Pelayo should be out there defending the swamps and the feathered flock that swarms to the hospitable environs of Candaba whenever the winter cold drives birds of all feathers migrating from the mainland to warmer climes.
There is that unfair line being unrolled by flu freaks that the migratory birds gathering in the Candaba swamps might be carrying the dreaded avian flu. Pelayo should shoot that down.
If they are merely warning about the possibility of contracting flu from migratory birds, there is basis for such a warning since we are free to scare ourselves anytime all the time about anything.
But, although I am no medical doctor or a veterinarian or an expert on flu, human or avian, I dare say that I doubt if these migratory birds are carriers of flu from the mainland.
If a Peking duck or some Chinese bird afflicted with the flu attempts to migrate to the Candaba swamps, it would literally drop dead before it could be within sight of the northernmost tip of Luzon.
If we ever get avian flu, it could be through other carriers, including humans arriving from such infected areas as China.
We are lucky that the Philippines is surrounded by a vast sea, over which no flu-infected bird can possibly fly and survive.
If we still do not have bird flu in these parts, it is not because our public health preparedness is that excellent. It never was. Our best quarantine, I think, is that protective marine water around us.
Charlie A. Agatep, president and CEO of the PR firm bearing his name, said the President should not be deterred by all that volley and thunder from the opposition. She should "just do it," he said, referring to her program of government.
Joel D. Laxamana, corporate communications director of the Manila Water Co. Inc., said good performance should carry her through. A leader who is doing her job, he added, need not worry too much about public approval.
The two practitioners from the Public Relations Society of the Philippines were the resource speakers at the weekly Kampus Kapihan at the Angeles University Foundation here.
Agatep approached the subject of public relations and advertising from the external viewpoint of a PR agency servicing a client. Laxamana gave his views from the internal vantage of an insider servicing his own company.
They were mainly sharing with the masscom students in the crowd the finer points of public relations, but were "forced" toward the end of the session to give their considered opinion about the communication program of the President.
Agatep also clarified news reports that the PRSP offered its services to the President when its officers called on her at Malacañang days ago. He said they did no such thing.
We have to admit that we Filipinos talk too much. We whine and complain endlessly about almost everything. While this may be good release, it could reach a point where it becomes counter-productive and unhealthy for us individually and collectively as a nation.
"Why get all het up about the latest (Pulse Asia) Ulat ng Bayan survey saying that nearly six in 10 Filipinos (58 percent) want La Glorietta to exit from the Presidency?" Max asked in his column. " Perhaps its true. Okay. But the reality is that GMAs in the Palace and holds the reins of power."
About Gloria Arroyo holding the reins, many people seem to have forgotten that there is a presumption of regularity without which there would be endless debate and, as Max said, "zero progress."
Ms Arroyo was elected president in an election generally accepted at the time as orderly and honest, proclaimed winner after the canvassing, and inaugurated as president. While there was a protest, it did not prosper because the alleged cheating was never proved and the electoral protest was dismissed when, almost like divine intervention, the complainant died.
Tapos na po ang eleksiyon ng 2004, at may nanalo na!
Agatep said it would not be right to predict that it would be all downhill for the administration after the holidays just because some people would not have a happy Christmas. There is more to it than that, he said.
Asked what would be their main PR advice to the President, both practitioners were careful to limit themselves to saying that Ms Arroyo should focus on doing a good job and that the rest would follow.
Both speakers told the students that PR is generally more effective than advertising, although the latter has some positive points absent in the other.
While advertising uses a more direct approach, PR is more subtle a quality that makes it usually more effective with most target audiences. The irony is that while advertising is expensive, PR is for free (in the sense that the PR man does not pay for time or space while the advertiser does.)
But it was pointed out that PR and advertising usually go in tandem, one complementing the other.
I wonder if the President or her advisers ever noticed that this is one small matter where she might be able to score some big points.
People are fed up with arrogant officials and minor functionaries using government vehicles, gasoline and personnel to force their way through traffic while the rest of us patiently wait for our turn.
Filipinos are a patient lot. We can wait. In fact, we sometimes tarry and wait too long before we move. But when we see supposed leaders in government, some of them unelected, abusing their position, we react.
It would be refreshing to see President Arroyo acting on this simple rule of everybody waiting for his proper turn.
But we ask complaining readers to please send us the license plate numbers of the vehicles and the place and time they saw the occupants abusing their presumed privilege.
(One problem here is that we might be fed with wrong information and get into trouble. Huwag naman po.)