Pressures of a President

Pressures of a President

As usual, I never seem to stay put.

This school year I made the shift from writing for The Guidon’s G Magazine to Beyond Loyola for two reasons:

  1. Challenge my writing style
  2. To prepare myself if ever I do fulfill my dream of being a big shot broadcaster in CNN or BBC.

If you follow this blog you know that my natural style is more features than news. But aside from the feel-good, funny blogs and sites that I frequent (at least when I had more time), I also enjoy reading a lot of analytical pieces on Time, Huffington Post and more recently, The Harvard Business Review. Plus, I originally wanted to take up international relations before discovering communications and I have my background with Model United Nations for 3 years.

“Pressures of a President” was my first official attempt at “newsy” writing. It was difficult to make the switch, but not impossible! I’m getting the hang of it with each article that we have to write. I’m enjoying the challenge.

I particularly liked writing this one because I got to apply something local — like the SONA to an international context, which is another reason why I was interested in writing for Beyond Loyola in the first place.  I like bridging worlds and ideas together. You get better insight that way.

Because of the delay in encoding it online, I never got to promote it! Since it’s not exactly timely anymore, I’ve decided to put it here instead. Enjoy!

Pressures of a President

By: Rica S. Facundo and Desiree T. Tan

FILIPINOS DEMAND president Aquino to tackle a multitude of issues such as land reforms, the Reproduction Healthy Bill, and regaining people’s trust in the government. In similar respects, other countries are burdened with identical issues: India with overpoppulation, and the United States with their questionable health care system.

With a year in office under his belt, little progress has been seen by the Philippine public. Perhaps, Aquino should turn to his fellow presidential counterparts to gain a tip or two on how to address such issues—what can our president learn from the experiences of other nations’ leaders?

Obama’s burden

Both Aquino and US President Barack Obama sit on platforms of change. However, with the portraits of their controversial predecessors behind their backs, getting too comfortable on their leather seats is not an option.

The two have a common burden: they both inherited their predecessor’s failures, which continue to cast a shadow on their own terms of office. Former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo left Aquino with a P177 billion debt and a long list of failures in the fields of human rights and good governance.

Aquino’s grace period is nearing its end—for some, in fact, it ended a long time ago. The issues spilled over from the past regime will no longer be able to serve as an alibi for Aquino’s lack of progress.

Gaddafi’s wang-wang in Libya

Whether it is caused by revolutionary riot or ruthless repression, thousands of people have died under the Libyan leader, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. An exercise of what Aquino would call wang-wang mentality characterized Gaddafi’s cultivation of absolute power, which thrived on a regional tradition of absolute respect for the father. Gaddafi is the Rais, the father, the inescapable head of state—and the ordinary Libyans were left with no choice but to follow.

Gaddafi is reported to have said that he will leave Libya only by divine will. Fortunately, there’s also a great power that exists within the reach of the people and can be strengthened with the collective voice of the international community—a force that is bulletproof to Gaddafi’s weapon of mass oppression.

As proven by the now victorious Libyan uprising against Gaddafi, and our own People Power Revolution 25 years ago, the people are capable of mobilizing against the abuse of power and of holding even the cruelest tyrants accountable for their actions.

Lessons from a neighbor

Singapore is one of the smallest nations in the world. The first Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew used an authoritarian leadership style to transform an underperforming nation into a highly developed and thriving city-state. His son and successor, incumbent Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, continues to push the already remarkable First World economy to greater heights.

The younger Lee has been known as a president who listens to his people’s pleas. Perhaps distinguishing him from his father’s firm governance, he is known for apologizing for the government’s shortcomings. As a result, he has developed trust among his people.

Where to go next

In spite of Aquino’s shortfalls and missed opportunities, his efforts have seen minimal success. One of his efforts include the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino program, which is a nationwide conditional cash transfer program geared to reduce poverty.

“Because we have another elite president,” Political Science Instructor Gino Trinidad says, “it’s a very promising project of making the government closer to the people.”

Yet Filipinos are starting to wonder: is this all he can do? The cash transfer program, for example, has been repeatedly criticized as a stopgap measure. “Governance is not just about anti-corruption—you also have to focus on your services,” comments Philip Recentes, a human rights project officer from the Ateneo School of Government (ASoG).

Even though he is committing to his anti-wang-wang policies, the president still holds a long to-do list that includes addressing controversial issues. “I think he has to feel that people are getting impatient,” said Rechie Tugawin, a human rights training officer from ASoG.

After one year in office, Aquino’s best bet to a better five years are accountability in all issues he will deal with, and better habits other than just his anti-wang-wang mentality.

Aquino may be better off in focusing on results rather than reputation, to practice political will rather than leniency, and to spend more time listening to the people on the streets rather than pleasing government bureaucrats.

Indeed, what he needs to do is to deliver more visible results, rather than just inspiring speeches.

Read more articles on Beyond Loyola here.

