'It is a dangerous myth that rabble-rousers and totalitarians cultivate since it easy to claim that one speaks for the faceless masses—as New People’s Army spokesmen always do. The Masses are Messiah? It was the masses that asked for Jesus’ head on that fateful day.'
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Rizal, Bonifacio and the ‘masa’ myth - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Rizal, Bonifacio and the ‘masa’ myth - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Justice - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Justice - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
'... the point is not just to release all those who ought to be released, it is to jail all those who ought to be jailed. It is not just to reward the innocent, it is to punish the guilty. Then and now, there has only been one key to lasting peace.'
Monday, November 15, 2010
Nature keeps nurturing, people keep stereotyping
by Madeleine Bunting @ SMH 16 Nov 2010 [click here to read full article].
'Type "men" and "hardwired" into Google and you tap into a wonderfully absurd catalogue of assertions about male behaviour. Men are "hardwired" to cheat, ignore their wives, suspect infidelity, overspend, love money, pursue women and achieve supremacy in the workplace. Women are "hardwired" to worry about their weight and dump cheaters. All include the magic phrase "scientific studies show".
It is a snapshot of how science is being used and abused to legitimise gender stereotypes. It would be laughable if it did not signify how a form of biological determinism – the claim that differences between men and women have a basis in innate biological characteristics – has re-emerged and acquired popular currency."
"Good science will challenge the tendency to stereotype. The danger, though, is what Cameron refers to as "stereotype threat". If you tell women that women do less well in maths tests, they will do less well, confirming the claim. Do not tell them, and they do better. Stereotypes are dangerous; they become self-fulfilling."
'Type "men" and "hardwired" into Google and you tap into a wonderfully absurd catalogue of assertions about male behaviour. Men are "hardwired" to cheat, ignore their wives, suspect infidelity, overspend, love money, pursue women and achieve supremacy in the workplace. Women are "hardwired" to worry about their weight and dump cheaters. All include the magic phrase "scientific studies show".
It is a snapshot of how science is being used and abused to legitimise gender stereotypes. It would be laughable if it did not signify how a form of biological determinism – the claim that differences between men and women have a basis in innate biological characteristics – has re-emerged and acquired popular currency."
"Good science will challenge the tendency to stereotype. The danger, though, is what Cameron refers to as "stereotype threat". If you tell women that women do less well in maths tests, they will do less well, confirming the claim. Do not tell them, and they do better. Stereotypes are dangerous; they become self-fulfilling."
Friday, November 12, 2010
The World Won't Be Aging Gracefully. Just the Opposite.
By Neil Howe and Richard Jackson
Sunday, January 4, 2009
'The world is in crisis. A financial crash and a deepening recession are afflicting rich and poor countries alike. The threat of weapons of mass destruction looms ever larger. A bipartisan congressional panel announced last month that the odds of a nuclear or biological terrorist attack somewhere in the world by the year 2014 are better than 50-50. It looks as though we'll be grappling with these economic and geopolitical challenges well into the 2010s.
But if you think that things couldn't get any worse, wait till the 2020s. The economic and geopolitical climate could become even more threatening by then -- and this time the reason will be demographics.'
Another doom & gloom story? Read it here.
But if you think that things couldn't get any worse, wait till the 2020s. The economic and geopolitical climate could become even more threatening by then -- and this time the reason will be demographics.'
Another doom & gloom story? Read it here.
Monday, November 1, 2010
How to Make Stress Good for Your Health
"The whole idea of living a balanced life is not about becoming a monk and sitting on a mountaintop all day long. It is about having a career you love and also being healthy, having strong relationships, and enjoying life. And this fine art necessitates learning how to make stress work for you rather than against you."
"Author of De-stress Your Success: Get More of What You Want with Less Time, Stress and Effort, Sacha Crouch is a business, executive and life coach who helps people create the work and lives they love. For other free lifestyle resources visit www.activ8change.com.au and www.de-stressyoursuccess.com"
"Author of De-stress Your Success: Get More of What You Want with Less Time, Stress and Effort, Sacha Crouch is a business, executive and life coach who helps people create the work and lives they love. For other free lifestyle resources visit www.activ8change.com.au and www.de-stressyoursuccess.com"
Saturday, October 16, 2010
jenny Kleeman reports on Manila's overpopulation
Manila: A megacity where the living must share with the dead
As the world faces overpopulation, the Philippine capital highlights the problems it brings, as Jenny Kleeman discovered.
For what it's worth: Danny Russell on Mary
mX News Friday, 15 october 2010 [page 8]
'I have had a vested interest in Mary MacKillop. twice I have prayed to her for miracles; twice she has let me down.
The first was for my wife, Kerrie, who had terminal cancer.
It was almost five years ago, and I didn't pray alone.
My aunty, who knows about these things, organised a novena. Friends, family members and anyone we could muster would stop what they were doing at the same time every night for nine days and utter a devotional prayer to Mary MacKillop and ask her to cure Kerrie's cancer. Even my atheist brother took part.
It was a good deal both ways - Mary MacKillop, who had been beatified about 10 years earlier, could deliver a second miracle to ensure she became a saint, and Kerrie got to live.
Even though I wasn't a regular churchgoer or a man of unwavering faith, it didn't strike me as odd, or misguided, or even hypocritical to turn to such an intangible source for help.
When someone you love is slipping through your hands, what else can you do?
Kerrie, as was her way, felt a bit uncomfortable but mainly humbled that people cared enough about her to go to all this fuss.
She shouldn't have. It made people feel good.
Sadly, the prayers went unanswered.
The second time, I prayed alone.
The idea came to me after a day in Penola, visiting the Mary MacKillop Museum because we needed a rest from the beach while holiday in Robe. I figured I had a hotline [to] above.
During his prayer, I asked Kerrie that if she happened to run into Mary that it would be greatly appreciated if they could ask God to bless my second wife with a child.
We needed a miracle. Because of age, time was running out. Her body clock was nearing 12, and the window of opportunity was all but closed. We had even tried the miracle of science, IVF.
This prayer, too, went unanswered.
But I'm not bitter on Mary MacKillop. What would be the point?
Nor do I begrudge the Australians who claim they were granted miracles by the former Australian nun. I'm glad of their good fortune. How could you not be?
But I am sceptical it was Mary MacKillop who intervened.
Medical experts said they were bamboozled by these cases of miracle survival. But these are the same doctors who are at loss to explain exactly how it is we get cancer int he first place.
Attributing miracles to Mary MacKillop allows people to overlook her real work - for which she deserves to be a saint.
She was a woman, when alive, who could get things done.
She provided an education for children, who otherwise would have gone without.
She taught these underprivileged kids in a remote area of Australia during the 1800s how to read and write. In a barn.
From there she founded schools, developed a curriculum and established an order of nuns to help spread this 'education revolution'. All without financial gain.
So come Sunday, I won't be buying a souvenir mug, or keeping the reams of papers and posters dedicated to our new saint. I'll just be glad she is being recognised for what she did - on earth.
How could you not be?'
Danny Russell is an mX staffer who believes if he is struck by lightning tonight, it will probably just be a coincidence.
'I have had a vested interest in Mary MacKillop. twice I have prayed to her for miracles; twice she has let me down.
The first was for my wife, Kerrie, who had terminal cancer.
It was almost five years ago, and I didn't pray alone.
My aunty, who knows about these things, organised a novena. Friends, family members and anyone we could muster would stop what they were doing at the same time every night for nine days and utter a devotional prayer to Mary MacKillop and ask her to cure Kerrie's cancer. Even my atheist brother took part.
It was a good deal both ways - Mary MacKillop, who had been beatified about 10 years earlier, could deliver a second miracle to ensure she became a saint, and Kerrie got to live.
Even though I wasn't a regular churchgoer or a man of unwavering faith, it didn't strike me as odd, or misguided, or even hypocritical to turn to such an intangible source for help.
When someone you love is slipping through your hands, what else can you do?
Kerrie, as was her way, felt a bit uncomfortable but mainly humbled that people cared enough about her to go to all this fuss.
She shouldn't have. It made people feel good.
Sadly, the prayers went unanswered.
The second time, I prayed alone.
The idea came to me after a day in Penola, visiting the Mary MacKillop Museum because we needed a rest from the beach while holiday in Robe. I figured I had a hotline [to] above.
During his prayer, I asked Kerrie that if she happened to run into Mary that it would be greatly appreciated if they could ask God to bless my second wife with a child.
We needed a miracle. Because of age, time was running out. Her body clock was nearing 12, and the window of opportunity was all but closed. We had even tried the miracle of science, IVF.
This prayer, too, went unanswered.
But I'm not bitter on Mary MacKillop. What would be the point?
Nor do I begrudge the Australians who claim they were granted miracles by the former Australian nun. I'm glad of their good fortune. How could you not be?
But I am sceptical it was Mary MacKillop who intervened.
