Mrs. Kim’s children

Busan, South Korea. This scenic port city was the only major city that was spared during the Korean War of 1950. Those fleeing from the war drifted south and found sanctuary in Busan and nearby islands. After Seoul was overrun, the central government transferred to this little corner in the southern coast of the Korean … Read more

The Bush visit

George W. Bush Jr. has come to Asia not to give away but to solicit money, not to deploy more American troops but to ask the governments of the region to send their own soldiers to secure Iraq, a country it destroyed and occupied. The president of the most powerful country in the world has … Read more

Why Gloria is running

In December 2002, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo felt so discouraged about how the country was faring under her leadership that she found herself suddenly announcing she was not standing for election in 2004.  The decision jolted even her closest allies who were only too aware of her consuming quest for another six-year term. By then, two years … Read more

Coming home

My three sisters who live in the States used to come home every year mainly to visit our ailing mother.  They would bring her everything they thought she needed, and for the whole duration of their vacation, they took care of her, compressing in two weeks what in their hearts they felt was a lifelong … Read more

The presidency in our time

The debate whether we need a change in system rather than a change in leaders is a sterile one.  The shift to a parliamentary, or federal, or unicameral system will not mean anything if not accompanied by changes in the distribution of power, wealth, and opportunity across social classes. The pressures toward a radical re-ordering … Read more

Global trade and poverty

Joseph Stiglitz, the 2001 Nobel laureate for economic science, puts it bluntly: The United States and Europe subsidize their cows at $2 per day, more than what a human being in many parts of the world earn in a day. I have come across more disturbing figures.  An article by Hamish McRae for a South … Read more

Politics without limits

Politics is an inescapable element of collective life.  In itself, it is neither good nor bad.  All of us engage in politics when we seek to enhance our power or influence over others or try to free ourselves from others’ control over us. In the life of nations, politics is a way of negotiating and … Read more

The power of good example

A professor of psychology from the University of Virginia, Dr. Jonathan Haidt, called it “elevation” – that warm glow that spreads through our chest and brings tears to our eyes when we witness an act of selflessness, compassion, or kindness.  Our breathing slows down, and gladness quickly fills our hearts.  We not only feel good, … Read more

The absurdity of blaming the PMA

In the aftermath of the July 27th mutiny led by young officers, among them the top graduates and the most be-medalled in their batch at the Philippine Military Academy, not a few opinion makers have advanced the proposition that the PMA should be abolished. The suggestion is that, in producing highly politicized officers who will … Read more