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Girlie Rodis

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Blog EntryMay 5, '09 11:34 AM
for everyone

 

Maxene posts "I saw this on someone's Multiply site and just couldn't believe my eyes:"

 

To all those that signed up with AKO MISMO!

You are now part of SMART telecoms network for potential campaigns in 2010.

The amount of information they have asked is so detailed that they can track you down to your zip code and contact you any time. In all my years of signing up for information I have never had a site require so much information AS REQUIRED FIELDS.

This makes for a perfect voter mapping database and campaign tool for anyone that wants to pay SMART for the information.

Did you think SMART would pay MILLIONS in production and advertising and talent costs for nothing?

If you refer to their privacy policy that no one ever reads, it states:

AKO MISMO MAY use the personal information you provide to:

• Contact you – either in response to a query or suggestion, or to mail newsletters, documents, publications, etc.

• “Remember” your online profile and preferences;

• Help you quickly find information that is relevant to you based on your interests, and help us create site contents most relevant to you;

In other words they can PUSH information to you which is an important tool in making sure that you can receive even unwanted campaign messages.

• Undertake statistical analysis.

They can use your answers to this PUSH for other mapping and trending purposes.

They also wash their hands of any person “accidentally” cracking the site and getting all your info. If you read privacy policy, again, which no one reads:

AKO MISMO shall not be liable under any circumstances for damages resulting from unauthorized use of information collected from visitors to the site.

AKO MISMO may change this privacy policy to reflect changes in the way we collect visitor information.

As a final warning, their privacy policy claims that you can still access this site even if you do not sign up (again from the privacy policy page):

What if I don’t want to provide personal information?

Providing personal information on the AKO MISMO web site is optional. If you choose not to provide personal information, you can still browse and use the AKO MISMO site, but you will not be able to carry out certain actions.

This is not true. None of the pages are viewable unless you have signed in. This is already a sure sign that their intent is to make you sign up and not just to make you a part of a youth reform activity.

A friendly piece of advice: Go back to the site and change your details please change all the details that pertain to AGE, SEX, and, LOCATION.

Also change your phone number if you like. This is to protect your privacy.

And remember you are still holding on to your pledge of participation in making our country great and they promise not to bar you from accessing the site even if you change your details so you will lose nothing but you will take back your security.

 

Maxene Magalona's blog


First of all, before I accepted this project, we made sure that this had nothing to do with political campaigns. And we were assured that it wasn't. I am shocked that people actually see this advocacy as something negative and corrupt. Instead of people seeing it as an improved way of the Filipino life, they choose to find something wrong with it. Sayang yung project.

 

Regardless if you receive campaign emails or not, it is up to you to decide on what to do. In a way, this campaign is also encouraging people, especially the younger generation, to register and VOTE. Just like the "Don't Vote" campaign in the US, the Ako Mismo org hopes to help in increasing the number of voters. We musn't be apathetic.

 

These kinds of people are actually what make the Philippines seem like a hopeless country. I mean, here is this movement, actually trying to make a difference in the Filipinos (since change begins with oneself) and instead of believing in it, there are some people who choose to put it down. I know that our country hasn't been improving much but come on, we can't just give up. We HAVE to take a stand. As the commercial says, poverty, inadequate education and insufficient jobs are not the main problems we are currently experiencing. The biggest problem that the Philippines is suffering from is its people's loss of hope. I thought that this ad would actually encourage the Filipinos to begin changing themselves by deciding not to give up. But now I can see that it isn't enough. And honestly, I don't think that anything will ever be good enough for the Filipinos. MASYADONG MARAMING REKLAMO. Nakakapagod na.

 

Oh well. I just really hope that you guys could give our country a chance. Wag tayo mawawalan ng pag-asa. :)


P.S. Smart denied these allegations. They simply pay for spots so that the ad would air. And with the billions of money SMART-PLDT makes, why would they need to make money out of this campaign? Tsk tsk.


This is nothing but a SINCERE project of DDB. What's in it for them, you ask? The improvement their ad makes in the Filipinos. The way they encourage the Filipinos to CHANGE. That's worth MORE than billions and gazillions of money. Check out their site here: http://ddb.com As you can see, lagi sila gumagawa ng advocacies. GANUN TALAGA SILA. Hard to believe? Kasi ang Pinoy kailangan laging may kapalit.


Ad sparks talk: MVP for president 

By Gil C. Cabacungan Jr.
Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines—Siya ba mismo tatakbo sa 2010? (Is he himself running in 2010?)