Medical experts said they were bamboozled by these cases of miracle survival. But these are the same doctors who are at loss to explain exactly how it is we get cancer int he first place.
Attributing miracles to Mary MacKillop allows people to overlook her real work - for which she deserves to be a saint.
She was a woman, when alive, who could get things done.
She provided an education for children, who otherwise would have gone without.
She taught these underprivileged kids in a remote area of Australia during the 1800s how to read and write. In a barn.
From there she founded schools, developed a curriculum and established an order of nuns to help spread this 'education revolution'. All without financial gain.
So come Sunday, I won't be buying a souvenir mug, or keeping the reams of papers and posters dedicated to our new saint. I'll just be glad she is being recognised for what she did - on earth.
How could you not be?'
Danny Russell is an mX staffer who believes if he is struck by lightning tonight, it will probably just be a coincidence.
Friday, October 15, 2010
NGM: Carbon Bathtub
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/big-idea/05/carbon-bath
National Geographic Magazine explains CO2.
National Geographic Magazine explains CO2.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
A little bit country, a little bit rock and roll | The Philippine Star Lifestyle Features Sunday Life
A little bit country, a little bit rock and roll | The Philippine Star Lifestyle Features Sunday Life
Maple Sugar Iced Tea - Butterfly ice tea
makes approximately 4 cups
3 English breakfast tea bags
2 cups boiling water
maple sugar or syrup, to taste
raw sugar (demerara), to taste
juice of 1 lemon, strained
1 cup ice cold water
1½ cups ice
Found online... I found another who said the secret is maple syrup & calamansi.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Maria Clara, Sisa - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Maria Clara, Sisa - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
There was a bit of irony to all this because Celdran put on a dark overcoat for his cathedral caper, intending to portray Jose Rizal, but after he was arrested the newspapers had a field day showing him behind bars. I think the photographs’ impact was stronger because what I, and many others, saw was not Rizal in detention but a Spanish friar, Padre Damaso, no less. Poor Celdran, with his Spanish ancestry and rotund body physique, did end up eliciting a bit of wistful thinking among Filipino indios.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Damaso - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Damaso - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Celdran hasn’t just guided people through the Walled City, he has guided this nation through the walls of its forgetfulness back to the time of Rizal and the fight against religious obscurantism. Indeed, in this case, he hasn’t just reminded this nation of its past, he has reminded it of its present, showing that the past is never really past, history is never really history, it flows into the present, it reappears in the present, it lives in the present. Still indeed he hasn’t just shown the past and present, he has breathed life into them by impersonating or conjuring or manifesting Rizal in all his desperate fury, shouting a name that like “Judas” carries with it a world of vituperation: “Damaso!”
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Take it from the Bernidos - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Take it from the Bernidos - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
"The Bernidos’ solution to the teacher problem: “Rethink the role of the teacher in the learning process, and institute a program that would not be strongly dependent on teacher qualification, ability and personality, but at the same time should foster the professional development of the teacher. This we implemented through the parallel classes scheme and activity-based features of the CVIF Dynamic Learning Program (DLP)."
"The Bernidos’ solution to the teacher problem: “Rethink the role of the teacher in the learning process, and institute a program that would not be strongly dependent on teacher qualification, ability and personality, but at the same time should foster the professional development of the teacher. This we implemented through the parallel classes scheme and activity-based features of the CVIF Dynamic Learning Program (DLP)."
Seeing - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Seeing - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
"You televise the Ampatuan trial and it will start to not make those things right. Certainly it will start to not make massacre right. The impeachment trial gave us an education in the vileness of taking public money, this trial will give us an education in the vileness of taking human life. I personally do not mind that the gruesome pictures of the dead in Maguindanao are shown to the public, with the usual alerts about parental guidance. If that is what it will take to shock us out of our mindlessness, out of our insensateness, out of our delusion these things happen only to other people and they cannot happen to us, then I’m all for it.
Sometimes making us see things is the only way we will see things."
By Conrado de Quiros
"You televise the Ampatuan trial and it will start to not make those things right. Certainly it will start to not make massacre right. The impeachment trial gave us an education in the vileness of taking public money, this trial will give us an education in the vileness of taking human life. I personally do not mind that the gruesome pictures of the dead in Maguindanao are shown to the public, with the usual alerts about parental guidance. If that is what it will take to shock us out of our mindlessness, out of our insensateness, out of our delusion these things happen only to other people and they cannot happen to us, then I’m all for it.
Sometimes making us see things is the only way we will see things."
By Conrado de Quiros
Thomas Edison’s Philippine films - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Thomas Edison’s Philippine films - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
'... in the late 1970s Doreen G. Fernandez brought back to Manila a copy of a film on the US imperial adventure in the Philippines, entitled “Bloody Blundering Business.” It was quite a sensation not only for its revisiting of Philippine history, but also because it included clips from these early films. People who saw the film believed they were watching history come alive.'
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Note to self: organise
"In the real world, there will always be times when two or more things demand your attention at once!
Research shows that multi-tasking increases stress, diminishes perceived control and may cause physical discomfort such as headaches, worry, and so on. It also makes it harder to concentrate for extended periods.
Here's how to do if efficiently and effectively:
1. SET A TIME LIMIT. When you shift your gears from one task to another - - or to do two tasks at once, GIVE yourself a deadline for returning to the original task. For example, if you receive a phone call while you're in the middle of writing a proposal for a client, let the caller know you're able to talk for only 10 minutes, politely but firmly end the call, making plans to follow up later if need be.
2. KEEP TABS ON WHAT YOU ARE DOING. Before shifting your attention away from the task you were working on, take a moment to note where you were, what your next step was going to be and where to pick up when you come back to the task!
3. USE STOP-LOSS MEASURES. At the very least, make sure multi-tasking doesn't undo any progress you've already made!
Like turning down the stove before answering the phone, or saving the document you're writing before chatting with a friend.
4. LEARN TO MANAGE YOUR TIME EFFECTIVELY. Try getting better at estimating the time it takes you to complete a task !
You'll generally find that you'll underestimate the time required. This discrepancy leads you to pile more expectations on yourself. You multi-task more and more, and soon you have way too much to juggle!
Keep an eye on the clock, too.
5. DEVELOP AN EXTERNAL MEMORY to take some load off your brain, it can be as simple as a pad of paper where you list all your task. Give yourself a chance to persevere on task until completion! This IS the most productive way to work. Eliminate distractions, of course, you also have to learn to say 'NO' to task you don't have time to complete and learn to prioritize what is important."
Via email.
Research shows that multi-tasking increases stress, diminishes perceived control and may cause physical discomfort such as headaches, worry, and so on. It also makes it harder to concentrate for extended periods.
Here's how to do if efficiently and effectively:
1. SET A TIME LIMIT. When you shift your gears from one task to another - - or to do two tasks at once, GIVE yourself a deadline for returning to the original task. For example, if you receive a phone call while you're in the middle of writing a proposal for a client, let the caller know you're able to talk for only 10 minutes, politely but firmly end the call, making plans to follow up later if need be.
2. KEEP TABS ON WHAT YOU ARE DOING. Before shifting your attention away from the task you were working on, take a moment to note where you were, what your next step was going to be and where to pick up when you come back to the task!
3. USE STOP-LOSS MEASURES. At the very least, make sure multi-tasking doesn't undo any progress you've already made!
Like turning down the stove before answering the phone, or saving the document you're writing before chatting with a friend.
4. LEARN TO MANAGE YOUR TIME EFFECTIVELY. Try getting better at estimating the time it takes you to complete a task !
You'll generally find that you'll underestimate the time required. This discrepancy leads you to pile more expectations on yourself. You multi-task more and more, and soon you have way too much to juggle!
Keep an eye on the clock, too.
5. DEVELOP AN EXTERNAL MEMORY to take some load off your brain, it can be as simple as a pad of paper where you list all your task. Give yourself a chance to persevere on task until completion! This IS the most productive way to work. Eliminate distractions, of course, you also have to learn to say 'NO' to task you don't have time to complete and learn to prioritize what is important."
Via email.
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Regaining public trust - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Regaining public trust - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
"Someone proposed that we should stop criticizing and just heedlessly defend the Court and its decisions. This simplistic suggestion was quickly shot down because it is downright unacceptable, impractical and illogical. To be effective in defending, one must be objective, truthful and credible.
"I personally think that it is best to lay down the facts plainly and then opine freely therefrom. False hosannas would skew the institution’s integrity and the writer’s credibility. Undeserved praise is disguised ridicule.
"Often, it is the Court or its members who provide the grounds for grievances and criticisms. As if the publication of Marites D. Vitug’s “Shadow of Doubt” and the bludgeoning of the Court’s decision allowing President Macapagal-Arroyo to appoint the new chief justice were not enough, the Court and the justices have unfortunately not stopped providing fodder for critics.
