BY THE NUMBERS
The atomic bombing of Hiroshima THURSDAY marked the 70th anniversary of the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. A second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki three days later. The US has said the bombings hastened Japan’s surrender and eliminated the need for a US invasion that would have cost many more lives. The toll on the two Japanese cities was heavy. Here’s a look, by the numbers, at that day 70 years ago: n 350,000: Population of Hiroshima before the bombing, of which 40,000 were military personnel. n 300,000: Total death toll to date, including those who have died from radiation-related cancers. n 31,500: Height in feet (9,600 meters) from which the B-29 Enola Gay dropped the “Little Boy” bomb. n 2,000: Height in feet (600 meters) at which the bomb exploded 43 seconds after it was dropped. n 3,000-4,000: The estimated temperature in Celsius at ground zero seconds after the detonation. n 1,600: Radius in feet (500 meters) from ground zero in which the entire population died that day. n 90: Percent of Hiroshima that was destroyed. n 3-6: Weeks after the bombing during which most of the victims with severe radiation symptoms died. n 10 million: Folded paper (origami) cranes that decorate the Children’s Peace Monument in Hiroshima each year. AP
THIS August 6, 1945, file photo shows the destruction from the explosion of an atomic bomb in Hiroshima, Japan. AP
Looking back at Hiroshima Seventy yyears ago o, the U. U S. dropped the first atomic bombs on Japan. J
Hiroshima, Aug. 6, 1945
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Uranium bomb dubbed “Little Boy” detonates 1,890 ft. (576 m) above the city at 8:15 a.m.
Tokyo T okyo Hiroshima
Explosion by gun-barrel method 1. Pressure sensors activate detonation device . . .
Hiroshima
Little Boy
2. . . . triggering a 3. Explosion conventional drives explosion uranium wedge into uranium target
Nagasaki
4. Chain reaction sets off nuclear blast
Nagasaki, Aug. 9, 1945 Plutonium bomb dubbed “Fat Man” detonates 1,800 ft. (549 m) above the city at 11:02 a.m.
Explosion by implosion 1. Numerous detonators located on conventional explosives fire simultaneously . . . 2. . . . creating powerful inward pressure on plutonium core, squeezing it, increasing Fat Man its density 3. Chain reaction sets off nuclear blast
Nagasaki
Core Uranium 235
Destruction Hiroshima
Source: Hiroshima Museum, NASA, U.S. Air Force Museum
Core Plutonium 239
Nagasaki
BusinessMirror Source: Hiroshima Museum, NASA, U.S. Air Force Museum
THREETIME ROTARY CLUBB OF MANILA M JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
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P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
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FOREIGN DEBT PAYMENTS, DECLINE IN VALUE OF GOLD HOLDINGS PULL DOWN FOREX RESERVES
July GIR dropped to $80.43B T
HE country’s front-line foreigncurrency reserves dipped in July to $80.43 billion, as the gold holdings of the central bank declined in value and the national government had to pay down maturing foreign obligations.
