One Filipino-American's Guide to the nonsensical sensical.

Friday, September 30, 2005

Pilipino Priday

I never knew that the Philippines is in the cloning business...

Philippines Close to Creating World's First Water Buffalo Clone
By Douglas Bakshian
Manila
29 September 2005


Researchers in the Philippines say they are close to creating the world's first water buffalo clone to help the nation's impoverished farmers and lower the country's dependency on imported milk.

At the Agriculture Department's Philippine Carabao Center, executive director Libertado Cruz says the process of transferring cloned embryos is under way, and he expects some live clones within 10 months.

He says Philippine dairy carabao, or water buffalo, produce in average of about eight liters of milk a day, while some Indian water buffalos produce up to 35 liters a day.

Philippine researchers have used cells from the ear of Bulgarian water buffalos and fused it with the eggs of the local buffalo in the cloning process. The Bulgarian animals are descendants of the high yielding breed from India.

Right now animals that produce 17 liters of milk are being cloned, but when the process is finalized, the 35-liter "super buffalo" will be cloned.

Sperm from the cloned super buffalo will be used in an insemination program to create more high-milk-producing animals. The goal is increased milk production in the Philippines.

Dr. Cruz says greater milk production will help feed the nation, as well as give farmers a new source of income.

"The Philippines is about 99 percent import-dependent on milk. We are spending on the average about $450 to $500 million U.S. dollars every year just to import milk and dairy products," he explained. " It would be a social contribution if we can help our local farmers produce this milk in the Philippines."

Dr. Cruz says that since Dolly the sheep, the first cloned animal, entered the world in 1997 cloning has become less expensive and easier. This has allowed the Philippines to undertake the program.

The carabao is an essential part of rural life in the Philippines and other parts of Southeast Asia. In addition to producing milk, buffaloes are used as draft animals and for meat.

Friday, September 23, 2005

Pilipino Priday

The U.S. isn't the only place experiencing the wrath of god....

The death toll from two storms on Luzon island in the Philippines continues to rise.

Authorities say 20 people have died in various parts of the island, including Manila.

Our reporter in the capital, Shirley Escalante, says officials have declared a state of calamity in two areas on Luzon island.

Under Philippine law, a state of calamity allows for the immediate release of emergency funds.

Flooding has been reported in 28 towns and municipalities and more than 3,000 families have been evacuated.

Rescue and relief operations are underway.

http://www.abc.net.au/ra/news/stories/s1466810.htm

Friday, September 16, 2005

Pilipino Priday

Philippines: Catholic Archbishop Denies Church Split over Arroyo Crisis
Catholic Archbishop of Cebu Ricardo Cardinal Vidal accused the Philippine media of causing dissention within the ranks of Church prelates.

Posted: Wednesday, September 14 , 2005, 11:55 (UK)

The Archbishop of Cebu in the Philippines denied yesterday that the Catholic Church had splintered over the worst political crisis to engulf President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Ricardo Cardinal Vidal instead accused the Philippine media of causing dissension within prelate ranks, reported INQ7. “It’s the media that are dividing us,” he told reporters. “You make it appear as though there’s infighting among us when there is none.”

Vidal, who was recently accused along with several other bishops of receiving considerable cash donations from the state-owned Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (Pagcor), called on the media to report truthfully rather than simply speculate.

Vidal admitted to receiving the cash donations, as did two other bishops, despite this going against normal church conduct. The Archbishop stressed, however, that the money had been used only for projects for the poor.

Ms Arroyo attended a Mass in Lipa at the invitation of bishops just before her departure for New York “in solidarity with the bishops”, said Media Secretary Cerge Remonde.

The 12-member permanent council of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines meets today to discuss the political situation in the country and formulate a response to calls for the Catholic Church to reverse its position of its July statement in which it made clear it would not join calls for Ms Arroyo’s resignation.

Impeachment complaints against the President for allegedly winning last year’s elections on fraudulent grounds were quashed in the House of Representatives last week.

Archbishop Paciano Aniceto of San Fernando City, a member on the CBCP council, however, said impeachment was an important “first step” in resolving the current political crisis.

