School Feeding Programs

I was telling my sister how hard it is to teach hungry children anything, how useless one feels when children can’t concentratee because they did not have breakfast. Makes you feel good that there are still people who find the time to volunteer in School Feeding Programs such as:

I don’t know why the massacre post from freakonomics lead to a post on school feeding programs, but the thing is It is hard to think with an empty stomach so if we really want to make an impact we must think of the whole problem of poverty not as separate things like education, hunger, lack of social mobility but as an interconnected net of conditions that create a somewhat insurmountable barrier, for probably everyone save for people with extraordinary luck and maybe skill.
old research in impact of School Feeding Program in the Philippines
PS I’d gladly add other companies to this list just email me.

rePost: Filipino teachers continue to fly to US for higher pay

A recession bound USA offers probably more opportunities for enrichment than our small country the Philippines. Sad but there are tens of thousands of teachers from the Philippines without work. I remember a conversation I had with the Filipino Couple we had met on the hotel in Thailand a couple of years back. They had two house helps who graduated as Education Majors , or even the feature in a GMA documentary of a Domestic Helper working in Hong Kong who also graduated with a degree in education, or I could go on and on. The problem is not how many teachers our country has but that the best are leaving to educate the young ones of another country. A country that could at least pay them a higher percentage of what they really are worth. That’s modernday international trade for you. Welcome to the Philippines the No Exporter of Human Resources.

Filipino teachers continue to fly to US for higher pay
By Cynthia Balana
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 17:51:00 08/28/2008
Most Read
Other Most Read Stories x
MANILA, Philippines—More and more competent Filipino teachers are flocking to the United States where they are paid more, according to the Philippine Embassy in Washington.
The embassy, in a statement, said that only last week, 93 Filipino teachers arrived in the US and were welcomed by Philippine Ambassador to Washington Willy Gaa.
The new arrivals attended orientation seminars organized by the embassy where they were also given “practical advice” to ease their transition into a new teaching environment.
The 93 teachers will be teaching special education classes, focusing on Mathematics, Science and English subjects in public schools in Prince George’s County in Maryland.
Gaa said the new recruits followed a group of 115 teachers who were also welcomed by the embassy last July.
The first batch of Filipino teachers moved to Maryland in 2005. As of the fall of 2006, 400 Filipino teachers were already in Baltimore City alone.

rePost: Pushing trolleys to make ends meet

Minor quibble, a side line is something you do aside a job/ or side by side a job. When it is your main means of making a living no matter how small or how far from a normal job it is , that is your work and not your sideline.
from Inquirer Blogs here please do read the whole thing:

Pushing trolleys to make ends meet
08/26/08
Posted under Everyday People, Videos
By Izah Morales
INQUIRER.net
MANILA, Philippines – An economic crisis pushes people to engage in sidelines or extra jobs aside from the regular job they are already doing. But for 21-year-old Rodel Rosario of Los Baños, a sideline means the only way of making ends meet.
Pushing a trolley from “Crossing” to the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in Los Baños has become Rodel’s “sideline” for two years now.
“Kung walang trabaho, ito ‘yung sideline ko ang mag-tulak ng trolley[If I have nothing else to do, I push trolleys for sideline], ” he said.
Every morning and afternoon, he is like an ice skater gliding on the train tracks, his feet alternately stepping on the steel (instead of ice) to move the makeshift trolley forward. However, his movement is not as smooth and graceful like an ice skater because his “skating rink” is the railway and his so-called performance is to push the trolley that carries a maximum of five passengers.
A trolley ride costs P25, according to Rosario.

rePost: RP airs 1st broadcast in South Korea

Koreans are everywhere in the Philippines and I don’t know hope Korea and the Philippines can forge real string ties beyond the Philippines being one of the primary places that Koreans learn speaking English from.
from GMA News Here:

