musogot kaya ang pamilya sa mga gipang liquidate sa iya panahon? hmm.....
musogot kaya ang pamilya sa mga gipang liquidate sa iya panahon? hmm.....
Kainit gyud sa imohang lubot sa akoa FK no? hehe ngano mag buot man ka unsa ako e comment dri. Nag comment raman sad ko sa gi sulti niÂ* Tempest. Unsa may problema Ang mismo nag post gani ani na thread kay nag hisgot kang arroyo ako pa noon. Grrrrrr kaayo ka ha.Originally Posted by FK
FK tanawa ra gud na iyaha post ni tempest. Wala siya nag ask kng okay ba sa atoa e lubong si marcos sa libingan ng mga bayani instead he is accusing nasad gloria na finally ni allow daw sa marcos burial sa libingan ng mga bayani. of course that would be my comment kay mao iya gi post. Pls make some sense kay kapoyan kaayo ko argue nimo bski unsa lang imoha e react ... ok? peace...Originally Posted by tempest 2
ilubiong na silang tanan! tanan politician! ilobong ug buhi! sa libingan ng mga bayani or sa calamba cemetary. basta ipang lubong na sila...mga giatay na silang tanan!!!
O.T.
deleted post...
ako na lang gi-pm ako reply para ni dallasgirl.
Group to study Marcos burial at Libingan ng mga Bayani | The Philippine Star >> News >> Headlines
What do you think? is it time?
For me he deserves to be in libingan ng mga bayani, everybody may not agree what he had done, but for me he it has also a positive impact to all of us.
Now that we bury corrupt generals sa Libingan ng Bayani.. might as well put Marcos in there too and dont forget to give him a presidential burial...
This thread was resurrected from the grave..lol
dapat sunogon si marcos... sa edsa... bubuan ug gasolina daun dilaoban...
source: Ferdinand Marcos - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The war came to the Philippines a day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Marcos knew beforehand that it was coming and had prepared himself to "die a thousand deaths" in his country's defense, as he had promised in his murder trial. With the main Japanese force pushing its way South from Lingayen Gulf landings, the young intelligence officer was all over the path of Japanese advance in his Oldsmobile to assess the situation. One day, he found himself in a hand-to-hand combat against the invaders for the control of the key bridge across the Agno River behind enemy lines.[9] Here he nearly got bayoneted before he could turn around and dispatch his two attackers with his pistol. He later found himself fighting a rear guard action as the men of the USAFFE were ordered to retreat to Bataan. He was with the last unit to slip into Bataan before the last bridge was blown up in the face of the pursuing Japanese. To this peninsula at the mouth of Manila Bay, MacArthur's men clung for three months against a modern army of 85,000 men.[9]
In Bataan, Marcos was wounded three times, captured once but managed to slip back to his unit after killing one of his captors. He was cited and awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for leading a four-man intelligence patrol in destroying an enemy battery atop Mt. Natib that had been raining shells on the Filipino soldiers.[9] He killed 50 Japanese soldiers who rushed to confront them. With the loss of the battery, the enemy advance was blunted and the fall of Bataan was delayed by another three months. Marcos was recommended by General Wainright, commander of allied troops in Bataan, for the Congressional Medal of Honor for having fought bravely and beyond the call of duty at the junction of Salian and Abo-Abo River. Again, he was cited for heroism that helped turn the battle on the slopes of Mt. Samat, one of the fiercest in Bataan.[9]
When the end came, Marcos and his companions refused to surrender and tried to escape towards the mountains of Zambales. But they were captured and forced to join the Death March, a trek of 100 kilometers across the plains of Central Luzon under the scorching sun, without food and water. Of the 50,000 men who started the trek, 15,000 collapsed along the way. Of the remainder, half died within three months in Camp O'Donnel in Capas, Tarlac. Five thousand more died of delayed shock after getting out.[9]
Marcos was released on August 4, 1942, emaciated beyond recognition but grateful to be alive. His mother had been waiting for him at the gate. He had hardly rested at their home in Manila, when he was arrested and brought to Fort Santiago by the Kempetai, the secret police, for questioning. For the next eight days, his torturers tried to break his will and make him reveal the hideouts of known guerrilla leaders, but to no avail.[9] The beatings stopped only when he agreed to lead them to Laguna where the guerrilla leader, Vicente Umali, was reported to be in hiding. Umali's men jumped the Japanese convoy and sprung Marcos who was too weak to walk. A convalescent in the mountains until December, he saw how factionalism, jealousy and suspicions had weakened the resistance. Early in 1943, he was off on a dangerous mission of establishing communications between the various guerrilla groups, to include Col. Fertig in Agusan and Col. Volckmann, commander of USAFIL-NL in Isabela. For the rest of 1943, he risked capture and death criss-crossing the archipelago in pursuit of his mission. He fell short of overcoming their division, but the communication network he established proved to be valuable in preparing the ground for the return of General MacArthur and his liberation forces. He was in communication with the Liberator.[9]
Marcos organized his own Maharlika group of spies based in Manila.[9] With the return of American forces, he fused his group into the USAFIL-NL under Volckmann who appointed Marcos major of intelligence. Again, Marcos was near death of malaria, hidden among cancer patients in the Manila General Hospital with the knowledge of President Jose P. Laurel and Gen. Mateo Capinpin, both of the puppet government. There he met with Manuel Roxas, who was collaborating with the Japanese. Marcos told Roxas of MacArthur's order for his escape.[9]
Marcos' intelligence work near the end of the war helped the combined guerilla forces to mass effectively against the retreating army of General Yamashita and achieve a decisive victory at Bessang Pass. Following a directive of the Commonwealth government to begin the transition from war to peace, a plan was developed to have Marcos as civil affairs officer for the nine provinces of Northern Luzon. His first job was to disarm the guerrillas, speed up their return to normal lives and restore peace and order in the region. Volckmann had to order his airlift from the frontline to prepare him for his new job. Thus, while the war was winding down, Marcos had his first heady savor of politics as civil affairs officer of Northern Luzon.[9]
for me ok ra gyud ka ayo si marcos for the libingan ng mga bayani...
kana raman sa heritage dili mo ok......
ok nalang gud aron sulbad na then mo forward nata....
dili naman ma balik tong ka gahapon ba........
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