Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Immigration

Hot button issue these days is immigration. There are 11 million illegal aliens in the US today. I had to go through the arduous process of converting my J-1, "exchange student visa" into a working visa by doctoring in a medically-underserved community. The commitment was for 2 years but we never moved. Turned out to be a big blessing to work and live in a rural community in the Oklahoma panhandle.

I could have become a US citizen many years ago if it were not for the "I hereby declare, on oath, that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereignty of whom or which I have heretofore been a subject or citizen..." I found the words too difficult to utter. It would have allowed me to pass through customs and immigration in all other countries without much hassle; it would have saved me the trouble of acquiring visas and it would have qualified me to run for public office in the US. Oh but to entirely renounce and abjure the Philippines, for all its troubles and defects, poverty and pollution, diseases and corruption...

Then again, being foreign-born disqualified me from becoming the President of the US.

Sunday, March 26, 2006

V for Vendetta

Just finished watching another great movie from the Wachowsky brothers. Only thing is it broke my cover. "The Count Of Monte Cristo" has long since been one of my favorite novels. My father long ago read to me from "The Plot Outlines of 100 Famous Novels" and that story stuck to me and I read the entire book while in high school and re-read it while I was in Brooklyn. I always treated every day as just another day of preparation for my eventual return. Truth is, I have no relatives active in Philippine politics today. I have about 70 first cousins and nobody is even on a school board. I certainly do not belong to the political elite. Unlike the Count, I am not returning with a personal agenda of vendetta.

Every day has been a day of preparation for my return. I do not want to offer my country an unfinished product. I have tried to learn lessons from most of my experiences as an exile. The Count was away for 20 years. I have been away for 17. This blog cannot even start to contain my ideas about everything that keeps the Philippines in the miserable situation that it is in. I look forward to the day when I can discuss everyday problems with fellow citizens and arrive upon common-sense/scientific solutions to each of these problems.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Schooling

Question most frequently posed regarding this quixotic return is where my daughters will attend school. Currently, the older two go to a Christian school and the 5 year-old loves to go to the Montessori Academy that my wife and I helped build seven years ago. For now, we are thinking of enrolling them in the same school that my wife attended in Bacolod (a city south of Manila with a population of roughly half a million).

We feel that what was good for us then must be good for our children. We feel that we received an education that adequately prepared us to take advantage of life's many educational opportunities. We felt that we were taught to learn.

The Philippine educational system needs to re-focus on its goals to make it more relevant to the needs of society. Unlike the US where a large part of the budget is devoted to defense, health and social security, the lion's share in the Philippine budget is rightly allocated to paying for the legions of schoolteachers and the maintenance of humble school facilities.

To become competitive, education must focus on the two C's (instead of the three R's)--Communication and Computation. We need to pare away non-essential subjects and determine early on each student's aptitude and establish magnet schools for the basic sciences and arts and music. The importance of physical education needs to be recognized and not overly emphasized. We need to keep students in school from 7:15 am through 4:30 pm. Make them stay in a place with other children their age and let dedicated and caring teachers guide them to read, listen, sing, exchange ideas and compute. This has been the time-tested formula behind the successful systems in China, Japan and Korea.

Learning is a lifelong habit.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Healthcare

Some other thoughts from the strenuous snow shoveling on the first day of spring. I needed to visit my chiropractor-friend yesterday because my back was becoming stiffer and more tender as the afternoon passed. I also started to sneeze and feel achy all over. I went to bed very early last night.

Healthcare in the Philippines is primitive compared to the US model. Hardly any money is budgeted towards the prevention and treatment of diseases but instead of seeing this as an insurmountable problem we need to look closer and determine the amount of resources that we are actually saving. There is a tremendous waste of money in the American model. Philippine healthcare must focus on vaccinations, clean water, proliferation of vegetable gardens and tilapia farms, suppression of cigarette smoking through education and increased taxation, educational campaigns towards the diminution of soda and sucrose-rich-juice-concentrate consumption and the benefits of aerobic exercise. The drug formularies must concentrate on inexpensive penicillin preparations and erythromycin, diuretics and beta blockers, aspirin, ibuprofen, insulin, glipizide, generic Prilosec (omeprazole), anti-tuberculosis regimens and deworming agents. At this point, the government has no business engaging in pharmaceutical research and development. Nor can the government afford to treat citizens with advanced cancers, renal failure and coronary artery disease.

The Philippines is considered a poor nation because a majority of its people live on less than $2 a day. But absent a trillion-dollar-a-year healthcare system, we do not need a whole lot to live decent, productive and edifying lives.