"As a retired chief justice, I sincerely hope that, to enliven the trust and esteem of our people, our justices would be more prudent, more precise and more decisive. Transparency, accountability and integrity are I think the Court’s best antidotes to media’s slamming. A misleading public relations hype or blind faith to defend the indefensible would only ricochet and intensify distrust in the Court."
By Artemio V. Panganiban
Philippine Daily Inquirer
"Someone proposed that we should stop criticizing and just heedlessly defend the Court and its decisions. This simplistic suggestion was quickly shot down because it is downright unacceptable, impractical and illogical. To be effective in defending, one must be objective, truthful and credible.
"I personally think that it is best to lay down the facts plainly and then opine freely therefrom. False hosannas would skew the institution’s integrity and the writer’s credibility. Undeserved praise is disguised ridicule.
"Often, it is the Court or its members who provide the grounds for grievances and criticisms. As if the publication of Marites D. Vitug’s “Shadow of Doubt” and the bludgeoning of the Court’s decision allowing President Macapagal-Arroyo to appoint the new chief justice were not enough, the Court and the justices have unfortunately not stopped providing fodder for critics.
"As a retired chief justice, I sincerely hope that, to enliven the trust and esteem of our people, our justices would be more prudent, more precise and more decisive. Transparency, accountability and integrity are I think the Court’s best antidotes to media’s slamming. A misleading public relations hype or blind faith to defend the indefensible would only ricochet and intensify distrust in the Court."
By Artemio V. Panganiban
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Information entropy - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Information entropy - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
"This haziness contrasts sharply with the vivid images supplied by television – the legalistic notes pinned by the hostage-taker on the bus door and windshield, the almost surreal efficiency of fast-food delivery to the hostages, the tireless shuttling of the man in the orange shirt, the curtained muteness of the hostages inside the bus, the searing smoke from the teargas, and the bizarre futility of the final assault. Television filled our senses with this absurdity – an overflow of images annihilating meaning."
"This haziness contrasts sharply with the vivid images supplied by television – the legalistic notes pinned by the hostage-taker on the bus door and windshield, the almost surreal efficiency of fast-food delivery to the hostages, the tireless shuttling of the man in the orange shirt, the curtained muteness of the hostages inside the bus, the searing smoke from the teargas, and the bizarre futility of the final assault. Television filled our senses with this absurdity – an overflow of images annihilating meaning."
Monday, August 30, 2010
Traitor - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Traitor - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
"How can someone be so selfish he can think only of himself and not of others? one of the hostages would ask afterward. Good question, and all the more terrifying for its simplicity and innocence, an attempt to grasp the enormity of evil with childlike words. How indeed can someone be so filled with blackness to snuff out the lives of children? That Mendoza is allowed a wake and a burial is Christian charity enough. Those things are meant to bring the community to grieve the departed."
"How can someone be so selfish he can think only of himself and not of others? one of the hostages would ask afterward. Good question, and all the more terrifying for its simplicity and innocence, an attempt to grasp the enormity of evil with childlike words. How indeed can someone be so filled with blackness to snuff out the lives of children? That Mendoza is allowed a wake and a burial is Christian charity enough. Those things are meant to bring the community to grieve the departed."
The man who killed Alexis Tioseco - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
The man who killed Alexis Tioseco - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
A waste of talent... a Filipino Canadian who came home to be with his people.
Alexis Tioseco & fiancee Niki... a waste, a disgraceful ending.
Another bungled case... will it end?
A waste of talent... a Filipino Canadian who came home to be with his people.
Alexis Tioseco & fiancee Niki... a waste, a disgraceful ending.
Another bungled case... will it end?
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Walk this way and see Manila differently - Lifestyle - GMANews.TV - Official Website of GMA News and Public Affairs - Latest Philippine News
Walk this way and see Manila differently - Lifestyle - GMANews.TV - Official Website of GMA News and Public Affairs - Latest Philippine News
"To be Filipino is to really be a mix and match of all the best values of the world. To be a Filipino is to truly be a halo-halo. You know halo-halo? The national dessert called mix-mix? It's got a lot. It's got ice it's got rice it's got sugar, it's got way too much. Because Filipinos just don't know when to stop...
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Saving Rizal by John Nery
"AT LEAST TWICE A YEAR, I SEIZE THE CHANCE to write about Rizal. As an opinion writer, I have long since come to the conclusion that the Philippines is incomprehensible without reference to the patriot and polymath. I have also belatedly come to realize, in the last two years or so, that Rizal is indispensable to an understanding of the modern democratic project.
One quick example: the classic arguments for a free press are derived from American constitutional history. But I have only lately come to appreciate the difference in Rizal’s own home-grown arguments (and those of Del Pilar too) for freedom of the press.
It is vital, then, to save Rizal both from the “veneration without understanding” that Renato Constantino warned us against a long time ago, and the “understanding without relevance” (to coin a phrase) that alienates younger generations."
Click here to read full version in John Nery's Blog at Wordpress.
Renato H Constantino: revisited
Reflections on the Nationalist Paradigm in the Era of Failed Neoliberalism
by
Prof. Roland Simbulan
"Renato Constantino was the Filipino historian and scholar who taught us to reexamine our colonial history, to rectify it and to learn from the past. He wanted Filipinos to have a useful memory of a past to advance the Filipino's quest for genuine nationhood. This lecture is a tribute to this great Filipino intellectual, a celebration of his life and works by way of reviewing his contributions and impact on Philippine nationalist historiography. He will be remembered as one of the most influential Filipino writers of the 20th century who through his pamphlets, columns and books influenced several generations of Filipinos. It is no overstatement to say that his advice, commentaries, historical writings and essays guided the contemporary nationalist movement from the late '60s to the current period. No Filipino writer has perhaps contributed as much as Constantino did in terms of substance and volume of writings to advance the Philippine nationalist cause in the 20th century."
by
Prof. Roland Simbulan
"Renato Constantino was the Filipino historian and scholar who taught us to reexamine our colonial history, to rectify it and to learn from the past. He wanted Filipinos to have a useful memory of a past to advance the Filipino's quest for genuine nationhood. This lecture is a tribute to this great Filipino intellectual, a celebration of his life and works by way of reviewing his contributions and impact on Philippine nationalist historiography. He will be remembered as one of the most influential Filipino writers of the 20th century who through his pamphlets, columns and books influenced several generations of Filipinos. It is no overstatement to say that his advice, commentaries, historical writings and essays guided the contemporary nationalist movement from the late '60s to the current period. No Filipino writer has perhaps contributed as much as Constantino did in terms of substance and volume of writings to advance the Philippine nationalist cause in the 20th century."
Renato Constantino’s false choices - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Renato Constantino’s false choices - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
By John Nery
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 04:40:00 06/15/2010
Filed Under: history, Heroism
"The classic critique of Rizal, whose 149th birthday we mark on Saturday, has itself become venerable. Renato Constantino’s “Veneration without Understanding” was the astounding Rizal Day Lecture of 1969, over 40 years ago. In my view, it does not fare as well as any of Rizal’s key writings. But it continues to be a popular read, and is sometimes used to punctuate, or even stop, a discussion. Everything that a genuine nationalist ought to know about Rizal, I can remember a friend saying, is in Constantino."
By John Nery
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 04:40:00 06/15/2010
Filed Under: history, Heroism
"The classic critique of Rizal, whose 149th birthday we mark on Saturday, has itself become venerable. Renato Constantino’s “Veneration without Understanding” was the astounding Rizal Day Lecture of 1969, over 40 years ago. In my view, it does not fare as well as any of Rizal’s key writings. But it continues to be a popular read, and is sometimes used to punctuate, or even stop, a discussion. Everything that a genuine nationalist ought to know about Rizal, I can remember a friend saying, is in Constantino."
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Of Monuments and Memories - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Of Monuments and Memories - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
"That memory of walking on the streets of martial law freely, among the huge crowd liberated by its mourning, is the most Filipino I’ve ever felt in my life.
"Now In one generation, we look back and appreciate the changes that have taken place. But we regret the squandered opportunities to change what may be unchangeable in Philippine life.
"That’s the sadness of this week. If you were out on the streets for Ninoy’s funeral you know that real life events subsequent just have not lived up to the hopes and dreams forever memorialized in head and heart that week."
Self-described as an American Filipino, Emil Guillermo is an award-winning print, TV, and radio journalist based in California. (E-mail: emil@amok.com. Updates at .com.)
"That memory of walking on the streets of martial law freely, among the huge crowd liberated by its mourning, is the most Filipino I’ve ever felt in my life.
"Now In one generation, we look back and appreciate the changes that have taken place. But we regret the squandered opportunities to change what may be unchangeable in Philippine life.
"That’s the sadness of this week. If you were out on the streets for Ninoy’s funeral you know that real life events subsequent just have not lived up to the hopes and dreams forever memorialized in head and heart that week."
Self-described as an American Filipino, Emil Guillermo is an award-winning print, TV, and radio journalist based in California. (E-mail: emil@amok.com. Updates at .com.)
