Preview

Hacienda Luisita Issue

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
462 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Hacienda Luisita Issue
Mary joy Guanzon 4A

Reaction paper: Hacienda Luisita

The documentaries about Hacienda luisita are serve a lesson for all of us. While watching the documentary I feel pity to all farmers of hacienda luisita because they will fight for what they think is right. And I really admired them for their undying love for the land they needed for their lives. On January 22 1987 when mendiola massacre happen, some 10,000 farmers marched to ask the President Corazon Aquino to make good on her promise to implement a genuine agrarian reform program. Mendiola Bridge was the center of many a protest in the country since the time of Mrs. Aquino's. Its proximity to the Palace assured demonstrators that their calls might be better heard. But on that day, it was the sound of bullets firing and screams from the farmers that echoed in the streets outside the presidential palace. Within a few minutes, 13 farmers lay dead. At least 39 others sustained gunshot wounds, while 20 suffered minor injuries. The media called it “Black Thursday” but it went down in history as “The Mendiola Massacre.”

People died protecting the land they had treated as their own. Risking their lives and losing their lives for the land showed how their lives would be meaningless or impossible without it. Sadly, lives were lost before this was made clear to the public. But that’s not the end of the the tragedy. The workers launched their strike again on November 6, 2004, two unions led the strike. The strikers were forced to contend with the biggest number of police and military. They stood their ground against tear gas and chemical-laced water that stung when it hit their skin. Many were hurt. At the final count, 72 were badly injured, 27 sustained gun shot wounds, and 110 were arrested by the police. By early evening, it was also discovered that seven were killed. It hurts for me to know that our own policeman killed there fellow Filipino. Eventually the policeman responsibility is to protect there

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The Article about African Policemen brutality, this case was about a police officer who arrested a taxi cab driver named Mido Macia because he parked illegally and handcuffed him and dragged him by their police car. Mido died in prosecution after being dragged. The policemen went to court and they claimed that he fell out of the van and the handcuff accidently hooked onto their van, but the judge found this unacceptable because when they realized they should have got him help but they didn’t. They we found guilty for the murder of Mido Macia, the family of Mido Macia had a sense of victory from this case and was able to work on their healing of their love one that they lost in police brutality.…

    • 303 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    A large crowd of five hundred entered the city and met with fifty police officers who were armed with bayonets, guns, and blackjacks. The officers attacked the protesters and began to kick, punch, bash with rifles, and prick with bayonets. “Thirty were arrested, and many more retreated to their meeting place, cut and bleeding.” It is understandable that the police would need to prevent a riot from ensuing, but the brutality demonstrated by police was uncalled for especially when most of the protesters were women. The police assumed that since most of the demonstrators were women and children they could be easily frightened with violence and cruelty.…

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The event has sparked many various views. Drawing a parallel to the situation with policemen in the United States, citizens of Brazil have varying views on their police force. For example, one citizen states, “The violence of Rio is an attack on our children.” He suggests that the police are corrupt and are at fault for the violence in Brazil [7].…

    • 432 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Third, the thesis is demonstrated through firefighter Anthony Smiljanic’s perspective. Anthony is apart of the Los Angeles Fire Department, and during all the rioting, he sees first hand, the things people say, and the way people feel. For instance, it is on Day 3 of the riot when he says, “There’s nothing to do but stare at new red, blue, or black graffiti that says, ‘F**k the Police,’ and ‘F**k the National Guard,’ and ‘Kill Whitey,’ and try not to take it personal (156) . . . I’ve never seen anything like it” (156). Smilijanic understands both sides of the riot, and tries to be completely unbiased and unprejudiced whilst doing his job - unlike the police who arguably started this whole riot. Smilijanic witnesses his superior Gutierrez when…

    • 338 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    was there to liberate or occupy the Filipino people. At first, it seemed like liberation. The…

    • 506 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On the evening of October 2,1968 in Tlatelolco, Mexico located the at La Plaza de Tres Culturas the mexican police forces along with army squads had opened fire at a student demonstration along with residents. Which had led to the streets of Mexico being plagued baths of blood and bodies littering the Plaza floor as others tried to escape the firestorm of bullets raining upon the protestors. The tally of death had been marked by the government as four dead , twenty wounded , whilst many eye-witnesses claimed hundreds were dead; the few protesters that had managed to escape were arrested. An estimate of one thousand protesters were arrested by police forces and military troops, the act of ultraviolence had put an extent shock around the government upon hearing acts of violence. The Tlatelolco massacre is not labeled as a ,“genocide” for it’s events have not shown many of the stages of a genocide, the events shadows a rebellion that grew and was shortly eliminated so the government could still remain in power. The behavior of the mexican government in 1968 was a very closed democracy which the people of mexico wanted a more open…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Venegas witnessed police officers harassing a group of zoot suiters, she was arrested on disturbing the peace and was charged for carrying a concealed weapon, because she carried brass knuckles for protection. Instead the newspapers labeled her as a “Pachuca” girl, they labeled what she had done as gang affiliation. The protests that were made on behalf of the zoot suiters made Venegas the perfect target to be portrayed wrongly just for the media campaign. Venegas’s case resembles those of the people that have died due to police brutality. The reason why is because, in most cases that police brutality does occur the media usually always portrays the police as “innocent”, they turn the tables and make it seem like the person who is usually African American or Hispanic, they portray these people as these negative stereotypes.…