RP airs 1st broadcast in South Korea
08/22/2008 | 09:27 PM
MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines now has its presence felt in the airwaves of South Korea, taking part in a daily multi-cultural radio broadcast, the Foreign Affairs Department said Friday.
The first multi-cultural radio broadcast in Filipino started airing last August 15, a statement on the DFA Web site said.
Aside from Filipino, the multi-cultural radio program will be provided in the languages of three other countries, including China, Vietnam and Thailand, the DFA said.
Regina Arquiza, a Philippine scholar at Ehwa Woman’s University, will host the Philippine segment of the multi-cultural radio program everyday for 30 minutes.
She will play traditional and modern Filipino music, and present educational and cultural programs, such as medical information, legal counseling, job information and an introduction to Korea culture, language and customs.
The program’s time slots are 3 a.m. to 3:30 a.m.; 9 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.; and 3 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
It can be heard at audio channel No. 855 of Skylife; channel 811 of cable TV operator C&M; and Internet Web sites of Woongjin Foundation (www.wjfoundation.or.kr) and Digital Radio KISS (www.radiokiss.co.kr) respectively.
Woongjin Foundation, the project proponent of the multicultural radio broadcast, hopes to target not only foreign workers but also most especially foreign spouses of Koreans, as a way to help them connect with their roots and keep abreast with developments in their home country.
The Philippine Embassy in Seoul is closely collaborating with Woongjin Foundation by supporting them with materials and information needed by Filipinos at Post. – GMANews.TV

Most Japinos (Japanese Filipinos)prefer dad's 'love' over citizenship

I have a friend who only wants to meet his siblings. With the way that Japan is slowly accepting that their close society can no longer be as restrictive, it is just a matter of time before my friend gets his wish.

Most Japinos prefer dad’s ‘love’ over citizenship
MARK JOSEPH H. UBALDE, GMANews.TV
08/21/2008 | 12:47 PM
MANILA, Philippines – Most Japanese-Filipino (‘Japino’) children would rather meet their fathers in person and be recognized as their children than be granted Japanese citizenship.
According to Mikas Matsuzawa, president of the Batis-YOGHI (Youth Organization Gives Hope and Inspiration) most first generation Japinos like her are not so much interested in getting a Japanese visa.
“We are more interested in being recognized by our fathers than being Japanese citizens,” Matsuzawa told GMANews.TV in an interview.
First generation Japinos are children of the first batch of Filipinas – mostly entertainers – who went to Japan in the 1970s to work.
There are no reliable data on the number of Japanese-Filipino children, but estimates range between 10,000 and 100,000.
Matsuzawa raised concern that the plight of Japinos would be constricted only to the issue of citizenship. “Most Japinos don’t even have enough knowledge about the issue. They’re confused. They are often stereotyped. It’s a complex situation.”
She explained that Japinos begin their ordeal with their quest to find their fathers. From there they still need to be recognized by them before dealing with their own nationality and identity.
“Japino children need to resolve the issue of their identities first before being coerced to become Japanese citizens,” she said adding that Filipino mothers often push their children to go to Japan to take advantage of the vast ‘opportunities’ there.
Nationality in Japan is determined by bloodline rather than place of birth, though foreigners may apply to become citizens. Many ethnic Koreans, for instance, have been born in Japan but retain the Korean nationality of their parents.
Under current law, a child born out of wedlock to a foreign mother and Japanese father is automatically granted Japanese nationality.
But a child born outside marriage can only obtain nationality if the father acknowledges paternity while the mother is still pregnant.
If the father recognizes the child as his only after the child’s birth, the child is unable to receive citizenship unless the parents get married, the report said.
Children born to Japanese mothers are automatically granted Japanese nationality, no matter what the nationality of the father is or whether the parents are married.
Voting 12-3, the Japanese Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional last June, a provision in the Japanese Nationality Law that states that such children can only become citizens of the mother’s home country.
The ruling applied to 10 Japanese-Filipino children in Japan — one child being deported for overstaying with his mother and nine others with resident visas.
In overturning the High Court’s decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the provision in the law resulted in “discrimination without any rational reason” and thus violated Article 14 of the Japanese Constitution, which stipulates equality under the law.
“The disadvantages caused to the children by this biased treatment cannot be disregarded,” said the ruling that found unlawful the clause requiring that the parents be married.
Meanwhile, Rieko Ito, secretary general of the Citizens’ Network for Japanese-Filipino, said in an interview last year that such children face an “identity crisis.”
Ito said these children can receive welfare benefits as long as they have residential status but will not have the right to vote as adults.
“Without suffrage, we are afraid they will feel alienated and face discrimination in job-hunting activities,” Ito said. – GMANews.TV

