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I will be less active on Facebook, Twitter (and all other social networking sites), offline on Yahoo Messenger and GTalk (and all other chat applications), WordPress, incommunicado/unable to reply to SMS, and may even have to reject your call from time to time. When you happen to notice inactivity for some time, DO NOT PANIC.

FREEZE! Put your hands up! Drop the cellphone!
Back away from the device. S-L-O-W-L-Y.

We’re just experiencing a communication lockdown due due to a change of work environment that does not allow for unnecessary external communication, apart from those relating to the business and emergencies.

 

If your concerns are not regarding my child and her well-being or no one is in an accident or dead, please understand that I won’t be able to share my unsolicited opinion on your matter from the hours of 8am until 5pm.

 

Thank you for bearing with us in this time of grief.


Lockdown: 8am – 5pm

Starting on Monday.

“the trial changed me.”
stevie g finally speaks.


As Steven Gerrard surveyed his surroundings in courtroom 4:1 he was sure of only one thing. Whatever happened, he would not come back here again.

No more mither, as he described it in Liverpool Crown Court, no more situations; change was the only answer.

Gerrard has never talked about the emotions surrounding the confrontation in a Southport bar that instigated a charge of affray and began an eight-month ordeal but, despite the exoneration of a not guilty verdict, it is clear the episode has left a mark on him.

The judge, Henry Globe, said that the accused could walk away with his reputation intact, and plainly this mattered greatly.

‘I’m the sort of player who likes to keep it clean,’ Gerrard told me, in a tiny ante-room at Liverpool’s Melwood training ground.

‘I was always very decided about the way footballers should behave. I do think it is important. It is not about image, or putting on an act, but I know a lot of kids look up to me, I get a lot of fan mail from them and at the time I thought I’d let them and a lot of other people down, just by being in this position.
‘I was concerned that people wouldn’t think as much of me and that was why the verdict was so crucial. During the trial when the prosecution was having its say there were a couple of days when I was reading the reports and thinking ‘I hope people don’t think that is what I am like.’

The continued threat of civil action means Gerrard cannot talk about the incident itself, or the accusations made by Marcus McGee, a 34-year-old businessman. He admits that his policy throughout has been to immerse his mind in football, but that has not precluded thoughts on how to ensure this remains an isolated chapter in his life.

‘The trial changed me,’ he said.’I had to learn from it, learn from being in the wrong place at the wrong time. What hour I am out, where I go out, I will be more careful in future.

‘From now on, if we win 5-1, if I score two goals and we go top of the league, I won’t try to enjoy it in a bar with my mates anymore. I’ll go for a meal and be in my house by half past ten. We get paid very well and there have to be sacrifices.

‘Throughout the trial I kept telling myself that whatever happened I would never be back in one of these rooms again. It was not a pleasant place to be, the whole experience was very frightening and intimidating.

‘I have never been through anything like it. I kept thinking of my team-mates away in Thailand playing football, and me being so far from where I should be.

‘Despite the verdict, there was not one minute that was enjoyable, not one moment that made me proud.
‘I regret the situation, I regret not going home when I could have done and I accept that some people will always see this as a blemish on my character, even though I got the outcome I thought I deserved.

‘What I would say is that I co-operated, I dealt with it and now I want to put it behind me. There is a balance between trying to be a model professional and living like a monk.

‘You have to be able to let your hair down like anyone else but I have always tried to treat people as they treat me. I think I have had respect because I give respect back.

‘There have been very few instances when I have had problems, but I will think about my spare time, even my holiday time, more carefully now. I reckon I have another six years as a professional footballer. It is not so long to make those choices.’

Gerrard’s circumstances felt more extraordinary to those who are acquainted with the man. There are certain footballers – you know who they are – whose appearance accused of violent assault would not have raised an eyebrow. To have Gerrard in the dock was anomalous.

He remains not just one of the most talented footballers of his generation, but one of the most down-to-earth, too. He has dedicated the best years of his career to one club, Liverpool, at a time when the managers of the two most successful teams in the Premier League, Manchester United and Chelsea, would have walked on hot coals to sign him.

