Tuesday, September 02, 2025

The Pleasures of Life

The Pleasures of Life


We here identify the two kinds of pleasures in life.

The different levels of good feelings we experience.

Of jubilation and elation raising us to certain highs. 


The first are those we perceive with our tactile senses.

The visual wonders of Nature our avid eyes feast on.

Rich smell an expensive perfume teases our noses with.

 

The coterie of  exotic tastes that food leave in our palates.

Soft touches and intimate caresses our bodies delight in.

The lilting music that fills the ears with joy and memories.


And the second kind are those that are  felt more otherly.

Pleasurable ebullience lodged in deeper recesses of being.

Like the exaltation of having sacrificed for our fellowmen.

 

Of utter delights for having built things seen and appreciated.

Of other human creation like books, letters and poems written.

Or those craftily generated from the fertile minds of man.


Of reverential delights for having sown altruistic acts.

Of many more partaking of such nature and selflessness.

And thus ennoble our very nature and godly purposes.


While the first ones are fleeting, temporal and temporary.

The second kind is more lasting and more cerebral.

And transcends the temporal nature of our humanity. .

Monday, July 28, 2025

US and Philippines Trade Agreement

Detractors of DJT continue to be baffled by his common-sense approaches to issues big and small, and high and low.  And in the process many are in a tizzy fit, their minds unable to grasp the "hidden" rationale.


Take the latest trade agreement between the US and the small country of the Philippines.  On the surface this is what is known.  It was agreed that US imports to the Philippines will have zero tariff, while Philippine imports to the US will instead be levied 19 percent, rather than the current 20 percent. 


Without thinking of the bigger picture or really, not knowing more, immediately the knives were unsheathed and outright condemnation ran rampant.


Here is my take, not necessarily from insider information but simply from making deductive reasoning culled from past statements and prior trade agreements with the rest of the world.


This is how the mind of Trump works, working on the premise that he had seen how the US had been taken advantage by its partners.  He thus wants to promote fair trade, with no country taking advantage of his country.  In his mind and with great confidence in American exceptionalism, he would rather that there be free and fair trade.  This one can deduce from past nuanced statements he has made about trade.  And if anything, Trump is so predictable when it comes to things he had articulated in the past.  He keeps his promises.


On a very positive note and maybe not known to many, the Philippines has been enjoying the positive end of a trade imbalance with the US, in 2024 alone that figure was $4.9 billion dollars.  Stated differently, the Philippines has been exporting and importing from the US but really exporting a lot more than importing to the tune of $4.9 billion.


Using tariff as effective negotiating tool, the US wants the Philippine to help mitigate this imbalance in the best and most fair way.  The Philippines will allow more US imports or encourage US exporters by easing regulations.  So the Philippines had responded generously by dropping altogether all tariff levies of US imports.  In response, the US has reduced the rate on its end by a mere 1 percent, which admittedly appears quite a pittance.  But that is not the end of the matter.


So what is to happen?


Once this trade imbalance is ameliorated, so that both countries will be importing and exporting almost the same, then further negotiations can be made to rectify the situation, and to make for a more reciprocal and fairer trade agreement.  One can be assured that neither country will interpose serious objections to the new agreement.


No country in the world could easily dismiss the biggest economy of the world, the US, as a destination of its exports. Almost 70 percent of US GDP is devoted to consumer expenditures.  Foreign investors with their abundant capital resources  continue to flock to the US which they consider very fertile and safe grounds.


Lastly, one has to consider other items discussed, like aid and assistance packages that may have been agreed upon as hinted in the interviews, given the very volatile situation in that part of the China Sea.  Add also the detail that tariff is not levied on all but rather on selective items.



Friday, June 27, 2025

Donald J. Trump

DONALD J. TRUMP


It almost humors one to realize that the world of punditry still has not figured out this rather unconventional leader, who prides himself as loaded with common sense.


He is supposedly pushing his country toward a brutal dictatorship, but he talks and behaves like a common populist would, as far as we can discern.


He is supposedly an inveterate warmonger and self-aggrandizing but has negotiated instead peace treaties which before were supposedly hard to untangle.


They said he is clearly one simple-minded oaf and narcissist, but look at what he has done to his country, in terms of successes in  governance and economics.  Things only imagined by his predecessors.


Etc.  And more.


What is not arguable is that the results of his actions continue to stultify his earnest detractors though publicly dismissive of them. 


And for others willful and dead-gone dishonest, he has sent to silent uncontrollable rage and jealousy.  TDS, they say.


We his believers do sometimes flash our rare smiles of approbation when we think these things.

Amused by the befuddled  reactions of our supposedly self-anointed betters who remain confused and agog.


For things so simple yet so hard? So common sense?



Friday, April 18, 2025

Uncharitable Talk

 No doubt modern man is not now only predisposed to making rash judgment against his neighbor, but this he does with relative ease and speed.

For this we need only take a peek at social media for confirmation.

Premise. This much we know.

We tend to believe everything we hear of our neighbor.  And then we make judgment, typically with prejudice, regardless how little we know of our targets.

In reality to judge others with prejudice is no easy task.  Only wise men or God could do that justly.

This difficulty is heightened by many factors we are saddled with. Our temperament.   Tastes.  Moods. Ambitions, and yes, even our own self-righteousness.

Thus best to leave judgments to others more capable and more invested.  

One may even know better than the one being criticized.  

But remember one can never discern the hidden motives of the doer.

The feeling of superiority when one harshly criticizes another is one very strong drive. And this feeling gets heightened even more when one willfully exaggerates the faults of others.

To Think About.

That our passion could work either for good or for something else.

The passion we exhibit for the people we love and hold dear is good. 

Limited in superlative expression only by our innate reservations.

But the passion we show for the people we abhor or dislike is something else.

Circumspection is the abiding rule, cognizant of that phrase in the Our Father that pleads for God's compassion, 

" forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us..."

He who loves much, cannot be said to also hate much. 

Monday, April 14, 2025

The Lesson In Life

 As we approach life's impending end,

A question left to be posed and answered.

What is Jesus Christ to me?


If at that point we still have not realized this.

That the only saving grace in love is to suffer.

Then we sorely missed our fated end.


That life is nothing more than a yearning to give.

And to toil and to endure trials and tribulations.

Then we misunderstood the lessons strewn our way.


That life is not one serene and cozy love fest. 

Where  peace and harmony reign supreme.

 That we still cling to wordily delights that fade


Life is one messy hodgepodge of petty stuff.

That will blind one from our eternal destiny.

Be careful then lest we lose our way.