Yesterday my obituary of Benigno S. Aquino III was published; I hope you will take some time to read it, as well as other reflections by members of my speechwriting team. Here is what I wrote: spot.ph/newsfeatures/t…
The Filipino and English thoughts and experiences of Mikael de Lara Co, who was my deputy speechwriter, head of the Correspondence Office, and a poet. rappler.com/voices/thought…
The candid views of Gian Lao who began as a drafter of correspondence then became one of my speechwriting team: and the first among us to put pen to paper in response to the President's passing. news.abs-cbn.com/ancx/culture/s…
And Ali Sangalang, the one whose words bridge our time in public service and afterwards, in not just words, but pictures: interaksyon.philstar.com/trends-spotlig…
My obituary mentions and took off from, a reflection I wrote when Aquino was still in office; a necessary summation in retrospect I am glad I made when he was still alive and without the benefit of hindsight. quezon.ph/2015/03/12/the…
Isang sulat sa yumaong pangulo mula kay Hermund Rosales, isa pang tahimik ngunit magiting na miyembro ng aming grupo ng mga speechwriters: rappler.com/voices/imho/op…
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Ang unang reaksiyon nila: halos tumambling sa kasiyahan dahil patay na siya. Hindi naman kagulat-gulat; mismong si Rizal, pagkatapos barilin, ayon sa isang saksi, may mga Pilipinong tumawa at pumalakpak sa Luneta. Ang kahit kaunting kabutiran sa isang tao ay nakakasilaw kung...
tutuusin, kaya mas mainam na lang magkalat ng lagim; sa dilim pare-pareho tayong pangit at pare-parehong puwedeng magkunwaring magaling, kahit sarili lang natin ang maniniwala. Heto ang sinabi ni Teodoro M. Locsin bilang paliwanag sa tindi ng galit ng iilang Pilipino kay Ninoy...
Pero ang layunin ng thread na ito ay hindi upang ipaliwanag ang buod ng buhay ng isang yumaong pangulo kundi dalhin ang usapan sa isang bagay na kailangan pag-usapan: ang diskurso natin tungkol sa mga taong may kapansanan, at sa pangaalaga nila, at ang mentalidad nila at ng mga..
For a man who loved music so much, even official music had to withstand his scrutiny. Three pieces you may have just heard as his remains were laid to rest. A thread.
1. "We Say Mabuhay," composed by Tirso Cruz, Sr. Presidential anthem since the Quezon administration; played whenever the president arrives at a venue, as a welcome. Performed with preceding ruffles and flourishes by the PSG Band. chirb.it/CHwcaD
2. "Parangal sa Pangulo," composed by PSG bandleader Maj. Xavier Celestial to be played when military honors are rendered the president; first adopted under Pres. BSA3; performed by the PSG Band. chirb.it/Mxeyyh
Organizing thoughts on #CommunityPantryPH, a thread. A semi-deep dive into our increasingly remote yet still recent past. We have to go back to a dozen years of mutual aid in times of emergency: the intersection of local need community response and social media: Ondoy...
Back then it was a crash course in applying modern methods (from communications to data-gathering/sharing/logistics) to source donations and distribute them as well as communal kitchens to provide hot meals. This has been increasingly refined and government even became reliant...
if one recalls the persistent call on volunteer labor to pack relief goods until the last government invested in equipment to pack relief en masse. Fast forward to the pandemic where again old ingrained instincts of mutual aid and assistance combined with online culture. Again,
Until May 6 #PhilippineDiaryProject will mark the anniversaries of the Fall of Bataan and the Fall of Corregidor with the diary entries of individuals who lived through those events. Today's thread is April 19, 1942...
1. Phillip Buencamino III Filipino officer POW camp Capas Tarlac: smuggled out note to my parents through a visiting doctor, it was a silly letter philippinediaryproject.com/1942/04/20/apr…
Until May 6 #PhilippineDiaryProject will mark the anniversaries of the Fall of Bataan and the Fall of Corregidor with the diary entries of individuals who lived through those events. Today's thread is April 18, 1942...
1. Victor Buencamino NARIC (today's NFA) administrator Manila 4/18/42: With no more rice imports the danger of a shortage is real philippinediaryproject.com/1942/04/18/apr…
Who is really running the show, a thread. The question is has anything really changed in the way things are run?
Is the on-again, off-again visibility of the Chief Executive not only not new but a sign of anything actually being any different from how it’s been since Day One of the current era? Or is it simply that the pandemic has blunted the force of loyalist cheering and intimidation?
A better framework might be to examine what things the President has never allowed others to decide, or modify. And those things are few but significant. The so-called War on Drugs; the punishment of media and businesses that don’t bend the knee; China-centric approach.