KODAO Productions
Raymund B. Villanueva | January 15, 2022
Bishop Ambo cites falsehood of ‘PH golden years’ under Marcos
The leader of the country’s Roman Catholics expressed support to a campaign for clean and honest elections, urging Filipinos to fight the current “age of disinformation” with “the moral imperative of truth and honesty.”
In an address to a group of businesspersons and professionals, Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines president and Caloocan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David said Filipinos cannot afford to remain quiet when falsehoods gain the upper hand as the May 2022 elections approach.
The country’s leading Catholic prelate criticized claims that the late President Ferdinand Marcos Sr.’s rule was the so-called golden years of the Philippines, assertions meant to support the candidacy of his son and namesake Ferdinand Jr.
“When some candidates claim that the best government we ever had was the Marcos dictatorship, good heavens! When they claimed that martial law was meant only to discipline the Filipinos, good heavens! That it actually improved our economy and it provided jobs to the people, good heavens!” he exclaimed.
David also warned against the Filipinos’ inclination to vote for poll survey frontrunners, instead of candidates they think are morally upright.
“It could only mean we have failed big time with regard to the formation of a moral conscience among Catholics,” he said.
Ferdinand Jr. leads in several surveys among presidential aspirants
David added well-funded armies of trolls whose main task is to create and maintain thousands of fake accounts that regularly post fake news, false narratives, hate comments and messages must be opposed.
Old campaign
David spoke at an online re-launching of an honesty campaign by the group Brotherhood of Christian Businessmen and Professionals (BCBP) on Saturday.
BCBP coordinator for programs and services Noel delos Reyes said their group is part of over 20 faith-based organizations pushing for “clean, accurate, responsible and transparent 2022 elections.”
The “Halalang Marangal 2022” (noble elections) campaign will not issue a list of candidates it will support but is focused on asking candidates to agree to disclose their statements of assets and liabilities by signing an honesty pledge, Reyes said.
The business leader said BCBP has also written earlier to the Commission on Election on apparent violations to the Election Code, including illegal early campaigning by many candidates.
The group refused to identify any erring candidate, however.
“The campaign shall focus on asking national candidates to sign the honesty pledge,” Reyes said.
Founded in 2000, BCBP claims a membership of 18,000 members across the country and abroad.
It launched its first Be Honest campaign in 2004 it replicated through various slogans in every succeeding election thereafter.#