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, November 19, 2025

Creation needs protection, love, justice and peace

 


Creation needs protection, love, justice and peace

By Fr. Shay Cullen, Founder since 1974

The Philippines has been battered by devastating storms in recent weeks. We endure around 20 powerful typhoons a year, and occasionally experience earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Recently, in Liloan, Cebu, several families were caught in floods rising as high as their rooftops. They had to climb mango trees to escape. Entire homes were flattened, and all properties were lost. They have nothing, not even extra clothes. That is how destructive typhoons can be.

Filipinos remain resilient as climate change tightens its grip on the weather, affecting their lives. They have the determination and strength to recover and continue surviving day by day. Inexplicably, many take these all with grim humor, even joking about their plight. But it is no joke for the poor when their humble houses are obliterated and survive, despite having nothing left for their families. Those involved in the massive corruption in flood control projects that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. first exposed in July have a lot to answer for. Meanwhile, world leaders who have gathered at the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Brazil have to continue serious efforts in bringing global warming under control.

Yet, we know that the climate is changing for the worse, and stronger, more intense weather is affecting many people all over the world. Like in previous editions, COP30 reminds us of the historic Paris Agreement signed 10 years ago. This pact binds countries to limit global temperatures to “well below” 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. However, in parts of the globe, temperatures have exceeded 1.5 C, and scientists say it is likely to rise higher. This could lead to catastrophic consequences, and our climate could reach a tipping point of no return.

The good news is that in the European Union, renewable energy (RE) produced by wind turbines and solar plants, as well as geothermal, hydropower and biomass facilities, has just overtaken fossil fuel as the main source of electricity. This is the ongoing struggle at COP30: the efforts to mitigate the negative effects of climate change are being thwarted by the fossil fuel industry, and some powerful nations, like the United States under President Donald Trump — who is not at the conference — want fossil fuel as their power source. However, many US states are going with renewables and working to hold global temperatures under 1.5 C.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres has said the “sun is rising on a clean energy age,” as 90 percent of RE projects are cheaper than fossil fuels. He has called on every major tech company to switch all of their data centers to run on 100-percent renewables by 2030.

Guterres has also said fossil fuels threaten the planet. Renewable sources of energy are the only way to go, and they’re much cheaper and safer. “The greatest threat to energy security today is fossil fuels. They leave economies and people at the mercy of price shocks, supply disruptions and geopolitical turmoil,” he said. “There are no price spikes for sunlight. No embargoes on wind. Renewable energy sources are cost-effective, too,” he said. Solar power is about 41 percent cheaper than the cheapest fossil fuel alternative, and onshore wind generation is less than half the price of fossil fuels, according to a report from the International Renewable Energy Agency.

The late pope Francis was outspoken about the dangers of climate change, as well as solutions to it. He said it was a matter of deep faith to do good and protect Creation and oppose the evil forces destroying it, as these are rooted in our “deepest convictions about love, justice and peace.”

When he was still alive, he called for a global “ecological conversion” and a radical change in lifestyles, production and consumption to “save the planet.” His core message, detailed primarily in his 2015 encyclical “Laudato si’” and 2023 apostolic exhortation “Laudate Deum,” is that the environmental crisis is a moral and ethical issue inextricably linked to social injustice and “throwaway culture.” He urged the “progressive replacement without delay” of highly polluting fossil fuels (coal, oil and gas) with RE sources, of which the Philippines and the developing world have great capacity.

This is the heart of the Christian commitment: to care for Creation and challenge the powerful economic and political forces blocking renewables and increasing global warming. What we can do is challenge the multinational power and mining corporations involved in extracting coal, oil and gas and persuade them, for the sake of humanity and Creation, to desist. This is what Francis seemed to have called for. The massive amount of carbon and methane gases in the atmosphere are causing the planet to overheat. Stopping the burning of fossil fuels is the only way to halt global warming.