The “Ako Mismo” (I myself) Advocacy movement, launched with a bang during the television broadcast of the Manny Pacquiao-Ricky Hatton fight on Sunday, has sparked talk that businessman Manuel V. Pangilinan is gunning to be the CEO of the Philippines.

The slick black-and-white ad that featured some of the country’s leading icons sponsored by Smart Foundation was meant to give Pangilinan a platform should he decide to throw his hat in the political ring, said a businessman close to the billionaire.

“If given the chance and if there is a possibility of winning, MVP will (run for president),” the businessman said.

Another business source said that a lot of Pangilinan’s close friends had been egging him to take a shot at what was expected to be a crowded field of 2010 presidential hopefuls and that the businessman was seriously considering this as an option.

However, Pangilinan said that while he believed in Ako Mismo’s advocacy, he was not interested in the country’s highest post.

In a text message, Pangilinan said:

“As I understand it, Ako Mismo is a movement that wishes to awaken and spread the Filipinos’ sense of responsibility as an individual. Our legacy is reliance on community, government and family, must, at this time, as this opportunity must be balanced by strong personal accountability.

“It is a principle I happen to believe in, as must millions of OFWs who left home and fended for themselves. I have recused myself from Ako Mismo precisely to wash away any political color from it.

“As for myself, I am not running for any political office. I am truly at home running a business.”

Among 40 richest Filipinos

Pangilinan, 60, is listed among the 40 richest Filipinos by Forbes magazine. He is the big boss of Hong Kong’s First Pacific Company Ltd., which controls the country’s largest telecommunication concern, Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. and Smart Communications.

Despite Pangilinan’s denial, talk of him running for president persists.

Two presidential aspirants are unfazed by the billionaire’s reported plan.

Sen. Francis Escudero said: “It is every Filipino’s right to offer his services to the country. I will respect and accept his decision whatever it may be. The more choices our voters have, the better for them.”

Sen. Loren Legarda considered Pangilinan a “good man with a good business sense.” She said anybody was welcome to run for president and present his vision for the country.

Albay Gov. Joey Salceda, an economic adviser of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, said the vagueness of the Ako Mismo movement had made it “ripe” for a lot of speculation, specifically Pangilinan’s reported political intention.

Salceda said that while Ako Mismo was a “feel-good propaganda” that could launch a thousand purposes, it was not about a presidential bid.

“MVP is a good businessman and a good citizen but the nation is better off if he remains just that. No reason to doubt his patriotism, but the incest between big business, foreign at that, and politics is always a temptation that has not proven to be a winning formula for modern states,” he said.

Country needs an Obama

Salceda cited Premier Silvio Berlusconi of Italy, regarded as a European Union laggard, and Thailand’s former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

“What the country needs is an Obama, someone with the least vested interests that are not always parallel to the interest of the nation,” he said, referring to US President Barack Obama.

Members of the House of Representatives are divided on whether Pangilinan was fit for the job.

Best among rotten apples

Nueva Ecija Rep. Eduardo Nonato Joson said Pangilinan should run.

“The more the merrier. He is not a trapo (traditional politician), he might be the best apol or alternative politician in a basket full of rotten apples,” Joson said.

Parañaque Rep. Roilo Golez said: “I have always been in favor of broadening the selection base but we should start the winnowing process through public debates starring the candidates. MVP is very qualified just like most of the apparent contenders. ”

But Palawan Rep. Abraham Mitra said businessmen like Pangilinan should just stay as businessmen.

“Just because they have the funds does not mean they can have their way with the electorate. Money is not everything. They often look down on people because of their money. The Philippines is not for sale, Sir Manny, common touch is the key,” Mitra said.

Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Teodoro Casiño said Pangilinan might have to change his name because he might be considered a nuisance candidate because presidential wannabe Sen. Manuel Villar has a prior claim on “Manny.”

56.7 TV rating

Sunday’s Pacquiao-Hatton fight and its Ako Mismo ads had a staggering 56.7 overnight Mega Manila television rating from AGB Nielsen.

Endorsers in the Ako Mismo ads included former Ateneo de Manila University basketball varsity player Chris Tiu, actress Angel Locsin, Eraserheads lead vocalist Ely Buendia, Journey lead vocalist Arnel Pineda and Fr. Matt de Jesus OSJ, the president of San Beda College, where Pangilinan serves as president of the board of trustees.

A two-page spread about the movement was also published in Sunday’s edition of the Philippine Daily Inquirer and the Philippine Star, which Pangilinan’s PLDT group is set to acquire for an estimated P4.8 billion.

The ad did not allude to any political process or endorse a specific candidate, but logos of PLDT and its mobile phone arm Smart Communications were flashed prominently at the end of the commercial.

