Drunk shouts 'Gloria!' during Erap speech
MANILA, Philippines - It was the wrong thing to say at the wrong place at the wrong time.
A drunk man almost received a beating after he shouted "Gloria!" at a campaign rally of former president Joseph Estrada at Quezon Park in Dumaguete City Tuesday night.
Estrada was in the middle of his speech when the drunk, identified as Armand Keren, started shouting "Gloria!" over and over again.
Some Estrada supporters started berating and hitting the man who fell silent after he saw TV cameras pointed at him.
He then started to leave the crowd but kept shouting until he was approached by Estrada's son, Sen. Jinggoy Estrada, whom Keren mistook for Sen. Bong Revilla.
The younger Estrada escorted Keren to a tricycle to escape a beating while the campaign rally continued.
The former president later admitted he was miffed by the incident but shrugged it off when he found out that the man was drunk.
"Syempre, parang binabastos ka nun eh, pero OK lang. Iniisip ko, baka pakana ng mga kung sino man. Yung mga nasa admin. Eh, di ko alam kung sino," he told reporters.
Members of the Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino admit that they cannot control the type of people who attend their rallies. They added, however, that no disturbance will stop them from campaigning for the former president.


LASING!!!!!
Tama yun ginawa ni Erap,wag pansinin yun tao kasi lasing.
Fading trust & confidence
My humble suggestion to Erap, its time to move on.. QUIT pushing yourself to politics. That's the very best way to end your goal to serve our people.. Age isn't that matter most but, IDEOLOGY.
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By John Greenwald;Jay Branegan/Hong Kong and Nelly Sindayen/Manila
"No favors, no excuses." That was the motto Corazon Aquino vowed to follow after her People Power movement toppled the corrupt regime of Ferdinand Marcos. But in the tumultuous four years since Aquino became President, charges of incompetence and graft have increasingly tainted her own government. When rebellious soldiers launched the seventh abortive coup against Aquino on Dec. 1, their most pointed complaints focused on the administration's failure to deliver basic services and on allegations of corruption among the President's wealthy and influential relatives.
The charges, magnified by the Manila rumor mill, have inflicted serious political damage. While the President herself is considered incorruptible, critics accuse her of turning a blind eye to family and friends who are said to be enriching themselves at the public's expense. "What good is a Blessed Virgin Mary if she is surrounded by Sodom and Gomorrah?" asks one disillusioned official. In a December speech after the coup attempt, even Jaime Cardinal Sin, Aquino's most important supporter, warned of "a social explosion" unless Aquino swiftly defused "unceasing reports of the abusive roles of presidential relatives."
To regain public confidence in the wake of the abortive coup, Aquino last week sacked nine of 19 Cabinet ministers in the third such shake-up of her presidency. The Cabinet changes, acknowledged press secretary Adolfo Azcuna, were prompted "by the same reasons, perhaps, that precipitated the coup." None of the ousted ministers had been accused of corruption, but some of their departments were widely considered ineffective, particularly Justice, Transportation and Education, where services had virtually broken down. Aquino also overhauled the Agrarian Reform Department, which has largely failed to deliver on her election promise of land redistribution.
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To many Filipinos, however, the reshuffling looked too modest to silence claims of scandal in high places. Though many of those tales flow from flimsily documented stories in the Manila press, which now enjoys unprecedented freedom, Filipinos follow them avidly. A frequent target of reports is Aquino's brother Jose ("Peping") Cojuangco Jr., a wealthy and powerful congressman. Shortly after Aquino took office, newspaper stories charged that Cojuangco had helped some of his cronies gain control of a lucrative cargo-handling business; he is also suspected of using family ties to get jobs for friends in Manila casinos. Cojuangco has denied any wrongdoing, and neither he nor any other member of the Aquino clan has been charged with a crime.
Yet lack of prosecution means little in a country where the rich and powerful are perceived to be above the law. "It would take a first-class fool to testify against someone like Peping Cojuangco," explains Blas Ople, executive vice president of the opposition Nacionalista Party and a former Minister of Labor under Marcos.