In the Philippines, power corporations have to phase out coal and oil-powered generation plants sooner to meet our international obligations and save the country from more natural and manmade disasters. The government must cancel all new applications for coal plants and improve tax benefits for solar and wind farms. More home-based solar panels are essential, but they are very expensive, despite low import taxes. Corporations supplying and installing panels are out to maximize profit.

It seems Francis’ words and actions have had some impact on COP30. Greater attention will be given to the so-called Global Ethical Stocktake. It will focus on the moral, ethical and cultural impacts of climate change. This will be focused especially on the poor, the vulnerable and disadvantaged groups to help women, children and Indigenous people. A large group of Indigenous people broke into the conference center to present their demands. Brazil is starting an international fund to pay developing nations to preserve their rainforests.

Sadly, in the Philippines, there is only 3 percent, or 861,000 hectares, of primary rainforest left and an estimated 5 million ha of secondary growth forest. The overall remaining forest is about 24 percent of its total land area, government statistics show. However, Global Forest Watch estimates a higher total of natural forest area of around 13 million ha, or 45 percent of the land area.

Denuded forests can recover and regenerate, if given the chance. In the Philippines, many brave environmentalists are being persecuted for protecting them. They need our support and protection.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Is it safe to travel to the Philippines during typhoon season?

 

 · 

I am in the Philippines currently and in Manila, Luzon, over the last 48hours typhoon Uwan has passed through Luzon. First the storms were forecast and television news carried regular updates. First it started with rain, it rained from around Midnight on Friday, and I was expecting Saturday to be wet, but I woke Saturday morning to a dry sunny morning in Manila. By late afternoon the rain started hitting hard so you hunkered down in your hotel room with snacks and spend the evening watching movies on TV.

Sunday was wet all day with strong rain throughout the day. I just stayed inside my room and watched tv. Throughout the evening alert messages were sent to the mobile phones advising of extreme rain, extreme tides, and extreme winds.

The messages were sent in Tagalog, but were easy to translate online.

Fortunately I was in Pasig area and staying in a hotel on the 10th floor, so I didn’t expect to be bothered by the water levels.

The night was windy, you heard the odd crashing thud, and what seemed a constant stream of emergency vehicles sirens.

On Monday morning I woke to blue skies and everything in Pasig was back to normal.

So is it safe to visit the Philippines during typhoon season. The simple answer is yes, If you are a tourist prepare to follow any alert instructions or evacuation orders. If you are in Manila be prepared to spend a couple of days in your hotel. If you are outside Manila in the provinces be prepared to follow any evacuation orders. Watch the news and be prepared to travel out of the area to Manila where the hotels are particularly safe. The hotel I was staying in was full on Saturday and Sunday with locals who live in coastal areas, who moved in advance of the typhoons arrival.

Do Not think you are indestructible and unless you are storm chaser, avoid putting yourself in danger.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

Davao City Council OKs P15.8-B budget for 2026


Published Nov 14, 2025 05:09 pm
DAVAO CITY – The 21st Davao City Council approved the P15.8-billion budget for 2026 on Thursday.
Council members unanimously passed the spending plan after reviewing a 17-page committee report detailing fund sources and expenditure breakdowns, the City Information Office (CIO) said in a news release Friday.
The 2026 budget is 10.8 percent or P1.54 billion higher than this year's P14.3-billion allocation.
The CIO said the bulk of the budget, P13.65 billion (86.16 percent), will go to the general fund. Another P2.02 billion (12.80 percent) is earmarked for the development fund, and P165.8 million (1.04 percent) will fund economic enterprises.
The general fund covers personnel services, operational expenses, and capital outlays for most city government offices.
The development fund will finance infrastructure projects, while the economic enterprises fund will support public markets, slaughterhouses, Santa Ana Port, public cemeteries, Davao City Recreation Center, and Magsaysay Park.
CIO attributed the budget increase to a 14.86 percent rise in the national tax allotment (NTA), adding PP1.31 billion and a projected 4.26 percent increase in local revenues, contributing P230.77 million.
“This upward trend in NTA share is attributed to the continued recovery from the adverse impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic,” the CIO said. (PNA)

„Scharfer Wetterwechsel“ kommt:

 

