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Aquino Cojuangco: Facts They Don't Want You To Know


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Dude! Enough with your silly arguments. You want us to debunk an article that has a disclaimer?! Really? The blogger who posted the article is already saying that he is unsure of its authenticity and you still want it debunked. That's the dumbest thing i've ever heard.

 

How about this idea... Before you believe any article, you first prove that it is true. Show your supporting facts Wil Robie.

The burden of proof lies on the accuser and since you're the one accusing me of posting fake news, you prove it. Your posts are getting weaker by the post. It's either you debunk it or just don't post. If it's silly, then prove it's silly by vitiating the figures with the figures you researched on and not lazily point to a disclaimer because it does not help your already weakened case. May nalalaman ka pang show your supporting facts. Ayan na nga. Read and understand the article and not just claim that it's fake news.

Edited by will robie
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He added that President Rodrigo Duterte will be invited to give the certificates of land ownership to the beneficiaries.

The agency plans to distribute 40,000 hectares of land this year, after distributing more than 60,000 hectares last year.

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During her term, GMA started going after the Hacienda Luisita to give it back to its rightful owners. She politically suffered greatly from it when the oligarchs ganged up on her. They vilified her so thoroughly over the decade that many Filipinos believed the lie they peddled about her.

 

Oligarchs fear that Hacienda Luisita can become a precedent to wrest away from them the ill gotten properties that they snatched away from the people in the past generations.

 

Now GMA is back in the current administration who is not beholden to the oligarchs. The fight against the stranglehold of oligarchs and their US backers continues.

Edited by camiar
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TODAY is a special non-working holiday, officially “Ninoy Aquino Day” as decreed by Republic Act 9256, signed into law in February 2004 by President Arroyo, when Speaker Jose de Venecia and Senate President Franklin Drilon headed Congress.

Curiously, the proclamation did not call Aquino a “hero,” nor did it explain why a holiday was being declared in his name. The terse six-paragraph text merely said it was a holiday “in order to commemorate the death anniversary of former senator Benigno “Ninoy” S. Aquino Jr.” That he is a hero is an interpretation from the fact that only two other persons have holidays declared in their honor, Jose Rizal and Andres Bonifacio, who were declared heroes in the same legislation that enacted their holidays.

Peruse the following facts and decide for yourself if you think Aquino is a national hero.

The superstar of the Liberal Party tipped to win against Marcos in the forthcoming 1973 elections, Ninoy was arrested in the hours after martial law was declared. He was found guilty of subversion and murder by a military court in 1977, together with New People’s Army (NPA) leaders “Kumander Dante” and Victor Corpuz.

In May 1980, Ninoy had a life-threatening heart attack. He refused to be put under the knife at the Philippine Heart Center, built by the Marcos regime in 1975, and Asia’s first specialized center for cardiac surgery, endorsed by the best cardiac surgeons in the world.

Aquino claimed that since it was a government hospital, Marcos could easily order its doctors to k*ll him, under the guise of a botched operation. While that was a slap on the face of the Filipino surgeons at the center, it was a clever move on Aquino’s part, for him to escape the country. Marcos feared that if Aquino died of a heart attack in prison, it would be blamed on him. That would have seriously undermined the semblance of stability that he had built after the 1978 interim Batasan Pambansa elections, in which the opposition leader ran and lost.

Not-a-hero120190821.jpgSentenced to death by military court: NPA leaders Buscayno and Corpus, left and center, and Ninoy. GOVERNMENT PHOTO

However, Marcos extracted from Aquino, in a message relayed personally by his wife, Imelda, two conditions: that he return to the country when he was fully recovered; that he does not publicly speak against Marcos during his stay in the US. Aquino himself said he told Imelda he accepted these terms.

Pact with the devil

A month after his operation in the US though, Aquino told an American reporter in Dallas: “A pact with the devil is no pact at all.”

Aquino got to stay in the US after being given the status of “Visiting Fellow” at the Center for International Affairs at Harvard University. A Harvard official said at that time that such Fellows “pursued their own research and are expected to present their research findings to the other fellows and interested faculty.”

But Aquino never did these things during his stay at Harvard. He was not an academic and hardly had the kind of stature for Harvard to bend its strict academic rules just to be a refuge for an opposition figure from some Third World country.

It was US President Jimmy Carter himself, however, who asked then Harvard President Derek Bok to find some excuse for Aquino to stay in the US, as a fellow of the university.

