A recent confrontation in social
media between blogger and President Rodrigo Roa Duterte supporter, Ms. Krizette
Laureta Chu and former Bayan Muna
Partylist representative Teodoro Casiño gave an insight as to how really this high ranking communist live in
this country.
A communist at the very first thought
you’d think will be living in the mountainous regions of Luzon, but sadly that
is not the case as exposed by Ms. Krizzette.
Veteran Journalist and former
Ambassador Rigoberto Tiglao weighs on the conversation, but not only that he
further takes the case of Ms. Krizzette and gave an in depth analysis and
revelation of the communists in the country- the difference of those in the
higher ranks and those who die for their so-called cause which are basically
children that have been recruited in schools.
(photo credit to PNA) |
“Chu had posted the photo to show the
hypocrisy of the Left who recruit — brainwash, really — students from schools
that cater mostly to the lower middle class to join the New People’s Army and
die in some jungle, while their leaders like Casiño put their children in
expensive schools like La Salle, cloistered from the real world.”
Where the sons of leftist leaders are
studying has became such a raging issue because of the timing of the
disclosure. There has been in recent days front-page stories showing mothers
crying before a Senate hearing while they related the how their daughters —
teen-age girls for Christ sake! — were convinced by the leftists to abandon
their families and join the NPA.
The outrage therefore was over the
thought that while the Left cadres were sending teenagers to a life of hardship
and even death fighting for the communist cause, their leaders’ children were
enjoying comfortable, bourgeois lives.
The disparity between the lifestyles
of Filipino communist leaders and those of their rank-and-file has been one of
the most scandalous features of this now anachronistic movement.
For puposes of making it public
knowledge, clarity, and full understanding we have quoted in full the article
of Mr. Tiglao titled “Lifestyles of the Left and famous, and their
‘princelings’” which was published in The Manila Times.
Lifestyles of the Left and
famous, and their ‘princelings’
SOCIAL media was abuzz in the past several days, with netizens cheering
on as Krizette Laureta Chu, an ordinary but very active and audacious blogger,
take on — and shame — the leftist Bayan Muna leader Teodoro Casiño, a
three-term party-list congressman, for threatening her with a libel suit.
Casiño claimed that Chu’s posting of a photo in her timeline (that went
viral) of him and his son (his face blocked out of course) in a La Salle school
activity was a violation of their right to privacy.
Chu had posted the photo to show the hypocrisy of the Left who recruit —
brainwash, really — students from schools that cater mostly to the lower middle
class to join the New People’s Army and die in some jungle, while their leaders
like Casiño put their children in expensive schools like La Salle, cloistered
from the real world.
There were also posts that claimed another Bayan Muna leader, Carlos
Zarate, had his son studying in Europe. Zarate though has not confirmed nor
denied the report.
Casiño, however, confirmed that his son was studying at La Salle, where
the yearly tuition is at least P200,000. The Bayan Muna leader, however,
claimed that a “benefactor” he didn’t identify was paying for his son’s tuition.
Foolish
It was rather foolish of him to disclose such a detail, for two reasons. First, unless the funds for his son’s tuition were coursed through La Salle’s scholarship program, the money given to Casiño was a gift. That is subject to a 20 percent donation tax, and I doubt if he reported it to the BIR. Second, a 200,000 “gift” isn’t chicken feed. This raises the question whether some tycoon has cleverly maneuvered to have a ranking Leftist leader under his payroll, in exchange for his “protection.”
It was rather foolish of him to disclose such a detail, for two reasons. First, unless the funds for his son’s tuition were coursed through La Salle’s scholarship program, the money given to Casiño was a gift. That is subject to a 20 percent donation tax, and I doubt if he reported it to the BIR. Second, a 200,000 “gift” isn’t chicken feed. This raises the question whether some tycoon has cleverly maneuvered to have a ranking Leftist leader under his payroll, in exchange for his “protection.”
To be fair to Casiño and Zarate, nearly all of the famous leaders of the
Communist Party fronts actually live lives of comfort. A long-time Bayan Muna
chair is married to a corporate lawyer, who can afford to have an upper-class
lifestyle with even a country resthouse; their son is studying at the Ateneo to
become a well-known broadcaster.
Where the sons of leftist leaders are studying has became such a raging
issue because of the timing of the disclosure. There has been in recent days
front-page stories showing mothers crying before a Senate hearing while they
related the how their daughters — teen-age girls for Christ sake! — were
convinced by the leftists to abandon their families and join the NPA.