“Let us not close our doors that easily. There are still alternatives. We are a people of hope,” said Aniceto, before calling on Filipinos to engage in “prayerful discernment so all of us will be enlightened”.

Representative Eduardo Zialcita of Paraňaque City, however, urged the CBCP to prevent prelates from issuing independent statements from the official position. Mr Zialcita, an Arroyo supporter, warned in a statement yesterday that “going against the CBCP stand is creating more confusion and divisiveness among the Catholic flock”.

Representative Jesli Lapus of Tarlac said: “The CBCP should serve as a calming voice amid the opposition’s refusal to abide by the House’s decision to dismiss the impeachment complaints against the President.

Senator Rodolfo Biazon said he was not surprised to see the Church and other religious denominations overstep legal boundaries, saying that politicians had given them the leeway to “meddle in state affairs”.





Maria Mackay
mmackay@christiantoday.com

Friday, August 26, 2005

Pilipino Priday

I attended a business lunch with a salesperson the other day. To break the monotony of the sales pitch, I decided to switch gears and discuss our passions outside of work. I naturally babbled about how I love to cook. I love to try out new recipes--preferably French and Italian dishes--and watch the Food Network whenever I get a chance. Sometimes when I tell people I like to cook, they would ask if I make a great lumpia or pancit. I usually do not make Filipino food because if want it, I can always visit my mom. Besides, whenever I ask her how to make certain dishes, she's like, "I never measure it out. I just eyeball it." I am very much a follower of recipes so her saying to eyeball it never goes well with me.

My absolute FAVORITE Filipino dish is chicken adobo. I made it once out of this recipe I found from epicurious.com. It turned out fine, but it certainly does not compare to my mom's. In any case, below is the recipe. If anyone out there has any suggestions on how to make it better, please, please, PLEASE let me know.

Chicken Adobo

8 chicken drumsticks (or 4 drumsticks and 4 thighs; about 2 1/2 pounds total)
4 garlic cloves
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1/2 cup cider vinegar
1/4 cup soy sauce (preferably Kikkoman)
1 teaspoon black peppercorns
1 Turkish bay leaf or 1/2 California bay leaf

Accompaniment: cooked rice

Pat chicken dry. Coarsely chop garlic. In a 12-inch nonstick skillet heat oil over moderately high heat until hot but not smoking and brown chicken in 2 batches, about 8 minutes for each batch. With tongs transfer chicken as browned to a plate.

Pour off all but 1 tablespoon fat from skillet and in remaining fat cook garlic over moderately low heat, stirring, until golden. Add vinegar, soy sauce, peppercorns, bay leaf, and chicken, with any juices that have accumulated on plate, and simmer, covered, 15 minutes. Remove lid and cook mixture over moderately low heat, turning chicken occasionally, until sauce is thickened and coats chicken, about 15 minutes.

Serve chicken with rice.

Serves 4

Friday, August 19, 2005

Pilipino Priday

My friend and co-worker J is leaving me and our workplace to pursue a PhD in comparative literature. For those of you who are wondering what she plans on doing with a PhD in comparative literature, the answer is that she wants to be a professor.

The office decided to take her out to NoMI to bid her a fond farewell and wish her good luck with all her endeavors. For those of you who don't know, NoMI is a very posh, upscale restaurant located at the Park Hyatt off Michigan Avenue. The food is--in one word--FANTASTIC. I highly recommend going there for a special occassion as it is very pricey. In fact, I suggest having your office pay for it like ours did. In any case, while my stomach is still digesting the food I thought I would report about the latest White House new hire, Cristeta Comerford. Cristeta has been named the White House Executive Chef. Not only is she from the Philippines, but she is the first female executive chef to the White House. Congratulations to Christeta!

First Woman Is Selected as Executive Chef at White House
By MARIAN BURROS
Published: August 15, 2005
New York Times

Cristeta Comerford yesterday became the first woman to be named White House executive chef after a lengthy selection process.

Laura Bush, the first lady, said she was delighted that Ms. Comerford, who has been an assistant chef in the White House since the mid-90's, had accepted the job. "Her passion for cooking can be tasted in every bite of her delicious creations," Mrs. Bush said.

