a bit late na pero big thanks to everyone that gave me all of these 🫶 all your efforts are very much appreciated!
di ko expect na marami akong mauuwi since late na ako but gosh ang generous niyo 😭
hoping to be team con sa susunod 🥹🤞
#ATEEZ#ATEEZinMANILA#InYourFantasy_MNL
🥟: “it’s going to you… it really likes you. you should raise this one”
🐿️: “do you want to come home with me?”
HAN MEETING RICHARD FOR THE FIRST TIME 😭
twitter's new shit is pissing me the fuck off. i can't even rant in peace in my priv. i hope you rot from the inside then die in your stupid fuglyass cybertruck elon
[ice cream with seventeen dup3 — actual samples]
🌟 face keyring (icecream cone) - ₱195 only
🌟 plush keyring (cone hat) - ₱230 only
— will post the claiming tweet by tomorrow, 5PM ! 💗🍥
🌻#hyucksole_onhand | pls help rt ~
‼️SALE
wts lfb | NCT DREAM SEALED DISCOUNTED ALBUMS
istj: ₱350 set (2 pcs)
i am the future: ₱180
dreamscape: ₱120
• all onhand
• pf = 15 php
DOP: 5 DAYS
📌REPLY/DM TO CLAIM
Rep. Chel Diokno is correct. This Anti-political dynasty bill is fucking USELESS AND BULLSHIT!
HERE'S WHY:
— it only covers close family (spouse, parents, children, siblings). Cousins, uncles, and aunts are not included.
— one family can still hold many government positions at the same time.
— when someone’s term ends, a relative can quickly replace them, so power can stay in the same family.
I refuse to support a law that effectively institutionalizes political dynasties!
I vote NO to House Bill No. 8389 or the “Anti-Political Dynasty Act.”
HB 8389 is not a true or genuine anti-dynasty law, but rather a dynasty legitimization act.
First: The bill has no succession ban. A governor can be succeeded by a spouse, who can be succeeded by a child, who can be succeeded by a sibling – indefinitely, legally, under this bill.
Second: The bill permits a governor, a mayor, and a Representative from the same family governing the same province simultaneously, as it only prohibits relatives from holding office within the same level of government, not within the same territory.
Third: The bill permits multiple congressional districts controlled by one family within the same province. Three adjacent districts, three relatives, all voting for the same party line: legal. Exactly as it operates today. Nothing changes.
Fourth: The bill neither covers party-list representatives as protected positions nor references incumbents. Therefore, a senator's son or daughter can be nominated and serve as a party-list representative – perfectly legal under this bill
Fifth: The bill limits the prohibition to relatives within the second degree of consanguinity or affinity, covering spouses, parents, children, and siblings. However, this second-degree prohibition excludes broader kinship networks, such as grandparents, first cousins, uncles, aunts, nieces, and nephews, through which dynastic power is often exercised. Limiting the prohibition to only the second degree narrows the reach of the law and allows extended family networks, which remain close-knit in Philippine culture, to continue operating within the same political sphere.
Sixth: The bill does not address, hence, permits substitution, caretaker designation, and every indirect route to office. The prohibition under this bill covers only direct candidacy, not the back doors.
The Filipino people have been waiting for this law since 1987. Tatlumpu't siyam na taon.
We can do better than this. We can pass a law worthy of the wait. A law the framers of the 1987 Constitution would recognize as the fulfillment of their mandate, not a betrayal of it.
I vote NO to HB 8389, not because I oppose anti-dynasty legislation. I vote NO precisely because I support it. I refuse to support a law that effectively institutionalizes political dynasties.
The Filipino people deserve better. The Constitution demands better. We can do better.
no matter how babygirl beautiful he looks he still has the most masculine energy out of every single member and people REFUSE to acknowledge it but GOD it’s good lmao