Washington’s eagerness to have Aquino as an exile in the US could be partly explained by Carter’s well-known human rights advocacy. But the more likely reason is that, as has been its practice, the US routinely befriends opposition figures that have the potential of succeeding an incumbent one. (To this day of course: Hong Kong protest leader Nathan Law last week left for Yale University to pursue a masters in law.)

In the Philippine case, during that period, there was another more compelling reason: the US military bases in Clark and Subic, the terms for which were scheduled for review in 1983. Marcos had been demanding more concessions from the US for the use of the bases, asking for higher payments that he wanted to call “rent.”

CIA knew

Having Aquino in the US sent the message to Marcos that if he insisted on such high demands, it could help overthrow his regime, in the guise of championing democratic rule, and install the opposition leader whom they were indoctrinating at Harvard.

Harvard had been known at the time to be a locus of the Central Intelligence Agency’s activities, with several of its professors fired in the 1980s after being exposed as having accepted CIA money for their projects.

Aquino, in short, became a US pawn in its geopolitical strategies and, smart as he was, he knew this and played his cards.

Not-a-hero220190821.jpgCIA’s first report on the Aquino assassination, contained in the Director’s ’Top Secret National Intelligence Daily’ issued Aug. 26, 1983. Source: Wikileaks

Aquino was in continuous contact with US officials, most probably even intelligence officials while he was at Cambridge. Proof of this is a “Top Secret” National Intelligence Daily dated June 27, 1983 issued by the CIA head, which reported: “Moderate opposition leader Benigno Aquino told senior US officials on Thursday he plans to leave the US and return to Manila in August.” At the time, nobody else knew of Aquino’s plans to return home.

Rather than as a scholar, Aquino used his stay at as a cozy refuge to build up his network among anti-Marcos opposition groups and more crucially, with the US officialdom. While the Yellows have claimed that he was writing two books at Harvard, no drafts of these, not a even a single page, were ever found, not even the roughest outline nor an abstract of his possible topic.

No academic

Aquino of course was no academic. He left no written work, except his bombastic speeches in his political heyday. There was, however, a speech he purportedly planned to deliver on his return to Manila. That likely was a forgery, as it surfaced only in 2014, three decades after his death, released on Ninoy Aquino day, and by Malacañang under his son Noynoy, without any explanation how it was discovered. After its publication in 2014 though, not even the Yellows claimed it was his.

A political scientist, the late Howard Wiarda, who shared an office with Aquino at Harvard, wrote in his book Adventures in Research (Volume III: Global Traveler): “[Aquino] wanted to talk constantly, while I was at Harvard to write a book, and in our year together I never saw him read or write anything.”

Aquino, who was supposedly a scholar at Harvard and MIT for three years, didn’t write anything, not even a journal, an essay, or any article for any US publication denouncing Marcos.

The Yellows claim that Aquino galvanized the opposition against Marcos there. I haven’t seen any evidence or any testimony to support this claim, though. It was the Movement for a Free Philippines headed by another former senator in exile, Raul Manglapus, that was more active, who went around the US rousing the Filipino community there to denounce the dictatorship. Aquino rarely left Cambridge.

Data show that Aquino appears to have been militant only a year after his 1980 heart surgery, and then in the months before his return.

The video of Aquino’s philippic against Marcos — which was widely distributed after his killing as proof that it was the dictator who wanted him silenced — was recorded Feb. 15, 1981 before a Filipino community. However, in his June 1981 interview with evangelist Pat Roberson, Aquino talked more about his getting closer to God as a result of his incarceration, and said not a bad word against Marcos.

Saudi Arabia

Another video was sometime in 1981 in Dallas where, rather than ranting against Marcos, he explained his ideas for getting Saudi Arabia to build a gas pipeline in Mindanao. “If I will be able to sell this [idea] to Mr. Marcos, the Philippines will be able to find an end to our insurgency in the South.”

I haven’t found any video or report of Aquino making fiery speeches against Marcos after 1981. Had the anti-Marcos fire in Aquino’s belly gone cold as he and his family enjoyed their stay that lasted three years in a fine house in Newton, Massachusetts, an upper-class district near Boston?

In fact, the CIA report mentioned above implied Aquino’s slide to irrelevancy: “Aquino’s political position has been hurt by his long exile. He probably believes [now] he has to return home if he is to play a role in the post-Marcos era.”

There were two major factors that likely prodded Aquino to leave his tranquil life in the upper-class town of Newton, Massachusetts in 1983.