INSIDE
THE PORN PROBLEM D
Let us be free
EAR Lord, help us to be free people so that we are able to think what we do, being able to assess what is good and what is bad. These are the types of conduct that lead to development: it means always opting to be good. Let us be free for goodness. And in things we do, are not afraid to go against the tide even it is not easy. Always being free to choose goodness is demanding but it will make us into people with a backbone who can face life with patience and unending service for others. Amen. MAGNIFICAT AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Friday the country’s gross international reserves (GIR) stood $200 million lower than in June, also as a result of so-called revaluation adjustments on the foreign-currency holdings of one of Asia’s vibrant economies. Just a month earlier, the country’s foreign-currency reserves aggregated $80.64 billion. It may yet prove useful again later this year, or soon after when the monetary authorities
A SON’S IDENTITY CRISIS OPENS A FEW NEW DOORS »D3
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The porn problem
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OR nearly four years, David’s days typically started and ended the same way. Around 6 am, he’d wake up, grab his phone or tablet from next to his bed and begin watching porn. Leaving little time to get ready and have breakfast, he’d head off to work around 8 am, where he would keep himself heavily caffeinated, anxiously waiting to leave. After work, he would head home, “literally running,” and sometimes skip dinner to spend the rest of the evening fully engrossed in the clicks and hits of Internet pornography. “I’d go until 11:30, 12, sometimes 1 [am], until my eyes literally hurt,” said David, 33, from Chicago’s Albany Park neighborhood. If it was a weekend, he’d spend it entirely at home watching porn. “I had no life. It was as if the whole world didn’t exist. That’s how I lived for many years,” said David, who didn’t want his real name used for this article. (While RedEye’s typical standard is to include a source’s first and last name, we are allowing some anonymity in stories dealing with addiction because of the sensitive nature of the topic.) There’s an ongoing debate over whether Internet pornography is addictive, but David’s days depended on it. Not only are the statistics hard to track, but also a clinical definition of pornography addiction has yet to be agreed on by experts. Although a proposed hypersexual disorder category was considered for inclusion in the American Psychiatric Association’s 2013 fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the standard for the mental health industry, reviewers decided in 2012 that there was not enough research and evidence to include the category. Gary Wilson, author of Your Brain on Porn: Internet
Pornography and the Emerging Science of Addiction, said there are no official statistics or surveys on porn addicts because the addiction hasn’t been acknowledged, yet. But a few polls on the subject were taken by organizations last year, including one by Proven Men Ministries, a Christian-focused organization that offers help to those who identify as porn and sex addicts. The nonprofit surveyed 1,000 adults, both men and women of various ages, races and geographical locations; a breakdown of those demographics, including religious backgrounds, could not be provided. It found that 33 percent of men ages 18 to 30 think they are addicted to pornography or are unsure if they’re addicted. Overall, 18 percent of all men said the same. Whether it is recognized as an addiction, people are talking about the trouble with porn. It’s interfering with users’ lives, and Chicago psychotherapist Jens Hussey believes that it is “the fastest-growing addiction that’s out there right now,” particularly in younger men. TRAINED TO NEED PORN BEFORE Internet porn, users were limited to the analog stuff, consuming magazines and videos in lesser quantity. But today, the Internet has helped put porn into the hands of anyone who wants it, as much as they want it. With Internet access and a viewing device, anyone has the ability to watch thousands of naked strangers anywhere at any time—in the car, in the bathroom at work, before even getting out of bed in the morning. “Back then I could only look at a picture of a naked girl, and what did I know about sex, when I was 12 or 13?” said Wilson, who also runs the web site www. yourbrainonporn.com. “But now...imagination has been replaced by what’s on the screen. You become a voyeur to watch and click and surf, conditioning sexuality—that this is the way
you do sex, this is how you have it...because it’s real people having what you think is real sex.” Wilson’s site references several studies that show how the brain is affected by porn, suggesting that too much Internet porn could be rewiring the brain, even if you’re not addicted, by “taking advantage of these innate types of reward circuit responses,” he said, that keep dopamine—the feel-good chemical in the brain—surging. Although what’s onscreen isn’t real sex, the brain naturally finds voyeurism, novelty, shock and surprise, seeking and searching and other aspects sexually stimulating. Every time a person watching porn clicks to a new video with new naked people and new surprises, his dopamine shoots up. David said that while he was watching porn six hours a day, he’d only watch each video for about 10 seconds and then move on to the next. Not everyone who watches porn uses it compulsively. But those who do crave it say it’s affecting their sex lives, causing erectile dysfunction, changing how they view real partners and their own body image and, in some cases, ruining relationships and careers. Hussey, who specializes in addiction, said access is a key component in the problem with porn. “When most people go to their jobs, alcohol is not there, cocaine is not on the job, but porn could be on the job,” he said. “Because of access, it becomes very difficult to get away from it.” Because it’s so accessible, young people are growing up with it, meaning that their brains are too: “Your brain keeps developing until about age 24,” Hussey said. “So if you start masturbating and watching porn at age 12 or 13, and you have 10 years of brain development, and let’s say you have a guy, who every time he masturbates he watches porn...he is now developing sexuality to be
Whether it is recognized as an addiction, people are talking about the trouble with porn. It’s interfering with users’ lives, and Chicago psychotherapist Jens Hussey believes that it is “the fastest-growing addiction that’s out there right now,” particularly in younger men.