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
But Will It Make You Happy?
'Inspired by books and blog entries about living simply, Ms. Strobel and her husband, Logan Smith, both 31, began donating some of their belongings to charity. As the months passed, out went stacks of sweaters, shoes, books, pots and pans, even the television after a trial separation during which it was relegated to a closet. Eventually, they got rid of their cars, too. Emboldened by a Web site that challenges consumers to live with just 100 personal items, Ms. Strobel winnowed down her wardrobe and toiletries to precisely that number.
Her mother called her crazy."
Click here, to read full article @ NYT.
Slumdog Tourism By KENNEDY ODEDE
SLUM tourism has a long history — during the late 1800s, lines of wealthy New Yorkers snaked along the Bowery and through the Lower East Side to see “how the other half lives.”
But with urban populations in the developing world expanding rapidly, the opportunity and demand to observe poverty firsthand have never been greater. The hot spots are Rio de Janeiro, Mumbai — thanks to “Slumdog Millionaire,” the film that started a thousand tours — and my home, Kibera, a Nairobi slum that is perhaps the largest in Africa.
Slum tourism has its advocates, who say it promotes social awareness. And it’s good money, which helps the local economy.
But it’s not worth it. Slum tourism turns poverty into entertainment, something that can be momentarily experienced and then escaped from. People think they’ve really “seen” something — and then go back to their lives and leave me, my family and my community right where we were before.
I was 16 when I first saw a slum tour. I was outside my 100-square-foot house washing dishes, looking at the utensils with longing because I hadn’t eaten in two days. Suddenly a white woman was taking my picture. I felt like a tiger in a cage. Before I could say anything, she had moved on.
When I was 18, I founded an organization that provides education, health and economic services for Kibera residents. A documentary filmmaker from Greece was interviewing me about my work. As we made our way through the streets, we passed an old man defecating in public. The woman took out her video camera and said to her assistant, “Oh, look at that.”
For a moment I saw my home through her eyes: feces, rats, starvation, houses so close together that no one can breathe. I realized I didn’t want her to see it, didn’t want to give her the opportunity to judge my community for its poverty — a condition that few tourists, no matter how well intentioned, could ever understand.
Other Kibera residents have taken a different path. A former schoolmate of mine started a tourism business. I once saw him take a group into the home of a young woman giving birth. They stood and watched as she screamed. Eventually the group continued on its tour, cameras loaded with images of a woman in pain. What did they learn? And did the woman gain anything from the experience?
To be fair, many foreigners come to the slums wanting to understand poverty, and they leave with what they believe is a better grasp of our desperately poor conditions. The expectation, among the visitors and the tour organizers, is that the experience may lead the tourists to action once they get home.
But it’s just as likely that a tour will come to nothing. After all, looking at conditions like those in Kibera is overwhelming, and I imagine many visitors think that merely bearing witness to such poverty is enough.
Nor do the visitors really interact with us. Aside from the occasional comment, there is no dialogue established, no conversation begun. Slum tourism is a one-way street: They get photos; we lose a piece of our dignity.
Slums will not go away because a few dozen Americans or Europeans spent a morning walking around them. There are solutions to our problems — but they won’t come about through tours.
Kennedy Odede, the executive director of Shining Hope for Communities, a social services organization, is a junior at Wesleyan University.
From Nairobi, Kenya New York Times article.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Around the world in Au$8000
by Travel $mart @ Yahoo7 July 22, 2010, 2:55 pmYahoo!7
Around the world with $8000
"It's the ultimate dream. Pack up your belongings and head off into the great blue yonder. It's a right of passage and a unique experience which will shape your life forever.
With some estimates pegging that around the world trip at $35,000, for some the dream is stunted before it even starts. The reality though is that you can backpack on a budget. All that's required is a little lateral thinking, some careful financial planning and key insider tips from those in the know.
For those who have been backpacking for years – otherwise known as "professional backpackers" it's all about the cheat sheet. Check out some handy hints to get you around the world on just $8000.
Before you go: Kick into serious financial planning mode. You're going to be living on a lot less – get used to it. Set a budget and save. Ditch fancy dinners and take away coffees – your new mantra is economise, economise, economise.
Plan your route strategically: Get online and check out your routes. The golden rules are don't retrace your route and don't aim for far flung destinations such as Antarctica which will blow your budget immediately. Research your destinations and if you plan to travel to Europe or North America try mixing it up with side trips to cheaper countries like Thailand or South America to get the best value from your plane ticket.
Talk through your plans with family and friends – determine if you have any far flung relatives in key destinations which will cut your accommodation costs dramatically. Actively seek out off season destinations which will save you dollars in the long run.
Getting equipped: Buy only the essentials. Guaranteed your supplies and clothes will be cheaper on the road. Plus how do you know what to pack? At least buying in-country is cheaper and you know what you need – saving dollars on unnecessary equipment.
On the move: Consider overland travel versus air – it may be longer but it's definitely cheaper. If a group of you are heading in the same direction consider hiring a car and pooling resources. Instead of getting buses and trains to get around the city hire a bike and take in the sights pedalling, you will save and stay fit at the same time.
Getting a roof over your head: Accommodation will be one of your biggest expenses. Consider sharing double rooms with friends, booking travel which takes place at night – giving you an extra night for free and seek out hostel chains such as YHA [Youth Hostels - mod note] who offer member discounts.
Money $mart: Remember to budget well. Set a daily spends limit, opt for activities at unpopular times and shop around when it comes to travel. Explore markets and local food grocers for gourmet treats rather than eating out and pick 'free' days to visit galleries and museums.
Think about the best way to manage your money overseas. The easiest way is with a prepaid travel card. Commonwealth Bank's Travel Money Card is particularly smart as it allows you to carry multiple currencies on one card – up to six and features the most prominent international currencies including United States Dollars (USD), Euros (EUR), Great British Pounds (GBP), Australian Dollars (AUD), Japanese Yen (JPY), New Zealand Dollars (NZD), Hong Kong Dollars (HKD), Canadian Dollars (CAD) and Singapore Dollars (SGD).
Staying in touch: Taking your mobile travelling can result in expensive bills. Consider using your mobiles for just emergencies and to receive calls from your parents. For everything else purchase a calling card from your local hostel. If your phone has a WIFI find out where free hot spots are around the city.
Finally remember the backpacker network is your friend. Ask around, share tips, books, supplies, cook as a group – these people will save you money in the long term and who knows you might make a friend for life."
Around the world with $8000
"It's the ultimate dream. Pack up your belongings and head off into the great blue yonder. It's a right of passage and a unique experience which will shape your life forever.
With some estimates pegging that around the world trip at $35,000, for some the dream is stunted before it even starts. The reality though is that you can backpack on a budget. All that's required is a little lateral thinking, some careful financial planning and key insider tips from those in the know.
For those who have been backpacking for years – otherwise known as "professional backpackers" it's all about the cheat sheet. Check out some handy hints to get you around the world on just $8000.
Before you go: Kick into serious financial planning mode. You're going to be living on a lot less – get used to it. Set a budget and save. Ditch fancy dinners and take away coffees – your new mantra is economise, economise, economise.
Plan your route strategically: Get online and check out your routes. The golden rules are don't retrace your route and don't aim for far flung destinations such as Antarctica which will blow your budget immediately. Research your destinations and if you plan to travel to Europe or North America try mixing it up with side trips to cheaper countries like Thailand or South America to get the best value from your plane ticket.
Talk through your plans with family and friends – determine if you have any far flung relatives in key destinations which will cut your accommodation costs dramatically. Actively seek out off season destinations which will save you dollars in the long run.
Getting equipped: Buy only the essentials. Guaranteed your supplies and clothes will be cheaper on the road. Plus how do you know what to pack? At least buying in-country is cheaper and you know what you need – saving dollars on unnecessary equipment.
On the move: Consider overland travel versus air – it may be longer but it's definitely cheaper. If a group of you are heading in the same direction consider hiring a car and pooling resources. Instead of getting buses and trains to get around the city hire a bike and take in the sights pedalling, you will save and stay fit at the same time.
Getting a roof over your head: Accommodation will be one of your biggest expenses. Consider sharing double rooms with friends, booking travel which takes place at night – giving you an extra night for free and seek out hostel chains such as YHA [Youth Hostels - mod note] who offer member discounts.
Money $mart: Remember to budget well. Set a daily spends limit, opt for activities at unpopular times and shop around when it comes to travel. Explore markets and local food grocers for gourmet treats rather than eating out and pick 'free' days to visit galleries and museums.
Think about the best way to manage your money overseas. The easiest way is with a prepaid travel card. Commonwealth Bank's Travel Money Card is particularly smart as it allows you to carry multiple currencies on one card – up to six and features the most prominent international currencies including United States Dollars (USD), Euros (EUR), Great British Pounds (GBP), Australian Dollars (AUD), Japanese Yen (JPY), New Zealand Dollars (NZD), Hong Kong Dollars (HKD), Canadian Dollars (CAD) and Singapore Dollars (SGD).