First, the Philippines’ economic crisis unfolded that any observer could see was a very serious threat to Marcos’ survival, and Aquino knew this. The Latin American debt crisis broke when Mexico defaulted on its foreign loans in August 1982, and would soon hit the Philippines as well, triggering its worst economic crisis ever. It would have been impossible for Aquino, with his wide network, not to have known this.

Second, Aquino was convinced of the certainty that Marcos was dying. He had to rush home to wrench the leadership from others who were active in trying to topple Marcos, especially Salvador Laurel.

Steve Psinakis

This is disclosed in an audio tape of his conversation with Steve Psinakis a few days before his return to the country.

In that conversation, Aquino said: “Marcos is a man now: Terminal… now that he (Marcos) is about to meet his Maker, I am almost confident that I can talk to him and sell him something.” Aquino told Psinakis his information came from Cardinal Jaime Sin. I suspect it came from his American intelligence friends, which is why he was so confident of his information.

But still he decided to risk his life, even after he was told by Imelda herself that there were serious threats to his life. Indeed, that’s been Aquino’s well-known trait: He took huge risks.

Aquino was smart though. He filled his China Airline flight with media men, practically from every continent — with not a single Filipino journalist, not even those from the emerging “mosquito press” at the time.

He obviously thought that they could be his human shields, and that Marcos wouldn’t risk his foremost critic to be killed in front of the world, nor Western media men hurt, or even killed, in the volley of fire or a bomb’s shrapnels intended for him.

Except for his brother-in-law, ABC newsman Ken Kashiwahara, the foreign media turned out to be as meek as sheep, and didn’t question, much less block, the unarmed military men who fetched Aquino to escort him to the tarmac. Nobody tried to be with him as he was brought down. Aquino miscalculated terribly that Western media men had balls.

Marcos’ fall

Did his death trigger Marcos’ fall? It helped, no doubt. It was the last straw that broke the camel’s back of our foreign debt quagmire, leading to our October 1983 debt default. But after his funeral parade in August 1983 that was attended by a million people, the protest crowds dwindled.

By late 1985, the hyperinflation that broke out in 1984 was being tamed, after the central bank gave wealthy Filipinos an irresistible haven for their funds (the so-called “Jobo bills,” with their astronomical interest rates). An orderly rescheduling plan for the country’s foreign debt was also in place.

Marcos became so confident that he was on his way to restoring political and economic stability, that he fell for the US ruse to call for “snap” presidential elections, which had absolutely no constitutional basis.

That Ninoy’s assassination triggered the People Power revolt that overthrew Marcos is merely a romantic tale, exploiting our belief in messiahs and heroes who give up their lives for a nation.

Marcos gave in to the US demand for him to call snap elections to prove his legitimacy. The cabal that planned his overthrow very expertly created the perception that Cory won the elections, by declaring her victory ahead of the official returns, outsmarting Marcos. The strongman’s refusal to recognize Aquino as the winner, and the propaganda that she won despite massive cheating, convinced his defense secretary Juan Ponce Enrile and his RAM colonels to accelerate their plan to grab power through a classic colonels’ coup.

But Marcos got wind of their conspiracy and ordered the arrest of Enrile and his RAM conspirators. Enrile was desperate, convinced that Marcos would k*ll him or throw him in jail.

He and his RAM decided to take their last stand at his headquarters at Camp Aguinaldo, and die in the blaze of glorious battle. He managed to convince Fidel Ramos — who most probably had been told by his US contacts that Ronald Reagan was set to dump Marcos — to join him and together they marched to Camp Crame, to make it their redoubt.

Enrile’s genius was to get the anti-Marcos Cardinal Sin to call on his faithful to go to EDSA and surround Camp Crame, to form a human shield.

Fortunately for those in EDSA in February 1986, Marcos wasn’t of the same thinking as the Chinese Communist Party during the Tiananmen Square uprising in 1989, which was to let People’s Liberation Army tanks and battalions of riot police disperse the human shields.

Marcos ordered his troops to stand down and, according to his son Ferdinand Jr., told his generals: “I have served my countrymen for most of my life. I am not about to k*ll them.”

The rest, as the cliché goes, is history — the real one, with Ninoy in the sidelines. Certainly a tragic and an audacious figure, but not a hero.

Source: Bobi Tiglao's column in Manila Times

Edited by will robie
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  • 1 year later...
  • 1 year later...
On 8/25/2020 at 9:58 PM, Yoda18 said:

The full text:

Why celebrate the death of a false hero?