Operations and Program Director of Disability Affairs Bien Mateo. In his inspirational message, Sen. Juan Edgardo Angara admitted that persons with disabilities (PWDs) laws in the country are works in progress and much needs to be done starting with the public’s awareness level specifically on the Accessibility Law and the Magna Carta of Disabled Persons. Angara promised that he will further push for bills that will make a difference in the lives of the PWDs, such as the value-added tax exemption for PWDs, the Comprehensive Anti-Discrimination Bill, the Inclusive Education Act, and the Paralympic Athletes’ incentives and benefits from the Philippine Sports Commission. However, Angara strongly appealed for the Filipinos’ support in order to overcome the hurdles and challenges of the passage of
ASSISTANT Cultural Affairs Officer Elizabeth Liu (standing, from left); SM Vice President for Operations and Program Director of Disability Affairs Bien Mateo; US Ambassador to the Philippines Philip S. Goldberg; Sen. Juan Edgardo Angara and Cultural Affairs Specialist Pong Aureus; (seated from left) National Council on Disability Affairs Executive Director Carmen Zubiaga, Executive Vice President and CEO of Tahanang Walang Hagdanan Joy Cevallos-Garcia; and Paralympian powerlifter Adeline Dumapong
the bills. US Ambassador to the Philippines Philip S. Goldberg highlighted that the US government is a strong advocate for equal access to education, employment and other social services for PWDs. He said that ADA prohibits discrimination against PWDs and ensures disabled students’ full participation in the educational system. Goldberg recalled several activities of the US Embassy that started last year, to raise awareness on the importance of inclusion of PWDs, such as a forum on disabilities with Miriam College, wheelchair basketball clinic with National Basketball Association legends, and promotion of PWD skills and music during the July 4 celebration in which blind singers and rondalla on wheels were honored. He further encouraged everyone to be advocates for the rights of the disabled.
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and send it to you, after which you fill it out and mail it back in. Then you wait for permission from the state. We waited to see if the dad would respond. And the letter came a few days ago. “I never forgot about you,” the letter read, in part. “I always wondered if you forgot about me.... There’s a lot I want to say to you, but I’m emotional right now. I love you, son, and I hope to see you soon...” I’m getting a little teary eyed just writing these words. I’m hoping that the prison bureaucracy will soon approve our visit so we can go up and see him. And Cheetah Boy can get the answers he seeks. Meanwhile, he and I are getting along better than we have in a long time. He apologized for being a (expletive deleted) to me during the worst of our arguments. And for other incidents I won’t repeat here. It’s making me think I might live through this whole teenage thing. Meanwhile, his 16-year-old sister, who was always the sunny, funny, friendly, academically gifted one with the good grades is doing her own version of acting out. I always hoped she’d get a scholarship to a top university. But that’s probably not going to happen now. It’s looking like she’ll be joining her brother in community college, which is fine, just not what I was hoping for. This time around, I hope I’ve learned enough to do a little less yelling and a little more understanding. n
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stopped grounding. One of the books I read, Yes, Your Teen Is Crazy! Loving Your Kid Without Losing Your Mind, recommends treating teenagers as if they were mental patients. Because their brains are so undeveloped as to be positively psycho. The author advises parents to go out of their way to be kind to their children and understand that they aren’t acting out to punish them, even if it seems that way. I decided to start being kind, as I would if I visited someone in the hospital. When my son was doing something of which I disapproved, I sat him down and talked to him about it. Not lectured. Not reproved. Just talked. I explained why I thought his actions would not lead to his future happiness and success. I asked him what he thought. Usually, he agreed. I told him I was worried and asked him to consider his future, not just the present. And sometimes, when he was being particularly annoying, I asked him what was going on with him. Why he was so upset. In the past, I would have just griped at him to cut it out and improve his attitude. Now, I was actually asking him what was going on. He didn’t always tell me. But sometimes he did. And, greatly to my surprise, it started working. He turned 18 back in February—a big date for former foster kids. That’s the age of majority when former foster children “age out” of the system and their foster parents no longer get paid to care for them. Many kids have no safety net when this happens. They are alienated from any birth family that still exists intact and have been moved around enough to lack
