Round of 32 Confirmed ⚽️📌🏆
🇿🇦 South Africa vs Canada 🇨🇦
🇧🇷 Brazil vs Japan 🇯🇵
🇩🇪 Germany vs Paraguay 🇵🇾
🇳🇱 Netherlands vs Morocco 🇲🇦
🇨🇮 Ivory Coast vs Norway 🇳🇴
🇫🇷 France vs Sweden 🇸🇪
🇲🇽 Mexico vs Senegal 🇸🇳
🏴 England vs Ecuador 🇪🇨
🇧🇪 Belgium vs South Korea 🇰🇷
🇺🇸 USA vs Bosnia 🇧🇦
🇪🇸 Spain vs Algeria 🇩🇿
🇨🇴 Colombia vs Croatia 🇭🇷
🇨🇭 Switzerland vs Iran 🇮🇷
🇦🇺 Australia vs Egypt 🇪🇬
🇦🇷 Argentina vs Cape Verde 🇨🇻
🇵🇹 Portugal vs Ghana 🇬🇭
This ad irked Duterte so much that he tried to revoke Trillanes’ amnesty and successfully denied ABS-CBN a franchise.
All for it to be hauntingly prophetic.
Si Kiko ang may kasalanan? Eh kayo tong nagpapakalat ng fake news na walang pananagutan ang mga menor de edad sa ilalim ng batas?
Kaka-fake news nyo may namatay. Mahiya naman kayo.
I think yung monetization sa socialmedia is one to blame sa mga fake news na kumakalat. They don't mind spreading wrong information or being rude for as long as they get engagement. Ang lalakas ng loob e.
Cannot overemphasize the fact that if you want good examples for your kids, one way is to introduce them to good role models. And that includes not 👏 electing 👏 violent 👏 people 👏
PNP is finding a scapegoat on computer games, instead of acknowledging that the school shooting was the result of the culture of violence and impunity that it bred and proliferated throughout the years.
There is something deeply troubling about a society that is quick to demand the harshest punishment for children, while celebrating convicted plunderers, tolerating corruption, and rewarding leaders who normalize violence.
Young people do not grow up in a vacuum. They learn from the values we model, the behavior we reward, and the systems we build around them. Violence rarely begins at the moment it becomes visible. It is often preceded by bullying, social isolation, neglect, untreated trauma, and countless missed opportunities for intervention.
If we want children to reject violence, then we must also be willing to examine the ways our society excuses, glorifies, and profits from it. We cannot celebrate violence among adults and expect young people to learn a different lesson.
🚨 As a graduating San Beda law student in 1972, Rodrigo Duterte shot his classmate Octavio Goco after Goco allegedly bullied and teased him for being an outsider.
Hindi Juvenile Justice Law ang problema.
Parenting, bullying, and loose access to guns ang problema. 👊
#Justice
As someone who has spent three decades advocating for children, I find it deeply troubling that his first instinct is to make younger children criminally liable rather than address the failures that allowed this tragedy to happen in the first place.
Three children are dead.
The question is not why a 10-year-old should be punished.
The question is why minors have access to firearms.
The question is why violence continues to find its way into our schools.
The question is why our education, mental health, social welfare, and law enforcement systems repeatedly fail children before a crime is ever committed.
Real leadership requires more than reacting to headlines.
It requires understanding the problem.
Lowering the age of criminal responsibility may generate applause. It may generate media attention. But there is little evidence that it addresses the root causes of youth violence.
Children who commit serious crimes must be held accountable. But accountability should not become a substitute for prevention.
A senator’s responsibility is not merely to propose the harshest response. It is to propose the most effective one.
I have worked with vulnerable children for most of my adult life. Many have been abused, neglected, abandoned, exploited, or exposed to violence long before they ever entered conflict with the law.
It is easy to appear tough on children.
It is much harder to confront the adult failures that create these tragedies.
Before Senator Padilla asks Congress to treat younger children as criminals, perhaps he should explain why government has failed to protect them as children in the first place.