Ala diay ghapon mo na.anad aning big 3? mo increase ug piso mo rollback ug .50cents... sus oi, lumang tug.tugin nani... ang dapat ninu tan.awon kung nganong n.saka ug maayo ang gasolina sa administration n noy2x dli kay nyong buta.butahan ug bungol.bungolan mga aligot2x sa mga tawo nga nagkalisod... sus oi.. MGA BINAYRAN........ wakekekeke![]()
maau unta 3 years ra term sa pres sa pinas same sa US aron dili taas ato agony oi.....
Big laugh
09/20/2011
Noynoy flew to the United States Sunday to flaunt his “credentials” as a transparent leader and a “corruption fighter” who shares Washington’s “vision of accountability and good governance” in a New York forum which just launchedthe Open Government Partnership, apart from saying that he would be using his trip to get more foreign investments.
There is doubt that he can succeed at that, despite his propaganda machine daily churning out its mantra of the righteous path, accountability and transparency because most, if not all leaders, know that their speeches lead to nothing, except in trying to make themselves look good before the others.
Then too, most if not all these leaders and their aides, certainly know that despite all the talk about good governance, accountability and transparency, what they really do, especially in the case of Noynoy, is to pay lip service to all these.
The world was witness to the Aug. 23 Manila hostage crisis where Noynoy not only muffed it as a leader, but also really muffed up his claim of making officials involved in that botched hostage rescue accountable. Worse, this non-accountability marked in Noynoy’s administration has become even clearer with his penchant for protecting his KKKs (cronies, classmates and shooting buddies) while running after his political foes and engaging in trial and conviction by publicity, since there is little solid evidence presented against his foes.
That he pays lip service to the principle of accountability is even made clearer as Noynoy has not accounted for the funds he gets whether from his presidential social fund or even in his gigantic pork barrel and his so-called intelligence fund.
Then too, even his “good government” mantra is a sham, considering the fact that corruption in his administration and government has not abated at all. He himself is into corrupting members of Congress to get what he wants.
His Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) goes about slapping tax evasion cases against the small earners — small in comparison to big business and the wealthy in society. Worse, even as the BIR chief goes after Noynoy’s political foes, such as the Arroyos, she does nothing in the same case of her boss, the Finance chief, who clearly had evaded paying taxes, using her own formula used against the Arroyos.
There was no question from the BIR chief either in the case of Noynoy himself and the very little tax he paid last year, in proportion to his tens of millions in earnings, without liabilities.
As for good governance, what kind of governance does he speak of, when he hoards the budget and resorts to very dangerous underspending, so much so that he ensured the slowdown of economic activity, failing to generate more jobs for the jobless and naturally, making more people live in a miserable state.
And he even claims that he prefers to underspend than get into corrupt deals. But what makes him equate public spending to generate economic activity with corruption? Is he then admitting that releasing the needed funds to his various secretaries, leads to corruption in his administration?
Strange, but while he has spent about P600 billion only from his 2011 budget, leaving intact some P1 trillion, which he hasn’t spent, he seeks an even bigger budget for 2012, moreover, insisting on his power to impound some P101 billion in hiring funds of the fiscal autonomy of these constitutional offices. He wants to control everything — for him to get everybody to beg for their funds which rightfully belong to them.
Noynoy speaks of his righteous path and his claimed code of transparency, which smacks of high grade hypocrisy, especially as he refuses to even present the deed of sale and receipts of his claimed second hand Porsche he then claimed he had already sold. And that isn’t the only thing he keeps hiding from the public.
As for transparency in his administration, that really is a big laugh, considering the fact that he has done nothing to get the Freedom of Information bill, which was a legislative measure he wanted pushed when he was on the campaign trail, passed.
Now that proof is his hypocrisy.
The Daily Tribune - Without Fear or Favor
^i like the last part dulot kaayo sa bukog ni unretry ug shofadgreat.
re: oil prices
what can you suggest to PNoy that he should do? aside from the Pantawid Pasada?
can you name a past president that was able to control oil prices?
most Filipinos have accepted the fact that oil prices is beyond the control of the government that's why the transport strike yesterday failed. they would rather go on earning their living than whining.
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