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Philippine National Police Manila Police District 105th Anniversary THE Manila Police District (MPD) is one of Manila’s landmark institutions. It has its own history and helped reshape Old Manila into what it is now today. Giving the public the highest level of performance in maintaining peace and order, it has helped make Manila the premier city in the Philippines. This is why the officers and men of the MPD have been called "Manila’s Finest."
A fresh start TO dismiss the strong peso as no big deal is to demean the sacrifices and heroism of our OFWs who are tirelessly working beyond our shores to provide economic security to their loved ones. This alone is a big deal for Filipinos who dream of a better life, a dream that the administration shares with every Filipino family amidst the stiffest odds. National survival borne out of collective effort and synergy in the hardest of times is a big deal.
Oodles of noodles SEN. "Mar" Roxas, described as "nominally an administration senator," is not impressed by GMA’s subsidized noodles and rice, a part of the recently-announced P35-billion pump-priming program.
Still no reaction on no-el move MANY observers, including yours truly, were taken in by the Malacañang press releases about former President Fidel Ramos blabbing to two Cabinet men all that transpired in his secret meeting with Senate President Frank Drilon and former Sen. Vicente Sotto.
A troika of ex-presidents ECONOMY ready to take off.
Some legal issues THE legal profession being one that is characterized by interpretative and analytical endeavor is often peppered by insinuation and speculation. But last week, it was one of bewilderment.
Quiapo Fiesta THE Quiapo district of Manila is celebrating its annual fiesta at the Shrine of the Black Nazarene today. Every Friday throughout the year thousands come to Quiapo searching for God’s mercy and love. But the biggest crowds come on Good Friday and on January 9 every year when the district holds its fiesta celebration.
Farewell to the first woman Supreme Court Justice and President of the 1986 Philippine Constitutional Commission, Justice Cecilia Muñoz Palma BORN on November 22, 1913, the late Supreme Court Justice Cecilia Muñoz Palma achieved much in her lifetime. After obtaining a law degree from the University of the Philippines (UP), she topped the Bar examinations in 1937 with a rating of 92.6 percent. She went on to obtain two master of laws degrees. She was subsequently conferred nine honorary doctorates, seven of them in law, by universities here and abroad.
Eid’l Adha MUSLIMS all over the world, estimated at 1.4 billion by the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), including 10 million Filipinos, will celebrate Eid’l Adha, the Feast of Sacrifice, today, January 10. The second of Islam’s two major festivals after Eid’l Fitr (Festival of Breaking the Fast), Eid’l Adha commemorates the willingness of the Prophet Abraham (Peace be upon him) to sacrifice his son Ismael in obedience to God’s command. The lunar month of Dhul Hijjah began Sunday, January 1. Arafat Day was yesterday, January 9 and Eid’l Adha is today. Eid’l Adha observance starts with an early morning prayer worship during which the imams narrate to and impress upon the faithful Abraham’s unwavering loyalty to God.
The baptism of Jesus AND this is what John the Baptist proclaimed: "One mightier than I is coming after me. I am not worthy to stoop and loosen the thongs of His sandals. I have baptized you with water; He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit."
The cure of a demoniac Mark 1:21-28
Discipline THE sooner we all realize that we are in conditions of war due to the deep crisis we have brought about to our country, the more realistic we should all become. We cannot behave as though the status quo can be kept. We cannot pretend that we can simply carry on as though business were as usual.
Cuba’s billions CUBA being what it is – direly totalitarian according to its powerful northern neighbor – and pitifully poor due to a 40-year embargo (imposed by the USA), you wonder why they bother making a budget and publicizing it during a press conference, at this far side of the Pacific Ocean. Anyway, for the fiscal year 2006, the approved budget outlay is US.30 billion (exchange rate is US=Cuba R1). For us, that is the pits but Cuba has to make do with shoe string to fulfill the needs of a population of 11.2 million, broken down into 3.5 million households, with an average of 3.16 members per unit. The majority of homes are situated in urbanized areas and 95 percent of these have sufficient water and electricity. Seventy percent of the 2006 budget will be spent on public welfare for a population with an average age of 35 years. As in the Philippines, education gets the lion’s share; in Cuba, health, culture, art, science, technology, and sports are also considered budgetary priorities along job-generation programs.
There were some positives last year IT’S a cliché that media thrives on bad news and good news is a Pollyanic bore. It doesn’t get your adrenalin going like gory tales of crimes and deaths from disaster and coup attempts. But there are many ways to slant a story. The headlines about the "five most corrupt departments" for example, might also have given plaudits to the five least corrupt, the honor roll of the departments that put in systems to curb corruption. Those were the Department of Health, Social Welfare, Science and Technology, the BIR and the Office of the President.
Poverty and hunger ALL the politicians of this country, not just Isabela Rep. Rodolfo Abano III and Zamboanga del Sur Rep. Isodoro Real, should express alarm over the results of a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey showing that so many Filipino families went hungry in the last three months of 2005. A total of 2.8 million people or some 700,000 families went through "severe hunger" while 2.1 million did not have food to eat at least once. SWS also reported that Filipinos considering themselves poor have risen to more than half of the population. If the alarm of these two congressmen of the high incidence of poverty is not alleviated, not only will the politicos today become irrelevant. Their alarm is virtually a warning that the hungry and angry might yet take matters into their own hands. This may not be far off, with aggressive leftist indoctrination among them today.
Bill of Rights edited WHENEVER documents like the Con-Com’s draft proposal are not discussed in one full publication, there’s always a great risk that one clearly unacceptable part may harm the whole.
‘Belittling’ the new heroes NO politician would be so politically incorrect as to belittle the contribution of OFWs to the economy but Malacañang had the temerity to claim that Sen. Manuel Roxas did just that when he dismissed as meaningless its "headline (economic) statistics" the other day.
Improbable alliance THE ultimate poser is not the probable bonding of three surviving former Presidents of the Republic, but the plausibility of the three celebrities forging an "unholy alliance" among them against President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo which is not only improbable but also unrealistic.
Council of State PRESIDENT Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is set to convene the Council of State on January 24.
Endangered species EXCITING and intriguing political and economic issues have surfaced early this year.
Take care, carers CAREGIVER appears in the dictionary, but carer does not, not yet. In deference to the need to shorten words (and lots of other things) as the world needs to do more things in less time, the word carer has been in use since – well, since caregiver became too long to spell and turned into a full-fledged career of its own.
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