Alex

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Alex

Alex

@TradingPinoy

Engineering is ❤ Big and Small Data is ❤ Full blown Oragon

Republic of the Philippines 参加日 Aralık 2017
627 フォロー中79 フォロワー
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
This two step strategy will always help you avoid costly emotional mistakes. 1. Before executing any trades, you must be clear on what your entry price, cut loss price, target price or trail stop prices are. 2. You then STRICTLY follow # 1.
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Billi Bear
Billi Bear@BilliBear3·
@StarboySAR Hence China can complete its retaliation against Japan’s WW2 invasion which Japan still refuses to remorse and apologize and thinking that it did not surrender to China.
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StarBoySAR 🇭🇰 🇨🇳 🥭
Getting closer to testing the UN Enemy state clauses... Articles 53, 77, and 107 in the United Nations Charter allow victorious Allied powers like China and Russia to take military action against former Axis powers (such as Germany, Italy, and Japan) if they resumed aggressive policies, without needing prior authorization from the UN Security Council
James Wood 武杰士@commiepommie

🇯🇵 Sanae Takaichi and Japanese Lawmakers Officially Make Taiwan Their Business 🇹🇼🇨🇳 Japan just dropped “China” from Its parliamentary group name and here’s what that means. Japan’s pro-Taiwan parliamentary group just dropped the word “China” from its name entirely. The new name: Japan Taiwan Friendly Parliamentary Alliance. The timing is deliberate. Furuya Keiji, the man behind the push, said the move makes sense because “now is the opportunity.” Sanae Takaichi is already in power and the pro-Taiwan faction inside the Diet is moving while she holds the top job. Photos from the event show Japanese and Republic of China flags side by side. This is being framed as a natural evolution in how Japan describes its Taiwan ties. It is a political act. Not an administrative one. When Japan recognised the People’s Republic of China as the sole legal government in 1972, it ended diplomatic relations with Taipei. The 1978 Treaty of Peace and Friendship was concluded on the basis of the one-China principle. Embedding “Taiwan” in the formal name of a parliamentary body and tying that explicitly to the prospect of a right-leaning government, is a deliberate breach of that foundation. It fits a pattern that has been building for years. Japanese politicians have increasingly talked up the idea that a Taiwan contingency would automatically become a Japan contingency. They have expanded security cooperation, pushed values-based diplomacy and worked to pull Taiwan issues into regional forums. This renaming takes the next step, it makes the alignment more institutional and harder to walk back. Being in China, you can observe the impact of these actions. They are not read as ambiguous. They are seen as deliberate attempts to normalise what was once kept at arm’s length, to test boundaries and to create facts on the ground. The media have framed it as three dangerous signals. Pro-Taiwan forces in Japan are becoming more open about their agenda. Some politicians are explicitly banking on a Takaichi government to accelerate their push. And the move directly undermines the political foundation of China-Japan relations that has prevented worse outcomes so far. Taiwan is not just another diplomatic file for Beijing. It sits at the absolute centre of China’s core interests. A parliamentary rebrand does not change that. Around 321 Diet members are connected to this effort. The chairman is already subject to a China entry ban. These are not cost-free gestures. They embolden the most hardline elements in Taiwan, raise the risk of miscalculation and signal to Beijing that some in Tokyo see advantage in turning the island into a pressure point. History does not reward that calculation. External powers that treat Taiwan as a geopolitical lever tend to find themselves exposed when the consequences arrive. Japan’s parliamentary rebrand is the latest step in a longer trajectory. The same logic, followed consistently, points toward more direct involvement. Beijing is not misreading the intent. It is watching the pattern and adjusting accordingly. The question for Japanese strategists is whether they genuinely believe they can keep advancing this line without Beijing treating it as the strategic challenge it clearly is. That is the calculation now in play.

