Home Blog Page 8687

UN marks 75 years amid pandemic

UNITED NATIONS — World leaders came together, virtually, on Monday to mark the 75th anniversary of the United Nations (UN), as the deadly coronavirus pandemic and tensions between the United States and China challenge the effectiveness and solidarity of the 193-member body.

As coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) began to spread around the world earlier this year, forcing millions of people to shelter at home and devastating economies, countries turned inward and diplomats say the United Nations struggled to assert itself.

Long-simmering tensions between the United States and China hit the boiling point over the pandemic, spotlighting Beijing’s bid for greater multilateral influence in a challenge to Washington’s traditional leadership.

The coronavirus emerged in China late last year, and Washington accuses Beijing of a lack of transparency that it says worsened the outbreak. China denies the U.S. assertions.

In an apparent swipe at the United States, China’s president, Xi Jinping, said on Monday: “No country has the right to dominate global affairs, control the destiny of others, or keep advantages in development all to itself. Even less should one be allowed to do whatever it likes and be the hegemon, bully or boss of the world. Unilateralism is a dead end.”

Xi’s remarks were not in the video he recorded for the meeting. They were included in a longer statement that the Chinese U.N. mission said was submitted to the world body.

China has portrayed itself as the chief cheerleader for multilateralism as President Donald Trump’s disregard for international cooperation led to Washington’s quitting global deals on climate and Iran and leaving the U.N. Human Rights Council and the World Health Organization (WHO).

The deputy U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Cherith Norman Chalet, told the General Assembly that the world body had in many ways proven to be a “successful experiment, but “there are also reasons for concern.”

“The United Nations has for too long been resistant to meaningful reform, too often lacking in transparency, and too vulnerable to the agenda of autocratic regimes and dictatorships,” she said.

The U.S. withdrawal from the WHO came after Trump accused the agency of being a puppet of China, a claim the WHO denied.

‘THEM AND US’
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said “increasing discord” in the international community was sparked by some countries meddling in the domestic affairs of other states and imposing unilateral sanctions — a veiled dig at Washington.

“The world is tired of dividing lines, dividing states into them and us. The world requires increasing multilateral assistance and cooperation,” he said.

The pandemic has exposed the world’s fragilities, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said. “Today we have a surplus of multilateral challenges and a deficit of multilateral solutions,” he said.  

The Security Council took months to back a call by Guterres for a global ceasefire – to allow countries to focus on fighting COVID-19 — due to bickering between China and the United States.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the interests of individual member states had “too often” forced the United Nations to lag behind its ideals.

“Those who believe that they can get along better alone are mistaken. Our wellbeing is something that we share — our suffering too. We are one world,” she told the General Assembly.

Several leaders called for a reform of the United Nations and in particular the 15-member Security Council, arguing it was unfair that the United States, Russia, China, France and Britain were the only permanent veto-wielding powers.

“A council structure that leaves the fate of more than 7 billion people to the mercy of five countries is neither fair nor sustainable,” Turkey’s president, Tayyip Erdogan, said.

The one-day special event on Monday comes ahead of the annual meeting of world leaders at the United Nations, which starts on Tuesday with no presidents or prime ministers physically present in New York. All statements have been pre-recorded and will be broadcast in the General Assembly hall.

The United Nations was created when countries came together after World War Two to prevent another such conflict. While there has not been a World War Three, leaders adopted a statement on Monday acknowledging “moments of disappointment.”

“All this calls for greater action, not less,” the statement said. — Reuters

China’s threats of war push Taiwan to boost US economic links

IT’S HARD TO FIND a world leader who’s had a better 2020 than Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen.

She won re-election in January in a landslide, oversaw one of the world’s best responses to the Covid-19 pandemic and helmed an economic recovery that has boosted Taiwan’s stock exchange to record heights. The central bank last week revised up its 2020 growth target to 1.6%, making it an outlier among global peers as most major economies shrink.

But Tsai does have one major problem: The Communist Party is threatening her life, with its Global Times newspaper saying over the weekend she would be “wiped out” in a war if she violated China’s anti-secession law.

The warning in a tweet Saturday described her dinner with Keith Krach, the most senior U.S. State Department official to visit Taiwan since 1979, as “playing with fire.” People’s Liberation Army aircraft last week repeatedly breached the median line between Taiwan and China, and the PLA Air Force released a video showing H-6 bombers making a simulated strike on what looked like a U.S. military base on the nearby island of Guam.