It’s about taking a stand

According to Ako Mismo’s website, the movement is about “making a stand and taking real action for the causes” that would-be members believe in and “can truly pursue to make a real, positive difference” to their countrymen and their country.

“[Ako Mismo] is for you who still dare to hope that life for millions doesn’t have to be a hopeless battle against problems like poverty, illiteracy, unemployment,” according to its website.

“It is for you who believe that not enough is being done about our country’s problems. And that to do right things, you’ll do them yourself,” it said.

“In Ako Mismo, you get to choose the cause you wish to pursue,” it said, explaining that commitments as diverse as teaching English, ending corruption, or ending inhumane treatment of animals are welcome.

“No cause is too small as long as it is a noble one. All we ask is that you make a pledge to do it.”

23,000 pledges

Approximately 6,700 pledges during the run-up to the Pacquiao fight past noon, grew to 23,000 as of late Monday.

A copy of the group’s video was also posted on YouTube late Saturday, labeled as an advocacy campaign by ad agency DDB Philippines.

Pangilinan has downplayed the role of his business group in the effort, saying Ako Mismo “has a number of supporters to it” including the PLDT-Smart Foundation “because the movement is cause-oriented and socially beneficial.” With a report from Daxim L. Lucas



10 CommentsChronological   Reverse   Threaded
mjrodis wrote on May 5, '09
My response to her blog on facebook:

I know -- I was so impressed with the campaign from the first time I saw it...then I heard all this back talk about a subtle political campaign for Manny Pangilinan...I just don't believe it. I guess people are just so jaded already that they have to suspect everything slick...but I am an optimist and I'd like to think that this is a genuine campaign--it has a great message---It begins with US...with me...AKO MISMO...bago ang lahat..ako ay dapat magbago...ako ang dapat gumawa....
gen777 wrote on May 5, '09
i was wowed w/ the commercial the first time i saw it.. then came this 'thing'. ick! the idea alone was so absurd. true or not, it may put the advocacy into a blurry. as for me, i'd like to believe the campaign was honest in its sense. kanino ba nagsisimula ang pagbabago, sa atin ba o sa ibang tao? ikaw, tayo, AKO MISMO.
mykdotcom wrote on May 5, '09
those who are against it are the members of IKAW NA LANG movement. :P
seriously speaking, they just don't care. — selfish indeed.
anagfeleo wrote on May 5, '09
haha.. ikaw na lang movement... haha
darlingvisitacion wrote on May 5, '09
tama. maglinis tayo ng sarili nating bakuran...

its time for a change now...
kakabukaka wrote on May 6, '09
Whenever people would do something like this they would always give malice to it. But whatever is the reason of the companies/people who produced it, the main idea of the TVC is to start the change within us and that's mainly what our country needs. Stop looking for something else in the TVC instead, look for the good cause that they want to send to all Filipino people.
lolapearl wrote on May 6, '09
AKO MISMO!
gangbadoy wrote on May 6, '09
Hi Girlie!

I posted that forwarded email posted on my blog account. When asked what I thought about it, I openly admitted on all posts that I haven't surfed the site, though I thought the spirit of the campaign is great, I just wanted to share the email Jaime Garchitorena of YPS (Young Public Servants) sent me.

In Rock Ed (as in my personal Multiply account) I always value dialogue so I post things and read people's reactions. I did not post it to discourage --- if I wanted to do that, I'd have to surf the site first and write something myself. Especially since I have personal friends involved in the campaign -- Susan, Ely etc.

Kindly clarify that I am sorry if my posting of Jaime's thoughts came out as a discouraging point -- as head of Rock Ed that is the last thing I want especially since I am all-out for participation. Which is why I wanted to hear what everyone thought of Jaime's opinion on it. I asked permission from Jaime before posting and he agreed wholeheartedly.

I am getting both positive and doubting reactions regarding the campaign, but nobody doubts it's a fantastic pull to participation. I also thought critical-thinking Filipinos will react and decide if they agree to it or not. I'm not a believer of Filipinos just buying anything they see onscreen anymore. Let it be known though that I think it's a good campaign, it will certainly withstand any criticism.

Though I have sent a text message through her sister Sabine, do apologize to Maxene Magalona for any distress this has caused her, I appreciate her reaction as it proves her sincerity and that gives me hope.

If I were to sign up for akomismo.org today, I'll pledge to continue doing Rock Ed's work in promoting a more nation-involved private citizenry -and certainly participation in the coming elections.

Gang Badoy
Executive Director
Rock Ed Philippines
Comment deleted at the request of the author.
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