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  1. #51

    "Change starts with our own selves!"
    sa san carlos mani oh.. hahaha kita ku anis bulletin board sa pychology department sa.una.. lmao




    .
    Hisgot ta ani wla gihapun ta mahimo pag usab sa pinas..
    aku agree ku ani.. basta government na gani ang kuntra, wa jud tay dag.anan..
    imung riklamu ma.abtan nlng kas imung apu, di japun nila lihukun.. HAHAHAHAHAHA

  2. #52
    nsuko rna cla bwt sa hostage event dri sa pinas...hay..g.generalize n lng gyd nila tnan2x...

  3. #53
    Quote Originally Posted by Crimson_Viper View Post
    aku agree ku ani.. basta government na gani ang kuntra, wa jud tay dag.anan..
    imung riklamu ma.abtan nlng kas imung apu, di japun nila lihukun.. HAHAHAHAHAHA
    +100 ko ani.

  4. #54
    Ched orders Cebu college closed

    Saturday, December 4, 2010

    CEBU CITY -- The Commission on Higher Education (Ched) central office ordered on Friday the closure of the Mandaue City College (MCC).

    Ched urged the 500 students of MCC to transfer to another school before January next year. By January 2011, their credentials will no longer be recognized by Ched and the Professional Regulations Commission (PRC).

    The Ched order, signed by Executive Director Julito Vitriolo, said MCC, "under the administration of Dr. Paulus Mariae Caņete, failed to comply with the directives of this commission in spite of sufficient notice given, and prior notice of a closure order of its higher education programs will be imposed if he refuses compliance with the directives."

    Caņete said the closure order is without bearing because it is not signed by Ched Chairman Patricia Licuanan.

    Dr. Elmer Ripalda, MCC dean of programs, said the order cannot be enforced because of an agreement between Caņete and Mandaue Mayor Jonas Cortes before the Office of the Ombudsman.

    "Both sides agreed to cease and desist from further acts of hostilities and abide by the resolution of the City Council," read part of the agreement between Cortes and Caņete that Ripalda distributed to reporters on Friday.

    City Government

    But Mandaue City Administrator Briccio Boholst said the issue on the closure order is between Ched and MCC.

    "Wa'y labot ang syudad (The City has nothing to do with it)," he told Sun.Star Cebu when sought for comment.

    School Supreme Student Council president Rene Jun Narandan, on the other hand, told Sun.Star Cebu that MCC is under the jurisdiction of the Association of Local Colleges and Universities (ALCU), not Ched.

    Lawyer Lilia Freida Milla of the Ched central office pointed out that ALCU is merely an organization of academic institutions, not a regulatory body.

    She cited Section 3 of Republic Act 7722, or the Higher Education Act of 1994, which states that Ched has jurisdiction of "both public and private institutions of higher education, as well as degree-granting in all post-secondary educational institutions, public and private."

    Caņete also said Ched monitors the programs of the MCC.

    Barred

    Milla, together with representatives of the Office of the Solicitor General and the Ched-Central Visayas, went to the MCC in Barangay Tipolo, Mandaue at 10 a.m. on Friday to serve the order. But they were barred from entering the school by security guards who accepted the order on behalf of school management.

    The Ched officials posted a copy of the order at the front of the MCC school building in Tipolo and another copy at the Eversley Childs Sanitarium in Barangay Jagobiao. Nursing students of the school hold classes at Eversley.

    The Ched group had a confrontation with MCC officials and students in the Barangay Tipolo campus.

    Ripalda told Milla to "study your law." Appearing annoyed, Milla shot back: "I am a lawyer and you're not, so do not teach me the law." MCC vice president Dr. Doreen Espina joined their heated exchange.

    Students

    Several students witnessed the confrontation between Ched officials and MCC management. While some expressed support for their school, others are anxious.

    "Syempre naguol mi kay diha gud mi nag eskuyla (Of course, we're anxious because we study here)," said 17-year-old Aisa Balibad, a first year student.

    The students have already paid the tuition for the semester.

