Bloggers’ Kapihan: Launch of Jun Lozada’s Blog

Bloggers’ Kapihan invites you to the launch of Jun Lozada’s blog:

Date:
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Time:
1:00pm – 4:00pm
Location:
Kape Tasyo
2/F Anonas Commercial Complex, #3 Anonas St., Project 3
Quezon City, Philippines

There will be free coffee and wifi. You may bring your friends.

Blogs nina Jun Lozada at Among Ed Panlilio, ilulunsad ng Bloggers’ Kapihan

Malugod kayong inaanyayahan ng Bloggers’ Kapihan sa magkasunod na blog launches sa dalawang susunod na Sabado. Sasamahan ng BK Crew sa paglulunsad ng kanilang blog sina Jun Lozada — ang pangunahing saksi sa pagdinig ng Senado sa ZTE deal — at si Among Ed Panlilio — ang gobernador ng Pampanga na iniluklok ng “people power” noong nakaraang halalan.

Samahan ninyo kami sa Sabado, May 31, 2008, 1pm sa Kape Tasyo sa Anonas, Quezon City sa blog launch ni Jun Lozada.

Sa Hunyo 7 naman, 30 bloggers ang dadalhin ng Bloggers’ Kapihan sa Among Ed blog launch. May libreng sakay, pagkain at pamamasyal sa Pampanga para sa mga sasama.

Abangan dito sa BK website ang kumpletong detalye ng mga gawaing iyan. Samantala, paki-markahan na ang inyong kalendaryo para muli namin kayong makadaupang-palad sa susunod na dalawang Sabado.

Satur tells bloggers: ‘People Power, a tool to change govt’s that’s still available to people’

People Power remains a tool for social change that is available to a people who want to institute changes in government, said Bayan Muna Rep. Satur Ocampo in a Bloggers Kapihan on Saturday at Kape Tasyo in Anonas, Quezon City.

In his sharing with bloggers, Ocampo stressed that “Filipinos are not frustrated over People Power 2, but with the dismal and disappointing regime that came to power.”

He said that the source of frustration is that “People Power 2 was a fight against corrupt and immoral governance, but we were given a worse government by the very persons who composed the new government.”

Ocampo said that the “if ever People Power resulted in bad governance, we cannot blame the people who took part in the uprising. It remains an alternative way of instituting change.”

“People Power as a concept is always relevant,” Ocampo said, adding that “It remains a mechanism for people to express their sentiments when institutional processes fail them.”

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