Sir Alex Ferguson eulogised him as the natural successor to Roy Keane, Jose Mourinho thought he had dragged a move to Chelsea over the finishing line four years ago, only for Gerrard to stay at Anfield at the eleventh hour.

He has recently signed a new contract but with each passing season the desperation to win a league championship medal grows more acute. Even with the memory of the most remarkable European Cup final in history, it would be a travesty if Gerrard was to end his career without knowing the feeling of playing for the best team in the land.

‘If I never won the league title, there would be regrets and an empty space, I admit it,’ he said.’Yet even if Liverpool were no longer challenging I would still find it difficult to leave. I could win 90 per cent of my medals here and one league championship elsewhere and that last medal would not mean as much.

‘I’ve been part of this club since I was eight. I remember my first final, the Worthington Cup against Birmingham City in Cardiff. Swarms of people around the coach, me looking out at their faces.

‘It was at that moment I felt I was part of something more than a football team. I would have been one of them, but I was just better at kicking a ball. That could have been me standing on the street. I felt responsible. I still do.

‘If you get on our bus after a defeat and you see me and Jamie Carragher, it is not company you want to be in. The difference is I’ve learned to enjoy that pressure as I get older.

‘Now we try to transmit that emotion to the foreign players. We try to explain to them what it means to take 6,000 away to Leeds United on a Tuesday in the Carling Cup, when everyone else says the competition does not matter.’

The other motivational force for Gerrard is his manager at Liverpool, Rafael Benitez. It has not always been a comfortable relationship, Gerrard’s tendency to positional indiscipline – a playground footballer is the most common criticism, always chasing the action – at first grated against Benitez’s equally instinctive desire for order.

The coach decided he could not trust Gerrard to occupy a position in central midfield and moved him wide. The player did not like it but continued to turn in stunning performances that kept Liverpool in contention for major trophies.

Over time, they developed mutual respect. Gerrard for Benitez’s meticulous attention to detail and his relentless drive for improvement: Benitez for Gerrard’s match-defining qualities.

It would be wrong to call Gerrard’s present role at Liverpool a compromise, because that would suggest weakness. But there is something about his placement in the centre, but high up the field where his defensive responsibilities are limited, that is the best of all possible worlds.

‘Even after five years with Rafa, I still feel I want to please him, that I want to impress him in every game I play,’ Gerrard added.’The great managers are like that. There are a handful operating on a different level and I am lucky enough to play for two of them, Benitez and Fabio Capello.

‘It is when you see what they put in, some of the little things they spot, that you realise how hard they work. Rafa will make a point, and you’ll be thinking, “Has this guy not got a life?” because it seems so minor, but it is what sets him apart.

‘I can have a good game – tell you what, I’ll be big-headed, say I’ve had a fantastic game – we’ve won 2-1 in the last minute and I’ve scored both.

‘I come back into the dressing-room and I’m buzzing, bouncing off the walls, thinking “I feel good today”, that is when Rafa comes up and starts talking about a throw-in when they changed the play and I pressed far too late. He’ll say: “If you want, we’ll go out there and I’ll show you”.

‘Or you’ll have a run of 10 games when you’re in form and flying and he’ll pop you a DVD of your recent play and it’s broken up into sections good and bad. And you’re thinking, “Hang on, bad? I didn’t do anything wrong”. But you’ll watch it and you’re out of position in one match, or you pressed late or you let a man go at a set-piece. You wonder when the guy sleeps.

‘At first when he did things like that, I’d be asking, “Has he not watched my last 150 games for Liverpool?” There is a danger that you think he has it in for you because he pulls you so much.

‘When he arrived, he would keep saying to me “Left foot, left foot” or I’d shoot and he would say “hit the target” and I’m thinking, “Look, mate, I’m trying to hit the f***ing target”.

‘I would say to people “I’m 26 – if he doesn’t think my left foot’s working now, it’s never going to work” but then a few weeks later I scored with my left and he came up with a little smile and said “lucky goal today, left foot and it hit the target” and then the penny dropped.

‘Finally, I realised it was the way he helped push you on and as a player you either recognised it or fought it and, with these guys, if you fight it there is only one winner.