While China’s military dwarfs that of Taiwan, an amphibious invasion across the 100-mile-wide strait separating the two carries risks that could easily backfire on the world’s number-two economy. Although many observers see the U.S. coming to Taiwan’s aid if China were to launch an attack, Tsai’s government is actively taking steps to increase economic ties between the unofficial allies to provide more incentives for American policy makers to intervene.

“If we lessen our economic reliance on China, it won’t be able to politically blackmail us,” Kolas Yotaka, presidential office spokeswoman, told Bloomberg. “By establishing closer economic ties with other countries, we’ll be able to uphold regional peace through shared prosperity.”

Right now, the economic relationship is heavily tilted toward Beijing. Exports to China accounted for 42.3% of Taiwan’s total in the first half of this year, with only 14.7% going to the U.S. during the same period. Taiwanese investment in China in the first eight months of this year was up 50% year on year, totaling $3.9 billion, according to Taiwan’s economic ministry.

Tsai’s government, however, has sought to reverse those trends in particular by encouraging companies to bring their tech supply chains out of China to Taiwan and places like Southeast Asia. In late August, she also lifted a ban on certain U.S. pork and beef products — the major obstacle toward a trade agreement with the U.S.

“We must accelerate our linkage to economies around the world, in particular strengthening our ties with our most steadfast partner,” Tsai said at the time. Through July, American government data shows Taiwan as its ninth-largest trade partner, up from eleventh last year.

The Krach visit marked another milestone in that effort. Tsai hosted a dinner Friday night for him that also included Morris Chang, founder of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the main chipmaker for Apple Inc. The presence of Chang, whose company recently announced it would build a $12 billion facility in Arizona, highlighted the importance of Taiwan’s cutting-edge semiconductor industry, which the U.S. is looking to wall off from Chinese companies such as Huawei Technologies Co.

On Sunday, Taiwan’s economic minister, Wang Mei-hua, announced she had met with Krach’s delegation for talks to prepare for a formal economic dialogue. Any serious discussions would be helmed by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, who negotiated the phase-one deal with China signed earlier this year.

While it’s unclear if Taiwan is on the USTR’s list of priorities, any agreement would go a long way toward bringing Taiwan out of its diplomatic isolation, according to Tiffany Ma, senior director at Bower Group Asia.

A bilateral trade agreement “would further benefit Taiwan’s security by giving momentum -— and political cover — for other countries to pursue similar arrangements with Taiwan,” she said.

WORST FEARS
The U.S. formally cut ties with Taiwan’s government in 1979 in order to establish relations with Beijing. Four decades later, however, U.S. ties with China are getting worse by the day while trade and official exchanges with Taiwan are on the rise.

Shortly before Krach arrived in Taipei, Wisconsin Republican congressman Tom Tiffany introduced a bill to establish formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan and negotiate a free trade agreement. While the bill is unlikely to pass, the fact that a member of Congress is calling for recognition of Taiwan risks adding to Beijing’s worst fears.

Despite the military saber-rattling over the weekend, China doesn’t appear ready to give up on economic engagement with Taiwan. Wang Yang, the Communist Party’s No. 4 official, on Saturday pledged to “further improve policy measures and arrangements” that benefit Taiwanese people.

China has released video of a simulated air strike on the U.S. territory of Guam after Undersecretary of State @KeithJKrach visited Taiwan.

“We need to have a longer-term vision,” said Liu Guoshen, director of the Taiwan Research Institute at Xiamen University, which sits across the strait.

Even so, China’s recent military maneuvers near Taiwan signal that it is watching carefully and possibly willing to escalate. While the Communist Party has never ruled Taiwan, and polls show the vast majority of Taiwanese citizens don’t want it to, President Xi Jinping has vowed to take it by force if necessary.

“Beijing fears a slippery slope,” said Bonnie Glaser, director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “It worries that the U.S. has abandoned its one-China policy and won’t respect China’s red lines.” — Bloomberg

Fighting Maroons, Blue Eagles further beef up talent pools

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

KATIPUNAN-BASED schools University of the Philippines (UP) and Ateneo de Manila University have further beefed up their respective men’s basketball talent pools, recently getting the commitment of top high school talents.

