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  1. Join Date
    Aug 2018
    Posts
    3,733
    #22821
    Quote Originally Posted by forceG View Post
    Yeah, what i mean is the date that reflects your membership and the date OB was banned,..
    Baka ikaw nga si OB haha[emoji6]


    Sent from my iPhone Xs using Tapatalk
    ¯\____(ツ)_____/¯


    Sent from my HUAWEI VNS-L31 using Tapatalk

  2. Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    2,746
    #22822
    Quote Originally Posted by Archerfish View Post
    Are you pertaining to *sean-archer? [emoji3]
    Sir archerfish, they're referring to you po hehe.
    Nananahimik ako dito, Just here sitting on my couch eating cookies while reading self help books. [emoji16]

    Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk

  3. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,620
    #22823
    Quote Originally Posted by EQAddict View Post
    Transcript of the speech delivered by Senator Emmanuel D. Pacquiao before the Oxford Union in Great Britain on November 5th, 2018

    DREAMS DO COME TRUE

    President Horvath and the other esteemed officials of the University of Oxford; distinguished members of the Oxford Union, other dignitaries in attendance and ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon.

    I am the only eight-division world boxing champion in history, having won 11 major world titles, ranging from Flyweight, which has an 8 stone limit, to Super Welterweight, which has an 11 stone limit. My tailor has been kept very busy throughout my career, adjusting the waistbands of my trunks.

    I have fought some of the best fighters in history. And yet I have to admit, as I stand before you, I am intimidated when I think of the kind of main event headliners who faced you over the years:
    • Sir Winston Churchill,
    • American Presidents Reagan, Nixon and Carter,
    • Mother Teresa,
    • the Dalai Lama
    • and Sir Elton John.

    And here am I, Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao, standing before you armed with just the equivalent of a sixth form education, an undisguised respect for what your group and your university represent and a pretty fair left hook.

    If this give-and-take today were a “tale of the tape,” I would be a respectful underdog. But be careful. I am not that easy to floor.

    When I received your gracious invitation, I asked myself, what could I talk about that could possibly interest you? What could Manny Pacquiao say that would be of any impact, much more utility, to the men and women who enjoy the highest standards of instruction at Oxford?

    The answer came fast: I know what I should speak about, something very few among you can claim to know about: my education, certainly non-traditional, non-formal, largely unstructured. I will call it my education in the Open University of Life.

    It is a matter of record that I only had traditional formal schooling until Secondary School, Grade 12.

    It was only recently that I reached University level through the alternative education program.

    We were dirt poor. I had to work since the age of five, to help my mother feed my three siblings and me. Many days, I was lucky to have one full meal. On days when we had no food, I would drink lots of water just to fill my stomach. But my mind and spirit were never hungry. I read anything I could get my hands on.

    I even read the newspaper that my lunch or dinner came wrapped in. I read signs everywhere, even on moving vehicles. I learned measurements and weights by constantly reading the rates and tariffs at the warehouses where I worked as a stevedore, a docker in your parlance.

    At night when I could not sleep because of the cold, I would read the labels on the carton boxes that served as my bed on the street pavement.

    The movements of the clouds, the tint of the horizon, and the clarity of the stars taught me when morning was about to come.

    And for me, the morning did come. Warm, bright, and simply amazing ——- a lesson in what can be achieved if you have determination … if you ignore the odds against you …and as you are taught here at this magnificent institution never, ever quit.

    Think of David and Goliath. Look at me. I am not very big and I never had five smooth stones to throw at any obstacle, but determination Is a power tool. I won a lot of fights.

    Since 2016, I have been a sitting member of the Philippine Senate, having received the direct vote of over 16 million Filipinos. As such, I participate in debates that result in the passage of legislation which determines the course of our country’s history and, indirectly, the world’s.

    I do not fault anyone who views me as singularly ill-equipped for this role. Instead, I ask: is there anyone more knowledgeable than this humble civil servant about the hardships incident to the way of life of the majority of our people? Who among my colleagues have faced poverty face to face from birth? Whose life’s work has it been to battle illiteracy?

    In crafting effective laws, there is no better guide than the pulse of the masses.