No (wo)man is an island

I was both excited and anxious to write this article. Firstly, because it’s something that I know I can say a lot about so there’s that self-inflicted pressure to articulate everything that I wanted to say. Secondly, by doing so I was risking being labeled as that “Ultimate Single Girl” which might actually decrease my chances at a love life this year haha. Thirdly, I really didn’t want to come off as self absorbed.

But it came out just the way I wanted it to be, maybe even better. I think it’s my favorite article yet! And it made me really happy to get such a response from it. After all every journalist wants to be able to reach out to his or her readers. It’s awesome to know that people – single, taken, boy, or girl – can relate!

Really, there’s no reason for singles to be S.A.D on valentines day or any other day of the year. The pictures on my blog are out takes from my photographer Ean Dacay which I edited. Enjoy :)

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No (wo)man is an island

By: Rica S. Facundo

Despite a population of more than seven billion people, the world can get lonely sometimes. From time to time, we may ask ourselves: are we all really destined to be stuck on a deserted island with no one but ourselves to keep us company forever?

Within him or her is a paradise that is bound to be experienced with others. It’s wasteful not to share the view—an infinite horizon of beautiful possibilities, but not before it has time to let life form them first.

In my case, I have been single since birth. Over the course of my life, I have come across most if not all overused clichés and romantic justifications to explain my lifelong statuses – “when it happens, it happens”, “I haven’t met the one” and “I’m just not looking” may vary on the scale of cheesiness, but secretly, we know that a lot of them ring true to our hearts.

Obviously there many scripted lines found in the handbook for singles, ready to guide anyone interrogated with the infamous and sometimes annoying questions and assuming judgments about singlehood. Admittedly, I’ve used a fair share of them to defend and explain the different chapters of my love life myself (then again, who hasn’t?)

But now at twenty years old, an age of which most undergraduates are on their path of self-discovery, I have no readymade answer to give. That’s because in the face of this burning question, I realized that I haven’t really been paying attention. My life is narrating a different story, with the old script now irrelevant. Prince Charming is now a minor character and the fairy tale has now become reality.

Putting the ‘single and ready to mingle mantra’ and all the fun shenanigans aside, the footnote in every great single love story is this: It’s less about the single activities and more about the kind of person the single person becomes that matters most.

That’s when singlehood moves on from being a stagnant stage in one’s love life soundtrack to a single playlist that one saves for special occasions. Sometimes you’ll even overlook its existence, proving that it’s easy to forget one is single when one is busy enjoying the rest of life’s music. And that’s when you realize it doesn’t matter that you still are.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that all single people have boycotted relationships and continue to parade around in picket lines, holding signs painted with a big red “NO TO LOVE” to scare off every suitor that comes their way, or are unwilling to raise the white flag and negotiate the terms. After all, we are all human with hearts that love and a soul that gets lonely.

Single people, especially those in college, are actually saying yes to the biggest relationship of all time. It’s a yes to themselves, a declaration of which presupposes and enriches any future romantic or even platonic relationship with others. In the first Sex and the City movie, I remember the breakup line that Samantha Jones, a strong and vibrant woman who rarely commits to a life of monogamy, gave to her then- longtime boyfriend. Despite of her indisputable love for him, she said that she’s been in a relationship with herself for 49 years and that’s the one she needs to work on.

We learn in Theology 131: Marriage and Human Sexuality that a relationship is the best context for a person to grow and mature. Like what Samantha points out, a relationship with one’s self should still exist. Some are stronger and more evident than others which in the long run, play a vital role in determining the health of one’s relationship.

In M. Scott Peck’s “The Road Less Travelled”, he defines love as the will to extend one’s self for the purpose of nurturing one’s own or another’s spiritual growth.  That’s why it’s a common misconception that love is about completing one another. Rather, it should be about complimenting each other which is hard to do if you start with a self with so many holes to fill.

So, if no (wo)man is an island then why is it that there are so many single people still lingering around? In my twenty years of experience, my answer is this:

You don’t need to be in a relationship to be happy. Initially that’s your job to fulfill. Instead, you can be in a relationship to become a happier self than you already are.

So when my sunrise meets his sunset, each of us painting the sky with our own brushstrokes of color, the image created will not be that of solitary islands, but of bona fide paradise—mine and his combined.”

That is the perpetual question

Overused cliches. We've all used them

Are you an island or a paradise?

Aquarius’ Guide to the Galaxy

I’m a big believer in the mystical workings of the universe. So when it comes to astrological predictions and the like, I’m fond of indulging my faith and hope in the unknown. It doesn’t hurt to know how not to be BV with the universe right?

I actually learned something while researching and writing this article for g and interviewing our family manghuhula (yes, we actually have one) and it has to do with the Aquarius age! The universe continues to pleasantly surprise me.

