University of the Philippines alumnus and former Presidential Spokesperson Atty. Harry Roque made an
direct to the point and eloquent article
regarding the ongoing 30th edition of the Southeast Asian
Games being hosted by our country.
He nailed when he said the intention to discredit or to make the
SEA Games a failure which would eventually put President Rodrigo Roa Duterte in
a bad light not only from the nation but also for purposes of someone’s
political agenda in the future.
Roque was o the spot that in saying that House Speaker Allan Peter
Cayetano was only the collateral damage the real target of the fake news that
came about a few days before the formal opening was the Presisent himself.
Pres. Rodrigo Roa Duterte and Brunei's Sultan Bolkiah, during the Opening ceremony of the 30th edition of the SEA Games (photo credit to PCOO) |
Expensive “kaldero”, serving of non-halal food to Muslim athletes,
kikiam and egg, accommodation failures are some of the issues imbued with fake
news all intended to besmirch the popularity of Pres. Duterte.
But all the Yellow tricks hurled against this administration just
like the other ones before this- miserably failed and back fired.
For the full understanding of our reading public, the written
article by Atty. Harry Roque which was published in Daily Tribune, please see
full quote below:
Yellow losers
The biggest losers in the opening ceremonies of the Southeast Asian
Games were the yellows. At every step of the way, they wanted our sponsorship
of the games to fail. The target was not really House Speaker Allan Cayetano.
He was collateral damage. The target was President Duterte. Surely, the yellows
thought that if the Games were to fail, it is PRRD himself who will take the
flak.
But the yellows lost miserably. Despite earlier fake news about Muslims
allegedly being fed with pork and some teams having had to sleep on the floor
because they arrived hours before check-in time, the opening ceremonies were a
huge success. It proved that once we Filipinos put our heart in any
undertaking, we can excel. In fact, the opening ceremonies were not only
world-class; it could rival any opening ceremonies even in the history of the
Olympics.
It was hair-rising to see our athletes
march onstage promising a great finish in these games knowing that they have
had to deal with lack of funding and terrible facilities to prepare for it.
The biggest losers in the opening ceremonies of the Southeast Asian
Games were the yellows. At every step of the way, they wanted our sponsorship
of the games to fail. The target was not really House Speaker Allan Cayetano.
He was collateral damage. The target was President Duterte. Surely, the yellows
thought that if the Games were to fail, it is PRRD himself who will take the
flak.
After all, it was he who decided that we should sponsor the 30th
Southeast Asian games.
But the yellows lost miserably. Despite earlier fake news about Muslims
allegedly being fed with pork and some teams having had to sleep on the floor
because they arrived hours before check-in time, the opening ceremonies were a
huge success. It proved that once we Filipinos put our heart in any
undertaking, we can excel. In fact, the opening ceremonies were not only
world-class; it could rival any opening ceremonies even in the history of the
Olympics.
Of course, it was first and foremost the Filipino talents. Starting with
Lani Misalucha’s rendition of the national anthem to Robert Seña’s solo, and
Christian Bautista’s kundiman, the Filipino talents took center stage and
proved once and for all that we are probably the best performers in the whole
world. My personal favorites were the Filipino rap and rock songs, which had
accompanying dance numbers, from the UP Pep Squad and, possibly, the Philippine
Ballet Company (I could be wrong here).
There, too, were the background videos showcasing the best of Filipino
fabrics and tapestries. Quite frankly, I did not expect that Philippine weaves
could be so visually pleasing. They were and kudos to whoever thought of using
them as background.
But the real reason why the opening was a huge success was us, the
Filipinos who were in the jam-packed Philippine Arena, and those who were glued
to the ceremonies on their television sets. To those of us who had the good
fortune of being physically present in the arena, it was a surge of nationalism
shared with the hundreds of thousands who witnessed the event. It was a moment
to be truly proud to be a Filipino. And it was not just because of the
spectacular show. It was a sense of being one with a nation which, despite
natural calamities, political bickering and a host of other challenges, could
stand up heads high up proud that we can be the very best at whatever it is
that we want to succeed in.
While I understand why some of us objected to the song “Manila,” in
reality, Manila meant the entire Philippine nation. The city referred to was
the capital city, but the visuals in the lyrics of the song, the jeepneys and
the beautiful women, referred to what every Filipino sees and experiences in
their everyday lives. It was hair-rising to see our athletes march onstage
promising a great finish in these games knowing that they have had to deal with
lack of funding and terrible facilities to prepare for it. But in the end,
despite material deficiencies, they will do their best and bring home the gold
because, for each and everyone of our athletes, it is their small way of making
our country proud.
And to us bystanders, we could only cheer our athletes knowing that
their individual stories are the combined stories of our people. From an
athlete whose only means to eat was by joining the national team, another
athlete who escaped domestic violence at home by joining the national team, to
those whose only means of obtaining an education is through the measly
allowance that we give them. We cheered because despite differences in dialect
and home provinces, we have a shared experience of having to live in the
country with the most natural disasters, in a country where politics has become
both a pastime and the biggest business, in a country where many of our youth
can only achieve their dreams by preparing for that elusive gold. And yes, we
cheered whenever the President waived at the crowd because he is also our
sovereign, the personification of our country and people. It was quite obvious
that with the applause that the President got, he remains truly well-loved by
an overwhelming number of Filipinos, with the exception of course of the crabs
among us in yellow.
So, what ultimately is the lesson that we learned from the opening
ceremonies? For the yellows, it should serve as a stern warning. While perhaps
it is their duty in a democracy to fiscalize, they should cease messing around
with what is truly important to our people. Yes, we have traffic. Yes, we have
poverty. Yes, we still have a problem with corruption. But despite all odds,
Filipinos know the many reasons why they should still be proud of being
Filipinos and no amount of mud thrown their way will dampen their pride in
being Filipinos. Mabuhay ang Pilipinas! Go for the gold! Let us win as one! To
the yellows — manigas na lang kayong lahat!
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