World Press Freedom Day. The Dissent.

Norman Posecion, “Untitled II”, Oil on Canvas, 122 x 91 cms., 2003. Downloaded with express permission from the site of the Kulay-Diwa Gallery at www.kulay-diwa.com , maraming salamat po!

The Dissent. From then Justice (now Chief Justice) Reynato Puno Jr., Dissenting opinion, In Re Emil Jurado, A.M. No. 93-2-037 April 6, 1995:

XXXX

Quote “XXXX Indeed, nothing in the record show that any person lost faith in our system of justice because of his (Emil Jurado’s) said report. Even the losing party in G.R. No. 94374. Eastern Telephone Philippines, Inc., (ETPI) does not appear to have given any credence to the said false report. I submit that it is not every falsehood that should incur the Court’s ire, lest it runs out of righteous indignation. Indeed, gross falsehood, vicious lies, and prevarications of paid hacks cannot deceive the public any more that can they cause this Court to crumble. If we adopt the dangerous rule that we should curtail speech to stop every falsehood we might as well abolish freedom of speech for there is yet to come a man whose tongue tells only the truth. In any event, we should take comfort in the thought that falsehoods cannot destroy only truth does but only to set us free.

Quote “XXXXX Respondent is a columnist and he does not only write straight news reports but interprets events from his own distinct prism of perception. As a columnist and like any other columnist, he has his own predilections and prejudices and he bends his views in accord with his own slant of faith. I see no reason to penalize respondent for the slants in his views, however, unpleasant and irreverent they may be to the court. When we start punishing a columnist for slants in his views, we shall soon be seeking slits to look for witches among them.

XXXX

Quote “XXXX There is an appropriate remedy against abusive press newsmen. I submit, however, that the remedy is not to be too quick in wielding the power of contempt for that will certainly chain the hands of many newsmen. Abusive newsmen are bad but laundered news is worse.

Quote “Eight. Again, with due respect, I submit that the majority misappreciates the role of the press as a critic of government in a democratic society. The Constitution did not conceive the press to act as the cheerleader of government, including the judiciary. Rather, the press is the agent (footnote 29) of the people when it gathers news derogatory to those who hold the reins of government. The agency is necessary because the people must have all available information before they exercise their sovereign judgment. As well observed: “The newspapers, magazines, and other journals of the country, it is safe to say, have shed and continue to shed, more light on the public and business affairs of the nation than any other instrument of publicity; and since informed public opinion is the most potent of all restraints upon misgovernment the suppression of abridgment of the publicity afforded by a free press cannot be regarded otherwise than with grave concern.” (footnote 30). As agent of the people, the most important function of the press in a free society is to inform and it cannot inform if it is uninformed. We should be wary when the independent sources of information of the press dry up, for then the press will end up printing “praise” releases and that is no way for the people to know the truth.

Quote “In sum, I submit, that the equation chosen by  the majority has the pernicious effects of hobbling the writing hand of newsmen and of chilling the sources of information of the press. The majority can snicker against the “bleeding heart” liberalism but this is a vain attempt to use a fig leaf to conceal its niggardly regard for freedom of speech and of the press. In a large measure, I fear that the majority opinion will weaken the press as an informed and informative source of information of the sovereign people. In so doing, it will unwittingly erode the people’s right to discover the truth. The protection we give to the sanctity of the sources of information of the press is for the benefit of the people. It is designed to benefit all of us, keep us above the cloud of ignorance. Democracy cannot bloom where sovereignty is rooted on the top soil of an ignorant mass.

Quote “I vote not to hold the respondent in contempt of court.” Closed-quote. – then Justice (now Chief Justice) Reynato Puno Jr., In Re Emil Jurado, A.M. No. 93-2-037 April 6, 1995.

“Rise of the Machines”: i’m testing the new WordPress Monotone Photoblogger theme/ design

Photo by Teng Lambino

 

 ”Rise of the Machines”

 

just testing the new design. Matt, the WordPress cover boy model, er, administrator/ corporate entity, says the theme changes color with the photo you upload. And it does! The machine can read colors, wadyaknow! next thing, it will read our thoughts we won’t have to type,  we’ll just plug a gizmo in our earlobes. wave of the future.

 

       actually, the program can also read what we write,  in the very literal sense (what we write as words but not as concepts) there’s a new feature that indicates at the foot of your own blog post  all possibly related posts worldwide (ooops, they appear, i think, a day later; my previous posts have them, this one still doesn’t, the machine takes an entire day to go over 100,000 new posts worldwide); no, it can’t read like us, i.e., i think it just recognizes frequently occurring words in all WordPress posts worldwide  and puts together those that have the same frequently occurring words as “possibly related posts”.  So… no, the machines still don’t  think the way we do. Not yet anyway….

 

            In a couple of months, with the automation of elections in the ARMM or the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, machines will replace (yehey!!!!) precinct election inspectors, precinct election watchers, precinct goons and thugs, and hopefully, precinct brawling and mauling — they’ll all be transferred to the city hall level. “brave new world”. i’m mixing my sci-fi genre and titles.

 

        (okay, i just found out this theme is not widget-aware, you can’t see my tag clouds and category clouds. etc. i can’t even put it my meta!  click the icon at the foot left hand corner of the blog for a window to categories. The theme also doesn’t read the photos of the older posts, e.g., the fourth previous posts and those older)

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

Sugar. Written by Student # 3


Flegel, Georg. Still-Life with Bread and Confectionary. Oil on wood, 21,7 x 17 cm Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. Downloaded with express permission from the Web Gallery of Art at http://www.wga.hu from site admin Emil Kren, Ph.D.. Many thanks.

On advertorials. Written by student number3 Media Monitor Entry 3, Student #3 (04-13939). Unedited by blog admin

Quote “In last Wednesday’s (February 20, 2008 ) issue of the Philippine Star, on no less than the front page itself, is a covertly posted advertorial posing as a news item. Coupled with stories of today’s critical issues, from the latest on the ZTE Scandal to the FBI investigation of Dulmatin’s supposed death, and right under the headline of Fidel Castro’s resignation is the headline “HUNDREDS ZEROED AS COCA-COLA LAUNCHES ITS NEWEST PRODUCT”. (sic, indicate if caps supplied – blog admin)This, as it was shamelessly (and no doubt expensively) guised (sic) by Coca-Cola’s PR agents, may of course seem like another important headline of the day to the untrained eye, given of course the unassuming eye of students of journalism, its (sic) is obvious that the Philippine Star has committed another act of completely selling out and of going against the code of ethics media practitioners are bound to follow (sic).

Quote “I know this particular example refers to print media, but I will cite a clause from the KBP, seeing it applicable to the issue tackled by this piece. According to the 5th section of the KBP Code, the one particularly on advertising and advertorials, “commercials in the guise of news” should not be allowed. Applying it to this particular “front page story”, having a headline of an advertorial about a Coke product in the front page of The Philippine Star, is an obvious violation of the ethical principles of journalism. 2008/02/25 at 11:05 AM” closed-quote.