duterte's police chief said he revoked that decision, apparently after Republican Donald Trump's surprise win in the U.S. presidential election.
"(The president) told me to continue the deal," Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Dela Rosa, told a news conference.

"The processing of documents are going on smoothly... we have the blessing of the president to continue the transaction."

Dela Rosa did not say why Duterte had changed his mind, but he said there would be a new president in Washington and "he and Donald Trump are friends."

Aides to Ben Cardin, who sits on the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, last month said the State Department had been informed Cardin would oppose the deal during the prenotification process, effectively putting the brakes on it.

Cardin was reluctant for the United States to provide weapons to the police given concern about alleged human rights violations in Duterte's war on drugs, which killed 2,300 people in its first four months.

The tough-talking Duterte has been incensed by U.S. concerns about a drugs crackdown he says is needed to save his country from ruin.

He has regularly berated the Obama administration but has expressed a desire to work with Trump.

Dela Rosa said it was possible the president would scrap the guns deal if there were an intervention in Washington.

"If they will block it, I'm sure the president will again tell me to stop it. We're paying for it, we're not begging for it," he said.
 
Aww...he wants to be friends with our god emperor, and he's gonna meet Putin soon at the APEC summit.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippine-president-wants-friends-trump-putin-063441295.html

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Philippine president, who has lashed out at President Barack Obama for criticizing his deadly crackdown on drugs, said his ties with the United States are likely to improve under Donald Trump, but that he is also excited to meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin at an upcoming Asia-Pacific summit.

President Rodrigo Duterte made upbeat remarks about both the president-elect and Putin at a news conference late Tuesday in Manila.


Asked whether his ties with America can improve under Trump, Duterte replied: "I'm sure, we have no quarrel. I can always be a friend to anybody, especially to a ... president, chief executive of another country."

Duterte, who has been compared to Trump because of his irreverence toward rivals and critics, said he trusted the U.S. president-elect's judgment and expected him to be fair in dealing with people living in the U.S. illegally.

Filipinos are one of the largest expatriate groups in the United States.

His friendly remarks were a departure from his comments on the campaign trail in March, when he took offense at being compared to Trump.

"Donald Trump is a bigot, I am not," Duterte told The Associated Press, referring to Trump's proposals to ban Muslims from entering the U.S and erect a wall along the Mexican border.

Duterte, 71, has had a frosty relationship with Obama and the U.S. government since U.S. officials expressed reservations about his anti-drug war, which is thought to have left more than 4,000 people dead since July. He has told Obama to "go to hell" and announced his "separation" from America, his country's treaty ally, during a state visit to China last month.

Duterte later said he meant he wanted to chart a foreign policy that would not lean excessively on America.

His push away from Washington has been accompanied by approaches to China and Russia.

Duterte said he is looking forward to meeting with Putin at this month's Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Peru, and wants the two countries to have stronger ties.

"I will not ask for anything. I want to be friends with him, I just want the two countries to be the best of friends," he said.
 
Oh Lordy, he is flirting with the idea of imposing Martial law, after they buried the previous president that used martial during his time.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippine-president-signaled-flirting-idea-213735205.html

(Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gestures while delivering a speech during the 80th National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) founding anniversary at the NBI headquarters in metro Manila, Philippines, November 14, 2016.Thomson Reuters)

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's rhetoric toward the US has vacillated in recent months, swerving between outright rebuke, tepid conciliation, and, after Donald Trump's election, affection.

Amid that zigzag, Duterte has also flirted with altering central tenants of the rule of law in his country: habeas corpus and martial law.

Deadly violence in the Philippines has increased since Duterte took office on June 30, when he launched the crackdown on drugs and the drug trade he had promised throughout his campaign.

Official records put the number of dead in official police operations at about 2,500, while other estimates put the total number well above 4,000.

In early August, after being criticized for his war on drugs by the country's chief justice, Maria Lourdes Sereno, Duterte asked if Sereno would rather he declare martial law.

In early September, Duterte put the country"under state of lawless violence" after a nighttime bombing at a market in his hometown of Davao City. The president said the declaration would increase military and police presence around the country to address terror threats as well as to support his campaign against drugs and combat the spike in extrajudicial killings.

The next day, an administration official said Duterte had mulled a declaration of martial law immediately after the bombing, put ultimately "decided that is was not necessary." Unlike martial law, the lawlessness declaration has no expiration date, and it remains in effect.

About two weeks after that declaration, Duterte said that even though he thought the drug trade had seeped into the government bureaucracy and local administrative leaders (barangay captains) had gotten involved narcotics, he did not want to declare of martial law in relation to the war on drugs

In early October, however, Duterte appeared to waffle.

During a speech in which he apologized to a Jewish community for comparing himself to Hitler, the Philippine president said, "There are 6,000 barangay captains doing their own thing, manufacturing shabu. How am I supposed to deal with — sometimes I am tempted really to declare martial law."

