You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Wednesday, July 9, 2025

When prayers seem unjust

 

When prayers seem unjust

Inez Ponce-De Leon

Irecently served as lector for a weekday Mass at Our Lady of Pentecost. As on any non-Sunday Mass, I read the Prayers of the Faithful from a book distributed to different parishes.

One of the prayers was rather unsettling. I cannot quote it directly, but it asked for people in government not to take bribes, not to be greedy, and to be content with their salaries.

I appreciated the prayer’s insistence on integrity, but it also seemed to box greed into simply not being content with what one receives in compensation; and, more disturbingly, its converse: that one must be content with whatever one is paid, otherwise one would automatically be greedy.

But what happens when the salary that one receives is neither commensurate with one’s skills nor justly addresses one’s needs? When our nurses, lower-ranked police officers, teachers, and workers are asking to be paid more, are they necessarily being greedy, or are their protests asking us to scrutinize systems of injustice that are being perpetuated by institutions where the hardworking many receive little while the overseeing few wallow in cash?

What if our plea for people to be content with their meager pay is also encouraging a system that devalues human labor?

Such a prayer was surprising, especially for a church that has a long history of speaking up for the poor, the marginalized, the desperate, and the deprived.

In the late 1800s, Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical “Rerum Novarum” rallied against the perils of an unchecked Industrial Revolution. The pope called for the protection of workers, who had become isolated and helpless in the face of greedy employers. Employers, the pope said, had to ease unforgiving work hours, assign humane tasks, and tend to both the bodies and souls of their employees.

Over a century later, Pope Francis’ “Laudato Si” tied a critique of society with a holistic approach to ecology. The Pope decried the culture of consumerism that makes it easy for people to “get caught up in a whirlwind of needless buying and spending,” further feeding the belief that people “are free as long as they have the supposed freedom to consume.”

The only ones who are free in this situation, however, are the few who wield power. It is the acceptance of such power that feeds into a culture that treats consumption and accumulation as a norm, even as such a culture exacerbates people’s selfishness and empty hearts.

Governments can only do so much when the culture is corrupt, the Pope warned. Politics must operate in the long term to first address and challenge the culture; if not, then the evils of society (human trafficking, organized crime, the drug trade, violence) will continue.

A careful reading of both encyclicals shows that the critique is not simply of individual mindsets and sins. The Church speaks, through the Holy Father, of sins that are spread by institutions that have long been allowed to fester with people who abuse both power and privilege, of institutions that have created a culture of self-centeredness.

Without addressing the corruption of social institutions and the role of culture, we reduce the issue of greed to a mindset, which puts us in danger of forgetting that we, too, must fix, question, and hold accountable the institutions that feed into a culture that prizes visible riches over that which is hidden, timeless, priceless, and righteous.

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In reducing greed to a mere mindset, we also absolve ourselves of the citizen’s obligation to demand that the government exercise oversight of important institutions, such as those that govern health, agriculture, and education. We ignore the possibility that badly created bureaucracies and the classification of difficult tasks as “menial” all contribute to rewarding the greedy while depriving the desperate.

In praying for people to be content with what they are given, we might also be in danger of praying that they remain silent in the face of injustice. When so narrow in scope, the prayer can put us in danger of telling hungry and desperate nurses, workers, teachers, police officers, and families to change their mindset and accept being abused and exploited for their labor—to simply accept others’ sins as their norm.

In praying for people to simply be content, we are also contradicting the once potent voice of the Church, where its leaders spoke on behalf of the oppressed, led the voices in the streets that defended people’s rights, and demanded change in broken social institutions even as the church was judged, laughed at, ignored, or neglected.

Why has the Church become so silent these last few years? Why have so few priests spoken up, with so little support from their leaders?

Perhaps the prayer could simply have been: Let us pray for our government employees, that they act righteously, and for our government, that it acts justly.

And perhaps, too, for our Church: that it will have the courage to speak up, in a loud, united voice, from its leaders to its shepherds, when it sees injustice that must be set right.