The Fighting Maroons are all set to welcome former Gilas Pilipinas Youth stalwart Bismarck Lina from the University of Santo Tomas (UST) juniors team while the defending University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) champions Blue Eagles secured the commitment of another of their high school standouts in Joshua Lazaro.

Lina was introduced by UP coach Bo Perasol and team manager Atty. Agathon Uverto on Monday as their latest addition to what has been a busy past few months of recruitment for the Fighting Maroons.

The 6-foot-4 Lina originally committed to UST early this year but had a change of heart, no thanks to the current controversy that the Growling Tigers are currently in for their alleged illegal training “bubble” in Sorsogon.

“[Bismarck Lina] is already processing his transfer from UST to UP. He’s just working on some papers and documents to complete his transfer,” said Mr. Perasol, who has taken UP to back-to-back Final Four appearances in the UAAP the last two years.

Despite coming out of high school, Lina will be sitting out UAAP Season 83 and instead will be playing next season.

“Bismarck will also be applying for the varsity program for Season 84. He won’t be eligible for Season 83 since he has to be enrolled for at least two semesters in UP, but the first semester has already started so he has to wait until Season 84,” Mr. Perasol said.

Lina tallied a double-double average of 16.6 points and 10.9 rebounds in his last season with the Tiger Cubs, something he hopes to continue doing once he dons the UP colors.

“It is really hard on my part to leave UST, but all I can say is that I’m really thankful to the UP Fighting Maroons for giving me another home. I can’t wait to work and compete alongside them,” said Lina.

In UP, Lina will be joining new recruits CJ Cansino (also a former UST player), Carl Tamayo, Gerry Abadiano, and RC Calimag.

LAZARO STAYING PUT
Meanwhile, despite having one more year left with the Blue Eaglets, Lazaro has made the decision to stay put in Ateneo and help its seniors team in the UAAP in its future campaigns.

The 6’5” Lazaro had it solid last season in juniors play, producing all-around numbers of 13.2 points, 12.8 rebounds, 1.93 assists, 1.47 steals and 1.33 blocks per game.

In choosing to stay with Ateneo, Lazaro, a transferee from San Beda Taytay, shared that the quality college education he believes he will get in Ateneo played a key part in his decision.

This was apart from the basketball program under coach Tab Baldwin, which he describes as “the best out there right now.”

Lazaro, 18, is the latest recruit of the reigning three-time UAAP champions Blue Eagles, following the likes of Forthsky Padrigao (committed) and Fil-foreigners Gab Gomez and Chris Koon.

Michael Jordan forms NASCAR team with B. Wallace as driver

BASKETBALL great Michael Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin have partnered to form a new single-car NASCAR Cup Series team that will feature Bubba Wallace as its driver, the trio said on Monday.

Jordan, a six-time NBA champion, will serve as principal owner of the team with Hamlin a minority partner while he continues to drive for Joe Gibbs Racing.

Wallace, the only Black driver at NASCAR’s top level, was thrust into the spotlight this year when his calls for NASCAR (National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing) to ban the Confederate flag — which many Americans see as a symbol of oppression — at all events was ultimately adopted.

The driver was later thought to have been a victim of a racial attack when a noose, a symbol connected to lynching and America’s slave history, was found in his garage.

The US Justice Department said after an investigation that the noose may have been in the garage since last October and that Wallace was not the target of a hate crime, while NASCAR said the noose was used as a garage door pull-down.

“Historically, NASCAR has struggled with diversity and there have been few Black owners,” Jordan said in a statement. “The timing seemed perfect as NASCAR is evolving and embracing social change more and more.”

Jordan added that he saw this as a chance to “educate a new audience and open more opportunities for Black people in racing.”

The name, car number, manufacturer, sponsors, and other details for the new team, which will start racing in the 2021 season, will be announced at a future date.

Wallace said the role was ideal for him.

“This is a unique, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that I believe is a great fit for me at this point in my career,” he added.

Gibbs said he was happy to lay the foundation for his racing career after he was finished with driving.

“Plus, Michael and Bubba can be a powerful voice together, not only in our sport, but also well beyond it,” said Gibbs. — Reuters

World no. 1 Djokovic wins fifth Italian Open

ROME — World number one Novak Djokovic overcame a sluggish start to lift his fifth Italian Open title on Monday, defeating Argentine Diego Schwartzman 7-5 6-3 for a record 36th ATP Masters crown.