    Vitriolo, in the order, directed Ched-Central Visayas to help the students and ensure that "their rights and interests are not prejudiced and to undertake the necessary action to transfer them to legitimate higher education institutions."

    Affordable

    Despite the past controversies involving the school, some students said they chose to enroll in MCC because of the affordable tuition. Besides, they thought, the issues hounding the school were related to politics.

    There are two MCCs. The other is managed by Dr. Susana Cabahug and is located on Don Andres Soriano Ave. Both MCCs were subject to an investigation by Ched, but the commission noted that the MCC managed by Cabahug complied with requirements.

    The Ched order states that the MCC managed by Caņete "is operating higher education programs without legal basis and (is) not in compliance with the policies, standards and guidelines" of the commission.

    Caņete, an appointee of then mayor Thadeo Ouano, has been at odds with Mayor Cortes since 2007. The MCC, managed by Caņete, was located in Ibabao-Estancia until Cortes ordered it closed, following the former's refusal to submit an accounting of the college's funds. (Oscar C. Pineda of Sun.Star Cebu)

    Published in the Sun.Star Cebu newspaper on December 04, 2010.

    i beg to disagree with the premise of this thread ...

  5. #55
    Quote Originally Posted by RMK711 View Post
    It's not true that the farmers are the backbone of this country. For the most part of recent history we have been a net importer of food products, that is, much of our food is now imported from overseas. This is particularly true of rice. Our ability to import comes from the strength of our non-farming industries, for example manufacturing and services (call centers).

    It is not accurate or true to say that the country will collapse if all our farmers suddenly stopped producing goods. We would just import more of them from overseas. While there are strategic repercussions to being 100% reliant on overseas food supply, the fact remains that we can this and still survive.

    CARP is a bad idea.. why is it communists and leftists seem to think that this has to be implemented here when it has never been implemented in any of the best agriculture exporters (U.S., Australia, New Zealand). What's the point of distributing land to people who don't have the skills, equipment or work ethic to keep it? Are you aware that a lot of redistributed CARP land is simply resold by the so-called farmers in violation of the law?

    The real solution is to provide subsidies for farming equipment to the rightful owners of the land. Hate the big landowners all you want, but the plain truth is no country can be rich if it does not protect the property rights of owners. CARP distributes land on the basis merely of such people having worked in that land, even if it is not theirs. Why the exception for agricultural workers, why stop there? Let's divide up our factories and give them to the laborers. Let's divide up our call centers and make each call center agent an owner. Yea, let's kick out all the capitalists and let the workers run their own affairs. I'm sick of the bleeding heart mentality that we have to help the farmers at all costs. Tell me, what have these farmers done to increase their own productivity and become competitive with the rest of the world?

    I guess you never been to the country side and interviewed this farmers and given the chance to study their life and production.

    You're right CARP was a bad thing, because it was not real agrarian reform. Are you not even curious why we are called agricultural country but yet we are importing rice? Farmers are the backbone of this country for we are agricultural country. We can not afford to just import our foods from other nation. Just imagine how much a vegetable will cost if we import them from Japan. People on the middle class and lower class will not be able to afford them. Yes we have call centers and processing zone but they are not enough to support the country when it comes to food supply.

    We need a real agrarian reform which empowers our farmers to produce more foods which will feed our starving nation. Philippines greatest asset is our land. It is fertile and thus we need to cultivate and till it instead of turning it into golf course. Give the land to those who will cultivate and farm it. So you want to own 100 hectares of farm land? What will you do with it. You can't farm it alone.

    Also, It will always make me smile when people react negatively to the concept of communism. I'm not a communist but if you read the wiki of Communism and try to understand it's concept it's actually very interesting.
    Pure communism, or the stage in history after socialism, refers to a classless, stateless society, one where decisions on what to produce and what policies to pursue are made in the best interests of the collective society with the interests of every member of society given equal weight in the practical decision-making process in both the political and economic spheres of life.
    -from Wiki

  6. #56
    and with this, moingon nlng tag wa na tay mabuhat?
    or ingna na lng, sa laktud nga pagkasulti, nga masokista lng jd ta?
    could you honestly say it to yourselves nga kaning tnan mada ra nig 'sagdai nlng ta ni'?

    pahuway mo anang mga motherhood statements ninyo oi, wa gyuy lami. ug way mausab ana. kutob ra ta pagarpar...we've heard enough cliches. wa mo pul-i?


    how about kung buhaton nlng nato?
    question is, asa pud lge ta magsugod?
    naa man gyud niy paagi ba...we just lack resources.