rePost : ‘Mujahideens’ behind Lanao attacks – Commander Bravo

These are the kind of mentality that gives credence to the fact that a lot of thinkers believe religion to be an nuisance.  Killing, Plunder, terrorism is not excused by God!
Let’s see here is some rebel commander who denies attacking the lanao villages but calls the attack “following the will of God”.
To the MILF command please just gag this commander he is sabotaging these talks!
To the government , Who the F*ck thought of that MOA which is unconstitutional even to a non lawyer like me? Don’t you have lawyers at the negotiating panel! The lives of 36 people were lost because of your incompetence!
from here thanks to GMA news!

‘Mujahideens’ behind Lanao attacks – Commander Bravo
08/20/2008 | 11:33 AM
(Update) MANILA, Philippines — Amid threats of disciplinary action from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) leadership, a rebel commander on Wednesday disowned last Monday’s deadly attacks in Lanao del Norte province and said “mujahideens” fighting for “Allah” (God) were responsible.
“Wala kaming alam diyan sa atake sa Lanao del Norte. Narito kami sa kampo. (We have nothing to do with those attacks in Lanao del Norte. We were inside our camp),” Abdullah Macapaar said in an interview with Radio Mindanao Network.
Commander Bravo, as Macapaar is better known, is the commander of the MILF’s 102nd Base Command, the unit blamed for simultaneous attacks in the towns of Kolambugan, Maigo and Kauswagan last Monday, resulting in the deaths of 36 people including three soldiers.
While denying that his men were responsible, Bravo justified the role the “mujahideens” played.
“Ang mga mujahideen ang may gawa niyan, ‘yun sundalo ng Allah. Ang sinusunod nila ay ang talagang kautusan ng Panginoon Allah. (It was the mujahideens, God’s warriors, who were responsible. They only follow the will of Almighty God),” he said.
At the same time, Bravo warned that his group would not stand idly by and to answer fire with fire should government forces decide to attack MILF positions.
“Kung dumating ang mga sundalo dito (sa kampo namin), handa kaming makipag-barilan hanggang maubos kami at kung hindi nila kami maubos ay uubusin namin sila. Walang ng usapan hanggat hindi ibinibigay sa amin ang Islamic justice sa Mindanao,” he said.
MILF high officials earlier denounced the attacks on civilian targets in Lanao del Norte and other parts of Mindanao last Monday and said these were not authorized by the group’s central committee.
MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu, who was interviewed by RMN after Bravo, said the attacks are now being investigated by the joint government and MILF ceasefire panels, and that appropriate punishments await whoever was responsible.
Lt. Col. Ernesto Torres Jr., Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesman, expressed disbelief over Bravo’s denials.
“Just this morning, there was condemnation coming from the MILF leadership of what Kato and Bravo did. So it’s not only the AFP and PNP who are saying these two commanders were responsible for the attacks,” he said in a separate interview.
Umbra Kato is the MILF commander whose unit was blamed for attacks on civilian targets in North Cotabato province last week.
On Bravo’s statement that they are ready to fight to the last man, Torres said: “Well it’s up to them. We will pursue them to punish them for their criminal acts.” – GMANews.TV

Reproductive Health Bill Debate on ANC August 20, 2008 8-9 PM

got this from an email forwarded to me by bea:


Friends
There will be a live TV debate between the Pro RH and the Anti RH group on August 20, 2008, 8-9PM over at ANC, the ABS-CBN Cable News Channel in the program Square Off of Ms. Twink Macaraeg.
Defending RH and the RH Bill are:
Cong. Edcel Lagman
Dr. Quasi Romualdez
Dr. Philip Medalla
Vs.
Kit Tatad
Lito Atienza
Liwayway Chato
While we are very confident with our team, there will be no judges.  The winner will be declared based on votes via text messages.  That is why we are appealing to all of you to please send this email to all your friends in the network and make sure that we will all tune in on Wednesday, August 20 at 8-9 PM to cast our votes.  I am sure we can do this and I am sure all of us will be willing to invest a few pesos for text messages just to ensure that our team wins.   Mechanics for voting will be announced during the show but the numbers are 2366 for Globe/Sun and 231 for Smart Subscribers.  .
Tell your friends about the event.
Thank you.