The Manila Times

By Ramon T. Tulfo  August 25, 2020

“YOU have to be ready with your hand cameras because action can become very fast. In a matter of three or four minutes, it could all be over, and I may not be able to talk to you again after this.”

Those were the words of former senator Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. during an interview with Jim Laurie of ABC News in his room at the Grand Hotel in Taipei a day before he was to take the China Airlines jet that would whisk him to Manila for a rendezvous with immortality.

Ninoy Aquino has been canonized as a martyr with an annual commemoration of his assassination on the tarmac of the Manila International Airport on Aug. 21, 1983, the country’s premier airport that was renamed in his honor.

His widow, Cory, and son, Noynoy, were both elected president of the country.

Cory was president from 1986 to 1992 and Noynoy, from 2010 to 2016.

Quite a feat for Ninoy, who had the flair for the dramatic when he was still alive.

How Ninoy Aquino was able to predict his assassination is something for the books.

Why was Ninoy so sure that he was going to be assassinated?

Before he boarded the China Airlines plane in Taipei, the former senator said he might be “hit” at the Manila International Airport, and his assassin would be shot in turn.

Holding up a bullet-proof vest, Ninoy said, “But if they hit me in the head, I’m a goner.”

Rolando Galman, a hired gun from Tarlac, Ninoy’s home province, shot the former senator in the head with a .357 magnum revolver, according to the government investigation into the murder.

Galman, who was wearing the uniform of airport maintenance personnel, was in turn, shot many times by soldiers, who fetched the ex-senator from the plane.

Why did Ninoy know he was going to be shot in the head and that his assassin would be shot by his escorts?

As the plane was about to land, Ninoy handed his brother-in-law, Ken Kashiwahara, his watch.

When Kashiwahara asked, “Why are you doing this,” Ninoy replied, “I just want you to have it.”

Was the gesture a premonition, or did Ninoy have foreknowledge of what was about to happen?

Ninoy was very sick — he was allowed to go to the United States for coronary heart bypass surgery — and he probably knew he was dying; thus, there’s no telling if he could have stage-managed his death.

The former senator was a publicity-seeker, whose every word or action was the stuff of headlines.

What baffles many people until now is why Cory and Noynoy, with all the power at their fingertips, did not form a panel of investigators to determine who was behind the assassination.

The US government made an in-depth probe into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and a commission was formed to do that.

Air Force M/Sgt. Pablo Martinez, in an interview with this columnist at the New Bilibid Prisons, took full responsibility for the dastardly deed but said his fellow soldiers, who were convicted with him, were completely innocent.

Martinez said it was he and his superior, Col. Romeo Ochoco, deputy chief of the defunct Aviation Security Command (Avsecom), who knew about the plot.

Martinez told me he handed Galman the .357 magnum days before Ninoy was to arrive and had the gun test-fired on the trunk of a tree.

My interview with Martinez was published in my column at the Philippine Daily Inquirer during Noynoy’s presidency.

Why didn’t Noynoy take a cue from that Inquirer column item and form a panel of investigators like the US government did on the Kennedy assassination?

There could only be one reason: the Aquinos and Cojuangcos wanted to let sleeping dogs lie.

The probe would probably have opened Pandora’s box.

Ninoy was no saint as a public official, and his flair for drama was legend.

The former senator exposed a plot by the government in the 1960s to send a commando unit to Sabah to help residents, mostly Filipinos from Sulu, launch a revolt against the Malaysian government, which would have led to the return of Sabah to the Philippines.

If he had been a true patriot, Ninoy wouldn’t have exposed that secret plan as it was a national security issue.

Ninoy was reported to have brokered the formation of the communist New People’s Army (NPA) at his residence in Hacienda Luisita in Tarlac.

He was absent when a grenade was thrown at a Liberal Party election rally in Plaza Miranda in Quiapo on Aug. 21, 1971 — is it a coincidence that that incident and his assassination 12 years later were of the same month and day? — that killed nine people and wounded scores of others, including his party mates.

Why was he absent at that election rally when his presence was important?

There were reports that he was forewarned by the NPA about the dastardly act and therefore, deliberately, did not attend the rally.

Or was Ninoy behind the Plaza Miranda bombing in order that it would be blamed on President Ferdinand Marcos in the same way his assassination would be blamed on Marcos?

Why do we celebrate yearly the assassination of a false hero?

 

  • Downvote 2
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  • 6 months later...
On 11/3/2021 at 9:00 PM, camiar said:

The full text:

Why celebrate the death of a false hero?