    I may not have financial acuity. I may not be historically fluent. I may not even be socially adept. But I am philosophically rooted in my personal adversities, which morally bind me to the general struggle of our people.

    I am a fighter, not just because it is my profession. I was a fighter long before I first set foot in a boxing ring. All my life I have fought to live. Every single day in my youth, I fought for survival. Now, I do it and get paid for it. Then, I was lucky to get a piece of bread for it.

    But how are my struggles of any value to the Filipinos? It cannot feed or clothe all of them. No matter how much I give financially, hundreds of thousands more remain wanting.

    In 2013, in the aftermath of Category 5 super typhoon Haiyan (locally remembered as Yolanda), the deadliest typhoon to devastate my country, leaving a record of more than 6,000 dead, I went to Tacloban and visited a nightmare.

    The place was a virtual ghost town. Everyone had lost someone from their family; others, their entire family. No property was spared. There were bodies everywhere. There was no food, no water, no electricity. Each face I looked into bore the same expression: defeat. Not a single person there thought that they could ever recover from that tragedy.

    I thought to myself, I can give millions, as have many other donors from all over the world, but no amount of money can give these people hope. I, too, fought against despair.

    But then I had an idea. We set up a makeshift basketball court and I started shooting some hoops. Then one boy picked up the ball after one of my shots and tried a shot. Soon there were enough of us to have a five on five matches, and we did.

    The smiles, the laughter, the whoops of joy of those boys during that game are memories forever etched in my heart. To have lost everything overnight, including parents, siblings, friends, but to still have the ability to rise above one’s personal loss and reach out to your fellow man, even just in play, to find joy together, there, at that point, in those victims’ eyes, I found hope.

    Those boys, who had nothing left, gave me hope.

    Four years later, I would see the same physical and societal devastation in Marawi. Our beautiful city of the South was reduced to ruins by civil strife. Death and destruction broke the hearts and backs of its residents. But not their spirit. One year later, Marawi is now under rehabilitation.

    These and other experiences like this motivated me to answer the call of public service. I believe, in all humility, that my life is just a snapshot, it is a glorified blow-up of what millions of Filipinos live through on a day to day basis -- the hardships, the challenges, the back-breaking, hope-extinguishing despair. Yet, through the ashes of destruction, the Filipino always manages to rise up and fight another day.

    I believe that I was destined to serve as an inspiration for the average Filipino to fight, to rise above adversity, to conquer and defy, and to embrace life and all its difficulties. Manny Pacquiao is the best fairy tale every Filipino could tell and re-tell to all generations yet to come. Manny Pacquiao’s story is incredible but true.

    Miracles do happen. Dreams do come true. Being poor does not mean one must die poor. Hard work and persistence will set you free from the shackles of poverty. But it is faith that will take you to the very top.

    That is Manny Pacquiao’s story so I ask you -- all of you -- to never lose faith in what you can do as a human being, belief in the loyalty of family, and belief in the Almighty. It is not easy to believe in the power one. But I ask you to look around you. Count the faces. Do the multiplication and suddenly we are a power of 50 or 100 or 1,000.

    You, with your education, determination, and faith you can change the world.

    Maraming Salamat!

    Speech delivered by
    EMMANUEL D. PACQUIAO
    Senator- Republic of the Philippines
    before the Oxford Union, Frewin Court,
    Oxford, OX1 3JB
    Great Britain
    On 05 November 2018

    Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk Pro
    i like it.

  4. Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Posts
    1,186
    #22824
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    i like it.
    Well, it proves he can read from a teleprompter or a sheet of paper.

    Nice message, but I'm willing to bet a month's salary that NOTHING in that speech was in fact written by him.

  5. Join Date
    May 2014
    Posts
    14,700
    #22825
    Quote Originally Posted by KingoftheNorth View Post
    Well, it proves he can read from a teleprompter or a sheet of paper.

    Nice message, but I'm willing to bet a month's salary that NOTHING in that speech was in fact written by him.
    obviously di sya nag sulat, kwento ng buhay nya yan bro, tapos di sya magaling magsulat. foreign ang makikinig, humingi tulong sa kung sino pwede sumulat para madali maintindihan ng mga makikinig.