permanent friends who might take them in. If they aren’t lucky enough to find a college program to help them, these kids often end up homeless or in jail. A friend of mine who aged out of the system, now a success, told me he and his brother ended up in a weird religious cult because they were the only ones willing to take them in. My son and I had conflicts over what it meant for him to turn 18 and how much liberty he should be allowed, just like average parents and kids. But it also triggered something in him connected to his past. For the first time, he wanted to seek out his birth mother and father and get some answers as to why they didn’t care for him as they should have. Since I adopted him at age 5, he’d always steadfastly refused to talk about anything in his past, or to have any contact with his birth family. I always thought it would be healing for him, because I know his birth mom is remorseful about how her drug addiction hurt her kids and would like the chance to tell him so, but he always refused to talk to her. Suddenly, now he does want to see her and get answers to his questions. And he also wants to talk to his birth father, who is in prison for a long time. A few weeks ago, I helped him write a terse letter to his birth father, whom he last saw when he was 4 years old. He told him he didn’t know if he remembered him, but he was his son and had some questions for him. So please put him on his visitors list. To visit someone in state prison, the inmate must sign a visitation form
MAGICAL FREEBIES AT ENCHANTED KINGDOM
THE newest lifestyle rewards program in the country, GetGo, not only offers its members free Cebu Pacific flights but also takes them to a whole new magical adventure via an exclusive promo with Enchanted Kingdom. A minimum purchase of three park tickets (maximum of 10) to the world-class theme park in Santa Rosa, Laguna, entitles GetGo members and their friends to free P100 Wizard Money each. All they have to do is present their GetGo card at the Enchanted Kingdom’s ticketing office. The Wizard Money can be used to buy food and souvenir items inside the park. It can also be used to purchase tickets on their next park visit. To avail yourselves of the GetGo card, simply visit www.GetGo.com.ph, click JOIN, fill out the application form and for only a P150 membership fee, have your personalized GetGo card delivered to your doorstep.
Art, for the enjoyment of kids B E C L LOOKING to promote museum visits to the youth as a fun, family-bonding activity, every Jollibee Kids Party celebrant can visit five participating museums for free starting this month by way of “Newseum,” a joint project by Jollibee and the Museum Foundation of the Philippines Inc. (MFPI). “Just imagine Jollibee posing beside a prized work of Juan Luna, encouraging children and parents to visit museums,” Maritess Pineda, MFPI president said in a recent news conference. “We aim to develop a museum-going Filipino society by educating our young children. It is the common goal of both [Jollibee and MFPI] to make museum visits a strong option when deciding where to go during one’s free time or spend weekend dates with family.” The museums participating in the project are Museo Pambata, A Ayala Museum, Lopez Museum and Library, as well as the Ateneo Art Gallery and Art Collection of the Far Eastern University of Manila. Aside from the free entrance along with a guardian, the project also includes activity sheets for Jollibee Kids Party guests, who will have the chance to recreate Filipino art masterpieces by acclaimed artists by coloring their replicated works in special activity sheets that feature one of five masterpieces from the participating museums. Some of the obra maestras featured are National Artist Arturo Luz’s Bagong Taon contributed by the Ateneo Art Gallery,
PARENTLIFE
THE leading fast-food chain in the Philippines, Jollibee recently launched its Newseum project in cooperation with the Museum Foundation of the Philippines Inc. (MFPI). Present during the launch were Jollibee Marketing Vice President Harvey Ong, Jollibee PR Director and Head of Kids Marketing Arline Adeva, MFPI President Maritess Pineda and MFPI Trustee Weng Domingo.
