A vignette of Marcos profligacy
When I was a college student sometime in the late 70s, my sister’s family invited me to watch the first-ever concert in the Philippines of hitmaker Dionne Warwick.
When I was a college student sometime in the late 70s, my sister’s family invited me to watch the first-ever concert in the Philippines of hitmaker Dionne Warwick.
This includes some which have been debunked several times over.
While some people pointed out that the post was a parody, many netizens thought otherwise.
In 1995, about 10,000 victims of human rights violations under the Marcos dictatorship won a class-action lawsuit filed in Hawaii.
It claimed, among other things that the money deposited by the Marcoses did not come from ill-gotten wealth.
Historians tell otherwise, as the Marcoses have a history of commissioning books with their own version of their story about former dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr. and his 21-year-old martial law rule.
The execution was macabre and bloody. The man had readily confessed he was a Japanese collaborator.
The FB page, in its caption, misleadingly attributed Enrile’s statement on oligarchs to Bongbong Marcos, whose photo was used in the graphic.
It also was not “richer” than Japan, Singapore and South Korea during Marcos’ rule.
President Rodrigo Duterte’s frequent public disappearances followed by staged photos to dispel rumors about his health recall the waning years of the dictator, Ferdinand Marcos.