‘I think that was why I adapted to Fabio Capello slightly better than some of the England players because his style was similar to what I had experienced with Rafa. He has that same way of keeping your feet on the ground in the moments when you’re thinking you are a bit good.

‘I loved that after the win against Croatia in Zagreb, Capello’s first thoughts were what we could have done better. My mates who were watching the game were on a high about the performance, which is how it should be for fans, but he was already onto the next match.

‘After we beat Slovenia in the friendly recently he was going round everybody during the warm down, telling them where they could improve and what they did right.

‘Everyone was tired, really players just want to relax after matches, but he was still looking to drive us on and, however you may feel about it at the time, when you take a step back from it, that energy is refreshing.
‘You look at a guy like Capello and sense he can help you achieve something. He is a manager I’ve always liked. I’ve seen him on the sidelines for Juventus and Roma and thought he looked a class act, I’ve read his book and when he got the job I immediately felt it could be our turning point.

‘I don’t want to retire and have the highlight of my England career a quarter-final lost on penalties. I want to look back on achievement, on a great team. I used to go down to England knowing it was not right, lying in my room for seven days with a tricky game ahead, driving myself mad.

‘Everyone was on our case and we had too much thinking time. I wasn’t sure I could run a game, I wasn’t sure where I would be playing or what the manager really wanted from me.

‘There was a lot of self-doubt. Now I lie in my room looking forward even to the team meetings and training just to be in Capello’s company, because you get so much from him.

‘He won’t be inviting you to dinner or the pictures, and he is not the guy you want to cross if you’ve had a bad game, but he is not as stone-hard as he is made out to be. He does pat you on the back as well.
‘People ask me what I would like to do after football and I’d love to be a manager, but then I wonder if I could ever be as good as those guys because it is 24/7, it’s their life, there is nothing else and I don’t think I could be crazy like that.

‘I like to switch off after games. I’ve got two daughters. I like to play golf. I think of Rafa and in five years I have never had a conversation with him that was not about football; Capello the same. They fascinate me, those people.

‘When I get talking to John Terry or Wayne Rooney, I am always asking about their managers, how they work, how they interact with the players. I’ll pull Gary Lewin, the England physiotherapist, and ask him about Arsene Wenger at Arsenal.

‘On Friday, I love getting home, sitting on the couch, turning Sky Sports News on and listening to all the interviews coming in from the training grounds, just to hear these characters talking about football. I don’t know if I could be that obsessed. Jamie Carragher, now he could, definitely.’

As if by magic, Carragher interrupts, mockingly telling his friend to make sure the article is about Liverpool,’not bloody England.’

We settle for a bit of both. Gerrard talks about his exceptional understanding with Wayne Rooney at international level, and reminisces about the first time they met, in a Merseyside derby.

‘We had our hands around each other’s throats because of my tackle on Gary Naysmith,’ Gerrard recalled.’He was 17, it was his first derby, he charged up, straight into the melee. I remember thinking, “Who the f***’s this? He’s a bit up for it.”

‘He was a man in a boy’s body. At the end it was forgotten. The best players are like that. If someone cannot forget what has happened once the final whistle has gone, they are not man enough to play. I’ve kicked many people, been kicked by a few, too, and the best ones never mention it. Roy Keane and Patrick Vieira were brilliant like that. Boot you all day, then “all the best” and move on.’

And moving on is what Gerrard is about, too. He looks around the featureless little interview room and compares it to a cell or a police interrogation office.

‘I think people now realise the truth of what happened,’ he concludes,’apart from every away fan in the country.’

SOURCE

*****

I found this article over at ontd_football and I have just fallen completely in love all over again. How can you not? After all those flashy footballers and all about the press, Stevie genuinely just wants to play football. To quote Kanye West, “WHY WON’T YOU LET ME BE GREAT??” You are, my Captain. You are.

January 25, 1933 – August 1, 2009

People Power’s Philippine Saint: Corazon Aquino
(Time Magazine article, 01 August 2009)

“Whenever the country appeared to be in a crisis, Cory Aquino rose above the bureaucratic procrastination that had always bogged it down, reminding her people that they once astonished the world with their bravery — and that they could do it again. But Filipinos must now take stock. Whom will they march with now that their saint has gone to meet her God?”

