Maybe, to Enrile’s mind, Edsa never happened
Your mantra for the week: “Today I am ready for all kinds of wonderful surprises.”
Your mantra for the week: “Today I am ready for all kinds of wonderful surprises.”
Your mantra for the week: “God is expressing through me now in whatever concerns me.”
Your mantra for the week: “I am the CEO of my life, and I manage it perfectly.”
One of the earliest anecdotes about martial law was how then popular TV host Ariel Ureta was arrested and made to bike around Manila for tweaking that era’s slogan: “Sa ikauunlad ng bayan, disciplina ang kailangan.”
Primitivo Mijares, the chief propagandist of the dictator Ferdinand Marcos before defecting in 1975, was nowhere to be seen in the launching of the reprint of his groundbreaking work “The Conjugal Dictatorship of Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos.”
Climbing down the stairs from the MRT Santolan station, we felt good to be “home” at Edsa—30 years after People Power 1.
A multimillion-dollar trove of seized Impressionist art believed to have been owned by the regime of Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos has sat for five years in a climate-controlled Brooklyn warehouse, the subject of a bitter legal fight.
The message came around midnight Nov. 19 on Facebook: “People are tired. We need food and water.”
Your mantra for the week: “God is in action in all areas of my life now.”
Two days in November will go down in history as shockers: Nov. 8, when the Supreme Court of the Philippines, voting 9-5, dismissed petitions to stop President Rodrigo Duterte’s order to bury the remains of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos at Libingan ng Mga Bayani; and Nov. 9, when Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton to become the 45th president of the United States.
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