Chi Laigo Vallido
Advocacy Specialist
Forum for Family Planning and Development, Inc.
305 Bahay ng Alumni, Magsaysay Ave.
University of the Philippines,
Diliman, Quezon City
632-426-5484; 0918-9443850

rePost: Illegal immigrants' kids want the 'American Dream'

It is a sad predicament that these people are in, pretty much unrequited love ?? But these are people who have lived so long in the US and probably know of no other way of life that denying them a chance at a normal life is wrong.
from here:

Illegal immigrants’ kids want the ‘American Dream’
PASCKIE PASCUA, Philippine News
08/18/2008 | 12:09 PM
LOS ANGELES — Childish grins intermittently escape from Stephanie Solis’ waif-like face like tiny arrows that cut through the concrete facade of America’s heart. “I don’t feel very Filipino,” she said,” I’m told I am not American, but the only thing that rings true to me is the English language.”
Stephanie arrived in the United States when she was only three years old. At that time, her parents only taught her to speak in English, “as if in preparation for something,” she said.
With a poignant mix of bashful restraint, sharp wit, and nonchalant humor, other “undocumented undergrads” like Stephanie narrated their stories before an entranced Sunday gathering at the Remy’s on Temple Art Gallery in Filipinotown here last Aug 10.
The “book party” aims at raising awareness about the plight of Asian-American undocumented college students, most of whom were brought to the U.S. as young children, and grew up in working class, immigrant enclaves.
The event was also meant to promote the publication, “Underground Undergrads: UCLA Undocumented Immigrant Students Speak Out,” and to help press for the passage of the California Dream Act that would allow undocumented students to compete for financial aid.
More than 300 undocumented UCLA students (part of around 65,000 who graduate from high schools throughout the country each year) face a formidable wall that Californians are currently struggling to scale, that of budget allocation.
These students, however, have already scored a victory that would reverberate for generations to come – they emerged from the cold shadows of immigrant paranoia and boldly spoke out.
“We are a rapidly-growing profoundly intelligent and culturally unique population, we are a goldmine,” says Bhamani, who had to excise extra improvisational skills and creative alibis to be able to outwit her adamant grandfather so she could hop in a bus to Filipinotown that day.
“The US government must recognize us,” she declares.
The California Dream Act, introduced by the state Legislature, would allow undocumented students to compete for financial aid opportunities. Both the California Senate and California Assembly passed similar legislation last year. It was, however, vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
On the national level, the federal Dream Act would provide an opportunity for undocumented students to earn a path to legalization by pursuing their education or serving their country in the military. In spite of bipartisan support, a minority of senators blocked the Dream Act from passage last October.
Since the passage of Assembly Bill 540 in 2001, undocumented students have become eligible to pay in-state tuition if they have completed three years of high school in California and graduated from a California high school.
AB 540 was a significant step forward in increasing access to higher education for California’s undocumented students. Passage of the Dream Act will realize that goal.
“My students at UCLA have been trained as teachers, social workers, scientists, accountants, engineers, and health-care professionals.
Their skills are desperately needed by our society. Business leaders realize that our economy needs more trained professionals, and many have supported both the California Dream Act and the federal Dream Act,” says Kent Wong Kent, who teaches labor studies and Asian American studies at UCLA.
“These underground undergrads are forced to live in the shadows. These students have done everything our society has asked of them: they have worked hard, stayed in school, and are pursuing their dreams. They have not failed us, but we as a society have failed them.”
Tam Tran, whose parents escaped the Vietnam War as boat people and were rescued by the German Navy, has traveled to Washington D.C. to lobby for the federal Dream Act before lawmakers.
“I can’t work legally even though I do have some legal status. Without the Dream Act, I have no prospect of overcoming my immigration status limbo. I’ll forever be a perpetual foreigner in a country I’ve always considered my home,” the recent UCLA graduate said.
Tam, whose passion is in the creation of documentary films, showed her own video production called “Lost and Found” at the event. It tells the story of Stephanie Solis, with the girl herself as the short film’s “actress.”
“My parents never told me that we were undocumented until I was 18 years old. Since then, my immigration status has affected every aspect of my life,” Solis, a junior majoring in English creative writing, tells the viewers.
“My parents are skilled and intelligent, but they float from one low-paying job to another. I share in their struggles with unemployment because like them, I do not have legal identification. Like a child, I cannot work, drive, or prove my age.”
Angelo Mathay, whose mother conceived him out of wedlock flew to the U.S. to “escape” humiliation in the Philippines, a predominantly Catholic-based culture.
“I wanted to come when my father died, but I couldn’t because of my status,” he said.
“As student activists, we are building on the tradition of the civil rights movement and promoting the passage of legislation that will enable millions of undocumented students to not only dream but also start living a life without borders,” Mathay writes in the preface of “Underground Undergrads.” – Philippine News