Staying in touch: Taking your mobile travelling can result in expensive bills. Consider using your mobiles for just emergencies and to receive calls from your parents. For everything else purchase a calling card from your local hostel. If your phone has a WIFI find out where free hot spots are around the city.
Finally remember the backpacker network is your friend. Ask around, share tips, books, supplies, cook as a group – these people will save you money in the long term and who knows you might make a friend for life."
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Duangporn Songvisava Bo.lan
Duangporn Songvisava
"In bustling Bangkok, “Thai food” varies wildly from superb street food to courtly traditional banquets, to insipid pretenders that tone down spice levels and modify tastes to suit Thailand’s legions of foreign taste buds. Instead of the fusion that dominates so many fashionable Bangkok restaurants these days, the remarkable achievement of young chefs Duangporn Songvisava (“Bo”) and Dylan Jones at their groundbreaking restaurant Bo.lan (No. 2 in Thailand in the 2009/2010 Miele Guide) is in staying true to classical Thai cuisine while updating it for modern times.
The name Bo.lan not only represents both their names, it is also Thai for “antique”. And “antique” it is - for their cooking style takes a leaf out of the Old Siam period, literally: every table at the restaurant is equipped with a cookbook harking from King Rama 5’s reign, while the contemporary setting of the restaurant belies the with a fresh touch and new perspectives of two young chefs with great ambitions for Thai cuisine."
http://bolan.co.th/
"In bustling Bangkok, “Thai food” varies wildly from superb street food to courtly traditional banquets, to insipid pretenders that tone down spice levels and modify tastes to suit Thailand’s legions of foreign taste buds. Instead of the fusion that dominates so many fashionable Bangkok restaurants these days, the remarkable achievement of young chefs Duangporn Songvisava (“Bo”) and Dylan Jones at their groundbreaking restaurant Bo.lan (No. 2 in Thailand in the 2009/2010 Miele Guide) is in staying true to classical Thai cuisine while updating it for modern times.
The name Bo.lan not only represents both their names, it is also Thai for “antique”. And “antique” it is - for their cooking style takes a leaf out of the Old Siam period, literally: every table at the restaurant is equipped with a cookbook harking from King Rama 5’s reign, while the contemporary setting of the restaurant belies the with a fresh touch and new perspectives of two young chefs with great ambitions for Thai cuisine."
http://bolan.co.th/
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Is Religion Special? by Stanley Fish
"...the law is more often than not in the business of avoiding substantive issues by recasting them as issues of procedure. Rather than directly confronting the moral questions apparently animating a case, courts will replace them with the questions demanded by the tests, models and magic phrases that make up the machinery of legal inquiry in a particular area.The process of applying those tests and models and of invoking those phrases has the effect of distancing one from the urgencies felt by the opposing parties as the professional urgency to find the right (or most persuasive) rubric becomes paramount.
"The strategy in those cases is to move the issue from the establishment clause, where the concern is state support for or entanglement with religion, to the free expression clause, where the concern is whether religion, as a viewpoint, is treated fairly with respect to other viewpoints. So the rule is changed from “no aid to religion” to “no aid that is not also given to secular entities”; evenhanded equality in aid replaces the older policy of prohibiting aid.
"Lurking in the background of these cases is the question of exactly what a religion is. The courts do not confront that question directly — how could they? What would be their expertise? — but when even-handed treatment becomes the rule in aid and burdens on free exercise must be tolerated if imposing them was not the law’s affirmative intention, an answer has implicitly been given: religion is just another discourse, no different than any other. That is to say, religion is not special; it is not special in the negative sense implied by the establishment clause, which by its very existence announces, “watch out, this stuff is trouble”; and it is not special in the positive sense declared by the free exercise clause, which seems to announce, “this is something the state must protect.” The evisceration of the establishment clause gets religion in the door but at the expense of its unique status; the neutering or “neutraling” of the free exercise clause completes the denial to religion of the label “special.”
"...it’s what religion is, and by definition religion sees itself as above secular norms, although the issue of being exempt from those norms is a vexed one, occupying the territory between “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” and “no one can serve two masters.”
"The entire point of religion — at least of the theistic kind, Christianity, Judaism, Islam — is to affirm a fidelity to an authority and to a set of imperatives that exceed, and sometimes clash with, what is required by the state. The denial of religion’s claim to be special is the denial of religion as an ultimate discourse, and is, in effect, the denial of religion as religion; it becomes just one more point of view. (This is the inevitable effect of protecting religion as a viewpoint; it is just an item on a list.)
"Christianity, like any other religion, is not an all-comers institution, but an institution that conditions membership on adherence to specific beliefs including, in some versions, the belief that sexual relationships outside of marriage between a man and a woman are immoral and disqualifying.
"Democracy, on the other hand, is an all-comers political concept; membership in the democratic polity is conditioned not on belief, but on a willingness to play by the rules — procedural non-substantive rules (or so is the claim) — proclaimed in democracy’s key documents.
"What it goes to show is that the conflict between the liberal state, with its devotion to procedural rather than substantive norms, and religion, which is all substance from its doctrines to its procedures, is intractable. In his “Political Liberalism,” John Rawls asks how democracy’s aspiration for “a just and stable society of free and equal citizens” can be squared with the fact that some of those citizens hold beliefs that are exclusionary; how can they receive equal treatment if they deny it to others?
"Another philosopher, Thomas Nagel, explains what must happen if the liberal state and its religious members are to co-exist in harmony: “Liberalism should provide the devout with a reason for tolerance,” that is, with a reason for putting tolerance above commitment to an absolute and demanding truth. There are no such reasons; the devout can only recognize reasons that flow from the structure of their devotion; liberalism can only give reasons that reflect its own commitment to neutrality. The rapprochements between them are fitful and temporary products of the endless political maneuverings we see in this case and in every case brought under the religion clause. That’s just the way it is and always will be."
To read full article, click here.
"The strategy in those cases is to move the issue from the establishment clause, where the concern is state support for or entanglement with religion, to the free expression clause, where the concern is whether religion, as a viewpoint, is treated fairly with respect to other viewpoints. So the rule is changed from “no aid to religion” to “no aid that is not also given to secular entities”; evenhanded equality in aid replaces the older policy of prohibiting aid.
"Lurking in the background of these cases is the question of exactly what a religion is. The courts do not confront that question directly — how could they? What would be their expertise? — but when even-handed treatment becomes the rule in aid and burdens on free exercise must be tolerated if imposing them was not the law’s affirmative intention, an answer has implicitly been given: religion is just another discourse, no different than any other. That is to say, religion is not special; it is not special in the negative sense implied by the establishment clause, which by its very existence announces, “watch out, this stuff is trouble”; and it is not special in the positive sense declared by the free exercise clause, which seems to announce, “this is something the state must protect.” The evisceration of the establishment clause gets religion in the door but at the expense of its unique status; the neutering or “neutraling” of the free exercise clause completes the denial to religion of the label “special.”
"...it’s what religion is, and by definition religion sees itself as above secular norms, although the issue of being exempt from those norms is a vexed one, occupying the territory between “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” and “no one can serve two masters.”
"The entire point of religion — at least of the theistic kind, Christianity, Judaism, Islam — is to affirm a fidelity to an authority and to a set of imperatives that exceed, and sometimes clash with, what is required by the state. The denial of religion’s claim to be special is the denial of religion as an ultimate discourse, and is, in effect, the denial of religion as religion; it becomes just one more point of view. (This is the inevitable effect of protecting religion as a viewpoint; it is just an item on a list.)
"Christianity, like any other religion, is not an all-comers institution, but an institution that conditions membership on adherence to specific beliefs including, in some versions, the belief that sexual relationships outside of marriage between a man and a woman are immoral and disqualifying.
"Democracy, on the other hand, is an all-comers political concept; membership in the democratic polity is conditioned not on belief, but on a willingness to play by the rules — procedural non-substantive rules (or so is the claim) — proclaimed in democracy’s key documents.
"What it goes to show is that the conflict between the liberal state, with its devotion to procedural rather than substantive norms, and religion, which is all substance from its doctrines to its procedures, is intractable. In his “Political Liberalism,” John Rawls asks how democracy’s aspiration for “a just and stable society of free and equal citizens” can be squared with the fact that some of those citizens hold beliefs that are exclusionary; how can they receive equal treatment if they deny it to others?
"Another philosopher, Thomas Nagel, explains what must happen if the liberal state and its religious members are to co-exist in harmony: “Liberalism should provide the devout with a reason for tolerance,” that is, with a reason for putting tolerance above commitment to an absolute and demanding truth. There are no such reasons; the devout can only recognize reasons that flow from the structure of their devotion; liberalism can only give reasons that reflect its own commitment to neutrality. The rapprochements between them are fitful and temporary products of the endless political maneuverings we see in this case and in every case brought under the religion clause. That’s just the way it is and always will be."
