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Friday, July 9, 2010

Straight from the Heart

Abs Damahan
Is Basilan road to peace?
Chances for longer and permanent peaceful solution to the Province it depend how the sincerity of leaders in handling the complexity problems over four decades of internal conflicts hounding of many lost of lives since the declaration of Martial Law in 1971 up-to the present Aquino administration.
The untamed paradox solution to peace is undeniable without wholehearted efforts to resolve by the Basilenos themselves, for a common ground base to attain cohesively by all stakeholders of the province with the supports of the National government. This is not denying facts Mindanao conflicts eaten much more of our National resources in term of war campaigns to eliminate the so called ‘The Armed-Resistance of the state’ whether  the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the Abu Sayyaf Group or whatever group based in Southern Philippines.
This pockets of resistance can hamper peaceful co-existence in golas living side-by-side, unless the National and Local government seriously enough to address the issue of Mindanao for a genuine and honest intent. These conflicts should have final conclusion and have definite ending for this trouble provinces of Mindanao.
The real country economic growth and progress if all of its citizenry enjoy the benefits of the nation’s interest from social and economic benefits. The equally shared values for common goods of all is the measurement of genuine economic growth, minority rights under UN Charters is a sacred and privilege rights cannot be denied by the majority of the society elsewhere of the global community. This is unconditional rights for the minority should be addressed by the leader of state in authority.
There are semblances of attempts from the previous administration since the Marcos era to PGMA is considered unworthy peace-efforts all of them are failed because of their attitudes of insincerity from GRP-Armed-Resistance Group some alleged gain from the war funds because of huge resources allocated for the purposed.
This time under P.Noy administration we are hoping for the best would change the atmosphere towards peace and development for the entire Philippines archipelago. Setting government an inclusive to all with-out borderlines minority rights should have fair shares of pie in his six years administration.
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com



Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Listening to the Voice of Humanity

Straight from the Heart
Feature-world crisis
Listening to the Voice of Humanity
Steven Kull
Last Part
Having a very large Citizen Advisory Panel also make it possible to hear from subgroups within the citizenry. This can include subgroups based on race, ethnicity, gender and partisan affiliation. Obviously, finding common groud among these different groups is more challenging than finding majority agreement among the general citizenry. But when one is dealing with people who are randomly selected, rather than people who are affiliated with organized interest groups, it is often easier than one expects. People have multiple identities and, as long as they are not committed to being identified with just one of them, they are more to find common ground.
Giving voice to the people is not an all-or-nothing proposition. If we think of humanity as a kind of large mural or tapestry, even the most basic poll begins to give us some information about the kind of thinking that is occurring in different corners of the world. With methods that go into greater depth, we gain greater detail and nuance. With coverage of more nation, we gain greater breadth so that we can increasingly get a sense of humanity as a whole.
As many have noted, the most compelling challenges of the future are ones of a global nature, requiring a global response. Nation states are not entirely adequate to these challenges and have prevented international institutions from fully consolidating their capacity for collective action. Like actors in a Greek drama, thay seem headed for an impasse with the potential for tragedy. It may be time to shift our attention from the actors to the chorus in the background. Already we can begin to hear a voice of humanity-a voice that is less constrained by established patterns and that offers a more flexible and holistic approach to the challenges we as a species facts.
Steven Kull, PhD is a political psychologist who studies world public opinion on international issues he is the Director of WorldPublic.org, the Program on International Policy Attitudes and the Center on Policy Attitudes and regularly provides analysis of public opinion in the US and international media. He has briefed the US Congress, the State Department, NATO, the United Nations and the European Commission. His most recent book, co-authored with I.M. Destler, is Misreading the Public: The Myth of a New Isolationism. He is a member of the Council on Foreign relations and the World Association of Public Opinion Research and teaches at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Policy.
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Listening to the Voice of Humanity

Straight from the Heart
Feature-world crisis
Listening to the Voice of Humanity
Steven Kull
Part-7
The Process of Collective Deliberation
Standard polls are not always adequate for giving the public a voice through. On some issues the public does not enough information or has not had enough time to really sit down and deliberate about tradeoffs. In this case it may be necessary to do in-depth polls where people are given information and presented pro and con arguments. They in key also need to wrestle with trade-offs.
In some cases it is necessary to go yet another step and to have representative samples get together in person to deliberate on the issues together before coming to conclusions. All around the world there exciting new experiments being conducted along these lines. These include the “citizens’ juries,’ ‘deliberative polls,’ ‘Consensus Councils’ or ‘civic lotteries.’
Here again these ideas are popular with publics around the world. Respondents were asked about the possibility of having a large group of randomly selected citizens meet to consider a current issue facing their national legislature; after hearing the full range of arguments they would discuss the issue with others and finally send their collective conclusion to the legislature. In nearly every country large majorities approved of this idea-on average 68%. Interestingly, in most countries, majorities said they would have more confidence in the conclusions of such a group than the conclusion of their own legislature.
Creating a New Function of Government
Of course, it is not enough to simply give the larger society voice. It is also essential for the government to actually listen to the people. To ensure this will happen it is probably necessary to make the process of listening to the people an established function of the government. Once again, this is something that people around the world would like to do needy survey country polled, majorities have said that they would be then government to establish an agency to study the public’s views on the issues the government facing. Ethan Leib has made the case that the function of giving voice to the citizenry should become a kind of ‘fourth branch’ of government.
For the government to commit to giving the citizenry a voice would create the possibility to truly go to scale. Rather than just having an occasional poll or citizen jury, there could be a large ongoing representative sample ready to give input to the government, a Citizen Advisory Panel. All panel members would be linked by the Internet and would be briefed on current issues facing the government and asked for their views. In some cases, it would also make sense to get panel members together in groups to deliberate on the issues together with other panel members. The conclusions would be reported to legislative representatives as well as being released to the general public and the media. To make sure the process is conducted in a fair and unbiased fashion, a board representing different political parties, different sectors of society, and also a small representative sample of citizens would oversee the entire process.
To be continued…
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com





