boy 1234 Dancarl
1.8K posts


@MILEYjna Oo payag aq. Di lang aq maglalakad ng hubot hubad, magpapatuli rin aq at magpapalagay ng humps. In other words... malabong mangyari....🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

@RyanLingo_ @bongbongmarcos The weakest president that jailed the strongman. Let that sink in. 🤣🤣🤣
English

Legacy mo @bongbongmarcos o!
We have the weakest peso because we have the weakest president ever!🫵👎💩

English

@AnnaMalindogUy Walang maniniwala sayo mam kundi mga kasamahan mo rin sa kulto ni quibs. Kaming mga pinoy ay di mo malilinlang. 🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

“Legacy”? What legacy, Mr. President?
You know what, Mr. Marcos Jr.—if the “legacy” you’re worried about being undone is the rampant corruption, the glaring inefficiency, the rising cost of living, and the deepening economic strain Filipinos are forced to endure under your watch—then by all means, it absolutely should be undone.
If that “legacy” also includes a foreign policy that seems more eager to serve Uncle Sam’s Indo-Pacific agenda than to defend the independent interests, sovereignty, and the strategic autonomy of the Republic of the Philippines, then yes—reversing it is not just an option, it is a necessity.
Because let’s be honest—what exactly are we preserving here?
- An economy flashing warning signs?
-A government struggling with credibility?
-A strategic posture that exposes the country more than it protects it?
You speak of legacy as if there’s something solid and admirable to safeguard. But from where ordinary Filipinos stand, it’s hard to see anything worth defending—let alone fearing its reversal.
So again, Mr. President… What legacy are you talking about?
Or is this another case of political imagination running ahead of reality?
Goodness gracious… are we witnessing governance, or hallucination???
My goodness gracious... Nakakaloka!! Duh! 🙄 🙄 🙄

English

@Albertodatuin21 @LakasNgTimog 2026 na di ka pa rin makamove on. Isa ka sa pinakatangang tao sa mundo.
Filipino

@LakasNgTimog A Counting Machine elected President is only a
Pretend Leader because “ Cheating is not a win”.
Conflict of interests was taken for granted.
An Observation.
Cheers!
English

@maltiq Wala, Di obra mga strategies mo mam kahit anong gawin mo. Marami ang Duterte supporters, i give u dat. Pero mas marami kaming di hamak sa inyo. Kami mas marami pero di ganong umiimik. Kayo sobrang mas konti pero mas maingay, as in sobrang ingay na nakakarindi na kung minsan.
Filipino

@ericab17619 Talk is cheap. Ang tanong may ginagawa ba sya?
Filipino

VP Sara, thank you for boldly speaking out and informing the public about the crushing rise in fuel and food prices! Your call for immediate government action, unity, and practical help for families is exactly what we need right now. Saludo po!
Diesel has exploded from just ₱54–55/L pre-crisis to over ₱120–134+/L in a matter of weeks — one of the steepest surges in Southeast Asia. While our neighbors used subsidies and stabilization funds to cushion the blow, Filipinos are left paying the full price.
Thank you, VP Sara, for using your voice to push for solutions. More leaders should follow your example. Action now, not just words!
#FuelCrisisPH #VP SaraDuterte #LeadershipNeeded
English

@ericab17619 Kayo na mga sumasamba kay quibs wala na kayong magagawa. Impeached na siya this year.
Filipino

The Lord is my light and my salvation — whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life — of whom shall I be afraid? (Psalm 27:1)
While the wicked sharpen their tongues like swords and subpoena 20 years of SALNs and NBI records in a desperate fishing expedition, the righteous stand firm.
“The wicked plot against the righteous and gnash their teeth at them, but the Lord laughs at the wicked, for He knows their day is coming.” (Psalm 37:12-13)
No weapon formed against the servant of the people shall prosper. Every tongue that rises against her in judgment shall be condemned. (Isaiah 54:17)
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.
Let the House panel chase shadows while true service feeds the hungry and comforts the afflicted.
The counsel of the ungodly shall perish, but the way of the upright shines brighter until the perfect day.
Stand strong. The battle belongs to the Lord.🙏🙏👊👊
#SaraDuterte #DefendSara #FaithOverFear #NoToWitchHunt

English

@MILEYjna Kundi ba naman kayo mga sinungaling at mga propagandista, ni wala ngang wampipti nakikipagrally sa inyo! Isang buwan ang prep pero langaw amg dumadating. 90% ang ayaw pwede pa. 🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

@LakasNgTimog Pwede namang sabay gawin bakit mo ititigil ang naumpisahan na?! Takot yarn?! 🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

@NoChanceTil2034 Nagsalita ang alagad ng mataas ang IQ na si Sara. 🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

@NoChanceTil2034 Sabi nyo si leni lutang. Si bbm naman bangag. Lutang nga si leni pero mas sensible naman sumagot kesa kay sara. Si pbbm naman bangag. Marami gugustuhing maging bangag kung magiging sing talino sila ni pbbm. Si sara literal na lutang at parang bangag na di alam ang pinagsasabi.
Filipino

@babypffft Ipupusta q pati pusa ng kapitbahay namin sa gapo walang panalo si vp sa 2028. Si tatay digs 16M lng boto nung nanalo. Baka di pa nya makuha un ngayon. Wag nyo ipagyabang ang 32M dahil kalahati dun o baka mas marami pa ay dahil katandem nya si pbbm.
Filipino

@smninews Mga kasamahan lang naman ninyo sa kulto nanonood sa programa ninyo. 🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

@AnnaMalindogUy SMNI fake news. Pati ikaw fake news din. Alagad kayo ni quibs. Kulto.
Filipino

