In the unlikely event that this happens, I have a business proposition: Have the event televised via closed circuit TV like a heavyweight boxing championship where viewers pay top dollar in order to raise money for the government. I know a hundred people willing to pay $50 each to watch Madam Santiago shoot herself in Rizal Park! She will be an instant "hero" like Rizal.
If people witness that no less than a former president is charged and convicted (or acquitted) in a fair trial, they will start trusting their government and believing that it really is a government of the people, by the people and for the people. Indeed, if Estradas billions cannot even buy his freedom, then it will be a lasting warning to all citizens that no one is above the law. I hope and pray that we will be strong until the last corrupt official is removed and made to pay for his or her crime.
The thing that bothered me about the alleged confession of the suspects was that they believed what they were doing was "legal" and "proper." In a democratic system, even convicts or prisoners are punished in a prescribed manner, and not just through plain strangulation and burning barbaric acts reminiscent of the burning of Nero!
Another is the forthcoming conference between the NPA and the Arroyo government to be hosted by another country in Europe. Aside from the fact that our government will be spending precious dollars in sending the government delegates to Europe, meeting these old-fashioned communists in their own turf diminishes the prestige of our newly installed government.
Then there is fugitive Mark Jimenez now running for Congress presumably with the objective that once he is elected he will be immune from prosecution. If that were the case, multi-millionaires or billionaires can just "buy" a seat in Congress. I find that preposterous and highly immoral.
There are other Filipinos in the US who should be extradited like the scam artists who fled back to the Philippines. In Southern California, weve had the fake green card scam, social security racket, personal injury scam and Medi-Cal scam.
One of these colorful personalities who has vanished from California was a popular businessman in the automobile industry who allegedly brought millions of dollars when he left for the Philippines in the mid-1980s by resorting to selling unregistered securities and creating some variation of the Ponzi scheme by issuing unsecured promissory notes and paying old investors with new money from newer investors or creditors. Rumors abound that because of millions of dollars that he was able to siphon to the Philippines, he acquired "official" protection that has prevented his extradition.
Wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, worship without sacrifice, and politics without principles.