Bis zu 20 Zentimeter Neuschnee in Bayern – Experte mit deutlicher Prognose

München – „Wärmeblase“, „Rekordwärme“ und „Schnee-Klatsche“ – in den letzten Tagen überschlugen sich in der Wetterberichterstattung die Ereignisse. Eine Schlagzeile jagte gefühlt die nächste. Sehr zum Leidwesen des ein oder anderen Meteorologen. Fest steht dennoch: Nach frühlingshaften Temperaturen kommt es in Bayern in den nächsten Tagen zu einem rapiden Wetterwechsel, bei dem der Winter Einzug erhält. Doch wie viel Schnee kommt auf den Freistaat zu? Und wann und wo ist damit zu rechnen? Ein Experte des Deutschen Wetterdienstes (DWD) erklärt.   

Autos fahren durch den Schnee
In Bayern werden bis zu 20 Zentimeter Neuschnee erwartet (Symbolbild). © IMAGO/Rene Traut

November-Milde hält bis zum Wochenende an – „scharfer Wetterwechsel“ in Bayern am Montag

Am Freitag (14. November) ist von der kalten Jahreszeit im Freistaat noch nichts zu sehen. Mit Höchstwerten von bis zu 22 Grad rund um Kempten und Hohenpeißenberg kommt der Tag eher wie ein Frühlingstag im Mai daher. Dazu gibt es viel Sonnenschein. „Ruhiges Herbstwetter“, schreibt der DWD in seiner Vorhersage. An den restlichen beiden Wochenendtagen wird es dagegen bereits wechselhafter. Neben Sonne kann es dann auch Regenschauer geben. Mit Höchstwerten von 14 bis 18 Grad geht es dabei weiter noch vergleichsweise mild zu.   

Zum Start der neuen Woche ist es mit dem schönen Wetter dann vorbei. „In Bayern steht der scharfe Wetterwechsel am Montag im Tagesverlauf an“, erklärt Meteorologe Jens Kühne vom DWD in München gegenüber unserer Redaktion. Eine Kaltfront zieht von Westen her auf. „Diese wird Franken und die Oberpfalz bereits in den Morgenstunden überqueren und dort Regen sowie einen Temperaturrückgang auf zwei bis vier Grad bringen. In Hochlagen der Mittelgebirge fallen sehr wahrscheinlich so drei bis fünf cm Neuschnee, also ganz normales Wetter für Mitte November“, so der Experte. Danach gibt es dort zeitweise wieder Sonnenschein.

Südbayern trifft es hart: Temperatursturz binnen weniger Stunden, bis zu 20 Zentimeter Schnee

Deutlich härter fällt der Wetterwechsel laut Kühne im Süden Bayerns aus. Am Montagmorgen (17. November) werden stellenweise bis zu zehn Grad erwartet. „Am Mittag zieht hier dann die Kaltfront zu den Alpen und die Temperatur geht ebenso auf zwei bis vier Grad zurück, das heißt in München wird es mäßig kalt bei Regenwetter“, erklärt der Meteorologe.    

Im Alpenvorland und in Lagen oberhalb von etwa 700 Metern beginnt es am Nachmittag zu schneien. „Das heißt, es ist südlich von München Montagnachmittag und Montagabend aufgrund eines Wintereinbruchs mit fünf cm Neuschnee und mit schwierigen Straßenverhältnissen zu rechnen“, so Kühne. Auf den Bergen oberhalb von 1200 Metern werden am Dienstagmorgen (18. November) zwischen zehn und 20 Zentimeter Neuschnee erwartet. Am Großen Arber soll es bis zu fünf Zentimeter Neuschnee geben.

