Archive - Commentary Year all all 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 Items per page 18 12 18 24 30 Commentary The crime (and punishment) of Imelda Marcos Maler, Trinidad, Rayby, Palmy, Vibur, Aguamina, Avertina, Azio, Verzo, Wintrop-Charis, Scolari – the Swiss bank accounts holder Jane Ryan had a knack for inventing swanky names to hide her identity. By Antonio J. Montalvan II | Mar 26, 2023 | 0-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Padilla insults politicians in push for Cha-cha Even if he doesn't want to be classified as a politician, Padilla should stop wasting precious money and time to push for Cha-cha… The Constitution is not the problem. By Tita C. Valderama | Mar 20, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Marcos Lies “Marcos Lies” is the most sprawling volume to ever come out that sets the facts straight under an era of severe disinformation the Marcoses have willfully curated to embellish their return to power. By Antonio J. Montalvan II | Mar 17, 2023 | 6-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Marcos government unwittingly prosecutes Duterte More than four years after it has been uttered, the statement from the ever-fluctuating Harry Roque only confirms the frail government position on the ICC case of Rodrigo Duterte. Shooting from the hips as always, Roque said then that the Duterte complaint before the ICC has been disproven by the Caloocan city regional trial court’s verdict convicting three police killers for the murder of 17-year old Kian delos Santos. By Antonio J. Montalvan II | Mar 14, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Paglaban ng Palasyo sa disinformation Step 1: Simulan sa sariling bakuran. Pakinggan ang komentaryo ni Christian Esguerra ngayong linggo. By Christian Esguerra | Mar 13, 2023 | 1-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Bad memories of the 1971 ConCon It was the period that anteceded martial law. At that time, the Marcos lust for eternal power was beginning to unravel. And it unraveled even if the dictator had to pull the puppet strings of the 1971 Constitutional Convention for all to see, without shame or remorse. By Antonio Montalvan II | Mar 10, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Edsa beyond Edsa It is time to expand the Manila-centric narrative of the People Power Revolution beyond the confines of Metro Manila. The narrative we most often hear – that it took place only at the stretch of Edsa – is clearly deficient. It is time to vet that if we are to have a narrative that has the scope of national history. By Antonio J. Montalvan II | Mar 6, 2023 | 7-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Unable or unwilling? While they were quick to defend Duterte et al. from being prosecuted, they were too slow in taking up the cudgels for the victims who are mostly from poor families. That does not give a picture of a well-functioning and independent judicial system. By Tita C. Valderama | Mar 6, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Are allies incriminating Duterte in ICC probe? By blocking the ICC probe through their legislative influence, aren't they putting the judicial system and Duterte's innocence in serious doubt? Therefore, the ICC probe becomes necessary. By Tita C. Valderama | Feb 27, 2023 | 5-minute read KEEP READING Commentary EDSA sa panahon ni Bongbong: Awkward Mas maganda kung may kasamang hustisya sa reconciliation. Pakinggan ang komentaryo ni Christian Esguerra ngayong linggo. By Christian Esguerra | Feb 26, 2023 | 1-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Police abuse in UP prof’s arrest over Kasambahay Law Defending the rights of those who have less in life does not justify breaching the rights of others, such as in the case of the UP professor and her former house helper. By Tita C. Valderama | Feb 20, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary China -outlaws of the sea On October 13, 1995, state parties meeting in Vienna, Austria agreed on what is known as the Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons. Since it was a treaty and which by United Nations procedure meant that each country would deposit its individual country consent at the UN headquarters in New York, the new protocol entered into force on July 30, 1998. As of 2018, 109 countries have deposited their consent. By Antonio J. Montalvan III | Feb 18, 2023 | 3-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Arroyo pasimuno sa pagdepensa kay Duterte Kailangan ba ni Rodrigo Duterte ang ganitong depensa? Akala ko ba handa niyang harapin ang ICC? By Christian Esguerra | Feb 17, 2023 | 1-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Will the MDT be operationalized in Ayungin Shoal clash? The assurance of U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III on Feb. 2 that the Mutual Defense Treaty is applicable on the West Philippine Sea will be tested in Ayungin Shoal as Chinese ships become more determined to block any more attempts by the Philippine Navy to repair the dilapidated BRP Sierra Madre, which is holding out as a block to China’s expansionism in the South China Sea. By Ellen Tordesillas | Feb 15, 2023 | 7-minute read KEEP READING Commentary PLDT’s billions and its customers’ miseries When I read news stories about PLDT's earnings running into billions of pesos year after year, I can't avoid the feeling of being robbed with consent.Can't the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) crack the whip on telcos to raise the level of competition for better service? By Tita C. Valderama | Feb 13, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary How much did the Marcoses exactly steal? Thirty-seven years have passed and that question obstinately nags at our national psyche since the start of the recovery of the Marcos ill-gotten wealth in 1986. By Antonio J. Montalván II | Feb 10, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Insanity, wisdom behind salt iodization law We sometimes joke that a person who has difficulty comprehending or lacks common sense is iodine-deficient. By Tita C. Valderama | Feb 6, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Commentary Teaching sovereignty 101 to Bato Suddenly the battle cry of the pro-Duterte apologists in government is sovereignty. No one cried sovereignty when the Senate of the Philippines ratified the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court on August 23, 2011. In fact, Senate Resolution 546 recommended the approval “without amendment.” By Antonio J. Montalvan II | Feb 3, 2023 | 4-minute read KEEP READING Posts pagination Newer posts 1 … 11 12 13 14 15 … 51 Older posts