Duterte said he had been told that martial law was "not feasible," and that he had settled a declaring a state of lawlessness instead.

He again broached possible extraordinary legal measures this month. On November 12, he saidhe may suspend the writ of habeas corpus — which gives an arrestee the right to contest their detention before a court — in the southern province of Mindanao if lawlessness there doesn't relent.

He went on to say the country was in "narcopolitics" and that his powers were limited to bring all those involved in drugs to account, but did say he could "declare a suspension of the writ of habeas corpus" in order to pick up those responsible for lawlessness.

A senator who met with Duterte after that speech said he thought the president "was not seriously considering suspending" habeas corpus, calling it "just a passing thought."

But on Wednesday, Duterte again referenced martial law as an option in his anti-drug campaign.

In response to concerns that the potential suspension of habeas corpus could lead to martial law, Duterte said, "I am not a fan of martial law ... But if ever, martial law is a contingency to meet widespread violence." (That was just a day after he said human-rights consideration would go out the window if ISIS became active in the Philippines.)

Duterte has sent mixed signals about his attitude toward martial law and the rule of law in general for some time.

In March, when then-President Benigno Aquino said Duterte's campaign promises would put him a step away from being dictator, Duterte defended himself by invoking his mother, an activist who protested during a period of martial law declared by dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

"The president forgot that my mother was one of the 3 or 4 or 5 marching down the streets of Davao during martial law," Duterte said. "So I will dishonor the memory of my mother by following the person she helped put down? The president is exaggerating."

But Duterte did say during his campaign that he would govern "like" a dictator, in that he would work to bring discipline and order back to the country. And his election and policies appear to fit with a regional trend in governance referred to as "democracy against disorder."

"What is distinctive about democracy against disorder is that it emphasizes order over law, yet its proponents seek legitimation through elections rather than through some alternative method of achieving political power," writesCornell professor Thomas Pepinsky.

Though, Pepinsky writes, democracy against disorder doesn't necessarily seek to abrogate democratic procedures, like elections, "it does threaten freedom, civil liberties, and popular representation."

Duterte has repeatedly said he would avoid declaring martial law.

But his repeated references to his country's drug-driven crisis seem to have laid a rhetorical basis for such a declaration. He has already said he wanted "a little extension of maybe another six months" to pursue his narcotics crackdown.

Duterte heaped criticism on the US until Trump's election brought about a change in tune. There may yet be some development that ends his avoidance of martial law as well.
 
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Now he is urging China to declare the disputed shoal a no fishing zone. Wonder how that will turn out.

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/duterte-sa...=rss&utm_content=/rss/yahoous/news&yptr=yahoo

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte urged China to ban fishing activities inside the disputed Panatag Shoal, also called the Scarborough Shoal. The Filipino leader is reportedly poised to issue a unilateral executive order declaring the resource-rich reef in the South China Sea a no-fishing zone.

Duterte said that irrespective of whose territory it is, protecting the reef and its rich marine life was "common sense".

Duterte recently made the suggestion of turning the disputed shoal into a marine sanctuary to his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping when the two met in Peru on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit last week. Philippine Presidential Communications Secretary Martin Andanar had said earlier in the week that Xi was receptive to the proposal.



However, a Reuters report quoted Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang as saying that they cannot confirm if their president supports Duterte's plan, but China had made "appropriate arrangements" in the spirit of friendship to allow Filipino fishermen access the disputed waters.

"China's sovereignty and jurisdiction of Huangyan Island has not and will not change," Geng had said on Tuesday (22 November), using the Chinese name for the shoal. "We hope China and the Philippines can continue to strengthen dialogue and cooperation, and make the South China Sea issue a positive factor in promoting bilateral friendship and cooperation," he added.



Two days later, speaking to reporters on Thursday, 24 November, Duterte said: "China should also give the same order to not fish on the spawning ground.

"I do not care what China says about their ownership of the shoal. Me, as president, I claim my rights, so I say no fishing," he said, referring to the international arbitrary tribunal's July ruling favouring the Philippines.

philippine-president-rodrigo-duterte.jpg

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte urged China to declare the disputed Panatag or Scarborough Shoal a no-fishing zone to preserve its rich marine life - File photoReuters
"Even if no country would claim it to be their territory, common sense should tell you not to destroy the source of the life," GMA News quoted Duterte as saying.

The disputed shoal is located 124 nautical miles from the nearest point in Zambales province in the Philippines, which is well within the country's 200-mile exclusive economic zone. However, Beijing has been disputing Manila's claims over the shoal and had even taken control over it in 2012. Since then until recently, Filipino fishermen were not allowed to operate near the shoal.
 
