"How great life would be just to eat and sleep."
These are translated words from a t-shirt I saw in the Philippines. The sad thing is, a lot of people here think that. It's a perversion of the old-fashioned view that work is low and those with means would really want a life of leisure. I say perversion because 'leisure' encompasses so much more than eating and sleeping. The shirt promotes laziness as the ideal, which is bad. It's meant to be a joke but here in the Philippines the work ethic is already weak.
Thoughts, interesting facts, hopes, observations, quotes, etc. May you find something here that stimulates you and resonates with you. Email me at roshan.bharwaney@gmail.com
10.29.2009
10.25.2009
4 people are born every minute in the Philippines, a Catholic country where 54% of pregnancies are unintended. Are 4 jobs being created every minute? No way! This is extending the poverty and stunting socioeconomic growth. The government should make contraceptives more widely available, provide sex education, and make abortion legal - there are an estimated half million of them happening every year anyway.
10.21.2009
Science/Tech jobs need to pay better for the amount of education & work they require. The fact they don't is why in the last 10 years, too many people have been interested in entering finance & consulting after college. Before that the hot trend was to study computer science and/or join (or start) a dot com. People take the path of least resistance, and, in the words of Jerry Maguire, paths that "SHOW ME THE MONEY"
10.18.2009
10.15.2009
10.12.2009
What does money buy? One of the things is venereal disease.
The tenfold growth in the number of syphilis cases over the past decade in China has been driven by the country's rapid economic growth.
Sexually transmitted diseases re-emerged in China in the 1980s after being virtually eradicated for two decades.
Prostitution, worker migration from the countryside to cities and poor health care systems means cases are now increasing 30 percent a year.
- From the World Health Organization's monthly bulletin
The tenfold growth in the number of syphilis cases over the past decade in China has been driven by the country's rapid economic growth.
Sexually transmitted diseases re-emerged in China in the 1980s after being virtually eradicated for two decades.
Prostitution, worker migration from the countryside to cities and poor health care systems means cases are now increasing 30 percent a year.
- From the World Health Organization's monthly bulletin
10.08.2009
10.01.2009
What's a spice? A spice may be the bud (clove), bark (cinnamon), rhizome (ginger), berry (peppercorn), aromatic seed (cumin), or flower stigma (saffron) of a plant.
What's an herb? An herb is generally defined as the leaf of a plant (rosemary, oregano, thyme, coriander) in cooking, but any other part of the plant, often drie, can be a spice.
One teaspoon of cinnamon has the disease fighting antioxidant power of a full cup of pomegranate juice or half cup of blueberries.
Red peppers, even milder sweet red peppers, boost your metabolism so you burn a few more calories.
Oregano has the highest antioxidant levels of the dried herbs because of its rosmarinic acid content. Used heavily in Mediterranean cuisines, oregano has antimicrobial powers that can help fight bacterial growth and may help inhibit the bacteria associated with ulcers.
- Carolyn O'Neil, registered dietitian
What's an herb? An herb is generally defined as the leaf of a plant (rosemary, oregano, thyme, coriander) in cooking, but any other part of the plant, often drie, can be a spice.
One teaspoon of cinnamon has the disease fighting antioxidant power of a full cup of pomegranate juice or half cup of blueberries.
Red peppers, even milder sweet red peppers, boost your metabolism so you burn a few more calories.
Oregano has the highest antioxidant levels of the dried herbs because of its rosmarinic acid content. Used heavily in Mediterranean cuisines, oregano has antimicrobial powers that can help fight bacterial growth and may help inhibit the bacteria associated with ulcers.
- Carolyn O'Neil, registered dietitian