“I don't make jokes. I just watch the government and report the facts.”
—Will Rogers
By Alex P. Vidal
WHILE pundits are saying seven out of 10 Filipinos support the ongoing impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte-Carpio, we doubt if it carries a weight in the priorities of the hoi polloi, or the masa.
By support means they are in favor, but will they zero in on the extravaganza when it becomes intense and carnivalesque hook, line, sinker?
After three hearings, it remains unclear if the impeachment trial has sunk in the imagination of plebeians who don’t have appetite for two competing besuited panels trading debates using highfalutin English and legal jargons.
They may be squirming, “Anong paki namin sa highfalutin English niyo? The gasoline is up; the economy is in tailspin. The peso is being pummeled in the foreign exchange rate market. We want food, shelter, and medicine; we want jobs; we need to survive.”
The average Filipinos still continue to struggle making both ends meet and are generally apathetic to politics.
They must prioritize daily needs, food on the table over raree-shows and all forms of discussions that don’t have direct impact on their day-to-day survival.
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They must ensure their children have daily meals and allowances and can go to school safe and sound.
Only the pundits, the political vloggers and social and mainstream media analysts are claiming that even the poor are interested in what’s going on in the impeachment trial.
Most ordinary income earners, the people selling vegetables and basic goods in the marketplaces and the sidewalks, are busy with their livelihood and have no patience for endless debates in the halls of congress now transformed as impeachment trial court.
According to the latest official data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), about 17.54 million Filipinos, or 15.5 percent of the population, were living below the national poverty line in 2023.
Many political combats like the impeachment trial and government policies only help drive up consumer prices, such as for food and energy, which disproportionately hurt the poor, or create artificial obstacles to jobs.
Concern for the poor is often equated with endgame of the impeachment trial in search for accountability of public officials. In reality, political intramural often makes it difficult for those striving to make ends meet.
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We didn’t push through with our male patient’s doctor’s appointment on 41st Street in Downtown Manhattan, NYC July 8 morning because of the danger posed by a Midtown Manhattan skyscraper under a massive renovation evacuated Tuesday after two interior columns began to buckle that made first responders to fear a collapse could be imminent.
Hours after the 8 a.m. evacuation on July 7, the buildings and streets around 235 E. 42nd St. near Second Ave. remained closed off because there was reportedly additional movement in one of the compromised columns.
New York City’s buildings commissioner said late Tuesday that a compromised high-profile housing project under construction near Grand Central Terminal was stable for now, even as he said that the neighborhood around it may remain in a tense situation “for the next couple of days.”
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said no additional movement has been observed at the Midtown Manhattan high-rise that was evacuated after structural columns buckled. Temporary shoring and beams have been installed on several floors to further stabilize the building, with more expected to be added today, the mayor said.
The developer behind the skyscraper told CNN faulty column supports carrying too much weight were to blame, adding they will determine the exact reason they bent “in due time.” Four buildings in the area remain under evacuation orders.
The building, located on East 42nd Street, is the former headquarters for Pfizer and is being converted into apartments. The developer intends to rebuild the damaged section and still finish the project on time.
(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor-in-chief of two leading daily newspapers in Iloilo, Philippines.—Ed)