As a known quantity, Ms. Comerford, a naturalized citizen from the Philippines, had a certain advantage over outside applicants. "It's something Mrs. Bush had a comfort level with," said Susan Whitson, the first lady's press secretary. "She knew what she was capable of, and it was an opportunity to promote someone from within," which is another first for the choice.

Ms. Comerford, 41, who immediately left on vacation, was unavailable for comment but she had said in an earlier interview that she was very pleased to be considered.

Ms. Comerford's White House kitchen colleagues and Walter Scheib III, whom Mrs. Bush asked to resign as executive chef in February, got together yesterday afternoon at a bar in Georgetown to toast her success. "We're shooting the breeze and talking about how good it is that Cris got a promotion," Mr. Scheib said. "There's unbridled joy that Cris got the opportunity, and we've come to an agreement that she will do phenomenally well."

Since Mr. Scheib's departure, Ms. Comerford has been preparing meals for official dinners, private parties and family dinners - from huevos rancheros, the president's favorite Sunday breakfast, to oysters and spinach au gratin for one of Mrs. Bush's literary-themed dinners, this one honoring Shakespeare.

Roland Mesnier, the former White House pastry chef, who supported Ms. Comerford's candidacy, said he was delighted with the choice.

"Fantastic," he said. "You can recognize the flavor of what she cooks, and you can recognize all the elements on the plate. Many times a chef puts some things in a recipe and you say, 'What am I eating?' "

Mr. Scheib said Ms. Comerford was "the best candidate, no question about it."

"Picking Cris as the first woman chef is a good publicity move, I expect," he said. "But it's not about being a man or a woman; it's that she's an exceptional chef. I saw that when I hired her." Mr. Scheib added, "Mentally she is tough as nails, is very strongly focused and a very talented culinarian."

Ms. Comerford worked closely with Mr. Scheib on many projects, including the 2003 state dinner in honor of the president of the Philippines.

"She and I were like two fingers crossed, mentor and protégée," said Mr. Scheib, who was a holdover from the Clinton White House. "I don't see her choice as a radical departure from anything."

Women Chefs and Restaurateurs, representing more than 2,000 culinary professionals in the United States, may want to take credit for Ms. Comerford's elevation. The organization sent a letter to Mrs. Bush last May, asking her to consider a woman for the job because the chef would be a role model for women.

"Throughout our history, women have been at the helm of feeding American families," the organization wrote. "Now is the time to have a woman at the helm of feeding America's first family."

But according to the White House, none of the people suggested by the organization, most of them well-known in culinary circles, were interested in the job. The pay, $80,000 to $100,000 a year with no overtime, for what is essentially a private family chef who occasionally has an opportunity to show off at a state dinner, is well below what top level chefs can earn on the outside.

And opportunities to dazzle at state dinners are few and far between in the current White House; there have been only five since Mr. Bush took office.

"I'm glad it's a woman," said Alice Waters, the noted Berkeley, Calif., restaurateur. "It can't be anything but encouraging to people to have someone at the top, particularly from another country. That particularly makes a beautiful statement that someone has succeeded to the extent that they represent the president."

Ms. Whitson, the first lady's press secretary, said there were hundreds of applications. "It's a long process and we wanted to give as many applicants as possible a chance because there are so many good American chefs out there," she said.

She would not say how many of the applicants were women.

After telephone interviews, the list of candidates was cut to a few who were then interviewed at the White House. Some of those chefs were asked to prepare tasting menus for the Bushes, among them Chris Ward of the Mercury Grill in Dallas; Richard Hamilton, formerly of the Spiced Pear in Newport, R.I.; and Ms. Comerford.

Ms. Comerford, who came to the United States when she was 23, received a bachelor's degree in food technology from the University of the Philippines, studied classic French cooking and worked in Austria. She also was chef at two Washington hotels. And she collaborated with the California chef John Ash to promote American game cooking. She lives in Columbia, Md., with her husband, John, and young daughter.