dani rodrik on doha round

from this article of dani rodrik:

We live under the most liberal trade regime in history not because the WTO enforces it, but because important countries — rich and poor alike — find greater openness to be in their best interest.
The real risks lie elsewhere. On one side is the danger that today’s alarmism will prove self-fulfilling — that trade officials and investors will turn the doomsday scenario into reality by panicking. On the other side is the danger that a completed “development round” will fail to live up to the high expectations that it has spawned, further eroding the legitimacy of global trade rules over the longer run. In the end, it may well be the atmospherics — psychology and expectations — rather than the actual economic results on the ground that will determine the outcomes.
So don’t cry for Doha. It never was a development round, and tomorrow’s world will hardly look any different from yesterday’s.

640000 Filipinos Left The Country The First Half of 2008

DOLE: Jobs available in RP but more Pinoys leaving

MANILA, Philippines – Labor and Employment Secretary Marianito Roque on Friday maintained that jobs are available in the Philippine despite the increase in the number of Filipinos who were deployed outside the country in the first six months of 2008.
His remarks came the same day that it was learned that 640,000 Filipinos left the country from January to June this year.

The data came from the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) which said that the said figure was 33 percent higher compared to 479,725 Pinoys deployed abroad during the same period in 2007.
The said increase is much higher compared to the normal three percent deployment growth every year, according to Roque.
But the increase on the number of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) doesn’t mean that jobs opportunity lack here in the Philippines.
“Overseas employment is only an option…well higher pay and better employment terms and conditions,” explained by Roque.
Roque made the remarks when interviewed by GMA news. The report was aired over 24 Oras.
The possibility of more Filipinos to leave the Philippines in the coming days will surely happen after the labor department announced that are more job opportunity available for professional and skilled workers in European countries like France, Finland, Australia and Canada.
Roque said the Phillippines is about to seal a memorandum of understanding with France to allow the entry of Filipino nurses, IT professionals and engineers.
Finland, meanwhile, is in need of nurses, Roque added.
In Southern Australia, there are 30,000 job vacancies for professional and skilled workers.
Three provinces in Canada are looking for engineers, nurses, welders, trailer drivers and bartenders.
But Roque said one of the requirements in the European countries is for foreign workers is to learn their language.
“Requirements nila yun otherwise hindi kayo magkakaintindihan… Sa Finland willing sila na magpadala ng teachers dito (to teach Pinoy of their language),” Roque said. – Fidel Jimenez, GMANews.TV

My only quirk with this piece is where in Europe is Australia and Canada???  Borrowing Brad Delong’s words.
Why Oh Why Can’t We Have A Better Press Corps.
PS: I think that I would have enjoyed if more If I knew , How many return each year?? or at least between the stated period.