
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This one is a conversation about personal risk-taking, "skin in the game", democracy, values, geopolitics and much more. It is a conversation that resonates based on what is happening across much of the world – particularly the rise of populism and authoritarians like Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro, and the entrenchment of old hands like Vladimir Putin and Turkey's Recep Erdogan, to name a few. However, it is also a conversation about personal and collective values and taking risks based on these. It, therefore, offers many lessons across a variety of contexts.
My guest is Philippine Congressman and opposition member Gary Alejano. Before becoming a Congressman, Gary was a soldier in the Philippine Marine Corps and risked his life in various combat operations. He was awarded the Medal of Valour for his service to his country.
In 2003, he was one of a group of young officers who led a mutiny to protest corruption in his country's armed forces. Yes – I said this one is about risk-taking. This was known as the "Oakwood Mutiny" (named after the luxury Manila hotel Alejano and his colleagues occupied). It was an incident that received worldwide attention.
We talk about that. We also talk about his becoming a Congressman and getting into politics – including the negative perception people in the Philippines have about their politicians (which of course, is a phenomenon many people have about their politicians across most countries in the world, particularly now!). We also discuss:
I came away from this thinking that Congressman Gary Alejano is one of the world's good guys. I hope you enjoy this fascinating conversation.
Show notes:
Gary Alejano's page
On Facebook
On Twitter
On YouTube
The Philippines "War on Drugs"
Rappler
Antonio Trillanes
The Oakwood Mutiny
Philippine v China South China Sea Arbitration case
"debt-trap diplomacy"
Failure of the UN's 10 year War on Drugs
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Want to learn how to make great decisions? Join our decision-making course for individuals or for small-businesses and startups and get a discount using the code "ALLTHINGSRISK"
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Get your free audio book and 30 day free trial at Audible:
US listeners: get your free trial and audio book at Audible
UK listeners: get your free trial and audio book at Audible
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
Like what you heard?
Subscribe and/or leave a rating and review on iTunes: http://apple.co/1PjLmK
Subscribe on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/all-things-risk/the-all-things-risk-podcast
Subscribe on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/ben-cattaneo
Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RiskThings
Drop us a note: [email protected]
By Ben Cattaneo4.4
1313 ratings
This one is a conversation about personal risk-taking, "skin in the game", democracy, values, geopolitics and much more. It is a conversation that resonates based on what is happening across much of the world – particularly the rise of populism and authoritarians like Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro, and the entrenchment of old hands like Vladimir Putin and Turkey's Recep Erdogan, to name a few. However, it is also a conversation about personal and collective values and taking risks based on these. It, therefore, offers many lessons across a variety of contexts.
My guest is Philippine Congressman and opposition member Gary Alejano. Before becoming a Congressman, Gary was a soldier in the Philippine Marine Corps and risked his life in various combat operations. He was awarded the Medal of Valour for his service to his country.
In 2003, he was one of a group of young officers who led a mutiny to protest corruption in his country's armed forces. Yes – I said this one is about risk-taking. This was known as the "Oakwood Mutiny" (named after the luxury Manila hotel Alejano and his colleagues occupied). It was an incident that received worldwide attention.
We talk about that. We also talk about his becoming a Congressman and getting into politics – including the negative perception people in the Philippines have about their politicians (which of course, is a phenomenon many people have about their politicians across most countries in the world, particularly now!). We also discuss:
I came away from this thinking that Congressman Gary Alejano is one of the world's good guys. I hope you enjoy this fascinating conversation.
Show notes:
Gary Alejano's page
On Facebook
On Twitter
On YouTube
The Philippines "War on Drugs"
Rappler
Antonio Trillanes
The Oakwood Mutiny
Philippine v China South China Sea Arbitration case
"debt-trap diplomacy"
Failure of the UN's 10 year War on Drugs
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Want to learn how to make great decisions? Join our decision-making course for individuals or for small-businesses and startups and get a discount using the code "ALLTHINGSRISK"
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Get your free audio book and 30 day free trial at Audible:
US listeners: get your free trial and audio book at Audible
UK listeners: get your free trial and audio book at Audible
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
Like what you heard?
Subscribe and/or leave a rating and review on iTunes: http://apple.co/1PjLmK
Subscribe on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/all-things-risk/the-all-things-risk-podcast
Subscribe on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/ben-cattaneo
Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RiskThings
Drop us a note: [email protected]