showing three men riding a bike to underscore the high spirits every time a new year comes around. Meanwhile, Lopez Museum and Library chose Malang Santos’s Rural Scene/ Fiesta to showcase the festive atmosphere of local fiestas. On top of the free entrance and the exercise on creativity, every activity sheets also serve as the kids’ entries to a special raffle with a Jollibee Kids Party worth P6,000
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as the main prize. Harvey Ong, Jollibee’s marketing head, shared the importance of exposing children to a world beyond the Internet, particularly to the wonders of art. “In immersing [our children] in our world-class art and heritage, I believe they will become more creative, they will learn to think outside the box, appreciate diversity and, more important, gain a deeper appreciation of our identity as a nation.”
AYALA LAND INC. INCOME ROSE 19 PERCENT TO P8.39B IN H1 B VG C
A son’s identity crisis opens a few new doors ARNING: This article isn’t funny, so if you’re looking for a laugh, maybe you should turn to the comics and come back another time. I want to talk about an issue facing my children, and thousands of other adopted kids when they hit their teenage years—the feeling that their birth parents abandoned them, in some cases, literally. In others, metaphysically, by choosing drugs or crime over them. This hits many of them hard in their teenage years, regardless of how happy they are in their adoptive home. Kids feel angry and unloveable and act out righteously. We’ve been going through that in our house for years. You can ask our neighbors, who have to listen to the yelling. Psychologists will tell you that a teenager’s most important job during those years is to form his or her own identity, separate from the parents. Typically, a kid looks to his parents for inspiration, then models a new identity similar to theirs—or opposite of theirs—depending on the circumstances. But what if a child’s birth parents are drug addicts? Or in prison? Yes, the adopted kids live happily with adoptive parents, who don’t look like them and don’t share any of their DNA, but that doesn’t help much with their identity crisis, when they try to sort out who they are. This is made more difficult by their classmates, who ask charming questions like, “Why didn’t your mom want you? Why don’t you have a dad? Why did your mom abandon you?” My children have been asked all those questions many times. They are still being asked today. In the adopted child’s mind, she was abandoned because her birth mom preferred to continue using drugs to parenting her. Meaning that she isn’t worth more than a crack pipe or a needle. And she has no easy explanations when classmates ask these crass questions. This is the age when adoptive kids are most likely to become angry—yet, they don’t always even know what they’re angry about. Everyone around them knows something’s going on when the teen starts thrashing around, yelling, withdrawing, becomes depressed, when school grades plummet and other forms of acting out start happening. This is a hard time for adoptive parents, who worry obsessively and become exhausted by all the drama and stress. It’s awful to feel helpless to guide your child and steer him in the right direction when he seems determined to self-destruct. There have been times over the past few years when I would sit down with Cheetah Boy and say, “Why do you keep sabotaging yourself? The path you’re going down leads nowhere. Yet, you won’t turn around.” I read book after book and visited therapist after therapist looking for answers to help my kids, who were obviously suffering. One thing you quickly learn as the parent of a teenager is—you can’t stop your kid from doing whatever he wants. You can discourage him. You can punish him. But he will find a way to do as he pleases, regardless of what you say. If you disagree with this, then you’re being duped. After what seemed like eons of yelling and disruption in our household, I finally learned that I could effect some change—by changing myself. I stopped yelling. I stopped being passive aggressive. I
have to dip into these resources to try to smoothen fluctuations in the exchange rate. The central bank attributed the decrease in reserves to payments made by the national government to settle maturing foreignexchange obligations. More evident in the data set was the decline in value of the BSP’s gold holdings due to revaluation adjustments. The value of the