Friday, July 2, 2010

Listening to the Voice of Humanity

Straight from the Heart
Feature-world crisis
Listening to the Voice of Humanity
Steven Kull
Part-6
But this is not what people perceive as occurring. Asked how much their country is governed to the will of the people the mean response was 4.6. in every country a majority-on average 73%-said that their country should be governed according to the will of the people more than it is.
What then can be done to increase the influence of the aggregated consciousness of the people? The first step is simply to give the people a greater voice.
Some have argued what is key here is for individuals to step forward and organize themselves into organizations that put forward key ideas and concerns about what needs to happen. This is doubtlessly an important part of the process by which new ideas and concerns are developed and disseminated into society.
However, no individual or group can speak for the society as a whole. To give voice to the whole of society we must go back to the method that the ancient Greeks used to develop the first democratic government. They created their government by selecting people by lot from the whole of the citizenry. In modern vernacular we call it random sampling.
This is the essence of public opinion polls. When a sample, randomly selected from the general public, is asked questions in a clear and unbiased fashion this can provide a useful way to discern the dominant tendency in the public as a whole.
People around the world also want government leaders to pay attention to polls. Even when presented the counter argument that government leaders “should not pay attention to public opinion polls because this will distract them from deciding what they think is right,” in all 18 nations polled majorities said that government leaders “should pay attention to public opinion polls.”
Some people express discomfort with polls. They hear that wording questions differently will produce different results and are afraid that polls are used to misrepresent the public for political ends. This, no doubt, sometimes occurs.
But there are means to address this problem. When public opinion researchers take many different poll results, some of them seemingly contradictory, and analyze the wording carefully, they are generally able to see that there is a reason the public responds differently to different questions. The public’s attitudes are complex and, like the blind men encountering an elephant, each poll finding elucidates one aspect of the whole.  However, in putting them all together there usually a discernible coherent voice.
Another approach that I have found effective in discerning the voice of the public is to take the majority position in numerous polls and to imagine that one ‘person’ had taken all these positions. I have even tried writing out a kind of interview with this collective-
Rather than just having an occasional poll or citizen jury, there could be a large ongoing representative sample ready to give input to the government, a Citizen Advisory Pane.
‘person’ where the answers to a series of questions are all majority positions from different polls. Interestingly this ‘person’ is remarkably reasonable and nuanced. Such an ‘interview’ with the American public can be found at pipa.org/articles/RBI_all.htm.
To be continued…
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com



Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Listening to the Voice of Humanity

Straight from the Heart
Feature- world crisis
Listening to the Voice of Humanity
Steven Kull
Part-5
Some have argued that long as there is a level  playing and all people have the option to join or form an interest group, when-
Asked by WorldPublicOpinion.org whether their nation is run “ for the benefit of all people’ or “by few big interests looking out for themselves” in nearly every nation polled majorities…said it was the latter.
Interest groups compete the net outcome is something that approximates the will of the people. Some have argued that this market of competing interests has an innate intelligence that is most likely to produce outcomes serving the common good.
But most people around the world do not think that is what is occurring in their country. Asked by WorldPublicOpinion.org whether their nation is run “for the benefit of all people’ or “by a few big interests looking out for themselves” in nearly every nation polled majorities- on average 63% - said it was latter.
Publics also tend to be less polarized than elected officials. Plotting the position of elected officials on a left-right spectrum, one tends to find a bimodal or u-shaped curve with clusters on the left and right and few in the middle. Thus, it is often difficult to find common ground.
However, the public lends to follow more a normal curve with a bulge in the middle and few at the extremes. Among the public, most do not strongly position themselves on one or the other end of the spectrum, but rather to try to find ways to balance, and hopefully integrate, the values at the ends of the spectrum.
Increasing the influence of the Whole
So what do people think should happen? All around the world people seem to think that the will of the people- i.e., the voice of the society as a whole- should play a larger role in government decision-making.
In a poll of 19 nations from around the world, majorities in every nation agreed with the principle enunciated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that “the will of the people should be the basis for the authority og government.” On average, 85% agreed.
This does not mean that they think that other more specific elements in society should not also play a role. Asked how much influence the will of the people should have on their government on a 0-10 scale the mean response across 21 nations was 8.0- not the highest possible number, through still quite high.
To be continued…
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com