  7. #57
    ^^bloody revolution lagi. patyon tanang mga politiko. ilisan og bag-o!

  8. #58
    aw karun pamu mao naman jud ning pinas face the reality nlang gud...

  9. #59
    Quote Originally Posted by Saga View Post
    I guess you never been to the country side and interviewed this farmers and given the chance to study their life and production.
    I agree their life is hard. But it is not my responsibility. They hate their jobs? They should do what any normal person who doesn't like their job does - get another job! Why are they exempt from this?

    You're right CARP was a bad thing, because it was not real agrarian reform. Are you not even curious why we are called agricultural country but yet we are importing rice?
    No, CARP is a bad thing because it encourages land grabbing. It takes land from property owners, and distributes them to people whose sole entitlement to the land is because they worked there. As I explained to you before, if we were to apply this to all industries, our country would collapse.

    Farmers are the backbone of this country for we are agricultural country. We can not afford to just import our foods from other nation. Just imagine how much a vegetable will cost if we import them from Japan.
    This is a strawman's argument. We are not going to be importing all our food from Japan, so don't act like we are. We are going to be importing them from the countries we already are importing from - Vietnam, India, Indonesia. All very cheap sources of imported food. There is nothing wrong with being a net importer of food, don't let the communists brainwash you. Also I'm perfectly aware of why we import most of our stuff - it's because our spoiled workers managed to force the government to increase the minimum wage to unsustainable levels making our local produce too expensive. It's simple market economics.

    People on the middle class and lower class will not be able to afford them. Yes we have call centers and processing zone but they are not enough to support the country when it comes to food supply.
    And you know this how? The service and manufacturing economies already comprise more than 70% of our GDP. The middle and lower class can't afford them? Give me a break. They can't afford Filipino grown products, but they can afford Indonesian and Vietnamese grown products which are much cheaper for the reason I already mentioned - our minimum wage is too high.

    We need a real agrarian reform which empowers our farmers to produce more foods which will feed our starving nation. Philippines greatest asset is our land. It is fertile and thus we need to cultivate and till it instead of turning it into golf course. Give the land to those who will cultivate and farm it. So you want to own 100 hectares of farm land? What will you do with it. You can't farm it alone.
    No, we need to move people from bad jobs to good ones. This can be done through education. There's a reason why most rich countries are not agricultural. And there's a reason why most of the best agricultural exporters never implemented CARP. If this stupid CARP idea were so great, why didn't they do it in the U.S. and Australia? Because it doesn't work. They implemented your so-called "real agrarian reform" in the Soviet Union and as a result, millions of people died. So much for smart ideas...

    Also, It will always make me smile when people react negatively to the concept of communism. I'm not a communist but if you read the wiki of Communism and try to understand it's concept it's actually very interesting.
    It makes me smile when people like you keep espousing this pure version of communism, but can't cite a single country in the world where such a system has succeeded. And then have the gall to say you're not communist. Hahaha.. just admit it, you have communist tendencies.

  10. #60
    1.) taas ra kaau minimum wage dire sa pinas.. para naa isweldo, ma forced ang producers nga mo magpamahal sa ila products.. mao ng di jud ta mka compete sa lain.. dapat pagamyan ang minimum wage.. that way, mka compete ta sa products from other countries... besides, pag mo ubos ang minimu wage, mo barato man sab products..

    2.)CARP is a really stupid idea.. ihatag ang yuta to somebody who doesnt have the technology and resources to develop them to their maximum potential.. mas effecient tana ang food production kung under a corporation ni sila.. they raelly shoulg form their corporations... bottomline is.. what is important is the collective effort...

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