Results 211 to 220 of 499
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June 14th, 2014 07:25 PM #211Huh? you can have work without electricity. Hindi pa computer generation yun. All were done manually.OR may work ka pero may electricity interruption?
Our government is happy with "manually done" jobs? Penoy pala.
Well, well. Makalabas na nga muna at makapagpamasahe. Baka sakaling may kuryente doon.
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June 14th, 2014 07:42 PM #212
Madali mag work dati kahit no electricity. Hindi mo lang talaga gusto intindihin.
People are lining up for hope of employment. Electricity or not, they can work and want to work.
HIRAP sila makahanap ng trabaho. Asan ba investors ni Marcos nung panahon niya?
Di ba he was taking over private companies?
O mahirap pa rin intindihin?
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June 14th, 2014 09:55 PM #213
I didn't know na mahirap maghanap ng work nung panahon ng martial law compared to the present.
My eldest brother hindi pa naka graduate sa UP may job offer na sa oil exploration.
My brother next to him got hired inside the Subic base right after graduation.
At that time Im addicted to nutriban, 15c plain and 25c if with peanut butter, match na match sa 10c na bayani lemon softdrinks.
When I graduated, my brother gave me a recommendation letter from Estelito Mendoza and presto napa-isip tuloy ako kung saan ako mag aaply. Ngayon you dont have that luxury na, sa dami ng kamag-anak ng mga gahaman politiko hindi na sila makapag bigay ng recommendation letter sa ibang tao.
Kahit yung mga jobless na tsismosa at mahilig magkutuhan sa mga squatter area nagka uniform at naging metro aide, kaya lalong dumami kuto nila sa init. Those were the years na hindi pa ginagawang negosyo ng mga oligarch ang mga pinoy. Hindi pa commercialize ang education, kahit anak ng magsasaka pwedeng makapag college, ngayon nakapasok na sa UP nag papakamatay pa dahil sa kahirapan, these days kahit UP hindi na affordable, sigh...
On the other hand, totoong mahirap magnegosyo nung panahon ng martial law, regulated kasi kung magkano lang pwede mong kitain sa pawis ni juan dela cruz, unlike today, pati brief gustong huthutin sa iyo ng mga negosyante na ito. Wala pang DI nun, kung isumbong mo sa malacanan na malaki ang DI ng SA mo baka ipabaril ni apo sa luneta ang SA mo. Those years nga, greed is a monopoly of malacanan, which to me is much better than the greed you can see today in both the politicians and the businessmen, isama na ang greed ng mga private educational institutions. K-12 is a product of greed.
At totoo din may vision si makoy para sa pinas, at least yun ang magiging first impression mo, sa bagong silang o new society na propaganda nya. But at least nakikita mo ang development, may mga specialize medical centers, may cultural centers, at dumami ang road network, nagsimula din ang LRT nung panahon nya.
If the marcoses are really that bad, bakit ni isang marcos o romualdez ay walang nakakulong for graft or plunder?
Sabi nga ng yumao kong tatay, kung sperm kapa nung 1972, you have no right to judge the martial law years.
If not for the martial law baka hindi lang sa ayungin nakatayo ang flag ng china, baka nasa malacanan na.Last edited by glenn_duke; June 14th, 2014 at 10:02 PM.
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June 15th, 2014 01:34 AM #216
Eto ang out of touch from reality.
Edi swerte kayo at nagkawork kagad. No so lucky for others.
Not born in the 70s, no right to judge? I pity this remark.
Ipapatay ka for small reasons like that tapos you like that? Yeah glorious years indeed.
Hindi nakasuhan tapos greed in malacanang? Opposing theory yet in the same post.
Kahit ano gawin ni Marcos, basta may infrastructure. Happy na.
No amount of economic evidences will stir you away.
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June 15th, 2014 01:44 AM #217
it is a 6-minute video... it will not hurt watching it whether you're pro or anti-Marcos, at least we can learn from history.
One is about the Mutual Defense Pact of Philippines and USA, that once Philippines is under war with external forces the USA can't immediately came for a rescue as mandated by US Constitution. Fast-forward 30 years decades later... we are having problems to defend our Islands in the West Philippine Sea.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v...type=2&theater
https://anc.yahoo.com/video/marcos-b...062256174.html
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June 15th, 2014 02:11 AM #218
have you heard of the Santa Barbara project?
A proposal for the Philippines: Resurrect Project Santa Barbara | Local and Foreign Issues | PinoyExchange
FILIPINO DISCOVERIES, INVENTIONS, INNOVATIONS and PRODUCTS: Philippine-made missiles during the Marcos era
Philippine First Missile during Marcos as President - YouTube
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June 15th, 2014 02:13 AM #219Kung gusto niyo si Marcos migrate kayong North Korea, pareho nangyayari doon at sa Pilipinas noong panahon ni Marcos.
Daming pinagawang infrastructure ni Kim Jung Il. Kim also invested on his military, just like Marcos. Wala rin freedom of the press just like Marcos days. Yung mga nakikinabang sa bansa nila ay yung loyalista ng mga Kim. Same with Marcos where in loyalists, cronies, and his Ilocano solid supporters ang inaalagaan niya.
May solid leadership rin si Kim Jung Il, at ngayon Kim Jung Un. He knows what he wants and will move heaven and earth to get it, just like Marcos, including executing his enemies.
Marami silang nuclear power plant to power their country, which they also use for uranium enrichment. Naharang lang yung Bataan Nuclear power plant ni apo kaya di natuloy nuclear aspiration niya.
Travel to North Korea, you still have a chance to relieve what we experienced during Marcos era. Para masiyahan na rin kayo.
Sent from the Twilight Zone...
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June 15th, 2014 02:30 AM #220
More like China nga daw. What he missed is every 5 years re elect sila.
Unlike Kay Marcos, no such thing. Dictatorship at its finest.
i think so, too. the koreans may look flashy, at first. but they do not age well. the L300 looks...
wigo versus g4