In one of the few corruption cases the authorities have pursued, Cojuangco's wife Margarita was suspected of having taken a $1 million bribe from an Australian businessman last year to help him obtain a gambling-casino license. In the end, the National Bureau of Investigation filed no charges: the probers said the Australian had been duped by a woman who impersonated Cojuangco's wife.
Critics often denounce Aquino's first creation in office, the Presidential Commission on Good Government, as a bastion of ineptitude. Charged with the recovery of up to $10 billion that Marcos is said to have looted from the treasury, the commission has recovered nearly $1 billion so far but has been accused of abusing its powers. In one case, for example, Ricardo ("Baby") Lopa, an Aquino brother-in-law who controlled a profitable Nissan auto- assembly plant and 38 other companies before they were seized by the Marcos regime in the early 1970s, was allowed to buy the firms back for only $227,000 within days after Aquino became President. A public outcry forced the commission to re-examine the deal with Lopa, who died of cancer last November. It found no evidence of improper behavior.
That Aquino has at least partially delivered on her "no favors" pledge is generally overlooked. She has cut into Marcos' "crony capitalism" by dismantling sugar and coconut monopolies and beginning -- however clumsily -- to privatize government-owned companies that produce everything from cars to cement. But she has been unable to dispel some well-entrenched assumptions. "For any average Filipino, if he gets a good job, his family would expect to benefit," explains Jose Luis Alcuaz, a longtime ally of Aquino's assassinated husband Benigno.
Yet tradition hardly absolves the President. By failing to attack corruption head on and thus clear up a growing list of allegations, Aquino risks damage to her most valuable asset: her moral authority.
----
Mabait si Cory Aquino pero wala siyang magawa pagdating kamag-anak na ang gumagawa ng masama at hindi rin malakas ang kanyang leadership.
To regain public confidence
To regain public confidence in the wake of the abortive coup, Aquino last week sacked nine of 19 Cabinet ministers in the third such shake-up of her presidency. The Cabinet changes, acknowledged press secretary Adolfo Azcuna, were prompted "by the same reasons, perhaps, that precipitated the coup." None of the ousted ministers had been accused of corruption, but some of their departments were widely considered ineffective, particularly Justice, Transportation and Education, where services had virtually broken down. Aquino also overhauled the Agrarian Reform Department, which has largely failed to deliver on her election promise of land redistribution.
To many Filipinos, however, the reshuffling looked too modest to silence claims of scandal in high places. Though many of those tales flow from flimsily documented stories in the Manila press, which now enjoys unprecedented freedom, Filipinos follow them avidly. A frequent target of reports is Aquino's brother Jose ("Peping") Cojuangco Jr., a wealthy and powerful congressman. Shortly after Aquino took office, newspaper stories charged that Cojuangco had helped some of his cronies gain control of a lucrative cargo-handling business; he is also suspected of using family ties to get jobs for friends in Manila casinos. Cojuangco has denied any wrongdoing, and neither he nor any other member of the Aquino clan has been charged with a crime.
Yet lack of prosecution means little in a country where the rich and powerful are perceived to be above the law. "It would take a first-class fool to testify against someone like Peping Cojuangco," explains Blas Ople, executive vice president of the opposition Nacionalista Party and a former Minister of Labor under Marcos.
In one of the few corruption cases the authorities have pursued, Cojuangco's wife Margarita was suspected of having taken a $1 million bribe from an Australian businessman last year to help him obtain a gambling-casino license. In the end, the National Bureau of Investigation filed no charges: the probers said the Australian had been duped by a woman who impersonated Cojuangco's wife.
Critics often denounce Aquino's first creation in office, the Presidential Commission on Good Government, as a bastion of ineptitude. Charged with the recovery of up to $10 billion that Marcos is said to have looted from the treasury, the commission has recovered nearly $1 billion so far but has been accused of abusing its powers. In one case, for example, Ricardo ("Baby") Lopa, an Aquino brother-in-law who controlled a profitable Nissan auto- assembly plant and 38 other companies before they were seized by the Marcos regime in the early 1970s, was allowed to buy the firms back for only $227,000 within days after Aquino became President. A public outcry forced the commission to re-examine the deal with Lopa, who died of cancer last November. It found no evidence of improper behavior.
