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On My Way Home
Tuesday May 23, 2006
My father and mother are here visiting in Guymon. I showed them around and they see why I think this place is so beautiful. They saw their fourth granddaughter for the first time.
| | Posted by Pinokie at 11:04 PM - | |
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Sunday May 21, 2006
Let me expand on my idea for character change. We Filipinos need to become more aware about our responsibility to help one another. We have a lot of work ahead when it comes to the concept of common good. What seems to come so natural here in the US and that is people in a community coming together to build projects or organize into groups remains largely a dream in the Philippines.
A good area to start is the concept of recycling as much as we can. This may be more expensive in the short term but this will eventually free-up a lot of land fills and keep everyone conscious about the need to conserve our resources. Garbage collection must be made regular and more often. And we need to make fresh potable water readily available. Society needs to put more premium into cleanliness.
We all need to be reminded that we are all in the same boat and we all need to work together to improve our common lot.
| | Posted by Pinokie at 9:49 PM - | |
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Wednesday May 17, 2006
I am a firm believer in the genetic pool. What do I mean by this. The Philippines has a population of 87 million people. In my time, there was only one single state-subsidized medical school, the University of the Philippines College of Medicine. My 1989 class was composed of 142 students. To this day, I am confident that pound for pound, we could compete with Harvard.
This brings me to my message for the day. I have no doubt that if the 13 colonies in 1776 were able to assemble a group of far-sighted geniuses who would be able to draft the Declaration of Independence and a formidable Constitution, we also have in the Philippines today a surfeit of talent and genius that will reel us back in record time. The substrate is there. We are not starting from scratch. Our country has a long history and we have generations of educated as well as patriotic people who will bring us back.
| | Posted by Pinokie at 12:10 AM - | |
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Monday May 15, 2006
How fortunate for the United States to have such an extraordinary bunch of geniuses for a first team 230 years ago--Washington, John Adams, Jefferson and Franklin. "When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another...."
Jefferson was 11 years younger than I when he wrote the majority of those words "not to find new principles, or new arguments...but to place before mankind the common sense of the subject, in terms so plain and firm as to command their assent...".
"We hold these truths to be self-evident....".
Is there still any question that revolutionary change will need to come from outside the Philippines? There are so many heroic Filipinos that will join without hesitation the cause that will make our country rise from these desperate depths. Enough of these superficial sound bites and pathetic displays of patronizing leadership. We need real and constructive debate; a serious discussion of the major problems that keep the Philippines stunted. A strong political resolve to finally end the generations-old problems of land reform, population control, environmental stewardship, relevant education and most important, CHARACTER CHANGE. We need to get rid of our bad habits as a nation. We must all strive to become more productive towards common goals. We need to bring God back into politics. Justice, truth, love for neighbor have never been proprietary concepts of any single religion. These are universal human attributes we need to continually strive for.
| | Posted by Pinokie at 11:19 PM - | |
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Monday May 8, 2006
"THE Philippines was able to reduce the incidence of child malnutrition by 0.9 percent every year from 1990 to 2004, the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef) reported.
This rate however, the report said, is insufficient to meet targets set by the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
The report card is the fourth of a Unicef series that monitors progress for children toward the MDGs, a set of time-bound strategies listed in 2000 by the international community to meet the needs of the world’s poorest.
Among the benchmarks outlined by the MDGs for the year 2015 is to halve the proportion of underweight children under 5 years old.
In the Philippines, the prevalence of underweight children under 5 stands at 28 percent."
I will admit that I did not realize how bad it continues to be in the Philippines. When I left the country 17 years ago, people here in the US could not understand why I disliked Ronald Reagan. That was the reason then. Because by supporting a dictator like Marcos, children were dying and nobody cared so long as corporate profits were sustained and American interests were protected.
Well, Marcos has been gone 20 years now and it looks like we are only sliding further down. We have run out of excuses. It is truly not out of any Messianic mission that I am returning home. I simply find it unconscionable to remain here in the US while children continue to die in droves from parasitic infections and upper respiratory diseases. And all these hotshots can think of is charter change.
| | Posted by Pinokie at 4:53 PM - | |
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