Monday, June 28, 2010

Listening to the Voice of Humanity

Straight from the Heart
Feature – world crisis
Listening to the Voice of Humanity
Steven Kull
Part-4
WorldPublicOpinion.org conducted a poll of eight developed countries in which respondents were presented the annual per capita contribution that would be necessary for meeting this goal, based on the World Bank estimates. In every case, and in most cases by a large margin, majorities of respondents- on average three out of four- said they were willing to any the amount necessary to meet the goal, provided that people in other countries did so as well.
Publics as more receptive to Evolutionary change
All this is not to say, as some have proclaimed, “vox populi, vox Dei” (the will of the people is the voice of God). However, it does appear that in many cases publics tend to be at least one step ahead of their government when it comes to addressing important issues. It does appear that the citizenry as a whole is more receptive to emergent ideas promting key changes.
Institutions…tend to pursue a narrowly defined concept of institutional self-interest. Individuals… are more likely to think in terms of the common good.
This dynamic is especially true when it comes to dealing with problems of a global nature that require international cooperation. Nation states as institutions have proven reluctant to cooperate in ways that compromise their sovereignty or their freedom to pursue their maximal national interest. Cnflicts are often viewed in terms of narratives of winners and losers in a zero-sum game.
But it appears that individuals as a whole are more ready to cooperate in a global framework and are not as constrained by competitive national narratives. While for most people national identity is strong, most also think of themselves as global citizen. A World values survey found that majorities in 43 of the 46 countries polled said thay saw themselves as global citizens- on average 72%.
This differences between individuals and institutions is evident within the nation state as well. Institutions- corporations, interest groups, and political parties- tend to pursue a narrowly defined concept of institutional self-interest. Individuals have a more complex and holistic to think terms of the common good.
Though individuals have the capacity for a holistic and inclusive perspective this does not mean that all or even most of them do. But taken as an aggregate, the collective often does show these features. Why is that? When all the voices of society are considered on an issue, the self-interested voices, because they differ, tend to cancel each other out, creating a kind of background noise. Those who look at issues with at issues with a more a neutral and inclusive consciousness than become the swing vote that creates a dominant perspective.
To be continued….
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com



Friday, June 25, 2010

Listening to the Voice of Humanity

Feature – world crisis
Listening to the Voice of Humanity
Steven Kull
Part-3
In a 2009 WorldPublicOpinion.org, in fifteen out of nineteen nations majorities indicated that their government should give higher priority to climate change than it does now. In no nation did more than one in three want their nation to give it a lower priority. On average, 60% of respondents across all nations polled wanted their government to give climate changes a higher priority.
One of the biggest obstacles to the resolution of many international issues in the resistance of nation states to subordinate themselves to international law and to give international institutions the necessary power to resolve international problems. Some leaders have even explained that this resistance arises from nationalistic feelings in their populace.
However, international polls again show quite a different picture. Most people around the world support an international order based on international law. Majorities in most countries believe that international laws create normative obligations like domestic law and reject the view that nation should not feel obliged to abide by international law when doing so it at odds with their national interest.
Most significant, publics show a far greater readiness than their national governments to enter into cooperative international efforts to address global issues, majorities in most countries favor having a much stronger United Nations and favor giving it new powers, such as the power to regulate the international arms trade or to have a standing UN peacekeeping force.
Large majorities in publics around the world, including countries with nuclear arms, favor an international agreement for the elimination of all nuclear weapons that includes intrusive international inspections. Publics worldwide would favor an international regime under the United Nations that would stop new countries from beginning production of nuclear fuel and instead would supply them with the fuel they need for energy production.
Robust majorities approve of the United Nations intervening in the internal affairs of states to investigate human rights abuses. Very large majorities in nearly every nation say that the United Nations should try to further women’s rights even when presented the argument that this would conflict with national sovereignty. Perhaps most dramatic, equally large majorities say that the UN has a responsibility to protect people, by force if necessary, from serve human rights abuses by their own government.
Another key area is in regard to poverty and economic development. The UN member states have established a series of key goals for economic and social development called the Millennium Development Goals. A key goal to cut hunger and severe poverty in half by the year 2015. While there has been some progress on this front, developed countries have not made the increases in aid that the World Bank has deemed necessary to meet this goal.
To be continued….
For comments, reactions and suggestions please e-mail at abs_damahan@yahoo.com or call to tel No. 062-926-9418 or text Cell. No. 09283147761 Blog: http://absdamahan.wordpress.com



20th National Tuna Congress Broke Records!

Ms. Rosana Contreras, Executive Director of Socsksargen Fishing and Allied Industries Incorporated (SFFAII), Friday, said that the 20 th N...