Kani jd sila bro backed by malaysia from the start labi na ng MNLF.. gi tolerate ra pod sa panahon ni Cory, wala na suppress ug na cntrol mao karon arang daghana na nila. Usa pod ni mao dli mo asenso ang nasud, if naay mga internal conflict ang usa ka nasud, ma grad down jd ang economiya. Mao ni usa ka punto ni Marcos sa una mao gi implement niya ang MArtial Law, pero ang mga oligarchs ang supak kau ani kay dli na sila "in-control" mao nag himo ug pa agi para mapa down nila c Macoy.
You tortured your People, You take away their Freedom, You PUT FEAR in peoples mind so that they will Fear the military and the Police and the Govt officials, You put your economy in RUINS and Borrowed BILLIONS of Money. You a MESS of your people and your Country and You expect the Next Presidents to FIXED All that? WOW
The people in 1980's are the same people who suffered FEAR under martial LAW, The people in the Govt are that time same people under MARCOS time, If MARCOS shows GOOD Governance During his TIME, Nganu puro BASURA ang mga Politiko nga Under niya?
And Why there's NO Mention ANYWHERE in the HISTORY Books about the PHILIPPINES being a RICH and DEVELOPED or have STABLE economy During 1970's and early 80's during Martial LAW?
So according to History and some accounts from people outside the PH, from 1960 to early 70's , PH economy is very Good, we are at the Top of Asian Region. Nya During sa Martial Law from early 70's to early 80's basura atung ekonomiya Ug walay Magpautang na nga lain nasud. KINSAY DIAY RASON?
- - - Updated - - -
I already said We will Judge Marcos according sa Nahitabo sa iyang time UNYA mag compare na nuon
We can discuss what Marcos Did during his time without inserting your HATRED of PNOY or any other Presidents![]()
Nakaabot ko sa time sa martial law, early teens pa ko ato. Kaning torture the people, over hype ra na kay ang mga subersibo ra ang gipang initan sa PC. Ang kulba ra jud ato nga time madakpan ka ug curfew kay awotan ka ug prisohon overnight pero on the other hand maau pod ang effect ato kay almost zero crime, walay loose firearms kay dakpon man jud kung magdala ka. Karon murag sayon ra kaau kadala2x firearms mao ni grabe ang crime. Mao di ta angay mga pinoy lenient governance dapat strict para ma disiplina ta.
agree ko ani.. sakto man sad, need man jd displina ang mga pinoy. kadtong time ni Marcos naa fear, naay disclipina. pareha ra pod pattern sa singapore, naa silay fear ni LKY naa jd pod disciplina. Pero kadtong nawala na c macoy, aww murag ilaga gibuhian ang mga politko, left and right and anomalya.. tiunod jd ang gi ingon na - "when the cat is away, the mice will play"
pero saon taman lagi, di man i-komparar si makoy sa uban...ang kang makoy lang nga bati atong stroyaan...sa expression pa, "eh di wow!"![]()
- It was during his first term that the North Diversion Road (now, North Luzon Expressway) (initially from Balintawak to Tabang, Guiguinto, Bulacan) was constructed with the help of the AFP engineering construction battalion.
- Successful drive against smuggling. In 1966, more than 100 important smugglers were arrested; in three years 1966-1968 the arrests totaled 5,000. Military men involved in smuggling were forced to retire
- Greater production of rice by promoting the cultivation of IR-8 hybrid rice. In 1968 the Philippines became self-sufficient in rice, the first time in history since the American period. In addition, the Philippines exported rice worth US$7 million.
- Land reform was given an impetus during the first term of President Marcos. 3,739 hectares of lands in Central Luzon were distributed to the farmers.
- President Marcos initiated, together with the other four heads of state of Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore), the formation of a regional organization to combat the communist threat in the region – the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
- Government finances were stabilized by higher revenue collections and loans from treasury bonds, foreign lending institutions and foreign governments.
- His 21 years in power with the help of U.S. massive economic aid and foreign loans enabled Marcos to build more schools, hospitals and infrastructure than any of his predecessors combined.
- Due to his iron rule, he was able to impose order and reduce crime by strict implementation of the law.
- The relative economic success that the Philippines enjoyed during the initial part of his presidency is hard to dispel.
- Peace and order substantially improved in most provinces however situations in Manila and some provinces continued to deteriorate until the imposition of martial law in 1972.
-Many of Marcos' accomplishments were overlooked after the so-called "People Power" EDSA Revolution.
A journalist said that "The Marcoses were the best of us, and they were the worst of us. That's why we say we hate them so much."
Too general about that torture or what it is. I personally know some people who where caught and jailed but they were released. Only the extreme subversives were dealt with. And besides, after Marcos the movement against him waned and is no longer as strong as before. So which goes, what were they really against? Just against Marcos or against 'oppression' and 'tyranny'? How come there wasn't anymore more momentum from the movement right after reaching its peak during marcos time?
How come they did not help the people that died under the succeeding administrations? So they really were just there to accomodate anti-Marcos sentiment? After that... NOTHING?
Anyway, in basic economics the security of a state relies on its citizens ability to pay for their daily living. No country is an exception. So the situation in the philippines is no different compared to others during that time.
Latin American Debt Crisis of the 1980s - A detailed essay on an important event in the history of the Federal Reserve.
The Origins of the Debt Crisis
During the 1970s, two large oil price shocks created current account deficits in many Latin American countries. At the same time, these shocks created current account surpluses among oil-exporting countries. With the encouragement of the US government, large US money-center banks were willing intermediaries between the two groups, providing the exporting countries with a safe, liquid place for their funds and then lending those funds to Latin America (FDIC 1997).1
Latin American borrowing from US commercial banks and other creditors increased dramatically during the 1970s. At the end of 1970, total outstanding debt from all sources totaled only $29 billion, but by the end of 1978, that number had skyrocketed to $159 billion. By 1982, the debt level reached $327 billion (FDIC 1997).
Similar Threads |
|