Woman of the Year: Corazon Aquino

(Time Magazine cover story, 05 January 1987; Cory was the first female to hold TIME’s annual distinction on her own since the newly crowned Queen Elizabeth in 1952.)

***

OTP: Cory/Ninoy
I’m sad, dare I say, teary, to send her off into the great beyond to finally be reunited with her beloved.

Cory always brought out that sense of morality and faith in the Filipino people. Even if you weren’t particularly impressed with her presidential CV, what she had gone through and how she had survived it all is still a testament to what kind of person she is. I couldn’t imagine running a country after a murdered husband and an opposition that was clearly out for my blood. That Cory, man. She had balls.

Even without the power duo, I’m sure that they’d want us to remember one thing:

And die, they did.

RIP.

Taxes on book imports lifted
By Paolo Romero Updated May 25, 2009 12:00 AM

MANILA, Philippines – President Arroyo ordered yesterday the Department of Finance to scrap the taxes imposed on imported books and reading material.

Press Secretary Cerge Remonde said the directive was prompted by a torrent of criticism on the move of the Bureau of Customs (BOC), which is under the supervision of the finance department, to impose the duties.

“President Arroyo ordered the immediate lifting of the customs duty on book importation,” Remonde said in a text message to The STAR.

“The President wants books to be within reach of the common man. She believes reading as an important value for intellectual formation, which is the foundation of a healthy public opinion necessary for a vibrant democracy,” he said.

Remonde said Mrs. Arroyo directed Finance Secretary Margarito Teves to revoke Finance Department Order 17-09 which imposes duty on book importation.

“Secretary Teves said he will comply immediately,” he said.

Teves earlier said the BoC has yet to compute the revenues to be generated by the taxes.

Teves, however, said that revenue generation was not the main reason for the import duties but to clarify regulations on book imports as provided by the Tariff and Customs Code of the Philippines.

The UNESCO National Commission of the Philippines (UNACOM), led by secretary-general Ambassador Preciosa Soliven, said the imposition of taxes on books runs contrary to government efforts to promote reading among children and the youth.

“Taxing imported books is tantamount to taxing reading habits. At a time when parents and educators worldwide have expressed alarm on the continuing steep decline in the reading habits and practices especially among the young, the tax measure is counterproductive to current initiatives to rekindle a reading culture,” UNACOM said in a statement.

“The measure would surely further discourage young and even old minds from appreciating, recognizing and rediscovering the value of reading,” UNACOM said.

UNESCO in Paris, France was reportedly already aware of the controversy over the BoC’s imposing duties on imported books, a clear violation of a United Nations world pact forged in 1950 where countries agreed to exempt reading and cultural materials from import duties.

John Donaldson, UNESCO senior legal officer based in Paris, said the Philippines, as a party to the Florence Agreement, must respect the principle “Pacta sunt servanda (Pacts must be respected).”

“This fundamental principle of the law of treaties, enshrined in the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of 1969, provides that treaties in force are binding upon the parties and must be performed in good faith,” Donaldson said.

“It follows that if the Philippines decides to apply custom duties or other charges on the importation of materials coming from another State Party, and for which the Florence Agreement foresees an exemption, it will be in breach of its obligations under this Agreement,” he said.

UNACOM said the Philippines’ Department of Foreign Affairs-Office of Legal Affairs submitted that DO No. 17-09 issued by the Department of Finance was “contrary to the Philippines’ obligations under the UNESCO Florence Agreement and is inconsistent with its principle of free exchange of ideas and knowledge.”

Source: Philstar.com

Oh yeah, and an update on Rock Ed Philippines’ Book Bigayan 2009. From the looks of it, it went swimmingly well.

CHEERS ALL AROUND!

THIS JUST IN:

NEIL GAIMAN helped spread the word on the Great Book Blockade of 2009.

***

An update on why there will be no more newly imported books in the Philippines.
Related link: The people’s response.

