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It doesn’t take a coup to break a Constitution. Sometimes, it just wears down—slowly, silently—until one day the gears no ...
The country’s volatile political situation has been compounded by the recent ruling of the Supreme Court that the impeachment ...
Our country being the second largest archipelagic nation in the world with its 7,641 islands (next to Indonesia’s 17,508), ...
Despite the clarification from the Department of Finance (DOF), the Capital Market Efficiency and Protection Act (CMEPA) has ...
We can only blame ourselves for the floods and piles of trash that are currently flooding Metro Manila and the areas around it. The Metro Manila area sits in a river delta, where precipitation from ...
Every year, it’s the same script. Rain pours. Streets flood. Social media floods, too—photos of submerged homes, drenched schoolchildren wading through murky waters, and barangay roads that ...
In the late 1980s, two American researchers conducted what would become one of the most cited experiments in education. A ...
With three years behind him and three more to go, President Marcos is at the critical midpoint of his presidency. Thanks to ...
In recent days, there has been a stir among the pharmaceutical and health-care sectors over the Department of Trade and Industry’s (DTI) announcement regarding the sale of over-the-counter (OTC) ...
There is always a time for everything, including when to make jokes. But in the middle of a storm is not one of those times.
Working students belong to a different breed of animal. They waste no time. They study even if they are already tired from work. They use holidays to catch up with their deliverables and readings.
I grew up in Hagonoy, Bulacan, a town where the tides of Manila Bay spill over during the monsoon season, where knee-deep waters are as routine as sunrise, and children learn to wade before they can ...
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