Wintereinbruch in Bayern oder kurzes Intermezzo? – Experte mit klarer Meinung

Einen Wintereinbruch bis in tiefe Lagen wird es in Bayern nicht geben, stellt der Meteorologe deutlich klar. An Orten, wo die meisten Menschen im Freistaat leben, wird es schlicht regnen und nasskalt. Hoffnungen auf einen länger anhaltenden Wintereinbruch müssen Freunde der kalten Jahreszeit zunächst einmal begraben. Denn bereits am Dienstag soll der Spuk wieder vorbei sein. Dann zieht die Kaltfront laut Kühne nach Osttirol und Slowenien ab. In Bayern lockert es auf.    Allerdings bleibt die Gefahr auf den Straßen bestehen. Durch Glätte ist mit gefrierender Nässe zu rechnen. Dazu tritt leichter Frost bei Temperaturen von bis zu minus drei Grad auf. Die Höchstwerte am Dienstag liegen bei einem Mix aus etwas Sonne und lockerer Quellbewölkung bei drei bis sechs Grad.

Der Rest der Woche bleibt wechselhaft und nasskalt. In den Nächten und am Morgen ist mit Glätte zu rechnen. Die Temperaturen erreichen zwischen drei und acht Grad – durchaus normale Werte für den November. Der große Wintereinbruch samt Schneechaos bleibt also vorerst aus. (Quelle: Wettervorhersage DWD vom 14. November, eigene Anfrage beim DWD in München) (jr)

Between deadlines and daydreams


 

I used to think that love and career existed on opposite ends of a seesaw—when one goes up, the other has to go down. It is what I often heard growing up: “Focus on your studies first.” “You can’t build a future if you’re distracted.”


Adults uttered them with the conviction of people who had been burned before. So, I followed the rule. I buried myself in schoolwork, chased grades, collected certificates, and convinced myself that love could wait—that it was something to be earned after success.


But as I grew older, I realized that life does not unfold as neatly as we plan it. Some of the most important things happen when we least expect them—not in the spaces we reserve for them, but in the moments we do not see coming.


I met someone who did not arrive as a distraction but as a quiet constant—the kind of person who did not ask me to choose between ambition and affection, but taught me that love could exist alongside the grind.


We were both in the middle of building our own worlds. There were deadlines, exams, and the endless pressure to “make it.” Yet in between the rush, we found time for simple things—coffee before class, late-night conversations about where we wanted to be five years from now, or how tired we both were but still hopeful. Love was not a grand event. It was the calm we returned to after a long day of trying to prove ourselves.


Adulthood has a way of testing that calm. Somewhere between job applications and responsibilities, I began to understand what growing up truly means—not just paying bills or showing up to work on time, but carrying both dreams and doubts in the same pocket. It means learning that success does not come all at once. It arrives slowly, sometimes disguised as exhaustion, sometimes as quiet progress no one else notices.


There were nights when I questioned everything. Was I doing enough? Was I falling behind? I would scroll through social media and see people my age already “there”— building careers, traveling, achieving things that made me wonder if I had missed a turn somewhere. It is so easy to compare, especially when everyone seems to be moving faster. But then I would remember something my partner once said: “You are not late. You are just on your own timeline.”


That sentence grounded me. It reminded me that life is not a race—it is a collection of moments, and each person has their own rhythm. Some people bloom early; some take time to grow roots. The important thing is to keep growing.


I have learned that love and career are not enemies. They are, in many ways, reflections of the same pursuit—the desire to build something lasting, to pour ourselves into something that gives meaning to our days. Love teaches patience, empathy, and resilience—the very qualities that make us better in our work. A career teaches discipline, purpose, and perseverance—the very traits that keep love grounded when life gets tough.


There are days when I still feel lost. When the future seems like an endless question mark, and the path ahead blurs with uncertainty. But I have stopped seeing uncertainty as failure. It is simply the space where growth happens. To grow up is to realize that not everything has to be figured out; sometimes, it is enough to keep trying, to keep showing up, and to keep believing that we will get there eventually.


Love helps with that. It is not the fairytale kind—not always fireworks or grand gestures—but the kind that holds your hand through the quiet, tired parts of life. It is knowing that even when things do not go as planned, there is someone who believes in your “someday.”


As I look ahead, I no longer see love and career as a balancing act but as two parts of the same story. The deadlines and daydreams can coexist. The person I love does not pull me away from my goals; she reminds me why those goals matter. And when life gets heavy, when work feels endless and the world feels too loud, it is love—steady, patient, and real—that brings me back to center.