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US Embassy hosts forum on PWD Rights THE US Embassy Manila hosted a forum titled PWD Rights: Diversity and Social Inclusion, on July 31 in the Charles Parsons Ballroom of the US Embassy. The forum, conducted in recognition of the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), was attended by almost 250 participants from the Philippine government, students from schools with special education, Philippine National School for the Blind, Philippine School for the Deaf, non-governmental organizations, and Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative members. They had engaging interaction with the panelists composed of National Council on Disability Affairs Executive Director Carmen Zubiaga, Executive Vice President and CEO of Tahanang Walang Hagdanan Joy CevallosGarcia, Paralympian powerlifter Adeline Dumapong, and SM’s Vice President for
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REMIUM property developer Ayala Land Inc. on Friday reported net income of P8.39 billion in the first six months, some 19 percent higher than last year’s P7.05 billion. Consolidated revenues amounted to P50.61 billion, an increase of 10 percent, driven by sustained momentum of its real-estate businesses. “Development continues in all our estates, with products in residential, shopping centers, offices and hotels on the rise. We are on track relative to our annual target, and we plan to sustain the momentum with new launches in the com-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 45.7820
ing months,” Ayala Land President Bernard Vincent Dy said. The company has thus far spent a total of P41.1 billion in capital expenditures, less than half of its budget for the year, for project construction and land acquisition. Property development, which includes the sale of residential lots and units, and office spaces, as well as commercial and industrial lots, generated revenues of P31.85 billion in the first six months, 9 percent higher than the P29.30 billion reported in the same period last year. Commercial leasing, which covers the operation of shopping centers, offices, hotels and resorts, C A
GOLD EXHIBITION Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. (from left) and Philippine Gold Exhibition Gala Benefit Committee Chairmen Doris Magsaysay-Ho and Fernando Zobel de Ayala at the media briefing for the Philippine Gold: Treasures of Forgotten Kingdom exhibit. The Philippine Gold exhibition in New York between September 11, 2015, and early January 2016 will bring to the world stage a truly fascinating, yet little-known, aspect about the Philippines’s rich heritage. NONIE REYES
Abaya to Uber: Follow PHL laws B L S. M
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T would be a pity. This was how Transportation Secretary Joseph Emilio A. Abaya described Uber’s fate, once the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board starts apprehending its drivers’ operations. The transport network company’s (TNC) operations are still considered illegal, as it has yet to receive its license to operate taxilike services in Metro Manila. “If they are not complying, then they are colorum; so we will need to go after them. But we cannot impose a deadline on when they should apply for a license,” the transport chief said. When worst comes to worst, Abaya said in the vernacular, “Pasensyahan na lang. It’s a fair game.”
ABAYA: “If they are not complying, then they are colorum; so we will need to go after them. But we cannot impose a deadline on when they should apply for a license.”
He seemed puzzled at how Uber took his agency’s decision to legalize the operations of ride-hailing application operators, and its delayed response to the ruling. “They brag that the Philippines is forward-looking; saying that we have the right framework, and yet they cannot comply,” he said. The Philippines is the first country to legally recognize ride-
hailing services. The Department of Transportation and Communications in May issued a department order, acknowledging the need for such innovation. A TNC is an organization that provides prearranged transportation services for compensation using an Internet-based technology application or a digital-platform technology to connect passengers with drivers using their personal vehicles. They will provide the public with online-enabled transportation services, which is known as Transportation Network Vehicle Service, which will connect drivers with ride-seekers through an app. In a nutshell, TNCs are companies that partner with private-vehicle owners or even fleet managers to provide private taxi services to consumers.
n JAPAN 0.3670 n UK 71.0445 n HK 5.9067 n CHINA 7.3726 n SINGAPORE 33.0914 n AUSTRALIA 33.6360 n EU 50.0351 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.2082 Source: BSP (7 August 2015)