Veteran
journalist Mr. Rigoberto Tiglao presses on his exposé the true person that is Rappler's Maria Ressa.
In
his article published today in The Manila Times titled “Rappler’s Ressa is a
colossal con man” he narrate’s how Ressa successfully makes herself known as a
Filipino while she has done numerous activities that Tiglao’s concludes she is
nothing but a fraud, protected by the United States.
Rappler CEO Ms. Maria Ressa (photo credit to owner) |
“Contrary to her
portrayal as a hapless journalist struggling against a powerful state, she is
under the protection of the world’s most powerful nation, the US, whose embassy
here quickly issued a statement after her arrest that it expected Ressa’s case
“to be resolved quickly in accordance with relevant Philippine law and
international standards of due process.”
“We have
to report details on Ressa to expose her as a fraud, as she hasn’t let up on
her campaign to paint the country black, as one moving towards dictatorship and
successfully suppressing the press.”
“Since
she is an American, we can’t expect Ressa to have a sense of delicadeza. “
For
the convenience of the reading public, please read the full article below:
Rappler’s
Ressa is a colossal con man
OR con woman, con person. Whatever.
Rappler CEO and Editor in chief Maria
Aycardo Ressa has successfully fooled Western media that she is a Filipino
journalist with little means who is fighting her country’s authoritarian
President bent on suppressing media dissent.
The reality is that she is a well-off
American citizen, who acquired Filipino citizenship in 2004 to make it legally
easier for her to work as a manager at ABS-CBN Broadcasting, a media company
where foreigners are banned by the Constitution from participating.
The Rappler website she claims to be
leading the fight against a strongman President was set up in 2011, initially
as a weapon for President Aquino’s assault against the Supreme Court by
removing Chief Justice Renato Corona.
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It was its reckless, journalistically
unprofessional undertaking of that role that got it in serious legal trouble.
It posted a libelous report that Corona was using an SUV provided by a
businessman, whom it identified by name and whom it claimed was engaged in
“human trafficking and drug smuggling.” The businessman of course was so angry
to be maligned as such, and filed the libel suit.
After that aim of removing the Chief
Justice was achieved, Rappler has been the Yellow regime’s apologist, financed
in so many ways by government contracts and a Yellow oligarch’s covert
financial support.
US mouthpiece
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Parallel to that role has been its
function as the mouthpiece for US interests, its neoconservative ideology and
its anti-China racism, compensated by a P100-million funding from American outfits
North Base Media and Omidyar Network, two entities known to advance US
political and economic dogmas in the world. (Omidyar Network promised to
bankroll Ressa’s legal defense with a $500,000 kitty.)
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That got Rappler into another serious
legal trouble. First, in taking that foreign money, it violated the
Constitution’s ban on foreign participation in media, a fact which Ressa
appears to have been ignorant of as Rappler even boasted about it in an
article.
Ressa tried to wiggle out of that
legal trouble by claiming that the investment was in the form of securities.
But she only dug her quagmire even deeper, as Rappler failed to pay capital
gains taxes of P133 million in issuing those securities.
She’s lied to the world to cover up
these boo-boos, claiming these suits were simply Duterte’s way of shutting her
up.
Ressa has taken her citizenship
duties quite seriously — her American citizenship, that is. She has voted in
nearly all US national elections, the last one on Nov. 18, 2016 for the
presidential elections that year. She has never voted in Philippine elections.
Under US protection
Contrary to her portrayal as a
hapless journalist struggling against a powerful state, she is under the
protection of the world’s most powerful nation, the US, whose embassy here
quickly issued a statement after her arrest that it expected Ressa’s case “to
be resolved quickly in accordance with relevant Philippine law and
international standards of due process.”
Unless she perjured herself in her US
voter’s registration, Ressa’s residence is in an upper-class suburb in Monroe,
Orange County in New York. The median income in
Ressa’s neighborhood is $160,000, according to US census data, putting her in the top 8-percent income bracket in the US. A property a block away from Ressa’s residence was being advertised for sale at $520,000 (P27 million).
Ressa’s neighborhood is $160,000, according to US census data, putting her in the top 8-percent income bracket in the US. A property a block away from Ressa’s residence was being advertised for sale at $520,000 (P27 million).
For the CEO of a website that
provides beggarly salaries to its staff, who are told that they are part of a
glorious crusade, Ressa, sources claimed, lives in a posh Bonifacio Global Village
condominium, where the rent is at least P150,000 per month.