By Aurea Calica  Updated May 14, 2009 12:00 AM

MANILA, Philippines – Senators questioned yesterday the Bureau of Customs’ (BOC) “book blockade,’’ saying it could do more harm than good even if it intends to raise more revenues.

Senators Edgardo Angara, Manuel Roxas II and Richard Gordon joined Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago in questioning the BOC’s move to impose taxes on imported books.

They said the government must promote reading and make it a part of every Filipino’s lifestyle rather than make books more inaccessible.

Angara said reading and publishing must flourish in the country.

“Books play an integral part in a country’s intellectual, technical and cultural development. They are the most effective and economical tools for achieving educational growth, imparting information and recording, preserving, and disseminating the nation’s cultural heritage. Unfortunately, only few of the books in our libraries and bookstores are local publications,” Angara said.

The Philippines has the lowest output of book titles compared to neighbors in Southeast Asia. Statistics released by the Philippine National Library showed that the number of books published since 2000 averages 5,326.5 a year.

Roxas asked Finance Secretary Margarito Teves to explain the new BOC policy, which has sparked complaints from book importers and sellers.

One percent duty is being collected for educational, technical, scientific, historical and cultural books and five percent for books/materials which are non-educational and intended for sale, barter or hire.

Roxas said Teves should shed light on the implementation of Department of Finance Order No. 17-09 dated March 24, 2009 which also clarified guidelines on duty-free importation of books allowed under existing laws and international agreements.

“We have received reports that the new Department Order has imposed a more stringent policy on importing books in our country, therefore restricting and discouraging booksellers and importers.”

Roxas also sent a letter to National Book Development Board chairman Dennis Gonzalez and requested the agency’s position on the implementation of the DOF order.

Gordon said the imposition of taxes on imported books would hinder the flow of knowledge and ideas by making these educational materials less accessible to the people.

The Philippines is a signatory to the 1950 Florence Agreement, a United Nations treaty that mandates the tax-free importation of books to facilitate the free flow of educational, scientific, and cultural materials.

Source: Philstar.com

Heads up from MLQ3

(The public’s response to The Great Book Blockade of 2009)

WE AIN’T TAXIN’ BOOKS HERE

We give ‘em away –for FREE!

Bring your used/old books too if you want to share. Let’s gather again at our Sunday Silent spot to give away books to anyone who wants ‘em. Bring your family and your family dog.

[Information filched from abashet]

I am PISSED. I do not devour books by any means but what the Customs have done is just plain filthy in my eyes. I sure hope it’s the hormones because this is upsetting me far more than anything I’ve encountered. If you are a bookworm, bookphile, bookmaniac, bookfanatic, or just read ONE book that you’ve loved ever since, you need to read this and pass it on.

***

In the last few months, the importation of books into the Philippines has virtually stopped. The reason why is explained in this article by Robin Hemley, a University of Iowa creative writing professor currently on a fellowship in the Philippines.

If you have no time to read the article, the essence is that the Bureau of Customs has decided to impose duties on the importation of books into the Philippines.

This, despite the 1950 Florence Agreement on the Importation of Educational, Scientific and Cultural Materials (which you can see here), which the Philippines ratified in 1979. The preamble of the agreement states: “Considering that the free exchange of ideas and knowledge and, in general, the widest possible dissemination of the diverse forms of self-expression used by civilizations are vitally important both for intellectual progress and international understanding, and consequently for the maintenance of world peace…”, an indisputable proposition.

Here’s an excerpt from Robin Hemley’s article:

…Over coffee one afternoon, a book-industry professional (whom I can’t identify) told me that for the past two months virtually no imported books had entered the country, in part because of the success of one book, Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. The book, an international best seller, had apparently attracted the attention of customs officials. When an examiner named Rene Agulan opened a shipment of books, he demanded that duty be paid on it.

The importer of Twilight made a mistake and paid the duty requested. A mistake because such duty flies in the face of the Florence Agreement, a U.N. treaty that was signed by the Philippines in 1952, guaranteeing the free flow of “educational, scientific, and cultural materials” between countries and declaring that imported books should be duty-free. Mr. Agulan told the importer that because the books were not educational (i.e., textbooks) they were subject to duty. Perhaps they aren’t educational, I might have argued, but aren’t they “cultural”?

