CARP vs. GARB

Posted by Ronnie Clarion On February - 2009

Land distribution to landless Filipino farmers is a preset of provision under Art. XIII Sec.4 of the 1987 Constitution. Prior to this provision, former Pres. Corazon Aquino mounted the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) which was later enacted through the passage of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARL) or RA 6657 on June 10, 1988. However, the program had been excoriated for its failure to completely distribute lands to the beneficiaries within its target completion timeframe of 10 years. It was later extended for another 10 years yet the struggle for genuine agrarian reform continues.

Ang Kartilya ng Katipunan

Posted by Christian Espinoza On June - 12 - 2010

The Revolution of the Katipunan may well have been thwarted by American imperialism at the turn of the 20th century, but it is noteworthy to declare that our people, who at that time were only beginning to form the concept of nationhood, were more than able to organize a revolutionary force that would liberate the entire islands from their Spanish colonizers.

Noynoy Aquino Inaugural Speech

Posted by Kartilya On June - 30 - 2010

Ang pagtayo ko rito ngayon ay patunay na kayo ang aking tunay na lakas. Hindi ko inakala na darating tayo sa puntong ito, na ako’y manunumpa sa harap ninyo bilang inyong Pangulo. Hindi ko pinangarap maging tagapagtaguyod ng pag-asa at tagapagmana ng mga suliranin ng ating bayan.

Subjugating the Philippine System of Education

Posted by Christian Lloyd Espinoza On Oct - 2009

The transformation and reorientation of the current rotten system of education in the country is not possible without the development of a critical consciousness that reflects and acts upon the existing social (dis)order. Any meaningful change in our basic curriculum must be liberative of the docility that has long infringed our mentality, dissolving what little nationalist ideal there is left in the heart of every Filipino youth.

The Character of the Philippine Educational System

Posted by Kartilya On 11:24 PM
ABRAHAM JAMBANGAN JR.
February|2009

The Philippine educational system is colonial, commercialized, and repressive. It basically serves the needs and interests of imperialism by producing battalions of cheap and repressed labor force. It also strengthens colonial culture that has dominated the Philippine society since the Spanish rule.


The privatization and deregulation policies on education have further driven it into becoming a commodity. State universities are being privatized while capitalist-educators gain increasing power to extract bigger profits through tuition and miscellaneous hikes.

In the campuses, the students’ democratic rights such as the right to organize, right to an autonomous student government and publication, and the right to peaceably assemble are grossly violated. Teachers and nonteaching staff are also victims of unreasonable wages and salaries and the lack of benefits that are due them. Democratic rights are being violated across the academic community.

This state of the Philippine educational system is also perpetuated even by the so-called sectarian or church-owned schools. They are in chorus with the government and the rest of the capitalist-educators against the youth and students, depriving them of their legitimate demands and interests.

The crisis of the Philippine educational system is an offshoot of the chronic economic and political crises of the Philippine society. There will never be an end to the crisis of the Philippine educational system unless the entire social system that breeds it is transformed to that of a truly humane society with peace that is based on justice.#

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