📺 WATCH: My Interview on SMNI Nightline News (March 16, 2026 | 10:00 PM)
Sharing with you my interview last night on SMNI TV’s Nightline News, where we unpack some of the most pressing geopolitical developments shaping our region and beyond:
🔹China rejects Trump’s call to deploy troops in the Strait of Hormuz, asserting Iran’s sovereign control
🔹Iran’s move to challenge dollar dominance by allowing oil trade in Chinese yuan
🔹The recent statement of the Department of Foreign Affairs on issues related to the South China Sea dispute, especially on Scarborough Shoal, and the Kalayaan Island Group(KIG), vis-à-vis China.
These are not isolated events—they are interconnected signals of a rapidly shifting global order, with direct implications for the Philippines’ security, economy, and foreign policy.
📌 Watch the full interview and click the YouTube link below. Let’s make sense of these developments together. Your insights and thoughts are most welcome.
YouTube Link: youtube.com/watch?v=WKpBq_…
#Geopolitics
#SouthChinaSea
#Philippines
#China
#Hormuz
#GlobalShift
#NightlineNews

YouTube



English

@fierceLady08 Hanggang 16M oang kayo. Wala kayong panama sa pinagsanib na pwersa ng liberal at loyalists. 15M + 15M un tanga. May kalalagyan kayo sa 2028. Ihanda nyo na pamunas nyo ng luha.
Filipino

@NoChanceTil2034 Si leni pang row 2. Di man kagalingan pero mapagtitiisan. Si sara nakow pang row 4 na nasa likod pa. 🤣🤣🤣
Filipino

@AnnaMalindogUy Wag magtitiwala kay mam. Fake news yan. Alagad ni quibs.
Filipino

Pulse Asia Numbers and the Gathering Storm Toward 2028
The latest Pulse Asia survey, released on March 16, 2026, offers a revealing snapshot of Philippine politics at a moment when the country is quietly entering the early stages of the 2028 presidential race. Beneath the numbers lies a deeper political story—one that reflects a FRAGILE PRESIDENCY, A RESILIENT VICE PRESIDENCY, and a public increasingly preoccupied with economic survival rather than geopolitical rhetoric.
According to the survey, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. posts a 36% approval rating against 45% disapproval, while his trust rating stands at 35%, with 44% expressing distrust. Vice President Sara Duterte, by contrast, registers 55% approval and 54% trust, both clear MAJORITY SENTIMENTS.
In simple political terms, this means the President is governing with a TRUST DEFICIT, while the Vice President continues to enjoy A RESERVOIR OF POLITICAL CAPITAL.
This does not mean the administration is collapsing. In fact, the survey notes that Marcos Jr.’s ratings have modestly improved compared to the same period last year. But improvement from previous lows does not erase the structural reality reflected in the data: plurality distrust toward the President remains the dominant national sentiment.
Meanwhile, Sara Duterte remains the single strongest political figure in the country today, particularly outside Luzon. The regional breakdown in the survey is striking. In Mindanao, Duterte commands 95% approval, while Marcos receives only 12% approval in the same region. In the Visayas, Duterte again dominates with 72% approval, compared to just 18% for Marcos.
This regional pattern reveals a political geography that is increasingly clear: Luzon leans toward the Marcos political universe, while Visayas and Mindanao remain firmly aligned with the Duterte political brand.
But perhaps the most important finding in the survey has nothing to do with personalities at all. It concerns what Filipinos actually care about.
When respondents were asked to identify the most urgent issues facing the country, the results were unambiguous:
Controlling Inflation — 59%
Fighting Corruption — 47%
Increasing Workers’ Pay — 36%
By contrast, defending Philippine territorial integrity ranked at only 2%, while terrorism barely registered at 1%.
The message is unmistakable. For ordinary Filipinos, the defining political question is not the South China Sea, nor diplomatic posturing abroad. It is the price of rice, electricity, fuel, and the daily cost of survival.
This economic anxiety is reflected in another critical section of the survey. When Filipinos were asked to evaluate the performance of the Marcos administration on specific issues, the government faced overwhelming disapproval on INFLATION (73%), CORRUPTION (67%), and ILLEGAL DRUGS (68%).
In other words, the administration is struggling precisely on the issues that the public considers most urgent. Taken together, these numbers hint at the emerging dynamics of the 2028 presidential contest.
First, the Duterte political brand remains formidable. Despite impeachment efforts, political controversies, and the shadow of the International Criminal Court case involving former President Rodrigo Duterte, Sara Duterte continues to command a MAJORITY TRUST NATIONWIDE. Her support base in Mindanao and the Visayas remains nearly unshakeable.
Second, the Marcos administration faces the classic challenge of incumbency: governance performance ultimately shapes electoral outcomes. If inflation, wages, and corruption perceptions remain unresolved, the administration’s ability to transfer political capital to a successor candidate in 2028 will be severely constrained.
Third, the survey reveals a subtle but important shift among the country’s elite and middle classes. While Duterte remains popular among lower-income groups, distrust toward her is rising among Class ABC respondents. This suggests the possibility that the next presidential race could become a two-level political struggle: a populist coalition anchored in the provinces versus an elite-backed candidate emerging from Luzon’s political establishment.
In short, the Philippines may once again be heading toward a familiar electoral divide—the politics of mass populism versus the politics of elite consolidation.
But the final outcome will depend less on personalities than on economic realities. If the Marcos administration succeeds in stabilizing inflation, improving wages, and restoring public confidence in governance, the political landscape could shift dramatically before 2028.
If it fails, however, the Pulse Asia numbers released this week may eventually be remembered not merely as another quarterly survey—but as the first statistical signal of a political tide already beginning to turn.




English

@AnnaMalindogUy Magpapatuli na aq kung manalo yan. Ipupusta q pati aso ng kapitbahay namin sa gapo na di man lang makakapasok sa Top 20 yan.
Filipino