No matter. With this one success under their belt, customs curtailed all air shipments of books entering the country. Weeks went by as booksellers tried to get their books out of storage and started intense negotiations with various government officials.

What doubly frustrated booksellers and importers was that the explanations they received from various officials made no sense. It was clear that, for whatever reason—perhaps the 30-billion-peso ($625 million) shortfall in projected customs revenue—customs would go through the motions of having a reasonable argument while in fact having none at all.

Customs Undersecretary Espele Sales explained the government’s position to a group of frustrated booksellers and importers in an Orwellian PowerPoint presentation, at which she reinterpreted the Florence Agreement as well as Philippine law RA 8047, providing for “the tax and duty-free importation of books or raw materials to be used in book publishing.” For lack of a comma after the word “books,” the undersecretary argued that only books “used in book publishing” (her underlining) were tax-exempt.

“What kind of book is that?” one publisher asked me afterward. “A book used in book publishing.” And she laughed ruefully.

I thought about it. Maybe I should start writing a few. Harry the Cultural and Educational Potter and His Fondness for Baskerville Type.

Likewise, with the Florence Agreement, she argued that only educational books could be considered protected by the U.N. treaty. Customs would henceforth be the arbiter of what was and wasn’t educational.

“For 50 years, everyone has misinterpreted the treaty and now you alone have interpreted it correctly?” she was asked.

“Yes,” she told the stunned booksellers.

Throughout February and March, bookstores seemed on the verge of getting their books released—all their documents were in order, but the rules kept changing. Now they were told that all books would be taxed: 1 percent for educational books and 5 percent for noneducational books. A nightmare scenario for the distributors; they imagined each shipment being held for months as an examiner sorted through the books. Obviously, most would simply pay the higher tax to avoid the hassle.

Distributors told me they weren’t “capitulating” but merely paying under protest. After all, customs was violating an international treaty that had been abided by for over 50 years. Meanwhile, booksellers had to pay enormous storage fees. Those couldn’t be waived, they were told, because the storage facilities were privately owned (by customs officials, a bookstore owner suggested ruefully). One bookstore had to pay $4,000 on a $10,000 shipment.

The day after the first shipment of books was released, an internal memo circulated in customs congratulating themselves for finally levying a duty on books, though no mention was made of their pride in breaking an international treaty.

UPDATE and more details at MLQIII’s blog.

***

“Customs would henceforth be the arbiter of what was and wasn’t educational. “
What the FUCK would they know about things of educational value? Who the FUCK are they to say what does and does not contribute to the education and expansion of one’s mind? These motherfucking custom officials have really hit close to home. They can be arbiters of SHIT if they want to, not books. These fucktards are KNOWINGLY stopping distribution of “educational, scientific, and cultural materials”. The only reason that they’re in it is because they realize the shitload of money they can rip off people. They can’t see anything BUT money. They are fucking breaking a motherfucking international treaty for godssakes! *$%#)!@_()!@*#)#%*&$%)#) I just really want to open fire on each and every single one of those bastards who think they’re getting one up on the people. I am no virgin to how corrupt the government can be but they have messed with something very near and dear to my heart. THERE WILL BE BLOOD.

***

UPDATE:

The Public’s response to The Great Book Blockade,

BOOKBIGAYAN2009

You will surely be missed by all.

His courage chronicled for those in need of strength.

So THAT idea’s shot to shit.

Goodbye, family.

OTATS Magazine Launch Party and Tattoo Exhibit

Takaaki’s Bar at Macapagal Road, HK Sun Plaza
(in front of seaside Dampa)

February 27, 2009; Friday

Entrance fee: Php 150 WITH ONE FREE BEER

Featuring: Loc, Dfp, Gayuma, Bagua, Balatek, Heavenly Host, Mithi, Even, Cosmic Love, Nalalato, Kulam, Krazy Kyle, Sunny Bandila, Mike Kosa, Dcoy and many more.

Tattoo Exhibit starts at 5pm onwards.

Get inked on the spot while you jam with the hottest acts in town!

*

TARA? :D

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