BREAKING

Monday, September 8, 2025

A dramatic reimagining of the SM City East Ortigas East Wing:


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The East is Reborn: A New Hub of Art, Food, and Play

In the heart of Pasig City, a transformation has taken place. The new East Wing at SM City East Ortigas is more than just a mall expansion; it’s a cultural revolution, a vibrant sanctuary for every kind of "squad". This isn't just a place to shop—it’s a destination built for making memories, where passions collide and every visit tells a new story.






A Feast for the Senses: A Global Culinary Tour

Step into the East Wing and prepare your taste buds for a world tour. The food court has been elevated to an international culinary passport, offering flavors from every corner of the globe without ever leaving Pasig. From the iconic Neapolitan pizzas of Italy at Rossopomodoro to the authentic Okinawan steaks from Japan's Yappari Steak, the options are as diverse as they are delicious.



But the journey doesn't stop there. Indulge in authentic Chinese hot pot at Jiangnan Hot Pot and Grill, or savor Taiwan's famous Dan Zai noodles at Du Hsiao Yueh. The sweet tooth is not forgotten, with South Korean pastries from Paris Baguette and Japanese soufflĂ© pancakes from Hoshino Coffee. Even local favorites are reimagined, with BEBANG's Halo-Halo offering fifteen different takes on the Filipino classic. It’s a true foodie's paradise.



An Urban Canvas: Where Art Comes Alive

The East Wing has been reborn as an open art gallery. Gone are the blank walls, replaced by massive, colorful murals created by Manila-based illustrator and creative director Kiefsix (Kiefer Indiongco). His bold, basketball-inspired designs turn the space into an artistic adventure. Visitors can get their perfect selfie against these vibrant backdrops, with the fun, sun-inspired character EYO—also designed by Kiefsix—as a playful, selfie-ready guide. This fusion of art and commerce makes the East Wing a truly unique hangout spot.



The Ultimate Playground: Chill, Play, and Compete

For those who believe life is a game, the East Wing is your ultimate arena. The fusion of dining and play is perfected at the Foodcourt + Game Park, the perfect "sweet spot" for any group of friends. After a meal of Thai plates, ramen bowls, or Korean cravings, squads can head to the Game Park to unwind with a friendly match of billiards or darts. It’s the perfect formula for "barkada" bonding, where a shared love for food and a healthy dose of competition create an unforgettable experience.



SM City East Ortigas’s East Wing has masterfully woven together global cuisine, urban art, and spirited entertainment into one seamless, stylish space. It's more than just a mall; it's a dynamic hub that adapts to your vibe, whether you’re there for a coffee run, a mural selfie, a hot pot night, or a gaming showdown. This is the new East, and it’s ready for you to make your mark.

Blame the Poor? Or Blame the System? The Real Root of Our Broken Democracy


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“Filipinos don’t know how to pick their leader.”


It was a statement that cut through the political noise like a blade, spoken by Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong. His words sparked outrage, earning a rebuke from Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David, who defended the poor majority of voters, insisting that the real culprit was not ignorance but lack of proper information.


Yet the question remains: Was Magalong targeting the poor? Not exactly. His critique was broader—pointing to a national weakness, an emotional tendency in choosing leaders regardless of class or wealth.


Still, the reaction exposed the deepest fault line in our democracy: who is to blame for the choices we make as a nation?





A Dangerous Blame Game

Cardinal David’s defense may have struck a sympathetic chord, but was it enough? To reduce the issue into a matter of protecting dignity while ignoring the hard truth may serve the rhetoric of the pulpit, but it misses the bigger picture.


Mayor Magalong, for all the bluntness of his words, was right: Filipinos must stop being swayed by the grand promises of political charlatans, by celebrities who have no understanding of governance, and by dynasties whose track records reek of corruption.


But blaming the voters—poor or otherwise—solves nothing. It creates division instead of solutions. What we truly need is not finger-pointing but transformation.