Playing in his maiden ATP 1000 final, eighth seed Schwartzman raced out of the blocks to convert two break point opportunities for a 3-0 lead as Djokovic’s usually clinical backhand offered up some errors.

An on-and-off drizzle at Foro Italico, which included a smattering of fans, added to Djokovic’s frustration but he still found a way past Schwartzman’s serve to draw level at 3-3.

Djokovic’s relentless baseline hitting came to the fore when he broke Schwartzman in the 12th game to take the opening set, despite committing 18 unforced errors.

The top seed stepped up the intensity to break Schwartzman’s serve twice before serving out the match comfortably to seal victory — clinching it with a drop shot. — Reuters

POC chief Tolentino to seek reelection in November polls

PHILIPPINE Olympic Committee (POC) President Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino confirmed on Tuesday that he will run anew in elections set for November.

He made the announcement at the online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum, saying he is eyeing reelection to sit for a full term and build on the sports agency’s gains since he took office last year.

POC elections are set for Nov. 27.

“Yes. I will definitely run for a complete term,” said Mr. Tolentino, the head of the Integrated Cycling Federation of the Philippines (PhilCycling).

Mr. Tolentino was elected POC president in July last year, filling up the position left by boxing federation’s Ricky Vargas, who decided to step down after just one year in office.

Included in Mr. Tolentino’s ticket are Al Panlilio of the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas as first vice-president, and Ormoc City Mayor Richard Gomez of fencing and modern pentathlon as second vice-president.

Clint Aranas of archery has signified as well his intention to run as POC president.

In seeking reelection, Mr. Tolentino said primary in his push will be building on the gains that Philippine sports has gained while he is the head of the POC.

“Not to sound like self-promoting; despite the short time in office, I think we have done a lot. What more if I’m given a full term of four years?”, said Mr. Tolentino, who is also a sitting congressman representing the 7th district of Cavite.

He went on to underscore that he has worked hard in pushing for Philippine sports, including helping the country win the overall championship in the 2019 Southeast Asian (SEA) Games under his watch as the local Olympic body head.

Mr. Tolentino was also a prime mover, in his capacity as congressman, for the restoration of the full amount of the allowances of national athletes and coaches, which were slashed by half early this year as funds were channelled to the fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

The POC president made sure that a P180-million budget to help restore the allowances to their normal level was included in the recently signed Bayanihan Act 2 bill.

“Hopefully it (budget) would help the athletes and coaches. It’s our way of helping them for winning the overall championship in the SEA Games,” Mr. Tolentino said.

Filing of candidacy for the elections begins on Oct. 1 and will run for the whole month.

Other positions to be filled are chairman, treasurer, auditor, and four board members.

To ensure that they guard against the spread of the coronavirus, Mr. Tolentino said they will impose strict guidelines, including making rapid or swab-testing mandatory for those participating in the elections. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Rays edge Mets, close in on AL East title

NATE LOWE hit the decisive solo homer Monday night, and six Tampa Bay Rays pitchers combined on a four-hitter as the Rays moved closer to clinching the American League East with a 2-1 win over the host New York Mets.

The win by the Rays (36-19), coupled with an 11-5 loss by the second-place New York Yankees to the Toronto Blue Jays, reduced Tampa Bay’s magic number for clinching the division to one.

The Mets (24-30) edged closer to being eliminated from playoff contention after wasting another brilliant outing by two-time reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom, who took the loss despite tying a career high by striking out 14 over seven innings.

New York began the day 2 1/2 games out of the NL’s final wild-card spot.

DeGrom (4-2), who allowed two runs on four hits and walked two, struck out the side on just 10 pitches in the first inning. In the second, Lowe drew a leadoff walk, went to third on Joey Wendle’s double and scored on Manuel Margot’s sacrifice fly.

Lowe homered leading off the fourth, after which deGrom retired 11 of the final 13 batters he faced. He struck out Kevin Kiermaier and Brett Phillips to end the seventh to become the first pitcher this season to record two 14-strikeout games and the first Mets pitcher with two 14-strikeout games in a season since Dwight Gooden in 1985.

The loss also marked the 32nd time deGrom has pitched at least seven innings, allowed two runs or fewer and not earned the win.

