In the Chinese mind, not paying would be so unfilial. After all, how can ones dead father or mother enjoy this afterlife if their ashes have been so rudely disturbed? The thought of the ashes of their loved ones being scattered here and there is unthinkable.
Mind you, the professional shoplifter goes to, uh, school to keep up with technology.
For example, they know that products with hard tags which are deactivated by the cashier upon payment cannot be detected by those detectors at the entrance of stores if covered in aluminum.
The other kinds of massage such as reflexology and acupressure are not monitored by government and can be offered by any Tom, Dick, or Harriet (regardless of experience and expertise) to anybody willing to pay.
There are only 2,000 copies and every single one is meant to be given away to friends (who are presumably as rich as the publisher or used to be as rich).
Aside from the social cachet of having a copy, the book is a tell-all of the families including that of the PLDT stockholder who made their money in the 1950s. Yes, behind some of these fortunes are the most interesting of crimes. And yes, some of these fortunes have been well spent and eventually lost.
Mr. Lozada, who is running against Ignacio Arroyo okay, the brother-in-law of President Macapagal-Arroyo and the husband of the Philippine Stock Exchange chairman Alicia Morales Arroyo has come up with an in-your-face campaign line: "Ibagsak ang Pidalismo."
By the way, another senior officer in the Lopez conglomerate this is Bayan Telecommunications chief financial officer Gary Olivar has taken a leave of absence to campaign for presidential candidate Raul Roco.