Showing posts with label FNF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FNF. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Plaza Athenee Bangkok

On October 20-24, I stayed at this hotel in Bangkok to attend the Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia 2013 Conference on "Middle Income Trap and Economic Freedom", October 21-22, then the GCOA-EMHN policy dialogue on ageing, October 23. My family joined me as they did not have to pay extra for the hotel, only the plane fare where they got a good price via Air Asia flying from Clark Airport in Pampanga.


The hotel is part of the four-buildings complex that includes a second hotel building plus the twin towers Athenee condominium. 

It is in the city center of Bangkok and is near other big hotels in the area. A train station is just two blocks away.


It has a nice garden and swimming pool on the 4th or 6th floor (I don't remember now).


Two swimming pools, the bigger one for adults, and the smaller one for children, only about 0.75 meters (about two feet) deep.


An open function room on the same level as the pool. A welcome dinner with program during the EFN Asia conference on the night of October 21 was held here.


The pool for adults, nice clean water.


A garden near the pool. There is a short jogging path in this area.


The main restaurant of the hotel on the ground floor. Buffet breakfast is served here.


A nice shallow pool with fishes on one side of the restaurant.


I enjoyed my stay in that hotel. Thanks again to EFN Asia for bringing me to Bangkok to attend the conference.
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See also:
Thailand trip, Part 1, June 10, 2008
Thailand trip, Part 2, July 22, 2008

Monday, September 23, 2013

The German Club, Makati

Last night, I set foot at the German Club in Makati for the first time. I was among the friends of the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom (FNF) who was invited to the "WahlParty" or Elections Party. We watched the elections live.

The place is not very big but cool. Prices of food and drinks are expensive of course, but FNF paid for our limited orders.


I like these different wooden flags of the different states of Germany. I have visited that country twice, in 2003 after my 7 weeks agriculture seminar in Sweden, I visited my friend, the Beil family in Miesbach, Bavaria; then when I attended the IAF seminar in Gummersbach, near Cologne, then I visited again the Beil family after. I like Bavaria/Bayern.


An Octoberfest announcement at the bulletin board.


Our group of Filipino observers, friends and some staff of FNF Manila office. It was the biggest defeat for the FDP since post WW2.


A photo from the official website of the German Club.


Thanks to the FNF and its Country Director, Jules Maaten, for the invite last night.
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See also:

Denmark, Netherlands, Germany, Oct. 2003, November 21, 2005

Bavarian Mountain, Germany, March 07, 2012

Beil Family, Miesbach, Germany, December 25, 2012


Saturday, December 03, 2011

FNF Freedom Run

I participated in the first "Freedom Run" organized by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Liberty (FNF) last November 27 at the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman campus. It was co-sponsored by UP and I think, the Quezon City government. There were also many corporate sponsors. One could run the 3k or 6k and the theme of the event was "I am Free". Free from corruption, and so on. Nice.

With only 5 hours sleep (had an early Christmas reunion with some friends the night before) and haven't run for the past 12 years or so, I ran the 6k, hahaha. I finished it in 43 minutes, awwww! At around 1.5 km. mark I think, I started walking already. But my goal in joining the run was clear: just finish the 6 kms route, in a brief period to shake and remove the rust in my legs.

What's special with this photo?... hmmm... :-) Ok, I'll tell you. I did not bring a camera but I needed a photo as it was my first run after 10 years or more. The one who took this photo was Jules Maaten, the country director of the FNF himself. Super thanks Jules!

There were probably close to 2,000 runners who participated in the 3k and 6k run. Knowing my physical limitations, I positioned myself in the front of the starting line, knowing that many guys will pass me anyway, so I gave myself a few meters of "lead" over the majority, hehe. And true enough, at the sound of the starting gun, dozens upon dozens of younger lungs and legs passed me.

Sometime in the mid to late 90s, I was running around 7 kms. a week, cycling around 100 kms. a week (I was using a road bike, not a mountain bike) and climbing a mountain once a month, on average. So inflicting limited pain on my body was no stranger to me then. That's why I dared running the 6k even with zero running preparation years before this event.

Here are some photos of the participants, taken from the FNF's facebook photos.





I think this is the first time that a political foundation like FNF has sponsored a running event. It's mostly corporations that sponsor the big events here. I think this is a good initiative to propagate a political foundation's advocacies. In the case of the FNF, it's propagating liberalism, a philosophy that I personally adhere to, especially classic liberalism, not just ordinary liberalism that is propagated by many current political parties around the world.

Back of the shirt says, "It's all about Freedom. ARE YOU FREE?"

Other participants included the Freedom of Information (FOI) group, here in white shirts, led by Nepo Malaluan. A guy called "Zorro" in UP also showed up. And a special participant, a dog riding his master's bicycle.

Freedom and liberty. Especially individual liberty, not national or collective liberty that tends to step on individual freedom "in the name of the nation, the commune, the collective." This goal, for me, sums up what liberalism is.

See the close up quote: individual responsibility, rule of law, human rights and tolerance. These are key words and philosophies that I personally advocate. "People who are afraid of responsibility are afraid of freedom itself." That's from Friedrich Hayek, and I totally agree with him on that.

My legs were hellish for 3 days (Nov. 27-29), it's like I underwent a brutal hazing and paddle hitting. Especially when I go up or down the stairs in our house. The next 2 days (Nov. 30-Dec. 1) the pain was still there but more manageable. Today, the pain is gone, or 6 days after that run.

I hope to be able to run again in other running events.