I wake up, thankful for another day. The cat is clawing at the door. The calendar says rent is due on Friday. Lately, morning ...
If you did not know the name Quezon City Rep. Jesus “Bong” Suntay last week, you almost certainly do now. It is difficult to ...
In the aftermath of coordinated strikes by the United States and Israel against the Iranian regime, the commentary was predictable. Talking heads and pundits immediately retreated to the United ...
There are moments in public life that make you pause mid-coffee and ask, “Did that really just happen?” Then you replay the clip and realize: Yes, it did. It wasn’t satire. It wasn’t a ...
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East triggered by the United States and Israel’s bombing of Iran once again exposes the high risk of job losses for overseas Filipino workers (OFWs). As of March ...
The Constitution guarantees the fundamental right against unlawful arrests, searches, and seizures, declaring it “inviolable” ...
The evolving sociopolitical landscape in our country does exact a toll on one’s mental health, particularly if podcasts on current issues, i.e., ghosted flood control projects; social media ...
It is the final days for “Mt. Kamuning,” the much-derided footbridge in Quezon City that has become some sort of an icon of ...
The sound of vehicles blaring their horns echoes across the highway. Tires roll endlessly on burning roads, while the city ...
In the Philippines, March is National Women’s Month, hence the timing of the recent Social Weather Stations (SWS) report: “83 ...
With so many crises confronting it, the Marcos administration should be burning the midnight oil these days. Malacañang’s lights need to be on well into the night for crisis talks, because that’s ...
Seventy-five years ago today, Fort Santiago in Intramuros was declared a national shrine by virtue of Republic Act No. 597. I dug up the law and was surprised to learn that Fort Santiago was supposed ...