    • 617 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Was Ludicrous Justified

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Although these workers had been facing many hardships, their actions during the demonstration had been ludicrous.I believe that the actions of the authorities had been justified. This is because, the authorities and government had the fear of a communist uprising much like that of Russia in 1917, the potential conflict between the two sides with and against the argument, and the strikers had been causing many cases of property damage.…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The five officers, Stacey Koon, Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Theodore Briseno, and Rolando Solano, were taken to court soon after the incident. The Officers were acquitted of all charges, the community was furious with the outcome of the case. Protesters immediately took to the street in light of recent court decisions. The Protest did not stay peaceful for long and soon there was all out violence and crime throughout the city of Los Angeles. The black community started attacking anyone who was not black pulling. For instance, “Reginald Denny, a white truck driver, was dragged from his truck and severely beaten by several angry rioters”(Staff, 1992).Throwing rock at other race people and even pulling them out of their cars for a quick beatdown for no apparent fault of the victim. Meanwhile the chief of police was attending a fundraiser on the other side of Los Angeles. As the night came the crime start to escalate with random fire by the dozen spread throughout the city. The ironic thing is these violent protester were not burning government buildings or officers houses, instead they were burning small business of people in the struggling community. By nightfall mayor Bradley declared a “state of emergency asking california governor to send two thousand national guardsmen”(Medina,2012). Violence, fires, looting, and deaths continued to increase throughout the night. Violence spread throughout major cities in the US. Among them was Seattle, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Atlanta. The following day violence continued even though the national guard was there. Much controversy was on the issue if the national guard should use live ammunition. The National guard decided not to and the riots continued to spread. That same day Rodney king went in front of camera and plead with the citizen of Los Angles and and cities throughout the nation to keep the peace, using the famous quote…

    • 1720 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many residents of Los Angeles saw the death of Jose Diaz as a tragedy that resulted from a larger pattern of lawlessness and rebellion among Mexican American youths. Much of this animosity had to do with the police and press characterizing all Mexican youth as “pachuco hoodlums and baby gangsters” (2). This was a great example of how the media and police played a large role into contributing to adding discrimination towards the Mexican American zoot suits. Not only was it that but also some of the sailors who were trying to justify their acts by spreading rumors. On June 3, 1943, a number of sailors claimed that they were beaten and robbed by Mexican Pachucos. The following evening, a group of around 200 sailors set out for East Los Angeles and began to beat up any Mexican male dressed in a zoot suit. Aided by a police department who seemed to approve of the violence, the initial attacks quickly turned into a riot that lasted for a period of nine days and has come to be known as the “Zoot Suit Riots” (1). The police were not doing their jobs correctly they weren’t protecting civilians that is the number one reason they wear that uniform. The police watch many of the young Mexican Americans getting beat up and the sailor tearing up their clothes and instead of stopping this from happening they watched and then proceeded to arrest the Mexican Americans…

    • 1341 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Ezln

    • 443 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The EZLN fights against the exploitation of the indigenous people of Chiapas but that is overseen. The message that the main stream media feeds to the public is that the EZLN are terrorist. They much publicized the armed uprising of the EZLN on New Year ’s Day 1994. The EZLN took arms against seven municipalities in Chiapas that day. It was not their first choice to use violent means to address the problem but it was “a last resort but just”. “A last resort against poverty,…

    • 443 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Worst Riots In America Essay

    • 2684 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Forty one of the fifty eight deaths were from gunfire whereas the rest of the deaths were from fires or being beaten. A total of eleven thousand arrests occurred during these riots but due to lack of evidence because of the large crowds, most charges were dropped. One third of those arrested in the riots were unable to be identified and were freed from the local police stations. Because of the large arrests the Los Angeles Police Department did not have enough room to put all of the arrested civilians thus letting most go as long as the charges were not severe. “The police withdrew from the main areas of fighting, ceding the streets to the insurgent poor. Systematic burnings of capitalist enterprises commenced. More than 5,500 buildings burned. People shot at cops on the street and at media and police helicopters. Seventeen government buildings were destroyed”…

    • 2684 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    1960s And 1970s Essay

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Many of these outcries and conflicts caused wounds that still have not fully healed. Then, of course, there are others that said the police were just doing their jobs, that they were not the ones at fault. It would appear it would be best explained as a mixture of these stances, and certainly, they should all be considered.…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “More than 10,000 people took to the streets to protest the perceived police brutality” (Harlem). As night fell, looting and more damage started to…

    • 490 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    This is a country where many unarmed civilians have suffered injuries or been killed at the hands of police officers. Drastic changes are needed to solve the issue of police brutality. Such excessive force by police officers is very disturbing to the community. People around the country are fighting for a country where law enforcement treats all communities with dignity, employs restraint on the power police officers, and only use the necessary force to maintain the community’s safety. Over the years there have many cases involving police brutality such as the cases of Rodney King, Timothy Thomas, and Eric Garner. Many people feel that nothing has changed with the issue of police brutality since juries still acquitted police officers, cops get their jobs back, and brutality happens again. But change has occurred and some things have become better as a result of it being publicized and causing public outrage.…

    • 1139 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays