* Politics is at the heart of the problem. There are notable exceptions but, in the main, Philippine politicians are driven by their own agendas. Just one small example. We are proud that there were only two deaths during the May 1 rebellion. But there were close to 100 deaths related to the elections! No developed democracy kills its opponents just to gain a position of power. If the killers (those who masterminded the assassinations) go to jail, the culture starts to change for the good. And too many of them are elected into power for no other reason but they are popular.
* Martial law, seven coup detat attempts, the recent rebellion are just the more extreme examples of wanting personal power regardless of whats good for the nation. Running for office when you are extremely untrained to handle it (as Mr. Estrada highlighted) is another example.
* The millions of pesos spent and cheating that were repeated in the recent elections are actions of people desperate for power, not actions of people genuinely wishing to serve. No society is perfect in this regard, but the Philippines is at the bottom end of the scale.
* No business would put an inexperienced, poorly educated person in charge of a company. Yet, too many cities and regions, which are at least as complicated as a corporation to run, are run by people without adequate experience or training. And the low government pay ensures most of their support staff is mediocre capability.
* Politicians, if they seriously care about their country, need to start considering what is best for the country, not what is best for them. And Filipinos have to vote more wisely and demand honesty and competence from their leaders. Two facts that are confirmed: first, by EDSA 2 (the result of not voting wisely), and second, by the recent rebellion (power-hungry politicians uncaring about what impact their actions have on the country)
* Education is probably the basic solution. In three ways: first, if everyone is educated, then those elected will be part of the educated lot; second, an educated populace will be more aware of the issues and vote more wisely; third, it provides social mobility as President Diosdado Macapagal so well demonstrated, rising from being a farmer to president of the country.
* On top of it all, there is need to clean up the political system by charging and convicting and jailing, those guilty of illegal activities.
China, 9.7 percent
Korea, 7.8 percent
Singapore, 7.7 percent
Malaysia, 6.8 percent
Thailand, 6.5 percent
Indonesia, 5.4 percent
Philippines, 3.1 percent
It is noteworthy that some of these countries have hit nine percent averages for up to nine years. Even during the Asian financial crisis, most did better than the Philippines 25-year average.
God has ways to inspire you when you feel down,
to encourage you when you feel the quitting,
and guide you when things become confusing
He will never leave you alone!
a morning hello will make us smile,
but a morning prayer will make our day complete
Have a blessed day!