To read full article, click here.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Who Cooked the Planet?
By PAUL KRUGMAN, Op-Ed Columnist at NYT
Published: July 25, 2010
"So it wasn’t the science, the scientists, or the economics that killed action on climate change. What was it?
The answer is, the usual suspects: greed and cowardice.
If you want to understand opposition to climate action, follow the money. The economy as a whole wouldn’t be significantly hurt if we put a price on carbon, but certain industries — above all, the coal and oil industries — would. And those industries have mounted a huge disinformation campaign to protect their bottom lines.
By itself, however, greed wouldn’t have triumphed. It needed the aid of cowardice — above all, the cowardice of politicians who know how big a threat global warming poses, who supported action in the past, but who deserted their posts at the crucial moment. "
Published: July 25, 2010
"So it wasn’t the science, the scientists, or the economics that killed action on climate change. What was it?
The answer is, the usual suspects: greed and cowardice.
If you want to understand opposition to climate action, follow the money. The economy as a whole wouldn’t be significantly hurt if we put a price on carbon, but certain industries — above all, the coal and oil industries — would. And those industries have mounted a huge disinformation campaign to protect their bottom lines.
By itself, however, greed wouldn’t have triumphed. It needed the aid of cowardice — above all, the cowardice of politicians who know how big a threat global warming poses, who supported action in the past, but who deserted their posts at the crucial moment. "
Friday, July 16, 2010
One way to decrease overpopulation without...
http://ronebreak.com/2009/08/06/one-way-to-decrease-the-population-without-getting-all-genocidal/
"For one, having less kids reduces your overall carbon footprint. With one less person on the planet that is one less person who needs food, clothing, shelter, and various luxury items. Not only that, but that one less person will not produce any offspring. By not existing, they just saved the rest of us plenty of resources. Additionally, it’s also one less driver and polluter, since we all pollute the Earth on some level or another."
"For one, having less kids reduces your overall carbon footprint. With one less person on the planet that is one less person who needs food, clothing, shelter, and various luxury items. Not only that, but that one less person will not produce any offspring. By not existing, they just saved the rest of us plenty of resources. Additionally, it’s also one less driver and polluter, since we all pollute the Earth on some level or another."
The Vicious Cycle of Overpopulation and Poverty
"Does overpopulation cause poverty? Certainly, but that’s far too simplistic an answer. Poverty is the result of a myriad of factors, and the mentality and culture of the impoverished is self-destructive by nature. That is unless government or outside aid is provided to help establish the necessary services that all first world countries have, and that all developing countries need in order to rise up and escape the poverty trap. Helping the impoverished escape from that trap starts with the head rather than the stomach. Providing food and economic aid to the poor only helps in the short-run, but helping them learn how to produce their own food on a sustainable level will save generations."
by Joe Dimeck
http://ronebreak.com/2009/02/14/overpopulation-and-poverty-the-roots-of-all-our-problems/
by Joe Dimeck
http://ronebreak.com/2009/02/14/overpopulation-and-poverty-the-roots-of-all-our-problems/
Thursday, July 8, 2010
How to Become a Better Writer:
11 Completely Non-Writing-Related Ideas by Rachelle Gardner
1. Be creative any way you can. Cook new recipes. Paint a picture. Design a garden. Compose a song. Build something with Legos. Organize the garage [wife would love this!].
2. Pay attention. Observe the mannerisms of people around you. Listen to how they speak. Marvel at the way they're dressed. Notice their shoes and their posture and the look in their eye.
3. Be an armchair shrink. Analyze people's behavior. Ask yourself how their actions reveal their character. Wonder about their motivations. Scrutinize the dynamics of relationships. Drive your spouse and kids crazy.
4. Live life with passion. Do the things on your bucket list. Stretch beyond your comfort zone. Climb a mountain. Jump out of a plane. Serve soup at a shelter. Dine in a restaurant alone.
5. Take trips. Fly, drive or ride your bike. Dig a well in Africa or lie on a beach in San Diego or discover just how big Texas really is when you drive across it... just go.
6. Watch TV intentionally. Only the best scripted shows and only a few hours a week. Pay attention to good writing and try to figure out why it works.
7. Be a patron of the arts. Theater, dance, museums, concerts, architecture, baseball games. Enjoy beauty, excellence and precision wherever you find it.
8. Spend time everyday in mundane tasks. Do them without any music, radio or TV in the background. Wash the dishes, mow the lawn. Even your commute can be done in silence. See what you find there.
9. Pursue your interests. Have a hobby or two. Besides writing.
10. Exercise. Preferably something like jogging, walking, hiking or bicycling where you have long stretches of a repetitive activity.
11. Stay active on Twitter. Tweet things like #amwriting or #amslackingoff or #ameatingfriedtomatoesforlunch. You may not become a better writer but at least you'll be perfecting the art of saying nothing very concisely.
12. ???? Add more to this list!
1. Be creative any way you can. Cook new recipes. Paint a picture. Design a garden. Compose a song. Build something with Legos. Organize the garage [wife would love this!].
2. Pay attention. Observe the mannerisms of people around you. Listen to how they speak. Marvel at the way they're dressed. Notice their shoes and their posture and the look in their eye.
3. Be an armchair shrink. Analyze people's behavior. Ask yourself how their actions reveal their character. Wonder about their motivations. Scrutinize the dynamics of relationships. Drive your spouse and kids crazy.
4. Live life with passion. Do the things on your bucket list. Stretch beyond your comfort zone. Climb a mountain. Jump out of a plane. Serve soup at a shelter. Dine in a restaurant alone.
5. Take trips. Fly, drive or ride your bike. Dig a well in Africa or lie on a beach in San Diego or discover just how big Texas really is when you drive across it... just go.
6. Watch TV intentionally. Only the best scripted shows and only a few hours a week. Pay attention to good writing and try to figure out why it works.
7. Be a patron of the arts. Theater, dance, museums, concerts, architecture, baseball games. Enjoy beauty, excellence and precision wherever you find it.
8. Spend time everyday in mundane tasks. Do them without any music, radio or TV in the background. Wash the dishes, mow the lawn. Even your commute can be done in silence. See what you find there.
9. Pursue your interests. Have a hobby or two. Besides writing.
10. Exercise. Preferably something like jogging, walking, hiking or bicycling where you have long stretches of a repetitive activity.
11. Stay active on Twitter. Tweet things like #amwriting or #amslackingoff or #ameatingfriedtomatoesforlunch. You may not become a better writer but at least you'll be perfecting the art of saying nothing very concisely.
12. ???? Add more to this list!
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Rizal's Travel Diary
http://joserizal.info/Writings/Diary/01_Calamba-Barcelona.htm
From Calamba to Barcelona:
"A traveler lives more, because he sees, feels, enjoys, and studies more than one who has seen only the same fields and the same sky and to whom yesterday is the same as today and tomorrow; that is, his whole life, all his past, his present, and perhaps his future, can be reduced into the first dawn and the first sunset.”
From Calamba to Barcelona:
"A traveler lives more, because he sees, feels, enjoys, and studies more than one who has seen only the same fields and the same sky and to whom yesterday is the same as today and tomorrow; that is, his whole life, all his past, his present, and perhaps his future, can be reduced into the first dawn and the first sunset.”
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Future tense
Future tense
"NIELS BOHR WAS a Danish physicist who made fundamental contributions to our understanding of atomic structure and quantum mechanics, eventually earning him the Nobel Prize in Physics.
He also had a dry wit: "Prediction is very difficult," he once said, "especially about the future."
Yet, predicting the future wasn't a problem for most of human history: 100,000 years ago, life in the savannahs of Africa didn't change much from century to century.
In Mesopotamia, Ancient Greece and even the Middle Ages, life was largely unchanging, occasionally upset by war, the toppling of a monarch or pestilence and natural disaster.
It's only since the Industrial Revolution that the future has been highly unpredictable. The march of science and technology has a way of tripping us up, surprising us, and changing our societies before our very eyes."
"NIELS BOHR WAS a Danish physicist who made fundamental contributions to our understanding of atomic structure and quantum mechanics, eventually earning him the Nobel Prize in Physics.
He also had a dry wit: "Prediction is very difficult," he once said, "especially about the future."
Yet, predicting the future wasn't a problem for most of human history: 100,000 years ago, life in the savannahs of Africa didn't change much from century to century.
In Mesopotamia, Ancient Greece and even the Middle Ages, life was largely unchanging, occasionally upset by war, the toppling of a monarch or pestilence and natural disaster.
It's only since the Industrial Revolution that the future has been highly unpredictable. The march of science and technology has a way of tripping us up, surprising us, and changing our societies before our very eyes."
Scientists must not be muzzled
Scientists must not be muzzled
"In 1633, the Italian astronomer and physicist, Galileo Galilei, was put on trial by the Catholic Church for suggesting that the Earth might not be the centre of the universe — and found guilty. Almost 400 years later, scientists and those speaking on their behalf are still being persecuted for expressing opinions based on their scientific expertise."