The Mets mounted their lone rally in the fifth. After Josh Fleming, the Rays third pitcher, recorded the first two outs, Guillermo Heredia walked, Wilson Ramos singled and Brandon Nimmo was hit by a pitch.

Jeff McNeil followed with an RBI single beyond second base, but shortstop Willy Adames ranged over, knocked the ball down and prevented it from squeaking it into the outfield, which forced Ramos to stop at third. J.D. Davis then lined out.

Fleming (4-0), who was credited with the win after throwing three innings teamed with Diego Castillo, Ryan Sherriff and Nick Anderson (sixth save) retired 12 of the final 13 New York batters.

Opener Pete Fairbanks issued a walk and struck out two over 1 2/3 hitless innings. — Reuters

Braves hold off Marlins, close in on NL East title

ATLANTA third baseman Austin Riley had a crucial run-scoring double and made a late game-saving defensive play to help the Braves hang on for a 5-4 win over the visiting Miami Marlins and trim their magic number to win the National League East to three.

Riley doubled home two runs to cap a four-run first inning and put the Braves ahead to stay after the Marlins scored three runs in the top of the inning. He helped save the game with his glove in the eighth when he took a step to his left to snare a 110-mph liner from Starling Marte with the bases loaded to preserve the lead.

The Marlins got the tying runner on first base in the ninth on Jesus Aguilar’s leadoff single. But Matt Joyce hit a high chopper to pitcher Mark Melancon, who threw to first for the out. First baseman Freddie Freeman then fired a strike to shortstop Dansby Swanson, who scurried to cover third, and the Braves erased pinch-runner Monte Harrison on a bang-bang play.

The winning pitcher was Tyler Matzek (4-3), the first of six relievers used. Melancon earned his 11th save.

Atlanta starter Huascar Ynoa worked three innings and allowed three runs on five hits and a walk, and struck out one. Ynoa threw 54 pitches, 39 for strikes.

Miami starter Trevor Rogers (1-2) gave up five runs in four innings, with all the runs coming in the first two innings. Rogers struck out the last six batters he faced. He allowed eight hits and two walks, and struck out six.

The Marlins scored three times in the first inning on RBI singles from Aguilar, Brian Anderson, and Garrett Cooper.

But the Braves responded with four runs in the bottom of the first. Travis d’Arnaud and Ozzie Albies had run-scoring singles, and Riley drove home a pair with his seventh double of the season.

The Braves made it 5-3 with a run in the second on back-to-back doubles by Swanson and Ronald Acuna Jr.

The Marlins drew to within a run in the eighth when Jorge Alfaro singled home Miguel Rojas. — Reuters

Halep claims Rome title; Pliskova retires

ROME — Top seed Simona Halep gave her French Open preparations a boost when she claimed the Italian Open in Rome on Monday after second seed Karolina Pliskova retired from the final with injury when she was down 6-0 2-1.

Victory gave Halep her first title in Rome and her third consecutive title of the year after wins in Dubai — before the COVID-19 hiatus — and Prague last month.

Pliskova attempted to continue playing after receiving treatment on her lower back and leg between sets but eventually decided to retire, not willing to take any chances before the French Open which begins on Sept. 27.

Halep raced into a 5-0 lead in the opening set, breaking the Czech defending champion three times and the Romanian also saved three break points at 0-40 down in the fourth game.

Halep, who even shook off a hard fall in the second game, was at her aggressive and disciplined best while Pliskova looked sluggish with her on-court movement, failing to hit a single winner as she was bagelled in 20 minutes.

The limited number of fans allowed into Foro Italico’s centre court urged Pliskova to make it a contest, applauding the rare points she got on the score board, and it seemed to work as the second set started with the pair breaking each other. — Reuters

Some Clippers not enamored with George

PAUL GEORGE’S pleas for players to remain committed and return to the franchise next season didn’t go over well with all of his Los Angeles Clippers teammates, according to a report by The Athletic.

George made his comments inside the locker room following the loss to the Denver Nuggets in Game 7 of the Western Conference semifinals last Tuesday. This was right after the Clippers’ third straight setback during an alarming collapse after they took a 3-1 series lead.

According to the report, some of George’s teammates were bewildered and began rolling their eyes as he spoke. The overall feeling was that George’s actions in the series didn’t line up with his postgame vows.

