Now they’re killing students

The latest name in this growing list is that of Farly Alcantara II, 22, a graduating student of the Camarines Norte State College in the capital town of Daet.  Farly was the former spokesperson of the League of Filipino Students (LFS) in Camarines Norte.  A lone gunman shot him five times with a .45 caliber … Read more

Why movie actors get elected

When Lito Lapid, a k a Leon Guerrero, was campaigning for governor of Pampanga, he got stuck somewhere and could not attend an important rally in another town.  The people had lined up the streets waiting for him all morning, but he could not be there.  So he sent his horse instead.  It was a … Read more

Why not a boycott?

If anyone had suggested in July 2005 that the correct response to the political crisis spawned by the Garci Tapes would be to wait for the 2007 midterm elections, that person would have been denounced as an agent of Malacanang.  Half of the members of the Arroyo Cabinet resigned that month, calling on the president … Read more

The future of political families

The current debate on the propriety of so-called “political dynasties” in a democracy is quite interesting.  While focused on the prospective senatorial candidacies of Alan Peter Cayetano, J. V. Ejercito, and Aquilino Pimentel III — who all have close kin in the present Senate – the issue is bound to affect many others at different … Read more

To run or not to run: an ethical question

People pursue public office for a variety of reasons.  For some, politics is just another livelihood.  For others, it is the best way to protect the wealth of their families.  A rare few enter the political arena because they like the feeling of holding in their hands “a nerve fiber of historically important events.” In … Read more

Bush’s surge of madness

If you were an Iraqi today who cares deeply for his country, what would you do?  Your country, previously one of the most modern in the Arab world, has been reduced to rubble.  A weak government, installed by the United States, desperately tries to enforce order in a society wracked by sectarian violence and an … Read more

An agreement hounded by the past

I was one of those who opposed the Visiting Forces Agreement when it was being negotiated during the final months of the Ramos presidency.  I was convinced that the country did not need it; we faced no external threat. I also felt vaguely that it was not the right time to invite US troops back … Read more

A long and healthful life

At a certain age, almost all conversations turn to diets, disorders, and health matters.  The starting point could be politics, or sports, the economy, or family – it doesn’t matter.  Talk inevitably drifts to the one thing we usually spend a lifetime abusing, and a fortune desperately recovering: health. For some it starts as early … Read more

Changing our priorities

What the country needs, says the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines is not Charter change but character change.  I think what we need today is neither Charter change nor character change, but a change in our priorities – a change that reflects a greater resolve to put our national destiny in our hands rather … Read more

When the political system fails

Political leaders have a duty to make sure that the decisions they produce in the nation’s name are not only legal but also legitimate. Politicians cannot perform their tasks as if they were mere consumers of a political order’s legitimacy; they must themselves continuously reproduce that legitimacy. The traditional politicians in Malacanang and in the … Read more