Tell it to Sun.Star: War on drugs

PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte’s campaign promise to eradicate the menace of illegal drugs in the country from three to six months may soon be realized at the rate the police are cracking the whip on drug lords and pushers.

As of the latest count, there are already 312 dead, 3,228 arrested, 120,209 who surrendered and 63,972 houses raided. The government is turning the tide on its bloody war against drugs.

“This will be a fight to the death,” said PNP chief Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa, who declared total war on drugs. He also warned police officers who are involved in drugs not to push their luck too much or else suffer the same fate as the drug lords.

Earlier, suspected drug lord “Jaguar” Diaz was killed in a shootout with the police in Las Pinas. Diaz was believed to be a big-time drug lord operating in Central Visayas based in Duljo Fatima, Mambaling in Cebu City.

Following Diaz’s death, another suspected drug lord “Barok” Alvaro surrendered to the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) in Bohol. Alvaro is now languishing in a Cebu jail and singing like a canary to pinpoint other lower-level drug lords in the region.

Recently, the new police chief visited the maximum cell in Bilibid and warned the convicted drug lords Herbert Colangco and Peter Co to put a stop to their illegal drug trade inside prison walls or else. It is widely believed that Bilibid is the source of illegal drugs peddled in other jails throughout the country. The jail guards were replaced by elements of the PNP’s Special Force.

The Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) is the lead anti-drug law enforcement agency responsible for preventing, investigating and combating any dangerous drugs, controlled precursors and essential chemicals within the Philippines. The agency is tasked with the enforcement of the penal and regulatory provisions of Republic Act No. 9165 of the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002.

The most commonly used drug in the Philippines is methamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu. It is a powerful stimulant drug that acts on the central nervous system (brain) increasing heart rate and blood pressure.

It increases brain activity, produce feelings of well-being, increased competence and alertness. Higher doses of the drug cause tremor sweating, heart palpitation and anxiety. Exhaustion and depression follow when the effects of shabu wear off. Serious mental illness including paranoia, delusion, hallucination and violent behavior may occur after prolonged use.

The Duterte government has turned the tide on the war against the scourge of society and source of all crimes – illegal drugs.--Rene F. Antiga of Banilad, Mandaue City

State and communism

The state must support the right to property, and to enable to possess private property. In communism, man is deprived of the right to private property.

The individual existed before the state and the state exists for the individual. Where there was no private property, men became beggars and slaves, so that the fundamental manifestation of freedom was suppressed.

Private property is an indispensable element in the social order. It mainly results from the fruitfulness of work and is, therefore, a strong incentive. The state must limit its ownership to enterprises that carry with them an opportunity too great to be left to private individuals without injury to the community at large.

Private property ought to be safeguarded by the sovereign power of the state and through the bulwark of its law. The ability to reason is part of the human nature. The rights of association, unions and religions of the people must be upheld by the state.

The state must support the individual’s right to choose freely one’s path in life. In communism, the state dictates what state of life one should follow. Human beings have the right to choose freely the state of life that they prefer, and therefore, the right to set up a family with equal rights and duties for man and woman and also the right to follow a vocation.

The state must respect the individuals’ right to worship God according to his conscience. Communism iadvocates totalitarianism. There is no supersensible theory for it but what exist are just material. In other words, communism is materialistic.

In protecting the lives of the individuals, special care must be given to the weak and the poor, because they do not have the means to protect themselves. They don’t have any private property.

In protecting the rights of the private individuals, however, special consideration must be given to the weak and the poor.--Wilfredo G. Anoos, CTU-Assistant Professor, Softouch Subdivision, Upper Calajoan, Minglanilla, Cebu

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