lets just wait and see...
anything can happen in philippine politics.
hope for the good of all.
lets just wait and see...
anything can happen in philippine politics.
hope for the good of all.
noy2x is a weakling. molikay man gali kung pangutan on kanus a ang kasal. unsa na kaha kung politika. naa na puy first black president ang pilipinas. si binay!
swetoha nato dri oi...hahahaha...
how about well pretend...
lets pretend that GIBO won the elections... tan-awon nato unsa ang reaction pud sa mga anti gibo...
hmmmm...
well unfortunately renouncing your citizenship is not as easy as that. besides...im not the only one who has the same sentiment. what's wrong with feeling sorry for your own country? for me its a love-hate relationship. i hate it but i cant deny the fact that i still love it coz its still my country. i dont see what your problem is... do you have issues with people going outside the country? im just a small voice who speaks for others who feel the same way.
and to answer your question, of course i would comment any time and any way i want. i pay my taxes... that alone gives me the right express all my negative and positive opinions, to hell with what other people would say (and yes that includes you).
you have issues, man. who ever mentioned being rich? lol. you seem to be getting too carried away with all these political issues.chill...![]()
sos ga labad ranis ulo, tabangan nlng nato kng kinsa ng naa dara karon sa lingkoranan. sayo pasad kaau para mo decide.
mag wait and see diay ta ron. mao na ni ang resulta sa taong way agi... dont blame us if we doubt him.
Unity is priority
06/21/2010
The gimmick being built up by the yellow crowd for the inauguration of President-elect Noynoy Aquino in making spectators take a collective oath with the new President — a first, as it is being bruited about by the same yellow horde — will likely be yet another attempt at exclusivity and will likely backfire.
The 10,000 (100,000 even, as claimed by the yellow media) estimated people who will troop to the Quirino Grandstand will likely be the same throng of civil socialites who mill around Aquino, Liberal Party (LP) members, movie stars and starlets and a sprinkling of supporters who are pinning their huge hopes on the Noynoy presidency.
Taking an oath presupposes a commitment which the organizers of the Aquino inauguration want the mass oath-taking to convey. It would be a commitment for support of Noynoy for the coming years he will be in Malacaņang.
This is a pretty strange oath, pledging loyalty to a president, not the country or the nation, but to Noynoy. Still, the yellows have always been strange in their ways of showing “loyalty.”
At the same time, however, those who will take the vow may presume an assignment of function that may result in the future of too many people poking their noses on Noynoy and his administration’s affairs that would contribute to making him largely ineffective.
The obvious media stunt will also alienate Noynoy from the rest of the nation outside of the Quirino Grandstand oath-taking since it would create an impression that Noynoy and his preferred 10,000 are the only ones that will assume roles for the next six years.
The biggest argument against the mass oath-taking is that it is not necessary. The mere fact that Noynoy was voted president was already a show of commitment. The votes speak for themselves.
The only other reason for the need to have a pledge of commitment is that Noynoy may not be too sure of the actual vote he has received, after all, there is no doubt that the polls were electronically rigged.
The supposed “Panata sa Pagbabago” or pledge for change would, however, look good on television, which mirrors most of Noynoy’s actions thus far which have been good for TV but actually are empty inside.
In the inaugural, it should be Noynoy who should be pledging for change to the nation and not the people pledging it to him. The presidency will be bestowed on Noynoy since Filipinos wanted a renewed outlook and it is for him to prove that he deserves the vote given him.
Filipinos, moreover, should not be surrendering their support to Noynoy and in all the acts that he would make.
For the past nine years, Filipinos have lived with a president who was not trustworthy and it would take a lot of work for such confidence to return.
The idea apparently was to get Filipinos involved in the arduous task of nation building under the Aquino administration, the reason for the collective oath-taking and most would volunteer pitching in to help Noynoy.
Noynoy, however, should start showing his capability to lead the entire nation, including those outside of his yellow circle and his recent divisive actions like his flat rejection of both the Chief Justice and the Armed Forces chief of staff and all in government whom he perceives as “residues” of the past administration as his yellow supporters call the appointees of Gloria.
In the inauguration itself, Noynoy will be taking his divisive acts to the hilt by taking his oath of before Supreme Court Associate Justice Conchita Carpio-Morales instead of Chief Justice Renato Corona.
Noynoy should learn from the past, particularly from the administration of his mother, Cory Aquino, that the divisive path leads to huge problems in the future.
A major criticism on the administration of then President Cory Aquino was her inability to unite political forces by exhibiting the same alienating traits of Noynoy.
What resulted were coup attempts in almost every year of her six years in office.
^O.T. link sa imong sa article nang kay mora kag nangawat ana.. unless you wrote it yourself.![]()
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