  6. Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Posts
    5,246
    #22826
    Quote Originally Posted by KingoftheNorth View Post
    Well, it proves he can read from a teleprompter or a sheet of paper.

    Nice message, but I'm willing to bet a month's salary that NOTHING in that speech was in fact written by him.
    May mali ba kung di sya nagsulat?

    Sent from my BLL-L22 using Tapatalk

  7. Join Date
    Dec 2017
    Posts
    2,686
    #22827
    Quote Originally Posted by EQAddict View Post
    Transcript of the speech delivered by Senator Emmanuel D. Pacquiao before the Oxford Union in Great Britain on November 5th, 2018

    DREAMS DO COME TRUE

    President Horvath and the other esteemed officials of the University of Oxford; distinguished members of the Oxford Union, other dignitaries in attendance and ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon.

    I am the only eight-division world boxing champion in history, having won 11 major world titles, ranging from Flyweight, which has an 8 stone limit, to Super Welterweight, which has an 11 stone limit. My tailor has been kept very busy throughout my career, adjusting the waistbands of my trunks.

    I have fought some of the best fighters in history. And yet I have to admit, as I stand before you, I am intimidated when I think of the kind of main event headliners who faced you over the years:
    • Sir Winston Churchill,
    • American Presidents Reagan, Nixon and Carter,
    • Mother Teresa,
    • the Dalai Lama
    • and Sir Elton John.

    And here am I, Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao, standing before you armed with just the equivalent of a sixth form education, an undisguised respect for what your group and your university represent and a pretty fair left hook.

    If this give-and-take today were a “tale of the tape,” I would be a respectful underdog. But be careful. I am not that easy to floor.

    When I received your gracious invitation, I asked myself, what could I talk about that could possibly interest you? What could Manny Pacquiao say that would be of any impact, much more utility, to the men and women who enjoy the highest standards of instruction at Oxford?

    The answer came fast: I know what I should speak about, something very few among you can claim to know about: my education, certainly non-traditional, non-formal, largely unstructured. I will call it my education in the Open University of Life.

    It is a matter of record that I only had traditional formal schooling until Secondary School, Grade 12.

    It was only recently that I reached University level through the alternative education program.

    We were dirt poor. I had to work since the age of five, to help my mother feed my three siblings and me. Many days, I was lucky to have one full meal. On days when we had no food, I would drink lots of water just to fill my stomach. But my mind and spirit were never hungry. I read anything I could get my hands on.

    I even read the newspaper that my lunch or dinner came wrapped in. I read signs everywhere, even on moving vehicles. I learned measurements and weights by constantly reading the rates and tariffs at the warehouses where I worked as a stevedore, a docker in your parlance.

    At night when I could not sleep because of the cold, I would read the labels on the carton boxes that served as my bed on the street pavement.

    The movements of the clouds, the tint of the horizon, and the clarity of the stars taught me when morning was about to come.

    And for me, the morning did come. Warm, bright, and simply amazing ——- a lesson in what can be achieved if you have determination … if you ignore the odds against you …and as you are taught here at this magnificent institution never, ever quit.

    Think of David and Goliath. Look at me. I am not very big and I never had five smooth stones to throw at any obstacle, but determination Is a power tool. I won a lot of fights.

    Since 2016, I have been a sitting member of the Philippine Senate, having received the direct vote of over 16 million Filipinos. As such, I participate in debates that result in the passage of legislation which determines the course of our country’s history and, indirectly, the world’s.

    I do not fault anyone who views me as singularly ill-equipped for this role. Instead, I ask: is there anyone more knowledgeable than this humble civil servant about the hardships incident to the way of life of the majority of our people? Who among my colleagues have faced poverty face to face from birth? Whose life’s work has it been to battle illiteracy?

    In crafting effective laws, there is no better guide than the pulse of the masses.

    I may not have financial acuity. I may not be historically fluent. I may not even be socially adept. But I am philosophically rooted in my personal adversities, which morally bind me to the general struggle of our people.