Friday, August 05, 2005

Pilipino Priday

Yeah....I will not be able to access the internet next week, so this is it until Friday, August 19.

Gee....no wonder why almost all my relatives are nurses...

Philippines losing doctors to nursing jobs abroad
Saturday, August 6, 2005 www.globeandmail.com

Manila -- About 6,000 doctors in the Philippines are studying to become nurses so they can find higher-paying jobs abroad, Health Minister Francisco Duque said. This was up from 2,000 doctors who studied to become nurses last year.

The exodus of doctors and nurses has created a "threatening situation for our health-care system," and a task force had been established to examine the potential impact, Mr. Duque told reporters Thursday.

The team is working on a bill that would require doctors to practise in the Philippines for at least three to four years before they are able to work abroad.

A doctor working in a government hospital in the Philippines earns only about 25,000 pesos ($500) a month but could earn about $5,000 a month while working as a nurse overseas.

Filipino nurses are in demand in Europe, the United States, the Middle East, Singapore and Japan. AFP

Friday, July 29, 2005

Pilipino Priday

As you (yes, to the one person who reads this blog) know, I haven't been wanting to blog as of late because it's way too nice outside for me to want to think about blogging. Today, however, is different because I am bored as hell at work and can't really focus on anything because some sort of drilling is going on in the hallway and it's DRIVING ME CRAZY!!!! AAAAARRRRGGGHHHH!!

Whew, now it's over.

There is a Jose Rizal center located on Irving Park Road where a lot of Pinoys hang out. I've been there only once and never really thought about who this Jose Rizal guy was and why he was so important until now.

Jose Rizal was, in short, amazing. Not only did this guy know 22 different languages, but he was also architect, artist, educator, economist, ethnologist, scientific farmer, historian, inventor, journalist, linguist, musician, mythologist, nationalist, naturalist, novelist, ophthalmologist, physician, poet, propagandist, patriot, sculptor, and sociologist. No wonder why December 30 is Jose Rizal Day in the Phillipines! I can't even get off my ass to do one thing let alone 22 things and learn 22 different languages. It's exhausting just thinking about wanting to do it.

ANYWAYS, enough about my laziness.

What I find even more interesting is the stuff I uncovered in the official Jose Rizal Web site. There was some speculation that Adolf Hitler was the love child of Jose Rizal. The following is a story about it. Very interesting stuff I must say.

Adolf Rizal (And his half-brother, Mao Rizal)

By Manuel L. Quezon, III

Here is the craziest thing I've heard (and I've heard it more than once, at parties): Adolf Hitler was really the illegitimate son of Jose Rizal. Here is the second most crazy thing I've heard: Mao Zedong was actually Rizal's illegitimate son. Two variations, I suppose, on the idea that "Yes, the Filipino Can!"

Sadly, I found the two theories so funny, that I never thought of asking the people who told them to me to explain on what grounds they based their claim about Der Fuehrer and the Great Helmsman. A dentistry student friend from U.E. has also heard these fanciful theories, but neither did it occur to him to ask on what evidence these fanciful claims were based. So I did a little research to find out how people could make such a story up.

The claim that Adolf Hitler was Rizal's progeny must be based on the following facts:

* Adolf Hitler was born on April 20, 1889 (that means he could have been conceived sometime in August, 1888) , in the little village of Braunau, near the German-Austrian border.
* He was born an Austrian and remained one until the 1930's.
* The name of Hitler's mother was Klara Polzl.
* At one time she was a maid, in Vienna.
* Hitler always considered the town of Linz, in Austria, as his hometown (in his Political Testament he referred to "my home-town of Linz on the Danube.").
* Hitler's oldest brother, Gustav, born on May 17, 1885, and his sister Ida, born in 1886, both died before he was born.
* Bavaria was considered the "cradle" of Nazism.
* The Nazis made Japan one of the Axis powers. At one point they were trying to prove that the Japanese were Aryans to make them members of the "master race."