The Root of the Rot: A Broken System

The problem does not start and end with the people. It begins with the very foundation of our Republic: the Constitution itself.


How can we expect competent leadership when the only requirement to run for public office is the ability to read and write? That bar is not just low—it is practically non-existent. The Commission on Elections (COMELEC), for its part, opens the door to every self-proclaimed savior, including those with well-documented histories of theft, abuse, and betrayal of public trust.


Our electoral system is a sieve so wide that it welcomes not just the qualified but also the opportunists, the entertainers, the dynasty heirs, and the shameless plunderers.


And yet, we wonder why we are trapped in this cycle.


The Urgent Need for Voter Education

The lack of information is not accidental—it is systemic. For decades, governments have failed to invest in comprehensive voter education programs that teach citizens not just how to shade ballots, but why their choices matter.


Imagine a nation where every citizen understands how the budget works, how checks and balances are supposed to function, and how local and national laws directly affect their lives. Imagine an electorate that votes not for a handshake, a campaign jingle, or a celebrity smile, but for platforms grounded in truth, competence, and integrity.


That vision is not impossible—but it requires deliberate, mandated programs in schools, communities, and workplaces. Without this, democracy remains fragile, easily hijacked by the cunning and corrupt.


Systemic Change, Not Band-Aid Solutions

But education alone cannot fix a flawed structure. Our party system is a joke—politicians change allegiances as easily as they change barongs. Personalities matter more than policies, slogans more than substance.


If we are serious about ending this budol-budol politics, we need structural change. A shift to a parliamentary system, or at least a more decentralized government, could reduce the stranglehold of personalistic politics. Charter Change, though controversial, might be the only path to correcting systemic errors that our current framework refuses to address.


Yet here lies the paradox: the very leaders who benefit from this broken system are the ones tasked to change it.


A Call Beyond Blame

So, can we blame the poor, who comprise the majority of voters? No. Poverty is not a sin, and ignorance is not a choice—it is a condition created by a state that thrives on keeping its citizens uninformed.


But neither should we sanctify voters as blameless. Every Filipino has a responsibility to demand better, to resist the empty theatrics of politicians, and to vote with conscience rather than comfort.


The greater blame lies in the architecture of our democracy—a system designed loosely enough to allow wolves in sheep’s clothing to rule over us, election after election.


If we are to break free, then we must rise above the blame game. We need to fight for reforms that will create a truly discerning electorate, a stronger electoral system, and a government built not on personalities but on principles.


Because at the end of the day, democracy is not about who we blame—it is about whether we, as a people, are finally ready to change.

Sunday, September 7, 2025

Beyond Carbon: Why a Just Transition is Humanity’s Defining Test


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The world is at a crossroads. As the climate clock ticks relentlessly forward, we are no longer asking if we must transition away from fossil fuels, but how. And that “how” will determine not only the survival of ecosystems but the dignity, rights, and futures of billions of people.


This is the essence of what experts and negotiators call a just transition. It is not simply about swapping coal plants for solar farms, or moving workers from one gigawatt to the next. It is far more profound—a societal recalibration that touches every aspect of human existence: livelihoods, health, politics, trade, finance, and the very balance of justice.


From Dubai to Belém: A Work Program for Justice

A work program on just transition was first launched in Dubai and is now gaining traction in negotiations leading up to COP30 in Belém, Brazil. Its mission is clear: to move beyond vague promises and create mechanisms that ensure climate action distributes benefits broadly rather than concentrating them in the hands of a wealthy elite or politically powerful few.


Governments are being pressed to agree on shared principles:


Equitable burden-sharing between and within nations.


Decent work and workers’ rights as economies shift.


Debt-free climate finance that avoids trapping poorer nations.


Resilient food systems and agroecology to ensure both food security and sovereignty.


Adaptive capacity and health protections so communities can thrive despite rising climate shocks.


This framework seeks to make climate policy not just about reducing emissions, but about securing rights, redistributing resources, and repairing broken systems of finance and trade.


