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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Thu Feb 18, 2010 7:35 pm 

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 2:49 am
Posts: 59
chiyo_sakamoto41@yahoo.com wrote:
si villar ang tunay na pahirap
si villar ang tunay na walang gilagid
si villar ang may kakayahan na gumawa ng sariling sugalan
si manny villar ang maghahakot ng ating kayamanan =D


:o sana nlagay mo ung masasabi o kya ang nsa isip mo..or bka wla klng tlgang isip :shock:

joke :mrgreen:


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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Wed Feb 17, 2010 5:22 pm 

Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2009 3:04 pm
Posts: 4
si villar ang tunay na pahirap
si villar ang tunay na walang gilagid
si villar ang may kakayahan na gumawa ng sariling sugalan
si manny villar ang maghahakot ng ating kayamanan =D


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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Tue Feb 16, 2010 9:10 pm 

Joined: Thu Jan 28, 2010 4:02 pm
Posts: 4
Election campaigns are not known to be friendly to the truth. The general tendency is for selective truth, for the promotion of facets of the truth which are favorable to candidates and the suppression of facets which are not. This period of an electoral campaign is an especially bad time for what is essential and a heyday for the peripheral values.

Philippine society has not been blessed with leaders who stay focused on the essential. Rather, Filipinos have been cursed with leaders who try to distract the attention away from what is fundamental, critical and necessary to side issues which range from the non-essential to the inane.

One would think that a presidential election would bring out the most debate about the crucial problems and challenges of a nation beset by corruption and poverty. Instead, candidates with the greater probability of winning skirt the core issues and prefer to make promises which can be broken with the least fallout in the future.

In truth, the central issue for Filipinos is corruption. After that, there are the main consequences of corruption – widespread poverty and the degradation of the morals and ethics of a people. Any debate, any discussion, whether it be about plans and programs or the competencies of candidates, especially those vying for the presidency, is only a clever way of avoiding the reality of corruption and the candidates’ proposals and commitment to confront, dismantle and defeat it.

It would appear strange, therefore, if candidates do not compete for ways and means to address the main problem of the Philippines, and then offer their respective versions to the people. But strange as it may seem, the truth is that a country mired in corruption and poverty will not have many presidential candidates grounding their campaign on these issues. Those who sit in the highest offices or competing for them, from congressman to president, represent the top hierarchy of governance. It can only be they who have made the country corrupt as their positions, and their influence and examples, are national in character.

How, then, could the most guilty focus on the areas where their guilt have done most damage? It doesn’t mean that there are no candidates for the highest offices who are honest and would like for honesty to be the standard mode of behavior. But history will show that these individuals are like voices in the wilderness without any chance of winning.

Once in a while, though, life intervenes, usually through political or economic crises, and a Cory Aquino is thrust by circumstance more than ambition to a political exercise like the snap elections of the 80's. Cory Aquino was not defined by her technical competence in management, economics or even politics. But her milieu was a Marcos dictatorship, and her challenge was to return democracy to Filipinos.

We do not have a dictatorship, not anyway in name. No one except the extreme Left claim a dictatorship exists, but several nuances of oppression which are usual to a dictatorship do exist. The Maguindanao massacre does not indicate a dictatorship, but the deliberate fostering and strengthening of a political warlord brings back memories of what Marcos encouraged and actually built in the provinces during martial law.

Dictatorships are about the control of one or a few favoured by the gods, while democracy is about empowering the many. The militant Left has been complaining about martial law tactics applied to them, to over one thousand alleged victims of disappearances or murders during the last nine years under Gloria Arroyo. But the same militant Left has been known to sacrifice their own in order to push their cause. Mendiola and Hda. Luisita are but two of the most classic of tactics which lead to class struggle, then violent revolution.

While violence and political suppression are, indeed, repulsive and have no place in a democratic society, it is corruption that actually enslaves a people and brings tens of millions to their knees.

Perhaps, the long history of poverty has made it almost so commonplace that it does not elicit urgent attention or cause political panic. Even a faith founded on loving and helping one's neighbor, especially the poor, is not known for its desperate and determined effort to mitigate poverty. If the Catholic Church can adopt bringing good tidings to the poor as a central mission, then its hierarchy can quickly grasp how it is mostly corruption at the top that makes massive poverty possible. Only the harshest face of Mother Nature, through droughts or epidemics, can compete with greedy and exploitative politicians.

What other issues could there be of greater national concern but corruption and the poverty it engenders? Where, then, is the effort to bring attention to technical competencies coming from? Why is there a fear to focus on the character of a person, to bring focus on the authenticity of the honesty of candidates, on the actual capacity or even the propensity to be in power yet not be tempted to profit from it, or be in love with it? Are we so afraid that those who seek the candidacy will have so little skill in the choice of key officials?

