A week ago, my colleague at Ateneo, Dr. Leland dela Cruz, asked on Facebook why it had taken the Israelites 40 years to make ...
It states: “The massive scale of the flood control corruption scandal appears to have distracted the administration’s ...
I often have to remind myself that my present freshman students were born after 2000. Martial law and the 1986 People Power Revolution are as ancient as dinosaurs and cavemen. Nothing brought this ...
Back in 2017, during the late, great Inquirer Briefing infographic experiment, we reviewed revolutions in our era by adopting the point of view of Timothy Garton Ash, who described two kinds of ...
Each year in the Philippines, the cool months give us a brief illusion of calm. Skies clear, rivers recede, and disaster ...
Clamor for young leaders with integrity has resonated in our country over the past decades and again during these very challenging times, as emphasized in the article ”We need more young servant ...
The late journalist Juan Mercado used to quote an old Malay proverb to describe the ultimate futility of the Marcos ...
Wake up, Philippines. There is a structural shift already reshaping telecommunications work across the region and Australia’s Telstra is an eye-popping example. From 2024 to 2026 Telstra has cut ...
There is more than one way to assert sovereignty beyond diplomatic protests and verbal barbs. For the government, the most effective one yet may not require words at all but something literally ...
Ominous dark skies loom over the political landscape in the fledgling Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) here in this city, the seat of the very first autonomous ...
A decade after former President Rodrigo Duterte launched his scorched-earth drug war, the arc of history is finally bending toward justice. This week witnessed something unprecedented in ...
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