The Struggle Over Indicators and Finance

Yet the noble principles of a just transition quickly collide with the harsh realities of geopolitics. Even something as technical as indicators—metrics to measure adaptation and resilience—becomes a bargaining chip. Wealthy nations use them as leverage to secure concessions elsewhere, while vulnerable countries struggle to keep justice at the center of negotiations.


Finance remains the thorniest issue. Article 2.1(c) of the Paris Agreement calls for all financial flows worldwide to align with low-carbon, climate-resilient development. In practice, this could fundamentally reshape how developing nations fund infrastructure, energy, and growth. But the promise of trillions in climate finance has too often been an illusion, with banks quietly exiting alliances and governments deferring net-zero pledges when profits are at stake.


Meanwhile, the Loss and Damage Fund, long demanded by the Global South, is inching toward operationalization—offering hope, but also raising fears it could be underfunded or overburdened with bureaucracy.


Trade, Justice, and the Carbon Border Debate

The fight extends beyond climate talks to the global trading system. The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)—set to take effect in 2026—will tax imports based on their carbon footprint. To Europe, it is a way to level the playing field. To many in the Global South, it is a threat: an economic weapon that could cripple export-driven industries, from steel to textiles, while micro and small enterprises struggle to survive under new carbon accounting rules.


This tug-of-war between trade fairness and climate ambition reveals the deeper truth: a just transition cannot happen if the costs are externalized to weaker nations. Justice must mean protecting workers and communities everywhere, not just the consumers of the wealthy North.


Health, Resilience, and the Human Core of Climate Action

One of the most overlooked aspects of just transition is health. A society cannot be resilient if its people are sick, overworked, and denied access to clean air, safe food, and dignified living conditions. Climate change magnifies every health burden—spreading disease, worsening air pollution, and destroying the foundations of well-being.


Thus, the right to a healthy environment is not an optional add-on to climate policy; it is a prerequisite for survival. In the coming years, adaptation frameworks will need to integrate health indicators as central measures of resilience.


The Politics of Narrative: A COP for Everyone—or No One

As COP30 approaches, the Brazilian presidency has released a flurry of letters framing the summit as many things to many audiences. Some emphasize people power and grassroots resistance. Others highlight private sector engagement and business opportunities. The goal is clear: make everyone believe this COP is “for them.”


But history shows us that when everyone is promised something, too often the result is diluted action that benefits the powerful while leaving vulnerable communities behind.


The Existential Question: What Does Balance Mean?

At its core, the debate around just transition is about balance—between environmental protection and development, between economic growth and social justice, between global ambition and local survival.


But as experts warn, this cannot be a linear equation. A “green development” that still enriches only a select few is not justice. A “resilient economy” that abandons its workers is not resilience. And climate finance that traps nations in debt is not solidarity.


True balance requires systemic transformation: a reimagining of trade, finance, food systems, and governance itself. Anything less will fail to meet the massive scale of the climate challenge.


The Cover Decision and the Illusion of Progress

At the end of each COP, if negotiations falter, there is always the fallback: the cover decision—a broad, symbolic document meant to reassure the world that progress is being made. Yet these are rarely binding, often filled with vague commitments and carefully chosen words like “phase down” instead of “phase out.”


As one negotiator once admitted, the cover decision is often “a document that saves face for the presidency.”


Why This Matters for All of Us

For journalists, activists, policymakers, and ordinary citizens alike, the message is unmistakable: climate action cannot succeed without justice. Every decision made in negotiating halls—from finance flows to trade rules—ripples outward to affect jobs, food prices, healthcare, and the right to live with dignity.


The just transition is not a distant abstraction. It is the defining struggle of our age—a test of whether humanity can redesign its systems not only to survive the climate crisis, but to thrive beyond it.


Because in the end, this is not just about parts per million of carbon. It is about who we are, what we value, and whether the future belongs to all—or to only a few.


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