Thursday, July 29, 2010

Painting the Future Bright

Benigno Aquino III's state of the nation address last July 26 pictured a country mired by so much corruption. Many people listened and sat aghast at the unscrupulous practices of various government agencies and the luxurious lifestyles of government officials. It was despicable at the least! Many would have thought our country to be doomed towards a destiny of "the favored few" and I don't blame them. But in despite of this I still believe that we can still rise up to becoming a financially competitive nation.

One of the rule of whitewater rafting is, "when you fall overboard, you need to be an active participant in your own rescue". Pnoy cannot weed out corruption on his own. That's a fact. Don't blame him if after his term corruption is still in place.

In order for our country to come out of the shadows of corruption each and every Filipino should start practicing integrity in all our transactions: take that traffic ticket, fall in line, buy that concert ticket from a certfied ticket seller. The problem is that we are fond of the "areglo" and "lagay" system. The thing is, we let our children bear witness to this and impressionable that they are---they imbibe this practice as part of the normal day-to-day transaction. Now these children are our future lawyers, police officers, bankers, government officials, president of the republic---so what do we expect our future to be?

As the Bible would say, "as you sow, so you shall reap". Let us sow goodness in our daily life and reap a bright future.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Nuffnang and HEAVEN Ice Cream invite you to a special screening of ‘SALT’


Divine ice cream pleasure is HEAVEN Ice Cream.


Give in to the richest, smoothest, and creamiest by NESTLÉ Ice Cream. Revel in the exquisite goodness of its four sophisticated flavors---Belgian Chocolate Bliss, Strawberry Dream, Vanilla Almond Secret and Butter Pecan Obsession. HEAVEN Ice Cream is made with only the finest ingredients and contains no artificial food colors. Available in 800mL(Php 175) & 450mL(Php 115) tubs across supermarkets, groceries, and convenience stores nationwide.

Friday, July 23, 2010

My Take on Climate Change

I planned on attending Al Gore’s presentation on climate change early this July but for reasons I can only attribute to aging---I was not able to.

Mental Note: Plot that in your planner, dummy!

Hmmm…come to think of it this incident only goes to show that time is indeed a RARE commodity. I’ve always been saying that time just zips on by. With all the things that we’ve been doing we don’t notice that the day is already at an end. Sometimes what we thought was Monday is actually Friday.

The issue on climate change and its impact on our future has been a continuing advocacy for the longest time. Movies were made to depict the worse case scenario of a climate gone haywire and scare us into espousing the call to protect the world from a man-induced destruction.

“An Inconvenient Truth” showed us the science behind global warming. “The Day After Tomorrow” made us feel the potential conclusion to our calloused stand with regard to this matter.

Blame that on The Industrial Revolution! This event paved man’s journey towards progress but it also triggered the global percolation that is climate change.

I believe in my heart that all is not yet lost and we can still make the future bright and cozy for our children but we need to start NOW. Alternative sources of energy have been abound: solar, wind, geothermal, ethanol. Right now, these alternative sources are part of the minority in terms of usage. Fossil fuel is utilized to generate 86% or our energy source.

The biggest stumbling block would be the oil producing countries. Of course, the change will need to be gradual but we need to decide NOW whether we want to prolong our existence or do we embrace our inevitable rendezvous with extinction. I’m sure these oil producing countries have children of their own to think about so I guess it would just be a matter of prioritizing LIFE over MONEY. Sigh! Easier said than done, right…

“Either find a way or make one.”---Hannibal

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Socrates' Triple Filter

Gossip is a disease.

It is contagious and can spread destructively.

Good people that we are, the aim for truth is of prime consideration. So how do we know that what we are telling is actually the TRUTH?

Simply follow Socrates' Triple Filter.

#1 Certainty - Are you sure that what you are telling is the absolute TRUTH?
#2 Goodness - Is the information something GOOD?
#3 Usefulness - Will what you will tell be of any use to the one you are going to tell it to?

If the answer to all the questions is a NO, here's the conclusion: IF YOU ARE NOT SURE ABOUT THE INFORMATION AND NEITHER IS IT GOOD NOR USEFUL---WHY TELL IT IN THE FIRST PLACE?

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Sam Pinto: FHM July 2010 Cover Girl

Simply---WOW!

Free-throw Shooting


Free-throw shooting should be the easiest way to score in a basketball game. First, you don't have anyone guarding you numbnuts! No one is between you and the hoop. A straight line of sight! And secondly, it's only 15 feet away! Duhh!

However, despite the seemingly easy task, free throw shooting is a bane to many basketball greats. Wilt Chamberlaine is the all-time leader in the missed free-throw category. Mr. Chamberlain, as you basketball fanatics should know, is the only player in the National Basketball League to ever score 100 points in a game! But in all his prolific scoring, “The Stilt” can only manage to convert 46% of the free-throws in his career!

A credible free-throw shooter should at least hit 70% of his attempts. Below that and you’ll likely be the goat during tight games. Hack-a-Shaq was coined due to Shaquille O’Neil’s dismal free-throw shooting. For the 2009-2010 season, Shaq shot 49%. Dwight “Superman” Howard’s kryptonite is free-throw shooting and can only convert 59.2% of his attempts..

Other NBA greats with free-throw problems are: Bill Walton (67.3%), Nate Thurmond (62.1%), Wes Unseld (60.8%), and Bill Russel (60.3%). See any commonality between them? They are all BIG men. So why is this so?

Big men usually post up to get the ball. With their proximity to the basket it’s either they go for the dunk, jump hook, or shoots an 8-foot jumper. Field goal percentage-wise these guys are up there! Now, how does this answer their free-throw woes? Well, it’s simply not on their range and it’s likely that they are not practicing this either. Shag has a free-throw coach but it did not seem to improve his statistics.

European and Asian big men are an exception. Sabonis, Divac, Kirilenko, Nowitski, and Yao Ming---are excellent free-throw shooters. I guess they see the game more clearly than their American counterparts.