The Manila Times

By Ramon T. Tulfo  August 25, 2020

“YOU have to be ready with your hand cameras because action can become very fast. In a matter of three or four minutes, it could all be over, and I may not be able to talk to you again after this.”

Those were the words of former senator Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. during an interview with Jim Laurie of ABC News in his room at the Grand Hotel in Taipei a day before he was to take the China Airlines jet that would whisk him to Manila for a rendezvous with immortality.

Ninoy Aquino has been canonized as a martyr with an annual commemoration of his assassination on the tarmac of the Manila International Airport on Aug. 21, 1983, the country’s premier airport that was renamed in his honor.

His widow, Cory, and son, Noynoy, were both elected president of the country.

Cory was president from 1986 to 1992 and Noynoy, from 2010 to 2016.

Quite a feat for Ninoy, who had the flair for the dramatic when he was still alive.

How Ninoy Aquino was able to predict his assassination is something for the books.

Why was Ninoy so sure that he was going to be assassinated?

Before he boarded the China Airlines plane in Taipei, the former senator said he might be “hit” at the Manila International Airport, and his assassin would be shot in turn.

Holding up a bullet-proof vest, Ninoy said, “But if they hit me in the head, I’m a goner.”

Rolando Galman, a hired gun from Tarlac, Ninoy’s home province, shot the former senator in the head with a .357 magnum revolver, according to the government investigation into the murder.

Galman, who was wearing the uniform of airport maintenance personnel, was in turn, shot many times by soldiers, who fetched the ex-senator from the plane.

Why did Ninoy know he was going to be shot in the head and that his assassin would be shot by his escorts?

As the plane was about to land, Ninoy handed his brother-in-law, Ken Kashiwahara, his watch.

When Kashiwahara asked, “Why are you doing this,” Ninoy replied, “I just want you to have it.”

Was the gesture a premonition, or did Ninoy have foreknowledge of what was about to happen?

Ninoy was very sick — he was allowed to go to the United States for coronary heart bypass surgery — and he probably knew he was dying; thus, there’s no telling if he could have stage-managed his death.

The former senator was a publicity-seeker, whose every word or action was the stuff of headlines.

What baffles many people until now is why Cory and Noynoy, with all the power at their fingertips, did not form a panel of investigators to determine who was behind the assassination.

The US government made an in-depth probe into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and a commission was formed to do that.

Air Force M/Sgt. Pablo Martinez, in an interview with this columnist at the New Bilibid Prisons, took full responsibility for the dastardly deed but said his fellow soldiers, who were convicted with him, were completely innocent.

Martinez said it was he and his superior, Col. Romeo Ochoco, deputy chief of the defunct Aviation Security Command (Avsecom), who knew about the plot.

Martinez told me he handed Galman the .357 magnum days before Ninoy was to arrive and had the gun test-fired on the trunk of a tree.

My interview with Martinez was published in my column at the Philippine Daily Inquirer during Noynoy’s presidency.

Why didn’t Noynoy take a cue from that Inquirer column item and form a panel of investigators like the US government did on the Kennedy assassination?

There could only be one reason: the Aquinos and Cojuangcos wanted to let sleeping dogs lie.

The probe would probably have opened Pandora’s box.

Ninoy was no saint as a public official, and his flair for drama was legend.

The former senator exposed a plot by the government in the 1960s to send a commando unit to Sabah to help residents, mostly Filipinos from Sulu, launch a revolt against the Malaysian government, which would have led to the return of Sabah to the Philippines.

If he had been a true patriot, Ninoy wouldn’t have exposed that secret plan as it was a national security issue.

Ninoy was reported to have brokered the formation of the communist New People’s Army (NPA) at his residence in Hacienda Luisita in Tarlac.

He was absent when a grenade was thrown at a Liberal Party election rally in Plaza Miranda in Quiapo on Aug. 21, 1971 — is it a coincidence that that incident and his assassination 12 years later were of the same month and day? — that killed nine people and wounded scores of others, including his party mates.

Why was he absent at that election rally when his presence was important?

There were reports that he was forewarned by the NPA about the dastardly act and therefore, deliberately, did not attend the rally.

Or was Ninoy behind the Plaza Miranda bombing in order that it would be blamed on President Ferdinand Marcos in the same way his assassination would be blamed on Marcos?

Why do we celebrate yearly the assassination of a false hero?