"In 1633, the Italian astronomer and physicist, Galileo Galilei, was put on trial by the Catholic Church for suggesting that the Earth might not be the centre of the universe — and found guilty. Almost 400 years later, scientists and those speaking on their behalf are still being persecuted for expressing opinions based on their scientific expertise."
NY Times Blog: Lens
Too Many Lenses, Too Few Eyes
By SETH MYDANS"...perhaps the creative act of taking a picture, whatever its quality, can connect a person with a subject in a more personal, interactive way. Maybe it simply says, “Hey, I was there.” In any case, the spread of cameras has made tourism — from museums to mountains — a less passive pursuit than in the past, for travelers and subjects alike."
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Speaking of confidence...
THE SECRET TO CONFIDENCE IS PREPARATION
With practice you'll come to a point of competence.
You'll find yourself accomplishing your goals gracefully and confidently.
It's then that you'll do things that you never dreamed you could do.
You'll discover powers you never knew existed.
If you're prepared, you're able to feel confident.
There can be no great courage when there is no confidence or assurance.
Half the battle is in the conviction that you can accomplish what you undertake.
Confidence doesn't come out of nowhere. It's the result of constant work and dedication.
© 2010 YourDailyMotivation .com
With practice you'll come to a point of competence.
You'll find yourself accomplishing your goals gracefully and confidently.
It's then that you'll do things that you never dreamed you could do.
You'll discover powers you never knew existed.
If you're prepared, you're able to feel confident.
There can be no great courage when there is no confidence or assurance.
Half the battle is in the conviction that you can accomplish what you undertake.
Confidence doesn't come out of nowhere. It's the result of constant work and dedication.
© 2010 YourDailyMotivation .com
Monday, June 14, 2010
Public Speaking:Keys and Tips
"There are ways to overcome the fear of public speaking.
Standing up in public to address a few people or a crowd can be a terrifying ordeal. If the idea fills you with dread you're not alone. Fear of public speaking is the most common anxiety experienced by adults.
Three keys:
Public speaking can be anything from making a speech at a club to doing a presentation at work, or saying a few fond words at a birthday party. People usually fall down when they are terrified of getting things wrong but with practise you can overcome this and other public speaking fears.
A good way to learn the art is to take a course at your local community college. Geoff Stone, an ex-television journalist who has taught public speaking to HSC students and Prime Ministers alike, believes there are three keys to becoming a good speaker:
1. Overcoming your nerves.
2. Knowing how to structure your speech.
3. Being able to deliver your message with energy and enthusiasm.
"When you start speaking, think about giving the gift of your information to the audience," Geoff says.
Tips for success:
Constructive visualisation
You can build up your confidence by visualising yourself giving your speech successfully. Do this whenever you have a few spare moments in the day. And be positive. Say to yourself "I will speak with confidence and success," and repeat this over and again.
Structure
Every good speech has a beginning, middle and end. The simplest way to think of structure, Geoff advises, is to "tell them what you're going to tell them, then tell them, then tell them what you've told them".
Summary notes
It's a good idea to make a summary of your key points on palm cards, using different colours so you can easily keep track of where you are in the speech. With any notes or cards, make sure your writing or type is large enough to see without straining.
Practise makes perfect
Practise your whole speech out loud imagining the audience in front of you. If you have a video or tape recorder, tape the speech so you can review yourself when it's done. If you can gather some family members to practise on it will help you get used to an audience. If you don't have access to any of these, just rehearse in front of a mirror.
Slowly does it
When it comes to delivering your speech, don't rush it. And don't be afraid if you lose track of what you are saying. Just pause for a moment, take a sip of water and pick up the thread again. Your audience won't mind, and probably won't even notice!
Remember
First and foremost, it's important to be yourself.
People in the audience will not require you to deliver the perfect speech, they simply want to get something out of the experience.
You've achieved what you set out to do, if your audience walks away having learned something new, feeling better about themselves or having been entertained."
From Better Homes & Gardens.
-----------------------------------------------
Whiel I am not an excellent nor am I a seasoned public speaker, I find the following tips helpful:
1. KISS - Always keep the speech short and simple [keep it simple stupid], especially if you're not a seasoned speaker or have been asked to give an impromptu speech or remarks.
2. Keep a basic outline of what you're planning to say and keep to your outline. A speech does not need to be lengthy, especially if it is an impromptu remark. A shorter speech with sense is always better than a seemingly 'longer' wherein you dwell and keep reapeating yourself. Your audience will appreciate a 'to the point' speech.
3. Do not use a well worn joke or anecdote, if it is not too original don't repeat it.
4. If there are more than one speaker, listen to what they are saying and either add on or elaborate on the finer points without copying their speech. If you don't have something of import to say, a shorter speech is better.
5. Be confident and speak loudly/audiblly. Your audience will notice if you are not confident and nervous.
6. If you can prepare, be fully prepared & research your topic, otherwise KISS.
Standing up in public to address a few people or a crowd can be a terrifying ordeal. If the idea fills you with dread you're not alone. Fear of public speaking is the most common anxiety experienced by adults.
Three keys:
Public speaking can be anything from making a speech at a club to doing a presentation at work, or saying a few fond words at a birthday party. People usually fall down when they are terrified of getting things wrong but with practise you can overcome this and other public speaking fears.
A good way to learn the art is to take a course at your local community college. Geoff Stone, an ex-television journalist who has taught public speaking to HSC students and Prime Ministers alike, believes there are three keys to becoming a good speaker:
1. Overcoming your nerves.
2. Knowing how to structure your speech.
3. Being able to deliver your message with energy and enthusiasm.
"When you start speaking, think about giving the gift of your information to the audience," Geoff says.
Tips for success:
Constructive visualisation
You can build up your confidence by visualising yourself giving your speech successfully. Do this whenever you have a few spare moments in the day. And be positive. Say to yourself "I will speak with confidence and success," and repeat this over and again.
Structure
Every good speech has a beginning, middle and end. The simplest way to think of structure, Geoff advises, is to "tell them what you're going to tell them, then tell them, then tell them what you've told them".
Summary notes
It's a good idea to make a summary of your key points on palm cards, using different colours so you can easily keep track of where you are in the speech. With any notes or cards, make sure your writing or type is large enough to see without straining.
Practise makes perfect
Practise your whole speech out loud imagining the audience in front of you. If you have a video or tape recorder, tape the speech so you can review yourself when it's done. If you can gather some family members to practise on it will help you get used to an audience. If you don't have access to any of these, just rehearse in front of a mirror.
Slowly does it
When it comes to delivering your speech, don't rush it. And don't be afraid if you lose track of what you are saying. Just pause for a moment, take a sip of water and pick up the thread again. Your audience won't mind, and probably won't even notice!
Remember
First and foremost, it's important to be yourself.
People in the audience will not require you to deliver the perfect speech, they simply want to get something out of the experience.
You've achieved what you set out to do, if your audience walks away having learned something new, feeling better about themselves or having been entertained."
From Better Homes & Gardens.
-----------------------------------------------
Whiel I am not an excellent nor am I a seasoned public speaker, I find the following tips helpful:
1. KISS - Always keep the speech short and simple [keep it simple stupid], especially if you're not a seasoned speaker or have been asked to give an impromptu speech or remarks.
2. Keep a basic outline of what you're planning to say and keep to your outline. A speech does not need to be lengthy, especially if it is an impromptu remark. A shorter speech with sense is always better than a seemingly 'longer' wherein you dwell and keep reapeating yourself. Your audience will appreciate a 'to the point' speech.
3. Do not use a well worn joke or anecdote, if it is not too original don't repeat it.
4. If there are more than one speaker, listen to what they are saying and either add on or elaborate on the finer points without copying their speech. If you don't have something of import to say, a shorter speech is better.
5. Be confident and speak loudly/audiblly. Your audience will notice if you are not confident and nervous.
6. If you can prepare, be fully prepared & research your topic, otherwise KISS.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
How to Save the News by James Fallows
IN FOCUS: The evolution of a science story
This week, British newspaper The Guardian, has decided to try a new way of reporting science stories. Instead of publishing a single story on a discovery and then moving on to the next one, they are tracking how a science story evolves over time.
The story in question is a paper published this week in the journal Nature, which has been published in full online: "Functional impact of global rare copy number variation in autism spectrum disorders". (For those of you wondering what on Earth the Nature title may be hinting at, the news article was titled "DNA sweep reveals new autism genes" at Cosmos Online)
This new idea for reporting science came after Krishna Bharat, the man who guides Google News, told The Atlantic this week that what astonished him most about the news business was the predictable and pack-like response of most of the world's news outlets to most stories.
It's as true for science stories as it is for politics, sport and business. The weekly studies published in the two major scientific journals, Nature and Science, are covered by hundreds - if not thousands - of media outlets around the world.