Maybe that is what growing up really is: learning to live in the middle—between ambition and affection, between where we are and where we hope to be. It is understanding that fulfillment does not come from choosing one over the other, but from letting both shape us.


Someday, when I look back, I hope I remember these years not as the time I had it all figured out, but as the time I learned how to keep going. To build a life not just of achievements, but of meaning. To chase success without losing softness. To love without losing myself.


Between deadlines and daydreams, I am still learning—and that is enough for now.

Friday, November 14, 2025

‘Tsismis’ and intelligence gathering


Ambeth R. Ocampo

Over the years, I have come across surveillance records in libraries and archives. These cover the late 19th century to contemporary lists of drug users, addicts, and pushers used to justify extrajudicial killings in former President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs. These records can be sensational, but they have to be read with caution. They contain raw intelligence information that was not subjected to critical analysis or validation. These records can make or break reputations if made public.

Many years ago, I sat beside the director of the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency, the office that supplies the President and the National Security Council with intelligence data that informs policy decisions. I asked him how long their records remain current, or if they have a cutoff date to declassify them. With the magic number usually set at 50 years, or half a century, I asked if old intelligence records could be transferred to the National Archives or the National Historical Commission for research and reference. The director said he would look into it, but he never got back to me. Where are these records, and what do they contain about ordinary persons like you and me? I’ve always been curious to see my dossier, if it exists, just to know what kind of information the government has collected on me.

Many years ago, in the archives of the Spanish Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores (Foreign Affairs Ministry), I found the dispatches of the Spanish consul in Hong Kong, which reported on the Filipinos’ interest in the colony. Rizal and his family were part of the archive, Josephine Bracken, too, and that is where I first found clippings of Hong Kong newspapers that heralded her not just as the widow of Rizal but also portrayed her as a modern-day Joan of Arc who fought alongside the Katipuneros in the first phase of the Philippine Revolution. That Spanish consul, Jose de Navarro, is best described in modern terms as “marites,” who sent all sorts of material to Madrid for the information of the ministry.

In the Philippines, we had the special branch of the guardia civil known as the “Cuerpo de Vigilancia” (surveillance body), which gathered all sorts of news from all parts of the Philippines and sent these to Manila to be collated and analyzed. Will write more about this archive in a future column. While going over my notes on Marcelo H. del Pilar recently, I found the report of Lt. Cmdr. Jose de Senespleda from May 1895 that lays a wide net not just for people associated with Plaridel but also anyone considered suspicious, Masonic, heretical, or anti-Spanish. At the top of the list was:

“Don Manuel Crisostomo, approximately 40 years old … former Gobernadorcillo and present municipal captain. Has little affection for our institutions and is particularly anti-monastic; has a cousin or nephew called Graciano Crisostomo who is a cleric, and being a coadjutant in Iban (Batangas), was sued for leaving the seminary where he had spent two years.”

A lot of material is reported, but it is made clear that: “I have no proof to present as to their being anti-Spanish or not, but I am convinced they are, and that they are anti-friar.” Then as now, such a report is dangerous because rumors can be mistaken for fact, and old scores can be settled by inventing stories about your enemies or people you simply do not like.

Don Vicente Gatmaytan, 40 years old, married, and a former captain in Malolos, was watched because he was the “compadre” of Luis del Pilar, who happens to be a cousin of Marcelo del Pilar. He was an in-law of Manuel Crisostomo, reported above. The intelligence report notes that:

“Don Vicente is shy and reserved, but he reveals his anti-friar sentiments in all his conversations, and I also believe him to be one of the filibusterers. There should also be past information about him.”