 

Well

1. Ninoy's writings and death was instrumental to get the people to overthrow marcos, in the same way that Jose Rizal's, our national hero, writings and death were instrumental to get the people to overthrow the spaniards

2. Surely for anyone who supports the spaniards back then, Jose Rizal is also not a hero. Isn't that right Buencamino?

3. Also the expose was done because a survivor of the jabidah massacre came to ninoy for help, to bring justice to the dozens of jabidah muslims slaughtered.

4. The most illogical thing that Pro-marcoses has always branded ninoy is that Ninoy is both an evil haciendero and a communist. I guess if people can believe that DuterTAE is both rich and poor whichever is useful to their argument

5. Also the NPA hates the Aquinos so much since they were already at 20,000 men when Marcos was kicked out, And 6-7 years of Aquino and FVR reduced their numbers to 6,000

Unlike with Marcos, the darling of NPA, in 1969 the NPA were only 60 people. By 1987 they increased to 20,000

  • 1969: 60 (Encyclopedia of the Developing World)[1]
  • 1987: 25,200 (Armed Forces of the Philippines)[2]
  • 1994: 6,000 (International Crisis Group)[3]
  • 2009: 4,874 (Armed Forces of the Philippines)[4]
  • 2018: 3,700 (Channel News Asia)[5]

Notice that they never published the numbers of the communist group between 1968 to 1987. Most likely Marcos didnt want to look like the most successful NPA recruiter of all time.

https://cisac.fsi.stanford.edu/mappingmilitants/profiles/communist-party-philippines-new-peoples-army#highlight_text_13167

 

Edited by rayanami
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On 8/21/2019 at 10:46 AM, will robie said:

Source: Bobi Tiglao's column in Manila Times

Would anyone care to ask around in the journalistic community on the reputation of  Bobbit Tiglao  ? The guy is a skilled paid hack. Wag agad kayo maniwala . Check the internet for more credible sources.

  • Like (+1) 1
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Gaano kagaling ang AQUINO: 

Tatay ni Bam nagbenta ng power plant na pag-aari ng PNOC sa mga Lopezes. Ilang months after ng bentahan, nag resign ang naging President ng naibentang power plant. Yan ang totoong AQUINO, MAKABAYAN.

Nahiya tuloy akong biruin si Timmy na Mrs ni Bam regarding sa issue.  Magkasama kami dati ni Timmy sa Unilever

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On 5/11/2022 at 6:03 PM, Raymoney said:

I second this! Mukhang madaming nakakakalimot at nagiging revisionists kamakailan lang 😅

 

23 hours ago, FF said:

Would anyone care to ask around in the journalistic community on the reputation of  Bobbit Tiglao  ? The guy is a skilled paid hack. Wag agad kayo maniwala . Check the internet for more credible sources.

@BizMan FF said: 

dapat meron din tayong thread for balance.

Marcos & The Martial Law : The Facts You Know But Choose To Ignore !😁

 

parang ok din po eto sir biz.

  • Like (+1) 1
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1 minute ago, yummy_yumi said:

 

@BizMan FF said: 

dapat meron din tayong thread for balance.

Marcos & The Martial Law : The Facts You Know But Choose To Ignore !😁

 

parang ok din po eto sir biz.

@yummy_yumi

Thank you po mam. Kung papalarin. Pagkakataon pong malabanan ang historical revisionism . Again with grateful thanks for the suggestion. 

 

  • Like (+1) 1
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Eto isang Aquino facts na no one is talking about

Noong panahon ni Marcos, naglabas sya ng agrarian reform program, na naglalayon na mapwersa ang mga haciendero na ibenta ang kanilang lupa sa mga tenants(yung nagsasaka para sa kanila) ng lupa nila.

Sa batas ni Marcos, hindi kasama ang Hacienda Luisita

Noong naupo si Cory, naglabas sya ng agrarian reform version nya, sa batas nya kasama ang Hacienda Luisita sa dapat magbenta ng lupa.

(Yes alam ko ang deal with Magsaysay)

Edited by rayanami
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On 5/11/2022 at 5:39 PM, kuneho92 said:

Wala na ang lahi ng mga Aquino.

Wala na mag dadala ng apelyido nila.

Ok lang yan.

Ang bayan ay para sa mga tao at di para sa mga politika.

 

di dapat maging Aquino ang pangalan para magdala ng pag angat ng bayan.

 

marami tin naman magaling at di kurakot.  Mali lang kasi pinipili natin.

 

 

 

 

 

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