Yet very few science news stories cater to the people usually uninterested in science, and very few cater to the people highly knowledgeable in science. Where would you go for more information if you fit into either of these categories?
Check out the story tracker at The Guardian, and if you love it or hate it, let us know.
Jacqui Hayes
Online Editor, Cosmos Magazine
At The Atlantic.com
"Plummeting newspaper circulation, disappearing classified ads, “unbundling” of content—the list of what’s killing journalism is long. But high on that list, many would say, is Google, the biggest unbundler of them all. Now, having helped break the news business, the company wants to fix it—for commercial as well as civic reasons: if news organizations stop producing great journalism, says one Google executive, the search engine will no longer have interesting content to link to. So some of the smartest minds at the company are thinking about this, and working with publishers, and peering ahead to see what the future of journalism looks like. Guess what? It’s bright."
This week, British newspaper The Guardian, has decided to try a new way of reporting science stories. Instead of publishing a single story on a discovery and then moving on to the next one, they are tracking how a science story evolves over time.
The story in question is a paper published this week in the journal Nature, which has been published in full online: "Functional impact of global rare copy number variation in autism spectrum disorders". (For those of you wondering what on Earth the Nature title may be hinting at, the news article was titled "DNA sweep reveals new autism genes" at Cosmos Online)
This new idea for reporting science came after Krishna Bharat, the man who guides Google News, told The Atlantic this week that what astonished him most about the news business was the predictable and pack-like response of most of the world's news outlets to most stories.
It's as true for science stories as it is for politics, sport and business. The weekly studies published in the two major scientific journals, Nature and Science, are covered by hundreds - if not thousands - of media outlets around the world.
Yet very few science news stories cater to the people usually uninterested in science, and very few cater to the people highly knowledgeable in science. Where would you go for more information if you fit into either of these categories?
Check out the story tracker at The Guardian, and if you love it or hate it, let us know.
Jacqui Hayes
Online Editor, Cosmos Magazine
At The Atlantic.com
"Plummeting newspaper circulation, disappearing classified ads, “unbundling” of content—the list of what’s killing journalism is long. But high on that list, many would say, is Google, the biggest unbundler of them all. Now, having helped break the news business, the company wants to fix it—for commercial as well as civic reasons: if news organizations stop producing great journalism, says one Google executive, the search engine will no longer have interesting content to link to. So some of the smartest minds at the company are thinking about this, and working with publishers, and peering ahead to see what the future of journalism looks like. Guess what? It’s bright."
Thursday, May 27, 2010
COSMOS - IN FOCUS: Evidence in favour
Politics has not traditionally been a place where evidence has ruled decision-making. A much more compelling driver has often been ideology.
The problem with ideology is that it is often based on philosophy rather than evidence, and philosophy can be incredibly appealing, since it explains the world in an attractive and tidy way. But ideology quickly becomes dogma, which is often impervious to evidence.
Which is why it’s refreshing to see a global interest in using science as the basis of policy. Hardly a radical idea, you would think (and I’d agree with you), but it’s taken a long time to come to the fore.
It was front and centre in Alice Springs this week at the annual conference of the Cooperative Research Centres. “Whose evidence? How can policy makers find a balance within scientific opinion?” was the lead plenary on Thursday, and it became a fascinating discussion of the intersection between science and policy.
The case study discussed was ‘the Aboriginal intervention’. In 2007, in response to a government report into child sexual abuse in remote areas of Australia, the then government of Prime Minister John Howard declared a national emergency.
It sent police and the army into remote communities, introduced alcohol bans and mandatory health checks for Aboriginal children, wound back Aboriginal land rights, suspended racial discrimination laws and quarantined the welfare payments of Aborigines to basic needs.
Has it worked? Most Aboriginal groups and many academics condemn the intervention, arguing that its heavy-handed, top-down approach was inconsistent with the report’s recommendations.
But with more than A$1 billion spent on 73 communities, some positives did ensue. More than 8,000 children received health checks. Few of these identified abuse cases; however, other health issues were picked up, with 500 children directed to ear, nose and throat surgery.
Extra police were assigned, leading to charges of increased tensions and the targeting of Aborigines. But a lot of other programs, which had been sitting on the shelf, were suddenly unleashed. Some were thoughtful and based on good evidence, others driven by little more than “mainstream values”, said Chris Burns, the Northern Territory’s Minister of Education.
A distinguished panel then discussed the results so far. On balance, it seems that if you throw enough money at a problem, you get some results. But policy formulation based on emergency timetables is hit and miss, and evidence would have been a better guide, they concluded.
As one of the speakers noted, quoting Winston Churchill, “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.”
Wilson da Silva
Editor-in-Chief, Cosmos
The problem with ideology is that it is often based on philosophy rather than evidence, and philosophy can be incredibly appealing, since it explains the world in an attractive and tidy way. But ideology quickly becomes dogma, which is often impervious to evidence.
Which is why it’s refreshing to see a global interest in using science as the basis of policy. Hardly a radical idea, you would think (and I’d agree with you), but it’s taken a long time to come to the fore.
It was front and centre in Alice Springs this week at the annual conference of the Cooperative Research Centres. “Whose evidence? How can policy makers find a balance within scientific opinion?” was the lead plenary on Thursday, and it became a fascinating discussion of the intersection between science and policy.
The case study discussed was ‘the Aboriginal intervention’. In 2007, in response to a government report into child sexual abuse in remote areas of Australia, the then government of Prime Minister John Howard declared a national emergency.
It sent police and the army into remote communities, introduced alcohol bans and mandatory health checks for Aboriginal children, wound back Aboriginal land rights, suspended racial discrimination laws and quarantined the welfare payments of Aborigines to basic needs.
Has it worked? Most Aboriginal groups and many academics condemn the intervention, arguing that its heavy-handed, top-down approach was inconsistent with the report’s recommendations.
But with more than A$1 billion spent on 73 communities, some positives did ensue. More than 8,000 children received health checks. Few of these identified abuse cases; however, other health issues were picked up, with 500 children directed to ear, nose and throat surgery.
Extra police were assigned, leading to charges of increased tensions and the targeting of Aborigines. But a lot of other programs, which had been sitting on the shelf, were suddenly unleashed. Some were thoughtful and based on good evidence, others driven by little more than “mainstream values”, said Chris Burns, the Northern Territory’s Minister of Education.
A distinguished panel then discussed the results so far. On balance, it seems that if you throw enough money at a problem, you get some results. But policy formulation based on emergency timetables is hit and miss, and evidence would have been a better guide, they concluded.
As one of the speakers noted, quoting Winston Churchill, “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.”
Wilson da Silva
Editor-in-Chief, Cosmos
In search of the perfect wine
In search of the perfect wine
Wine making getting too highly technical.
Like food, if it tastes good - I drink it... I like wine on the sweet side.
Wine making getting too highly technical.
Like food, if it tastes good - I drink it... I like wine on the sweet side.
The Trouble With QWERTY
The Trouble With QWERTY
Of course this is a fictional story!
Funny & at the same time scary... HAL all over again...
Of course this is a fictional story!
Funny & at the same time scary... HAL all over again...
The coming famine
The coming famine
'Researchers found that every $7 we spend on family planning over the next 40 years will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by over a tonne.
There is no denying the fact that human population growth has soared; at the start of the 20th century it was 1.5 billion. Thanks to advances in medicine, hygiene and technology, the population is well on its way to seven billion – and is set to reach 9.1 billion by 2050.'
'Researchers found that every $7 we spend on family planning over the next 40 years will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by over a tonne.
There is no denying the fact that human population growth has soared; at the start of the 20th century it was 1.5 billion. Thanks to advances in medicine, hygiene and technology, the population is well on its way to seven billion – and is set to reach 9.1 billion by 2050.'
Wilson da Silva, Cosmos Editor-in-Chief
Monday, May 24, 2010
Tired of being tired?
'...how many times have you woken up on the bus drooling or sat in an afternoon meeting with heavy eyes? Before having a baby, that was me[not really ME, but the author of the article!] on a number of occasions. I’ve done a bit of research and found out about a few of these hidden energy sappers, so I hope this helps shed some light on why you sometimes can’t keep your eyes open!'
Wellbeing: Tired of being tired?
Wellbeing: Tired of being tired?
The Punch: Penbo on Facebook
http://bit.ly/d06HQ0
'As someone who is being dragged reluctantly into the world of social media, the most depressing aspect is how much time it seems to require. This more than anything makes it no real fun at all. The irony of these sites is that they are all ostensibly meant to make staying in touch easier and to free us up to give us more time, but instead steal time away from us. It’s long been my personal theory that the amount of time people spend at work on social media sites was an unheralded but significant contributor to the global financial crisis, particularly in the white collar industries where some workers seem to spend half their day buggerising around messaging the world. Life’s too short to spend it in cyberspace.'
Sunday, May 23, 2010
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