What I find interesting is the detail in the descriptions, which can be read more like an ethnography of Malolos rather than an intelligence report, because it details family, church, and social relations. It also notes different occupations, educational attainment, etc. Anastacio de Leon, for example, was 42 years old, married and a lieutenant in charge of livestock:

SEE ALSO

“A man with little education, with a bad disposition and great influence in the municipality, a fact that I find strange but that I attribute to his having ties with respectable people … [he] is by nature cunning and cynical. He was head sacristan and choir boy of the [Malolos] church some years ago and was dismissed because of his behavior, and since then, he has been one of the satellites of Marcelo and Luis del Pilar in their plans against the friars. I also think he is anti-Spanish like the rest.”

Other citizens in Malolos are referenced in the report that prompted the governor general in Manila to issue an order of banishment. Manuel Crisostomo was ordered out of Malolos and exiled to Jolo, while Gatmaytan was exiled to Iligan. Others to Davao, Sarangani, and even Puerto Princesa. So much suffering caused by “tsismis” in the guise of intelligence.

—————-

Comments are welcome at ambeth.ocampo@inquirer.net

LOOK: 'The Devil Wears Prada 2' unveils its first teaser

 By Robert Requintina

Published Nov 13, 2025 10:51 pm
'The Devil Wears Prada 2' unveiled its anticipated first teaser on Wednesday.
Set to the tune of Madonna’s “Vogue,” the teaser gives nothing away in terms of the sequel’s plot, on which 20th Century Studios is still staying mum. It features Anne Hathaway‘s Andy Sachs walking into an elevator after Meryl Streep‘s Miranda Priestly, who tells her, “Took you long enough.”
Following up a beloved 2006 fashion-world dramedy starring Streep, Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci, all of whom are returning, the sequel is expected to examine high-fashion mag editor-in-chief Priestly’s perspective as she faces the decline of the print industry, according to a report by deadline.com.

Based on Lauren Weisberger’s 2003 novel of the same name, the original film followed Hathaway’s Andy, a journalism graduate, in her experiences after moving to New York City and starting her demanding job as Priestly’s junior assistant.
"The Devil Wears Prada 2" is scheduled for release in theaters on May 1, 2026.

Warum es eine gute Idee ist, täglich Bananen zu essen

 Warum es eine gute Idee ist, täglich Bananen zu essen

Schon wieder Sodbrennen? Versuchen Sie es mit einer Banane.

Schon wieder Sodbrennen? Versuchen Sie es mit einer Banane.

Foto: Getty Images

1. Bananen bringen die Verdauung in Schwung

2. Bananen helfen gegen Sodbrennen

Auch der Magen profitiert von der gelben Frucht. Der hohe Stärkegehalt bindet überschüssige Säure – so lassen sich Beschwerden wie Sodbrennen lindern, ganz ohne Medikamente.

Zudem liefert die Banane Kalium, ein Mineralstoff, der ebenfalls säureregulierend wirkt.

3. Bananen machen glücklich

Sie liefern Tryptophan – eine Aminosäure, die der Körper braucht, um das Glückshormon Serotonin zu bilden. Zwar enthalten Bananen selbst kein Serotonin, aber dessen Vorstufe. Das reicht, um die Stimmung zu heben.

4. Bananen geben schnell Energie

Bananen sind der ideale Snack für Sportler: Sie machen satt, liefern schnelle Energie – und enthalten Dopamin, das wach und fokussiert macht. Dabei bleibt der Blutzuckerspiegel stabil.

Die Mischung aus Fruchtzucker und Ballaststoffen sorgt dafür, dass die Energie lange anhält. Heißhungerattacken? Keine Chance!

5. Bananen helfen beim Abnehmen

Trotz rund 92 Kilokalorien kann die Banane beim Abnehmen unterstützen. Der Grund: Ballaststoffe halten lange satt, der Blutzucker bleibt konstant.

Eine Studie an übergewichtigen Diabetikern hat gezeigt: Wer Bananenstärke zu sich nahm, konnte erfolgreicher abnehmen. Besonders wirksam: grüne Bananen – sie enthalten mehr resistente Stärke und sättigen noch länger.

Und laut einer südkoreanischen Studie könnten Bananen sogar vor Alzheimer schützen: Sie enthalten – wie auch Äpfel und Orangen – eine Substanz, die oxidativen Stress im Gehirn senkt.