Technical competency is dime a dozen but honest people who will stay honest when they have the opportunity to lie, steal and cheat to accumulate millions or billions are simply rare.

When 500 billion pesos can be stolen from the national budget, and hundreds of billions more are lost in selling our natural and national treasures, what technical competencies can compensate for that. One honest president who will try his utmost to appoint only honest members of the cabinet and heads of agencies, who will exert his influence to have an honest Senate President and an honest Speaker of the House, will be magical in the transformation of government and inspire a whole people to change their value system back to what our ancestors held in high honor.

Our greatest tragedy is corruption, our greatest pain is the poverty of our masses, our greatest shame is our cowardice to confront evil, and our greatest challenge is to find honest and courageous patriots to elect. ***

http://opinion.inquirer.net/viewpoints/columns/view/20100211-252678/Avoiding-the-issue-of-corruption

Glimpses
Avoiding the issue of corruption
By Jose Ma. Montelibano
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 22:31:00 02/11/2010


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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Tue Feb 16, 2010 7:45 pm 

Joined: Thu Jan 28, 2010 4:02 pm
Posts: 4
The thought, or challenge, persists: Can Noynoy do it? Or variations thereof: Is he qualified to become president? Is he prepared to become president? Does he have what it takes to be president?

The question doesn’t just come from Arroyo’s people, who ask it with dutiful sneers. The question comes from readers who ask it with dutiful concern. One e-mail I got put it this way: If you’re applying to become CEO of a company, you have to submit a résumé. What commends Noynoy to become CEO of this country?

I’ve written about this in past columns, but a couple more things need pointing out.

First off, the question, “Will Noynoy be a good CEO?” is a wrong one. The job at hand is not CEO of a company, it is janitor of a building. What this country needs today is not someone to manage things, it is someone to clean up things. What we need today is not someone to make a business flourish, it is someone to make a dwelling place habitable, one whose previous tenant left it in a condition only cockroaches, rats, and real-estate speculators, in ascending order of predation, can appreciate. Who better to do this than Noynoy?

Or if you persist in using the CEO image, the job at hand is CEO, but only of a company that has been bankrupted by a bunch of crooks. Whom would you hire to revive it? An efficiency freak with a long résumé but who has business interests that compete with the company, who is a known tirador or beholden to people who are, and who therefore can only be trusted to efficiently pillage some more? Or someone you can trust?

Again, a no-brainer.

The applying-for-CEO idea presumes these elections are normal elections, or a peaceful transition, or a routine transfer of power like 1992 and 1998. They are not. These are extraordinary elections, a fitful transition, a still uncertain transfer of power. We need in the first place to make the transfer happen—like 1986. The pissing contest of submitting résumés presumes moreover that the contest is just elections. It is not, or it has gone beyond elections. The elections are just a battle, they are not the war. The war is not between candidates offering relative merits (or demerits), the war is between Good and Evil, between yoke and freedom, between oppression and liberation. As with 1986 and last year’s US elections, the cry is the epic “We shall overcome,” not the miserable “We shall underwhelm.”

Noynoy represents the first, the rest of the field the second.

Second off, the question “Can Noynoy do it?” is a wrong one. The real question is, “Can we do it?” To paraphrase John F. Kennedy, what we need today is to ask not what the president can do for us but what we can do for the president.

That’s what makes trustworthiness the most decisive qualification of all. If the president is just an InGlorious Basterd, why on earth would you want to ask yourself what you can do for your president? You would want to ask yourself only what you can do to her, particularly if she refuses to go.

Indeed, that’s what shows the folly, or danger, of the CEO template. A CEO is accountable only to the stockholders, not to the hundreds of men and women employed by the company. The hundreds of men and women he can order around and fire as he pleases. Its political equivalent is that the president is accountable only to the taipans and coniotics who spent for his campaign, not to the citizens of the country. The citizens he can bully around and screw as he pleases.

That may be so for a dictatorship but not so for a democracy.

The power of a democracy does not lie in a strong leader—or heaven forbid, strong republic—it lies in a strong people. The power of a democracy does not lie in excluding the people, it lies in including the people. The folly of our elections is that it is premised precisely on excluding the people, in looking for “presidentiables” who can fill the role of Savior or Padron, who can save us from ourselves, who can spare us the need to apply ourselves to improving ourselves.

Which in any case is a monumental exercise in self-delusion. Or self-flagellation. We demand heaven but expect only hell. We ask of candidates the virtues of a messiah, but expect from the winner only the conduct of a cur or asal aso, as we say. Who seriously believes the candidates with the résumés will deliver on their promises? We get a moderate (the greed) crook, we’re happy; we get an immoderate one, we say, “What else is new?”

