The bigger crisis

Typhoon “Milenyo” came and went like an haughty star performer with a million-dollar name. Its arrival was announced just the day before, but in less than an hour of its lightning visit, it was gone.  In its wake it left a devastation the likes of which Metro Manila hasn’t seen in a decade.  In an … Read more

The Thai coup

The Sept. 19 military coup in Thailand bears more similarities to the January 2001 ouster of Joseph Estrada than to previous coups in Thai history.  This is a coup that displaced a democratically elected leader – a politician despised by the elite and the intelligentsia but adored by the urban and rural masses. The generals … Read more

Marcos and Arroyo

Thirty-four years ago, the then incumbent president, Ferdinand Marcos, invoked an obscure provision in the 1935 Constitution to free his presidency from basic constitutional restraints.  The imposition of Martial Law, which was meant to preserve the State, was supposed to last only for the duration of the imminent threat to public order.  But Marcos shrewdly … Read more

After 9/11

The transformation of air travel, particularly into the United States, into a tedious, time-consuming, and often humiliating activity is only the most obvious effect of 9/11. It is perhaps the least important. The paranoia that 9/11 spawned has produced a new international security doctrine that is undermining democracy everywhere. It has given a new warrant … Read more

Systems and people

There is something perverse in the way the leaders of Sigaw ng Bayan are peddling the shift to a parliamentary system.  They advertise it as if it were a miraculous cure for all our problems.  They claim that it will treat political instability and end political adventurism among our soldiers; that it will spur economic … Read more

Testing culture

Profiting from test leaks is probably as old as testing itself.  Advances in the technology of retrieval and duplication of information, coupled with the heightened competitiveness in almost all professions, may have made resort to it easier and more tempting.  Even so, we may assume that the methods and principles for preventing it and managing … Read more

Emergency rule

The state of national emergency that Gloria Macapagal Arroyo declared on Feb. 24, 2006 was supposed to have lasted only one week.  But events in the last six months suggest a different conclusion: emergency rule may have, in fact, become Ms Arroyo’s paradigm of governance. In various parts of the country today, the military conducts … Read more

Hezbollah

All over the Arab world and beyond, it is Hezbollah that is on everyone’s lips these days — not the Al-Qaida, not the Taliban, not the Hamas.  Israel’s army, the most powerful in the Middle East, is not fighting the Lebanese national army.  It is fighting a militant armed group inside Lebanon that is possibly … Read more

Impeachment as a truth procedure

I do not share the view of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) that impeachment cannot yield any truth unless it is performed according to fair rules and with the common good in mind. I believe that the impeachment of any president, no matter how it is conducted, can be an important source … Read more

Images of the nation

I had a hard time following Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s recent State of the Nation Address.  It wasn’t just because the indiscriminate applause that punctuated nearly every sentence was interfering with the flow of her hour-long speech.  It was more because the whole speech was making no sense to me until I began to pay more … Read more