What bolsters the truth of this claim
is that Ressa went to the extent of violating the Securities and Exchange
Commission’s reportorial requirements and refused to report her residence. In
documents submitted to the SEC, in which incorporators of Rappler Inc. and then
Rappler Holdings are required to report their residences, Ressa reported hers
as Rappler’s first headquarters (at Antel Global Center), instead of her
residence.
All of the other incorporators
complied with the SEC regulations and reported their residential addresses.
A fraud
We have to report details on Ressa to
expose her as a fraud, as she hasn’t let up on her campaign to paint the
country black, as one moving towards dictatorship and successfully suppressing
the press.
Only a week ago, the New York Times
prominently run a front-page article titled “A Journalist Trolled by Her Own
Government,” with its lead paragraph being: “Harassing journalists is one of
Rodrigo Duterte’s specialties.”
How many of the NYT’s 5 million print
and digital subscribers in the US and in the world will bother to investigate
if the article’s preposterous claims on this unimportant country are accurate?
How many will simply accept the “venerable” Times’ claims on bad things
supposedly happening in this far-off country?
Ressa’s claim that she is “trolled by
her government” has been totally disproven with a recent unprecedented
development: Over 40,000 (as of submission deadline for this column) Filipinos
here and in the US have signed a petition through the unassailable change.org
asking the Justice department to revoke her Filipino citizenship. Can she claim
these 40,000 are Duterte trolls?
Just to cover up for her website’s
libelous articles, and her boo-boo as a CEO that led to tax-evasion charges,
Ressa has seriously damaged the Philippines’ and its media’s reputation in the
world.
In contrast to Ressa, the owners of
the Philippine Daily Inquirer — which had been more critical of Duterte — when
faced with a tax-evasion case and told to relinquish their hold on a lucrative
government-owned Mile Long property, didn’t cry to the world that theirs was a
case of press suppression.
Delicadeza
Since she is an American, we can’t
expect Ressa to have a sense of delicadeza. Whether the libel suit was under
Duterte’s direction or not, the Rappler report claiming a businessman was into
“human trafficking and illegal drugs” was so patently libelous, which Ressa as
the site’s editor should not have allowed to be posted, and even updated.
Contrast her stance to that of former
Top Gear Philippines editor Vernon Sarne who immediately resigned his post,
when faced with a libel suit that appeared to have some validity.
Ressa has been able to get away with
her lies partly because, especially in the case of American media, such claims
fit their narrative — after Duterte expressed his disdain toward the US and
launched his war against illegal drugs — of a global drift towards
authoritarianism. Western journalists, since the Philippines is really an
unimportant country for them in their world, have been too lazy to fact-check
Ressa’s false claims.
In all of Western media’s
unquestioning coverage of Ressa’s claims, there is absolutely no report at all
on who filed the cyber-libel suit against her and what the charges entail. They
simply swallowed hook, line and sinker Ressa’s claim that the charge was merely
Duterte’s way of harassing Rappler, for its “critical” coverage of his
administration.
Not a single Western article reported
that Rappler’s libelous article was posted as part of its enthusiastic,
mercenary participation in Aquino 3rd’s campaign to remove Chief Justice
Corona, or that the tax-evasion case was because of its attempt to wiggle out
of the constitutional ban on foreigners in media.
Ressa also speaks the way Americans
do, and as a former broadcast journalist she knows how to use sound-bites, such
as “hold the line” and “weaponizing” laws.
Ressa is an American citizen who even
conscientiously votes in US elections, and has an upper-class residence in New
York. Except once in 2004, she uses a US passport in her numerous travels to
her country and in the world.
US media and even the American
embassy swiftly went to her defense when an arrest warrant was issued against
her. Rappler is funded by US entities, and has always echoed American views,
especially that on the South China Sea territorial disputes.
There is a certainly a case for the
claim that Rappler has been the US’ media instrument in the Philippines, much
more intrusive and dangerous as it is in the new media of the world wide web.
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1 Comments
Jimmy Pedro
ReplyDeleteRapler Maria Ressa is fallen is fallen and become the habitation of demons and devil, and the hold if every foul spirits, and the cage of every unclean and hateful birds. You know why? Because Rapler Maria Ressa made all the filipino people to drink of the wine of the wrath of her poisoning vices of information, by her manipulative and slandering styles of making headlines, Rapler Maria Ressa had been constantly dragging the filipino people into poverty until she was kicked out from Philippines.