Archive for March 2015

WAKE UP

   I woke up this morning feeling depressed. I was told just before bedtime that a close contemporary was discovered to have metastasized stage 4 cancer. My batchmates are also slowly being decimated one after the other by cancer and heart attacks.
        I clicked on the TV not really to watch the latest depressing newsbreak, but to check on the day and date to get my bearings. “What’s up? What are the fresh challenges for octagenarians like me?”
        With that as background, I decided to write a blog about my favorite topic, healthy aging, for my favorite elderly audience.
        I decided to use “Wake Up” as the most apt term for my concern of the moment. The lyrics of this song are most appropriate for what I have in mind.
        I have always wanted to be in control of my environment – to act at a comfortable pace - my pace. Lately, I get stressed trying to keep in step with events in my life. The usual advice is to take it easy – take deep breaths, pray and live longer.
        And this I find ironic, frustrating, because modern living is so fast paced and unsavory events seem to be overpowering us keeping us from doing something productive. Taking it easy will mean stagnation falling back. If one relaxes too much it is like just waiting for your barangay first-aiders to barge into the room and to take you away in a stretcher!  I still find difficulty in just taking deep breaths and keeping faith.

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BRIGHT and DANGER SIGNS FOR OUR FUTURE

        I know for a fact that our ADMU batch has long been into Gawad Kalinga projects including scholarship projects for the housing beneficiaries' dependents. I am also aware of Our Lady of Pentecost Parish’s many scholarship programs for the community’s depressed areas. Also, Loyola Heights is host to many NGOs and families supporting the school needs of informal settlers here.
Aside from DSWD’s CCT dole-out assistance to indigent families, the Department of Education is also zealously implementing the K to 12 program striving to make Philippine educational standards at par with global standards.
        Aside from the government’s push on education, a remarkable number of International and Filipino scholarships are available for the citizens of Philippines. The Philippine Government and other educational organizations are making continuous efforts to increase the literacy rate and improve the education system for the students. In order to encourage the development in the education sector, institutions seek to provide number of incentives in the form of scholarships, grants and subsidies to students for their higher education. Many international universities and organizations like University of Strathclyde, the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Asian Peacebuilders, etc are also offering grants and bursaries for Filipinos to avail the benefits of their educational facilities in their countries.
        I cite three among many local leading schools offering various Filipino scholarships.
1.            University of the Philippines is awarding scholarship for Filipino students. Applicant must be a bona fide student of the University of the Philippines who is enrolled in the field of Science and Technology. The actual interest earnings of the fund but not to exceed P37,000 per year. The benefits from the programs may be used to defray expenses in purchasing special equipment, instruments, supplies and materials, or to hire special tutor or coaches. The application deadline is August 28, 2015.
2.            De La Salle University is offering St. La Salle Financial Assistance Grant for incoming college freshmen. Only those whose annual family income is less than PhP 700,000 will be considered. The financial aid program usually includes tuition and fees only, although a donor may provide other forms of assistance, such as book and living allowances. Once awarded, the grants are renewable every trimester. Grantees are required to meet certain academic standards and to abide by the policies prescribed by the OAS. Grantees may be required to render service/research assistantship beginning their sophomore year. The application deadline is 28th February 2015.
3.            The Ateneo Freshman Merit Scholarship is an academic distinction awarded yearly to outstanding freshman applicants who have excelled in the Ateneo College Entrance Test, have distinguished themselves in their respective high schools, and who also show great promise for the future. This award includes a full tuition and fees grant for any undergraduate degree of the awardee's choice.

        My point is that all these may be for naught much like the futile efforts of Don Quixote of La Mancha fighting the windmills, because of our unregulated population growth. Where are the successful beneficiaries of these gratuities going?

        Until I came upon the following blog where I found answers my question.

WHEN WILL THE PHILIPPINES REACH A TIPPING POINT?
by PinoyInEurope

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The Legacy of PNoy

        Have you ever wondered why as 2016 approaches the attacks against PNoy are getting more frequent and vicous by the day?
        The accelerating attacks against the person of  President Noynoy Aquino to get him out of Malacanang is in effect an indication of what he has thus far accomplished. 
        Unknown to many, he has given the Filipino people the gift of hope for their future. He has threatened to end the historic prevailing culture of impunity in the country by invading the comfort zone of the core of power and wealth in the country. He has indirectly destabilized the the lifestyle of two or three clan leaders in Ilocos, two/three in Iloilo, three/four in Cebu and about a dozen in the Manila area and over 20 high flying oligarchs. Politics in the Philippines has been under the control of a few notable families. It is considered normal for a politician's son, wife, brother, or other kinsman, to run for the same or other government office.
        One can trace its roots from the Spanish colonial times where favored families of the mestizo stock, or the Illustrados were given responsibilities of Gobernadorcillo, or Alcalde. As such, these men have wielded some influence in their communities, and patronage politics became a common Philippine undertaking.
        During the early years of American rule of the Philippine Islands, these Illustrados joined the democratic process introduced by the Philippine Bill of 1902. During this period, family names such as Cojuangco, Lopez, Marcos, Osmeña and Aquino started to emerge, later on becoming household names.
        Cory Aquino’s 1987 Constitution of the Philippines states in Article II Section 26, "The State shall guarantee equal access to opportunities for public service, and prohibit political dynasties as may be defined by law."
        Many have called for the Congress to pass the Anti-Dynasty Law, but this bill has been understandably passed over by each Congress since 1987.

         It is recognized that oligarchy is the root problem of all the corruption in the Philippines.

        At the beginning of his term in 2010, PNoy’s message was clear – to transform Philippine society and reintroduce morality to public service. His two major weapons were to institutionalize the rule of law and to set a personal example of personal integrity. This model of personal behavior would extend to that of his immediate family, especially his sisters and their families. He has remained true to this promise.
        For so many, many years the realization of a government that would actively fight graft and corruption and where corrupt judges and politicians, tax evaders, smugglers and money launderers would actively be prosecuted and punished, was just wishful thinking on the part of the Filipino people.

        Today, after neutralizing selected questionable seats of judicial authority, the filing of graft and plunder cases against three senators and a growing number of other political bigwigs, there is a real sense of hope that this quest for a just society is actually taking place and may even be realized in our lifetime.
        But as to be expected there are many detractors coming from those who are in control of plundered accumulated hidden treasure now at risk of exposure if the struggle against corruption succeeds. What  do you think will these plunderers do?
        Also, there are moneyed politicians preparing for 2016 elections hoping the environment will remain as before where patronage, money and cheating win elections.
        Our tabloid media is intellectually and mentally light years away from serious news media like BBC and Bloomberg.  Generally, media is more a distraction than a help to good governance. They are simply focused on ratings and since the biggest competitors are entertainment shows, then these radio and television commentators must find ways to be entertaining. Listening to their programs, you will find an inane mix of gossip, wild commentaries and games where the public can participate with the lure of a prize.
        The ideal thing therefore is for the President to make hard decisions and then go and educate the people on why a decision that was necessarily unpopular was made. In the end, history will make the final decision on P-Noy’s legacy.
        Clear-thinking Filipinos will just need to understand this and do what they believe in – praying their will shall finally prevail.



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