Now combine the above information with the following culled from the life of Rizal:

* On February 1, 1886, he left Paris for Germany. He went to Heidelberg, Wilhlmsfeld, Munich (in Bavaria), all somewhat near the German-Austrian border; on August 9, 1886 he left for Leipzig ("visiting various German cities along the way," one book says), arriving there on August 14. In October he went to Dresden and then to Berlin.
* In Berlin he finished Noli Me Tangere. One of the book's characters is named Maria Clara.
* On May 11, 1887, Rizal began his Grand Tour of Europe. He went to Dresden, Teschen (now Decin in the former Czechoslovakia), Prague, and then Brunn (where he lost a diamond stickpin), and Vienna (where he got back his stickpin, which was found by a maid in the hotel he stayed in in Brunn) in Austria .
* On May 24, 1887, he left Vienna by riverboat to see sights on the Danube River (on the boat he saw paper napkins for the first time). His voyage ended at Linz.
* From Linz he went to Munich (where Hitler attempted a putsch in 1923) and Nuremberg (site of the Nazi Party rallies and the War Crimes trials), and other German cities.
* Rizal was in the German Empire, sometimes past the German-Austrian border, from February 1886 until he went to Switzerland in early June, 1887.
* Rizal was again in Europe from May 24, 1888, until October 18, 1891. He was in London, Paris, Brussels, Madrid, Biarritz, Ghent. He was in Europe during the time Hitler was conceived and when he was born.
* Rizal in 1888 had an affair with a Japanese woman, Seiko Usui, when he visited Japan. She had an only daughter, Yuriko, by a foreign husband some years after her encounter with Rizal. Yuriko later married the son of a Japanese politician.

Put all this information together and you may be able to conclude the following: Hitler was conceived either in 1887 when Rizal passed through Linz or other towns (such as Brunn - how do you think he lost the diamond stickpin? And who was the "maid" who found it later and gave it to Blumentritt who forwarded it to Vienna?) near the Austrian border: in which case Hitler's older siblings were fictitious, to cover up his mother's being pregnant with him. In other words Hitler was actually born before 1889.

Or he was conceived in August, 1888, when Rizal was supposedly in London. Or perhaps in September, 1888, when Rizal went to Paris for a week (to have a rendezvous with Klara?). Maybe when to Paris in 1889 it was so he could communicate more easily with the now-expecting Klara? Klara Polzl's affair with Rizal may have centered around Linz, which is why the Hitler family moved there later (so Mama Hitler could live where she had An Affair To Remember), which would explain Hitler's fondness for the town.

Finally, Seiko Usui's only daughter was not really fathered by her husband, Alfred Charlton. He was simply a front. Yuriko, you see, was Rizal's daughter! And Hitler knew she was his half-sister. She used her influence on her brother Adolf to convince him to enter into an alliance with Japan (making it one of the Axis powers): which is why Japan invaded the Philippines! Yuriko made it clear to Hirohito that Hitler would appreciate it if his ally were to take over his father's homeland. And of course the reason why Hitler wanted to become dictator of Germany was because his natural father had spent some of the most interesting years of his life there!

That, I think, is the rationale behind such a fantastic claim based on information that can be gathered from any High School textbook on Rizal and any good biography of Adolf Hitler. Naturally, this can only be done through selective use of the evidence, but it does make for an amusing piece of historical fiction.

Now, as to the idea that Mao Zedong was also Rizal's son. Unfortunately this claim cannot be supported by even the most spurious evidence. Mao Zedong was born in 1893, in Hunan Province, which you could say is kind of near Hong Kong. But at that time (1893), Rizal was in exile in Dapitan. Now it would have been possible for Rizal to scamper around Europe and get Klara pregnant without anybody noticing, but he couldn't possibly have jumped into a boat and rowed to Hong Kong without being caught. He did pass through Hong Kong in 1888 and 1891 but he never seems to have visited other parts of China (unless you count Xiamen and Macao). So there are no details that can be manipulated.

These exercises in foolishness prove how creative us Filipinos can be. What other people would be able to make the bogus claim that one of their heroes fathered the man who almost turned Europe into a "howling wilderness" (as one U.S. officer wanted to do with Samar)? That would have been poetic justice, I suppose, the brown man strikes back and all that sort of thing.