The remarks also came immediately after George scored just 10 points on four-of-16 shooting in the decisive contest. It was the second time he tallied just 10 in the series after averaging 21.5 on the season.Reuters

Nuggets’ resiliency

Not a few quarters saw fit to write the Nuggets off in the wake of their disconcerting loss to the Lakers the other day. It wasn’t simply that the outcome put them two down after two contests in the West Finals. More crucially, it was that they appeared quite overmatched for long stretches at a time in both encounters. And while they made enough adjustments after Game One to nearly snatch victory in Game Two, that they succumbed, anyway, speaks volumes of their status as vast underdogs. In a series where they don’t have the two best players, they need no small measure of good fortune to survive.

To be sure, the Nuggets aren’t predisposed to accepting conventional wisdom. In fact, bucking it is precisely why they continue to be in the National Basketball Association’s bubble environment at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex. If they’re well into their third month at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida, it’s because they’ve learned to make their own luck with a heady concoction of skill and determination. Their remarkable sense of purpose was what enabled them to become the first in pro hoops annals to overcome two one-three deficits through a single playoff run.

For all the Nuggets’ confidence, though, they understand that their latest challenge is Sisyphean at best. Not only do they need to win four of their next five outings; they’ll be up against the vaunted Lakers, who: one, have LeBron James and Anthony Davis; two, boast of superior speed, strength, and athleticism; and, three, are equally driven to succeed. Which is why they’re bent on outworking their rivals at every turn from here on. They know that then, and only then, can they have a puncher’s chance of prevailing.

If there’s anything going for the Nuggets, it’s that they believe in themselves and in their capacity to blaze new trails. They, too, have an all-world cornerstone in Nikola Jokic, a fearless competitor in Jamal Murray, and a supporting cast completely subscribed to collective pursuits. They’re not likely to win — but, hey, their plight is nothing new to them. They’ve been there and done that, and if they’re still around to keep plodding on, it’s due to their resiliency. They won’t be handing anything to the Lakers without a fight, and they’ll be at their best just because they’re incapable of showing anything less.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Non-traditional education, unprecedented times

By Mariel Alison L. Aguinaldo

Progressive, non-traditional education for children is becoming more attractive to parents amid COVID-19, said George Carey, founder and chief executive officer of The Family Room Strategic Consulting Group, a research and brand strategy consultancy firm. 

According to firm’s Passion Points Study, a quarterly consumer survey across 14 markets, parents believe that life skills such as determination, confidence, and creativity are better predictors of their children’s success over excellence in academic fields like math and science.

The latter is often the focus of traditional schools, wherein students are lectured in classroom settings and assessed by their knowledge of academic subjects. Some members of the academe have criticized this “one-size-fits-all” approach, noting that students have different ways of learning.

On the other hand, progressive, non-traditional schools emphasize experiential learning and holistic development, with the approach varying on the institution’s philosophy. 

In the Philippines, the Manila Waldorf School focuses on developing a child’s physical, emotional, spiritual, and intellectual faculties based on the teachings of Rudolf Steiner, an Austrian philosopher who advocated “working from the ‘hands’ (physical) through the ‘heart’ (emotional and spiritual) to the ‘mind’ (intellectual).” Meanwhile, the Raya School runs a discovery-based, play-oriented curriculum that inculcates a deep sense of the country’s heritage. 

“Parents don’t want their kid to be forced into a square hole if they’re a round peg. They want the hole to be conformed to their child,” said Mr. Carey during a session in All That Matters 2020, an online convention.

Other findings from the study show that parents are looking for educational content that will preserve and restore their children’s sense of optimism and belief in the future. There is also a growing interest in preserving and celebrating family traditions. According to Mr. Carey, this category shot up by 125% in the past six months after a five-year decline among their interviewees.

“We have got a future which is very uncertain, very murky, and for many parents, very dark. As a consequence, these millennial parents have suddenly gone from having this love affair with the future to a love affair with the past,” he said.  

While this seems to paint a negative forecast for the future, hope may be found in the children themselves who were found to have a strong sense of fairness and righteousness. The study’s six-year-old interviewees showed concern for the environment and literacy rates and a drive to accept other children coming from different backgrounds. 

“This [the world’s injustices] has made the kids understand that the world’s unfair, but that they have a real role to play in righting that ship,” said Mr. Carey.