    I am a fighter, not just because it is my profession. I was a fighter long before I first set foot in a boxing ring. All my life I have fought to live. Every single day in my youth, I fought for survival. Now, I do it and get paid for it. Then, I was lucky to get a piece of bread for it.

    But how are my struggles of any value to the Filipinos? It cannot feed or clothe all of them. No matter how much I give financially, hundreds of thousands more remain wanting.

    In 2013, in the aftermath of Category 5 super typhoon Haiyan (locally remembered as Yolanda), the deadliest typhoon to devastate my country, leaving a record of more than 6,000 dead, I went to Tacloban and visited a nightmare.

    The place was a virtual ghost town. Everyone had lost someone from their family; others, their entire family. No property was spared. There were bodies everywhere. There was no food, no water, no electricity. Each face I looked into bore the same expression: defeat. Not a single person there thought that they could ever recover from that tragedy.

    I thought to myself, I can give millions, as have many other donors from all over the world, but no amount of money can give these people hope. I, too, fought against despair.

    But then I had an idea. We set up a makeshift basketball court and I started shooting some hoops. Then one boy picked up the ball after one of my shots and tried a shot. Soon there were enough of us to have a five on five matches, and we did.

    The smiles, the laughter, the whoops of joy of those boys during that game are memories forever etched in my heart. To have lost everything overnight, including parents, siblings, friends, but to still have the ability to rise above one’s personal loss and reach out to your fellow man, even just in play, to find joy together, there, at that point, in those victims’ eyes, I found hope.

    Those boys, who had nothing left, gave me hope.

    Four years later, I would see the same physical and societal devastation in Marawi. Our beautiful city of the South was reduced to ruins by civil strife. Death and destruction broke the hearts and backs of its residents. But not their spirit. One year later, Marawi is now under rehabilitation.

    These and other experiences like this motivated me to answer the call of public service. I believe, in all humility, that my life is just a snapshot, it is a glorified blow-up of what millions of Filipinos live through on a day to day basis -- the hardships, the challenges, the back-breaking, hope-extinguishing despair. Yet, through the ashes of destruction, the Filipino always manages to rise up and fight another day.

    I believe that I was destined to serve as an inspiration for the average Filipino to fight, to rise above adversity, to conquer and defy, and to embrace life and all its difficulties. Manny Pacquiao is the best fairy tale every Filipino could tell and re-tell to all generations yet to come. Manny Pacquiao’s story is incredible but true.

    Miracles do happen. Dreams do come true. Being poor does not mean one must die poor. Hard work and persistence will set you free from the shackles of poverty. But it is faith that will take you to the very top.

    That is Manny Pacquiao’s story so I ask you -- all of you -- to never lose faith in what you can do as a human being, belief in the loyalty of family, and belief in the Almighty. It is not easy to believe in the power one. But I ask you to look around you. Count the faces. Do the multiplication and suddenly we are a power of 50 or 100 or 1,000.

    You, with your education, determination, and faith you can change the world.

    Maraming Salamat!

    Speech delivered by
    EMMANUEL D. PACQUIAO
    Senator- Republic of the Philippines
    before the Oxford Union, Frewin Court,
    Oxford, OX1 3JB
    Great Britain
    On 05 November 2018

    Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk Pro
    This is a touching speech, rather, a touching story. True enough, what else can you share to those guys who received top-notch education when you yourself finished​ grade 12? However, a lesson in life is more than enough. Let's not lose hope, as he have said.

  8. Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    57,760
    #22828
    Quote Originally Posted by KingoftheNorth View Post
    Well, it proves he can read from a teleprompter or a sheet of paper.

    Nice message, but I'm willing to bet a month's salary that NOTHING in that speech was in fact written by him.
    That's a lot of money

    And I'm willing to bet my head, he had a ghost writer. But yeah, nice message.

    Sent from my SM-N960F using Tapatalk

  9. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    40,599
    #22829
    Quote Originally Posted by sean-archer View Post
    Sir archerfish, they're referring to you po hehe.
    Nananahimik ako dito, Just here sitting on my couch eating cookies while reading self help books. [emoji16]

    Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
    Hinde nga ikaw dahil hinde ka fil-am eh. Hinde Spokening dollars. [emoji23]


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  10. Join Date
    May 2014
    Posts
    14,700
    #22830
    Quote Originally Posted by _Cathy_ View Post
    That's a lot of money

    And I'm willing to bet my head, he had a ghost writer. But yeah, nice message.