The outrage therefore was over the thought that while the Left cadres
were sending teenagers to a life of hardship and even death fighting for the
communist cause, their leaders’ children were enjoying comfortable, bourgeois
lives.
The disparity between the lifestyles of Filipino communist leaders and
those of their rank-and-file has been one of the most scandalous features of
this now anachronistic movement.
Dear Leader
Start with the communists’ “Dear Leader” Jose Ma. Sison. In his 52 years waging revolution, the only time he really lived a spartan life was in the nine years that he was imprisoned — on murder charges — during the martial law regime. Freed by Corazon Aquino in 1986, he apparently couldn’t stand a life with his comrades in some jungle, and moved in 1987 to Europe, ending up in Utrecht.
Start with the communists’ “Dear Leader” Jose Ma. Sison. In his 52 years waging revolution, the only time he really lived a spartan life was in the nine years that he was imprisoned — on murder charges — during the martial law regime. Freed by Corazon Aquino in 1986, he apparently couldn’t stand a life with his comrades in some jungle, and moved in 1987 to Europe, ending up in Utrecht.
Before that, what we cadres in the 1970s thought was a selfless “Amado
Guerrero” issuing directives from a guerrilla base in an Isabela redoubt, was
actually living in a well-appointed house in Parañaque, and moving around in
the latest-model cars. His acolytes of course justified this, that living so
and moving around in such cars, ensured his security, as the “fascists” fear
the rich.
I have never in my days as a ranking communist cadre heard anyone tell
stories of Sison spending time with the NPA in some jungle. In the first years
after the founding of the Communist Party in 1967, he did undertake
indoctrination sessions with the first NPA leaders in the middle of rice fields
in Tarlac — but mostly in Hacienda Luisita, where at night he would be
accommodated in some Cojuangco mansion.
Sison is a very prolific writer. He even wrote a poem that romanticized
the revolution, titled “The guerilla is like a poet.” But in his many
interviews and writings, he has never related any period in this revolutionary
life, of spending months with the NPA, nor in a Red base in some jungle that
his followers are asking teenagers to spend time in, so they would “awaken to
the reality of class society.”
Three decades
I cannot really understand why communists even listen to him, when he has been living among the comforts and luxuries of an advanced capitalist country for three decades now.
I cannot really understand why communists even listen to him, when he has been living among the comforts and luxuries of an advanced capitalist country for three decades now.
With Sison having such a lifestyle, most of his inner core of
leadership, which they call the Executive Committee of the Central Committee,
of course followed suit.
In fact, once when we were called to a meeting (in the 1970s) in one of
their “safe-houses,” my comrade from a Tondo slum sarcastically remarked how
much he enjoyed that meeting since he could eat good food there that he only
had heard about and in a kind of house he has never been to.
I myself was shocked when the party’s finance officer, once visited our
safe-house — driving a top-down sports car. We had to ride buses, jeeps, and
tricycles for our revolutionary work. I was told though that the officer, who
is today a well-known leader of the National Democratic Front, was after all
the son of a a prominent lawyer — Marcos’ personal attorney to boot.
The couple who are the present leaders of the NDF are both scions of
well-known, very rich sugar landlords of Negros, whose parents — or their
inheritance in recent years, I’m not sure — had been subsidizing their
lifestyles in the Netherlands, one of the most expensive countries to live in.
Another well-known NDF leader has lived in an expensive Quezon City compound he
inherited from his parents, and had managed to get his children into UP, who
all are living petty-bourgeois lives far from the Revolution, one even living
in Sweden.
Disparity
This disparity in lifestyles is not unique to the Philippine communist movement. Communist parties that have seized control of the state eventually become the social and economic elite.
This disparity in lifestyles is not unique to the Philippine communist movement. Communist parties that have seized control of the state eventually become the social and economic elite.
Some accounts claim that widespread resentment among lower party cadres
— especially those from the KGB — over the lifestyles of ranking officials of
the Communist Party of the Soviet Union precipitated its fall.
Even in the People’s Republic of China, where its Communist Party has
regularly undertaken anti-corruption campaigns that resulted in the almost
immediate execution of those found corrupt, there has been “princelings,”
descendants of prominent and influential senior communist officials who have
privileged, comfortable lives much better than children of ordinary party
officials.
That probably is a good term used for Casiño’s and Zarate’s children.
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Report from Manila Times
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