POPS in the city

POPS is an acronym for “privately-owned public space,” a concept that is fast replacing our traditional notion of public space.  The old public space we knew referred to town plazas, parks, squares, and promenades where citizens congregated in their free time.  Nowadays, the most common public spaces are the shopping malls that were built for … Read more

The return of traditional politics in Pampanga

From the moment we first beheld the unique magic of people power in 1986, we have scanned the political horizon for signs of its recurrence. The possibility that it will appear again gives us eternal hope. Its unpredictability, however, keeps us guessing when and in what form it will happen again. Its elusiveness tells us … Read more

When neighbors fight

To my last column on the current conflict between the Philippines and Taiwan, a country with whom, until recently, we have had only friendly relations, a reader from Canada has written a most thoughtful rejoinder.  He wishes to remain anonymous, but, with his permission, I will quote from the rich account he has shared of … Read more

Vote-buying and its deniability

“What do you make of this, Kuya?” my younger brother Ambo, auxiliary bishop of San Fernando, Pampanga, asked me last Monday, as he showed me an envelope addressed to him containing the campaign leaflet of a party-list nominee and a crisp P200 bill. “All the other priests at my parish got the same envelope through … Read more

Nations and their governments

In an ideal world, how would the recent shooting by the Philippine Coast Guard of a Taiwanese fishing boat, which resulted in the killing of one of the fishermen, have been handled?  I think that both Filipino and Taiwanese authorities might have immediately sought one another to express grave concern over the incident, and to … Read more

Build with every vote

Electing public officials is the most important act of any citizen in any democracy. Here we choose people who will have the power to make decisions that bind all of us. If we try to do it rationally, we will find that it is also one of the most complex things we can do in … Read more

Politics and its consequences

It is a testimony to the undifferentiated nature of our political system that many other social institutions are mobilized during elections.  There’s the family, there’s religion, there’s the business sector, and then there’s the science of surveys.  Their chief purveyors try to convert the power they wield into the currency of politics.  We are disturbed … Read more

Prosperity without growth

The rise in the number of unemployed Filipinos in the midst of economic growth has made our government officials take a serious look at the current economic strategy. This pattern of jobless growth partly explains why the level of mass poverty in our country has remained unchanged even as the economy seems to be growing. … Read more

The ‘kasambahay’

Some moral progress is noticeable in the way we now refer to our house help, though not always in the way we treat them. First we called them alila (servant), a term that recalls the feudal culture from which it was drawn.  Then for a long time they were simply referred to as katulong (house … Read more