⚠️ Wow, the impeachment case has improved because of Sen. Bong Go.
The witness Atty. Jeremy Lotoc was able to clearly establish that BP Sara committed inciting to sedition as well.
High crime yan!
Thank you double agent Sen. Bong Go… go, Go, GO!
😂
#ConvictSara
TV host and radio anchor Winnie Cordero on dealing with reality after her husband's death: "Alam mo ba na kahit we go on separate cars, kasi siya dediretso siya sa, di ba pagdating ng Quezon Avenue, siya pupunta sa ilalim. Ako sa ibabaw. Bago kami maghihiwalay, maghu-honk muna yan. Or, maghihintayan kami doon sa part na bababa na siya tsaka didiretso. And when I pass by that place, which I still do. I still honk."
https://t.co/6cF5WsX9Ph
Kakatuwa naman yung sagutan nina Vice and Vic sa noontime shows nila.
Baka nga para sa movie, pero anuman ang rason, ang gaan at ang ganda para sa industriya.
Gumaganda na ang panahon.
#ShowtimeOhMyJuly#EatBulaga@itsShowtimeNa@EatBulaga
Every Filipino, including the faithfuls of Iglesia Ni Cristo, has the right to protest. But the rest of us also have the right to ask: why would a religious organization stand in defense of someone who has admitted to receiving large sums of money from private individuals while serving as a public official? On his own, and unprovoked, Senator Marcoleta has publicly and personally admitted to it. No faith, whatever the religion may be, should be used to shield corruption or place anyone above accountability and the rule of law.
'IT'S BEEN RAINING IN MARINA, HINDI KA BA NILALAMIG?' 🥺😍
Lola Amour is set to perform at the 2026 Singapore Grand Prix this October!
The "Raining in Manila" hitmakers are among the lineup of artists who will perform at the event from October 9 to 11 alongside Janet Jackson, Zara Larsson, James Arthur, the Goo Goo Dolls, JJ Lin, Cortis, and many more.
Read more:
https://t.co/THcJTLi9ZZ
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.