We want to change the equation, we change ourselves. We change the way we are governed by including ourselves in our governance. Which is what a democracy is. Look at all the successful democracies and see if they are not premised on an active people, a vocal people, a people demanding to have a say in how they are governed.

I’m perfectly serious in pushing “Noypi,” both in the sense of “Noypi” as “Noynoy for President Initiative” and as “Noynoy’s People’s Initiative.” (I am aghast that another group is using that very name to promote their own political agenda!) We need to unleash the power of the people in everyday life, not just during elections, not just when things have gotten so bad we need to act to save ourselves. We need to unlock the key that makes People’s Initiative—the young and feeling-young Noypi—a force in everyday life.

All this is premised on a president we can trust. All this is premised on a president who does not crave power so badly she or he won’t part with it at all costs, least of all to the governed. All this is premised on a president who is as much willing to believe that the voice of the people is the voice of God as the voice of God is the voice of the people. All this is premised on a president who is one damn good person.

Can Noynoy do it? Believe it:

Yes, he can.

http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view/20090909-224319/Yes-he-can

Theres The Rub
Yes, he can

By Conrado de Quiros
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 01:05:00 09/09/2009


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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Tue Feb 16, 2010 3:35 pm 

Joined: Tue Feb 16, 2010 2:56 pm
Posts: 3
I think si aquino nagpapanic dahil sa mga tv ad's ni villar. pero dapat naman sya mag panic ehh kung wlang syang gagawin matatalo sya. Hinamon ni aquino si villar sa isang debate. satingin ko mukang sisirain lang naman nya si villar para bumaho ng tingin ng tao sa kanya. NAKO!!grabe yan. i think aquino is playing dirty to much with villar. mabilis mag init ang ulo ni kua noynoy kasi wlang buhok. dapat nga pag wlang buhok ehh malamig pero baliktad kay kua nonoy mabilis mag init...ouch!! naman kua noynoy ang pangit ng style mo...

Do you think you will vote this man....ohh no! no! no!...think before you vote :!:
Kua noynoy wag ka naman ganyan :x si villar hindi naninira 8-) ikaw ehh******

Whahhahahha!! :D kahit bata ako kaylangan ko rin sumali sa mga ganitong gawain...
kasi sila ang mag aayos ng pilipinas... :roll:


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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 1:14 pm 

Joined: Sat Sep 05, 2009 11:26 pm
Posts: 140
Villar VS Aquino
How appropriate, the way it sounds Villar is the challenger. There seems to be a tinge of truth in this.Today is officially the start of the campaign period.

To be a president one has to be proclaimed the winner after he is voted with the highest number of votes, against other candidates. To be voted he must be remembered by the voter at the critical point of voting, or he must have a very dominant name recall, embedded in the minds of the voter.

Villar is fighting for name recall all along. The tri-media ad campaign he is launching and paying for with serious money all aims to create name recall,that hopefully will be helpful when the voter is besiege by many "brands" when he finally buys in the "supermarket" come actual voting time.

The strategic advantage of Villar is almost unlimited funds and resources.
The strategic advantage of Aquino is name recall.
The strategic advantage of Teodoro is organizational support via GMA.

I think there will be are-alignment of forces before election day, other candidates will align with their chosen rising star than continue with the agony of impending humiliation at the polls.

I think it will be an Aquino and Villar battle to the finish line.


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 Post subject: Re: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 3:23 pm 

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 2:49 am
Posts: 59
I think LP only chose Noynoy bec. of the popularity of his family and noynoy have a big winning percentage than roxas..sad to say Noynoy has been in politics as congressmen and senator for almost 20 years. only passed 3 laws in congress and 9 in senate.Compare the track records of other senators.Sa loob ng 20 yrs sa serbisyo yan lang ang nagawa niya panu pa kaya kung 6yrs lang as president?
Records came from Mike enriquez -isang tanong isang sagot.

From sept. noynoy has a 60% aprroval while Villar has 37%
As of november he droped to 59% while villar raised 45 %

the others just visit this link: http://www.sws.org.ph/


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 Post subject: Villar vs Aquino
PostPosted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 3:22 pm 

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 2:49 am
Posts: 59
Tight fight for Aquino and Villar
With three months to go before the May 2010 elections, voters are choosing between Senators Noynoy Aquino and Manny Villar for the presidential post, a Pulse Asia January 2010 nationwide pre-elections survey showed.
The survey said that 37 percent of the respondents would vote for Aquino, while 35 percent said they would choose Villar.

Sabi ni Villar tumaas ung ratings nya dahil sa effective na TV ads niya.
Si noynoy nman gumawa ng bagong TV ads niya pero parang my pinapatamaan.


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