    Sent from my SM-N960F using Tapatalk
    maybe i misread your post cathy, bakit parang masyado elitista ang dating O_o

  11. Join Date
    Aug 2018
    Posts
    3,733
    #22831
    Even presidents have speechwriters

    Sent from my HUAWEI VNS-L31 using Tapatalk

  12. Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Posts
    6,160
    #22832
    Maybe he didnt write the speech but the life story it tells, the hardships it chronicles, the faith and belief it espouses, the millions of people he has touched are definitely and 100000% his.


    Haters gonna hate....but he is the one delivering the speech in Oxford.......

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  13. Join Date
    May 2014
    Posts
    14,700
    #22833
    Quote Originally Posted by _Cathy_ View Post
    That's a lot of money

    And I'm willing to bet my head, he had a ghost writer. But yeah, nice message.

    Sent from my SM-N960F using Tapatalk
    maybe i misread your post cathy, bakit parang masyado elitista ang dating O_o

  14. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,620
    #22834
    in truth, many of our past and present great leaders and speakers, had wordsmiths to write their speeches for them.
    if i may opine, it is un-common for them NOT to have a speechwriter.

    barack had a speechwriter.
    even jfk had a speechwriter.

    but churchill... "he rolled his own". i like his "..we will fight them on the beaches..". his bulldog is very apt for him.
    lincoln. he had a great speech writer. himself. he wrote his gettysburg address several times, because some folks back then wanted copies of the speech, and as there were no xerox machines yet... he wrote them. there were slight differences in lyrics of the copies.
    FDR. yes and no. "...here's what i want to say. you guys can polish it up". but i believe his pearl harbor speech was from the heart.
    cicero wrote his own, while the empire slept.

    paQman chose the right topic. no one can say he made a mistake in the facts about his life.
    Last edited by dr. d; November 9th, 2018 at 09:17 AM.

  15. Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Posts
    5,246
    #22835
    Quote Originally Posted by EQAddict View Post
    Maybe he didnt write the speech but the life story it tells, the hardships it chronicles, the faith and belief it espouses, the millions of people he has touched are definitely and 100000% his.


    Haters gonna hate....but he is the one delivering the speech in Oxford.......

    Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk Pro
    So true.

    I can smell bitterness in some of the posts here.
    Like him or not, he did work his a$s off to be where he is now...successful.

    Sent from my BLL-L22 using Tapatalk

  16. Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    57,760
    #22836
    Vote Manny Pacquiao for President

    And yes I am aware that even great presidents had speech writers.

    Sent from my SM-N960F using Tapatalk

  17. Join Date
    Dec 2017
    Posts
    2,686
    #22837
    Quote Originally Posted by sean-archer View Post
    Sir archerfish, they're referring to you po hehe.
    Nananahimik ako dito, Just here sitting on my couch eating cookies while reading self help books. [emoji16]

    Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
    Thank you for taking it with humor, which I have intended.
    [emoji3]

  18. Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    2,746
    #22838
    I couldn't have written it better, but the last part for me lacked that KO winning punch.

    Parang nag orgasm na ng orgasm sa first and middle, then wala na binuga sa huli. But overall, it's already a brilliant and touching message.

    Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk

  19. Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    54,620
    #22839
    Quote Originally Posted by chronicle View Post
    So true.

    I can smell bitterness in some of the posts here.
    Like him or not, he did work his a$s off to be where he is now...successful.

    Sent from my BLL-L22 using Tapatalk
    "he belongs in the ring, not in congress."
    heh heh.

    ang pinoy talaga...

  20. Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Posts
    5,246
    #22840
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    "he belongs in the ring, not in congress."
    heh heh.

    ang pinoy talaga...
    Yes. Totally agree on where he belongs and where he should not be.

    I just dont see the point of bashing him for having ghost writers though.

    Sent from my BLL-L22 using Tapatalk

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