That Aquino has at least partially delivered on her "no favors" pledge is generally overlooked. She has cut into Marcos' "crony capitalism" by dismantling sugar and coconut monopolies and beginning -- however clumsily -- to privatize government-owned companies that produce everything from cars to cement. But she has been unable to dispel some well-entrenched assumptions. "For any average Filipino, if he gets a good job, his family would expect to benefit," explains Jose Luis Alcuaz, a longtime ally of Aquino's assassinated husband Benigno.
Yet tradition hardly absolves the President. By failing to attack corruption head on and thus clear up a growing list of allegations, Aquino risks damage to her most valuable asset: her moral authority.
----
Mabait si Cory Aquino pero wala siyang magawa pagdating kamag-anak na ang gumagawa ng masama at hindi rin malakas ang kanyang leadership.
Bakit naman kasi...
Bakit naman kasi itong si pacquiao e nakiki sali pa sa politiko, iho baka nalimutan mo noong nagpapala ka sa construction site at nagbubuhat ng mabigat walang politiko na lalapit sa iyo para pansinin ang bigat ng trabaho at iangat ang sahod mo...kahit anong gawin mong upgrade sa utak mo hindi mo pa rin kakayanin at sasambulat lamang yan utak mo kaya ang maigi pa makipag-basagan ka na lang ng mukha at enjoy mo na lang ang kinita mo pati na ng iyong pamilya na pinangarap mo para sa kanila. Mabuti pa na tumulong ka ng tahimik gaya ng ibang negosyante na tumutulong sa kapwa ngunit halos hindi mo napapansin ang kanilang ambag sa mamamayang pilipino.
Si Erap oo Idol ko yan bilang artista at mahusay na entertainer sa mga ordinaryong tao na mababaw ang kaligayahan. Pero hindi ako bilib kung ano ang ginagawa niya behind the camera, sugalero, babaero at kung anu-ano pa. Tama na sa kanya ang maranasan niya na naging presidente siya at ipaubaya na lamang niya sa mas kwalipikado na pamahalaan ang Pilipinas at enjoy na lang niya ang nalalabi niyang buhay sa sarili at kapwa pilipino na gusto niyang pasayahin.
Siguro gusto lang tumulong ni
Siguro gusto lang tumulong ni Paquiao (matulungin naman c Paquiao base sa balita), pero ang hindi alam ni Paquiao ay hindi cya karapat-dapat sa kongreso. kasi wala cyang sapat na kaalaman tungkol dito.
Kay Erap: baka naman pakulo lang yan. sa dami dami naman ng eescort sa lasing na tao si Jinggoy pa. Hindi kaya gawa-gawa lang. ganyan talaga ang pulitika, gagawa ng kakaiba para mapansin.
Ni ayaw nga nya sabihin kung sino ung nanuhol sa kanya na umatras sa eleksyon.
PACQUIAO-CLOTTEY
alam nyo wla na tao manuod nyan d2 sa US sa boxing na yan... si manny .. sira na yan sa pambabae nya.. tapos patakbo sia congressman.. di naman yan tapos sa college.. ano magawa nia sa bayan natin... pabogbog ka na lang may pera ka pa.
kya lang mas dami makita ni villar sa kanya at sia na rin pag nalo villar.. kasama ksi sila sa negosyo... at si willie pa kasama dyan..
kya sila manny at wellie kasama kay villar ksi pra sa kapakanan nila.. negosyo at pera.... at di sa bayan..... mga SAKIM
Hahaha.. That was funny. That
Hahaha.. That was funny. That made my day.... But I still think both Erap and Gloria are not good leaders of this damn country.
AHAHAHA
buti nman at inintindi nlang cya ni erap dahil lasing.
sabagay pareho kc sila lasenggo kya ganon ngkakaintindihan nlang