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Aquarius’ Guide to the Galaxy

As you walk down Sec Walk, a hallway or any old street, have you ever felt a tingling sensation lingering on your nape? You turn around, and look. Lo and behold, a pair of eyes is staring straight at you.

Now don’t freak out—this isn’t an episode of Twilight Zone. The tingly feeling, mystics say, is how mystics often describe having a higher level of consciousness or a mystical knowledge of an ultimate reality.

As we undergo a transition into the Aquarian Age, 2011 is the best time to harness this energy and ride the universe in your favor. Sit back, relax and let g unveil its secrets! Click here to read more.

Work & Play

We're the g-sters, like hipsters only cooler.

I love my yuppie friends who like to discuss business matters about stocks, investments and the like, but the fact is that I’m a com major. And although that might sound extremely stereotypical of my course and belittling to my own capacity to understand issues of this nature my point is this:  it doesn’t matter because it really doesn’t peak my interest.

I know that I can probably offer my own 2 centavos to the discussion but after my block and g inuman about 2 weeks ago, i realized how refreshing it is to talk about work and an industry that relates directly to me and laugh about pop culture trivia and comments that only people like us will find funny and appreciate.

I know that these pictures are late but school has taken over my online life since we came back from break. Now I have a bit of time to spam. My general rule with photoblogging backlog is only to post eventful gimmiks that have a story to share. Continue reading

The Battle of Katipunan’s Extension: Banapple VS Conti’s

This is my second food review and i’ve learned that writing about food is definitely a lot harder than it tastes. Nonetheless,  it’s still fun to do and my partner Lexie & I tried our best to get our inner foody out.  Click the link to see whether Banapple (Lexie) or Conti’s (Me) won!

 

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With new restaurants popping up along Katipunan every few months, Ateneans’ dining choices are endless. It’s certainly easier to stick to the establishments near school, but resisting the call of Katipunan Extension’s Banapple Pies & Cheesecakes and Conti’s Pastry Shop & Restaurants is becoming quite the challenge. They serve similar fare that satisfies both an empty stomach and a sweet tooth, but before you hop into the car or hail that elusive cab, g has the verdict on which restaurant actually deserves the trip.

10 Things I Hate About Sembreak

4 more days till school starts. How many of these 10 things I hate about sembreak list have you already ticked off? My article on g.

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Sorry to burst your sembreak bubble, but sometimes that much needed vacation sounds a lot better in our heads than in real life. Thanks to months of constant hell weeks and futile all-nighters to improve our grades, the truth is that we tend to build it up too much. In the end, we feel cheated and disappointed when our glorious sembreak doesn’t go according to plan.

But because g wants you to have a blast this October, to get your much needed R&R, we’ve come up with 10 annoying sembreak woes and surefire ways to bust them. This is the year when your sembreak expectations actually align with reality. Read more here.

Yes, It’s on and poppin’

Summer days left: 7

After experiencing the world of the employed as an intern this summer, the question now is: Which do i prefer being – a working girl or a student?

Before officially ending my internship I remember my editor asking whether I was looking forward to going back to school, especially since for the past two months I’ve gotten to learn first hand from a classroom without walls.

My answer? Well, it’s a yes. Because as much as I’ll surely doze off listening to a boring lecture by a monotonous teacher and would much rather be covering events and meeting people who are much cooler than anyone i could ever meet in school, the bottom line is this: I feel like there are just so many things to look forward to this year such as ACOMM and g! magazine (to name a few) that will kick, push, pull and hone me into a much better version of myself.

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For juniors it’s THE year to step up especially when I know that most of my friends have core positions this year, including myself. It’s something my blockmates have talked about in Matabungkay. As juniors we pretty much have enough experience to our name that we can’t use ignorance that as freshmen we used as our excuse for pretty much everything. As sophomores we could still get away with it.

Because of how hectic high school was for me I’ve been floating for the first two years of college, taking my time to test the waters before I dive in deep into my extra curricular activities.  But now, I’m finally ready to take the plunge! The currents might pull me deep into the undertow where at times I might find myself desperately gasping for air. But I’m a strong swimmer. And I know that there will be people there to rescue me if needed – such as Lauren my co AVP for the ACOMM projects department.

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Plus there are my friends and orgmates who I’m looking forward to enduring the perils of university with. And there’s the other extra “stuff” that I’m hoping will make my school year the BEST it can be. In fear that I might jinx my chances by mentioning it here, I won’t just yet. But soon, I hope. Real soon.

I know I’ve mostly been posting pics of my lakwatchera side but my days have been just as full as my nights! It’s just that playing seems to be more fun to document than working and I don’t have my own camera (yet.) BUT as Idge says below in his ACOMM presentation we’ll all work hard to party even harder!

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Sometimes I may prefer the working world, but I feel like I haven’t milked college for all its worth just yet.

So rain or shine, A’s or C’s, well-rested or stressed, whatever this year will be, I’m looking that bitch straight in the eye and saying BRING IT.