Now local communists in the Philippines don't trust him 100% despite his anti-US rhetoric and they also criticize his drug war and they don't trust Russia and China claiming those two nations are imperialistic as the US and China's communism is a facade:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/communist-rebels-see-philippine-us-ties-troubling-peace-075005897.html

SIERRA MADRE MOUNTAINS, Philippines (AP) — Communist guerrillas warned that a peace deal with President Rodrigo Duterte's government is unlikely to be reached if he won't end the Philippines' treaty alliance with the United States and resist foreign control by other countries he's trying to befriend, like China and Russia.

In a clandestine news conference in a New People's Army guerrilla encampment tucked in the harsh wilderness of the Sierra Madre mountains southeast of Manila, regional rebel commander and spokesman Jaime Padilla outlined the advantages and downside of talking with Duterte to end one of the world's longest-running Marxist insurgencies.

The dozens of mostly young guerrillas in muddy boots in their rain-soaked encampment on a wooded plateau reflected their resiliency but also showed the tough conditions that have long hampered their insurgency. Young rebels cooked rice, pork and chicken in soot-covered pots over wood fire while others gingerly puffed cigarettes while watching the peripheries. The nearest army camp lies just 3 kilometers (1.8 miles) away. When an air force Huey helicopter flew overhead, rebels at the news conference briefly paused and watched the passing aircraft.

Founded in 1968, the rebels' communist party has held peace talks with six Philippine presidents, including Duterte, whose rise to power in June sparked rebel optimism due to his searing anti-U.S. rhetoric, populist pro-poor stance and appointments of at least two left-wing Cabinet members.

But the guerrillas have also found themselves in a dilemma due to Duterte's moves they find reprehensible, including the killings of large number of poor drug users that sparked accusations of massive human rights violations against him, a recent decision to allow dictator Ferdinand Marcos to be buried in a heroes' cemetery and threats to shift to dictatorial rule if rival politicians derail his anti-drug crackdown and try to impeach him.


While the president has gotten attention with his angry threats to end the presence of American forces in the country, stop joint combat exercises with U.S. troops and terminate a defense accord with Washington, Padilla said Duterte has, so far, not formalized these utterances and instead has walked back on many publicly-stated policies.

"While the Duterte government hasn't abrogated all these treaties, the New People's Army will have no reason to enter into a friendship or alliance with him," Padilla, 69, told a small group of journalists escorted into an encampment ringed by mostly young rifle-wielding guerrillas.

"That's not negotiable because as long as the U.S. military has a presence, the imperialist influence on Duterte's government will remain," said the bespectacled Padilla, who wore a Mao cap with his 9mm pistol within reach on a wooden table.

Other rebels echoed Padilla's remarks. "We support Duterte but not 100 percent," said a 24-year-old rebel who identified himself as Guiller. "He's projecting himself as anti-U.S. and pro-poor but that's still mostly rhetoric. If the problems persist, the revolution will go on."

Duterte's reaching out to China and Russia also disturbs the communists. "They hide behind what we call a communist (facade) or socialism but essentially, and in their core, they are imperialist nations, which control parts of the world," Padilla said. "Even if it's China that controls us, we're not free, and we should fight their control on us."

Coinciding with the rebel warning, the Philippine armed forces chief, Gen. Ricardo Visaya announced Wednesday that most joint exercises with the U.S. military would proceed next year, including the largescale Balikatan maneuvers. Most would be refocused, though, on disaster-response, humanitarian missions and counterterrorism from previous maneuvers centered on territorial defense that Duterte worries may offend China.

Visaya's statement came after he met U.S. Pacific Command in an annual defense meeting on Tuesday.

Despite thorny issues, Padilla said Maoist guerrillas remain committed to pursue talks with Duterte while criticizing his wrong moves, like allowing Marcos's heroes' burial and carrying out the bloody anti-drugs crackdown.

Philippine police should target drug lords and syndicate leaders and not poor addicts, who the rebels consider victims and not criminals," he said, adding they have targeted big drug dealers in the past.

"We are sincere with the peace talks, we are honest and we want to end 47 years of armed struggle," Padilla said when asked if the rebels were just trying to extract concessions from a president with whom they may not likely forge a peace deal.

The guerrillas, he said, would not simply surrender their firearms unless their major demands are not met, including social and economic reforms, land reform and an industrialization program that favor the poor, who make up about a fourth of more than 100 million Filipinos.

"If he remains in the right direction, he will be with us," Padilla said. "But if he veers off from the direction that we seek, we will break away from him."

Battle setbacks, surrenders and infighting have weakened the rebel group, which is blacklisted as a terrorist organization by the United States. A confidential government assessment obtained by The Associated Press says the guerrillas have declined to 3,800 fighters with more than 4,500 firearms in the first half of the year, with about 700 of the country's 42,000 villages affected by the insurgency.

The insurgent group "remains as a threat to national security due to its stance of not abandoning the armed struggle," the report said. "Although the communist movement had been weakened ... it continues to pursue recovery efforts nationwide."
 
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