A legacy of unfinished causes

No president could have wished for a more rewarding funeral than the one that the Filipino people gave President Cory Aquino last Wednesday.  The sendoff Cory got was neither a state nor a family event, but a national funeral befitting someone widely regarded as the mother of the nation.  It was the long funeral procession, … Read more

The state of our communities

Instead of a highly partisan speech by the incumbent president on the state of the nation, our country might be better served if the mayor in every town, and the barangay captain in every barrio, were required annually to face their people and give a report of the state of their respective communities.  The nation, … Read more

State of the nation

If the nation were a family, it would clearly be wrong to describe its state solely in terms of how sufficient its earnings are relative to its needs, or how strong the house is in which it dwells.  To properly assess the state of a family, it would be necessary to inquire into the authority … Read more

Overseas employment and its effects

The business pages of both the Inquirer and the Philippine Star carried almost identical headlines the other day.  “Remittances surged to $1.48B in May,” said the Inquirer.  “OFW remittances hit record high in May,” said The Star. One cannot miss the celebratory tone in which Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando Tetangco Jr. shared this … Read more

Truth, power, love, and money

Not too long ago, a couple of bishops of the Catholic Church who were attending an important meeting of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) were invited to have a meal with some Malacanang officials.  The purpose of the meeting ostensibly was to brief the prelates on what the government was doing to … Read more

Seeing like a nation

In our daily lives, we experience the state of our nation as a series of random events with no visible logic or coherence.  We see only what we see, and remain blissfully unaware of the partial nature of our vision.  A mother might see life as a never-ending cycle of meals to prepare or an … Read more

The road to Sagada

For the longest time, my friend, the late Cordillera-based historian William Henry Scott, had been inviting me to come to Sagada.  But I never found the opportunity to visit this magical place that he called home.  The closest I got to Sagada was in the late ‘70s, at the height of the Cordillera resistance to … Read more

The promise of politics

The public has watched with great interest the almost weekly visits of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to Pampanga, particularly to the province’s second district, where she is a registered voter.  These unusual visits, too numerous to ignore, have fueled speculation that Ms Arroyo may be preparing to contest the district’s seat, either as representative in the … Read more

On being Filipino

The awareness of being Filipino does not come naturally.  We may be surrounded by all the symbols of nationhood – the flag, monuments, maps, pictures of our national heroes and the historic events in which they figured – but, though these may conjure stirring images of the nation, they do not necessarily bind us to … Read more

House of Gloria

The members of the House of Gloria (HOG) have discovered the instability inherent in language.  And they have decided to make political capital out of it.  Sec. 1, Art. XVII of the 1987 Constitution states: “Any amendment to, or revision of, this Constitution may be proposed by: (1) The Congress, upon a vote of three-fourths … Read more