CAN’T BE LATE

 

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CAN’T BE LATE   Students from Latbang village in Kayapa, Nueva Vizcaya, use what’s left of a hanging bridge that was recently damaged just to get to Barangay Pinayag where their high school is located. Here they are crossing the river on Sunday in order to make it in time for class on Monday. —GLORY MADAWAT-SMITH/FACEBOOK

10 Easy Health Tips for a Happier, Healthier You

 

 · 

1. Stay Hydrated – Make it a habit to drink enough water daily for your health and energy boost.

2. Prioritize Sleep – Aim for 7–9 hours of quality sleep each night to feel your best.

3. Eat Nutrient-Dense Foods – Choose whole foods, lean proteins, healthy fats, and fiber-rich options.

4. Move Your Body Daily – Incorporate regular exercise to enhance your mood, energy, and lifespan.

5. Manage Stress Effectively– Use mindfulness, meditation, or deep breathing techniques to keep balanced.

6.Limit Processed Foods & Sugar – Cut back on junk food to improve your gut health and overall energy.

7. Get Sunlight & Fresh Air – Spend some time outdoors to boost your mood and increase your vitamin D.

8. Maintain Healthy Relationships– Surround yourself with uplifting and supportive individuals.

9. Practice Gratitude & Positivity – Shift your mindset to improve your mental and emotional well-being.

10. Listen to Your Body – Take time to rest, nourish yourself properly, and make self-care a priority.

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HEAT, WILDFIRES, HARVEST WOES

 


Germany has been experiencing record-high temperatures and has seen the outbreak of unusually extensive wildfires.

A forest fire in the Saalfelder Höhe municipality in Thuringia was described as the largest wildfire in the state in the last three decades. The Gohrischheide area on the border between Saxony and Brandenburg, a former military training area where the ground is full of discarded ammunition, has seen a record 2,100 hectares destroyed.

Farmers in Brandenburg are forced to carry out an emergency harvest, to prevent the fire from spreading to the dry rye or grain. The early harvest means financial losses because it can probably only be used as animal feed.

Climate change is making summers warmer and winters milder, creating ideal conditions for pests. 

Fliegen wird teurer – auch mit Billigairlines


Ticketpreise haben im Vergleich zum Vorjahr deutlich angezogen

Nur die auf Osteuropa spezialisierte Wizz Air ist günstiger geworden

Nur die auf Osteuropa spezialisierte Wizz Air ist günstiger geworden

Foto: Bernadett Szabo/REUTERS

Audioplayer überspringen

Seit der Corona-Krise steigen die Ticketpreise. Wer diesen Sommer von einem deutschen Flughafen abhebt, muss richtig tief in die Tasche greifen.

Selbst Billigflieger sind teurer

Das Deutsche Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR) hat die Preise für One-Way-Tickets ohne Gepäck analysiert. Ergebnis: Auch bei den Billigfliegern wie Ryanair, Easyjet oder Wizz Air sind die Tickets teils deutlich teurer als noch vor einem Jahr. Gründe sind laut DLR ein knappes Flugangebot sowie hohe Steuern und Gebühren.

Die Preise für einfache Flüge ohne Gepäck lagen im Schnitt zwischen 67 Euro (Wizz Air) und 130 Euro (Eurowings). Zum Vergleich: Im Vorjahr reichte die Spanne von 66 bis 110 Euro.

Ryanair verliert Preis-Krone

Früher war Ryanair der billigste Anbieter. Jetzt zahlen Kunden dort im Schnitt 80 Euro – 14 Euro mehr als im Vorjahr. Auch Eurowings dreht an der Preisschraube: Statt 110 kostet der Flug nun im Schnitt 130 Euro. Easyjet bleibt mit 86 Euro im Mittelfeld. Nur Wizz Air wird günstiger – von 94 runter auf 67 Euro.

Wer spät bucht, zahlt drauf

Das DLR untersuchte Verbindungen mit vier verschiedenen Buchungsfristen – vom spontanen Last-Minute-Trip bis zur Planung drei Monate im Voraus. Klarer Trend: Kurzfristige Buchungen sind am teuersten. Tickets kosteten dann zwischen 119 (Wizz Air) und 169 Euro (Eurowings).

Wer früh bucht, spart: Mit drei Monaten Vorlauf sinken die Preise auf 46 Euro bei Ryanair und 90 Euro bei Eurowings.

Fast 500 Euro für einen Flug

Den absoluten Preis-Hammer fanden die DLR-Forscher bei Eurowings: Ein Ticket von Düsseldorf nach Stockholm, gebucht eine Woche vor Abflug, kostete satte 499,99 Euro.