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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@StarboySAR Ohhh boy. Would be really relevant if this were any other country, but coming from China? Laughable. No credibility or whatsoever. For all we care, they could bark all they want.
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
Love how the Chinese troll army is now on full-blast, when things don’t go as planned. Good to know that their DDS puppets are gone and many more to come. We can now focus on more pressing matters.
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@OopsGuess You’re all bark. Do it then. 😂
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𝘊𝘰𝘳𝘳𝘪𝘯𝘦
If China acted like the United States, that ship would not be sprayed with water. It would be blown apart by “democracy” missiles, followed by a “no survivors” briefing. China used water cannons. Your masters would have used a kill order.
𝘊𝘰𝘳𝘳𝘪𝘯𝘦 tweet media
Isabella Anderson@IsabellaAn67

Two China Coast Guard Ships attacking a Filipino Coast Guard vessel inside Philippines's waters! China calls this "Law Enforcement Activity" But when, Philippines & Japan sign defense treaties, China blames them for destroying peace & destabilizing the region!

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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@liusanchuani @wooyh0706 @DWalpiri It’s a simple problem, a problem being a good member of the UN. However, it does not change the fact that we won the UNCLOS arbitration ruling of the west Philippine sea, and China is illegally occupying the islands. Where China is a signatory of the UNCLOS. You should behave.
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劉三川i
劉三川i@liusanchuani·
@TradingPinoy @wooyh0706 @DWalpiri Is it the Philippines that holds this stance, or the international community? The UN vote result — 49 in favor of the Philippines versus 142 for Kyrgyzstan — speaks for itself. 😊
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David Walpiri
David Walpiri@DWalpiri·
China MFA is slamming Japan for its $58 billion defense budget, calling it a threat. Japan should have rearmed much earlier They waited too long. They needed this years ago, with China rapidly building the world’s largest navy and harassing everyone around it.
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Isabella Anderson
Isabella Anderson@IsabellaAn67·
Two China Coast Guard Ships attacking a Filipino Coast Guard vessel inside Philippines's waters! China calls this "Law Enforcement Activity" But when, Philippines & Japan sign defense treaties, China blames them for destroying peace & destabilizing the region!
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@angeloinchina There’s one issue that a paid sucker like you missed. The Philippines won the Arbitral ruling. You’re framing this is like it’s got nothing to do with China occupying our territory illegally. You getting paid by the dollars or yuan there, may I ask? 😂
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Angelo Giuliano 🇨🇭🇮🇹
The Philippines Steps Up: Linking the Comprehensive Archipelagic Defense Concept with a Stronger First Island Chain Defense Network – My Take Discovery of the Paper This paper turned up in recent Indo-Pacific reads. Titled “Linking the Philippines’ Comprehensive Archipelagic Defense Concept with Japan and Taiwan: Forging a Stronger First Island Chain” by Renato Cruz De Castro, it appears in the Stratbase Albert del Rosario Institute’s 2025 4th Quarter Spark. Full article here: adrinstitute.org/wp-content/upl… Overall View on the Shift According to the paper, the Marcos administration is finally crafting a real grand strategy through the Comprehensive Archipelagic Defense Concept — the Philippines’ first in decades. It shifts the Armed Forces from internal security toward defending the massive exclusive economic zone. Treating geography as an asset sounds reasonable on paper. Yet the direction marks a clear slide into vassalization. Manila trades sovereignty for illusion by locking tighter into Washington’s anti-China orbit. Budgets will strain and Philippine priorities keep losing out. A Deeper Transformation This turns the Armed Forces of the Philippines into an extension of US power projection — vassal behavior packaged as modernization. The concept pushes anti-access tools, joint operations, and deterrence in the West Philippine Sea. BrahMos systems look flashy, but it embeds Philippine forces deeper into America’s containment machine. Detailed breakdown here: x.com/angeloinchina/…. Brian Berletic showed Washington grooming the Philippines as proxy: x.com/BrianJBerletic…. Proxies pay the price. The Strategic Vacuum in the First Island Chain De Castro outlines the First Island Chain as a supposed barrier to China. The southern flank remains weak: underfunded and distracted. Beijing exploits gaps, but the paper ignores China’s legitimate interests after encirclement. Militia friction and Marawi exposed shortfalls, yet full US-aligned militarization escalates tensions and speeds vassalization. Balanced diplomacy would serve better. Closer look here: x.com/angeloinchina/…. Why Link with Japan and Taiwan The paper calls for plugging the concept into Japan and Taiwan’s defenses. Japanese tech and chokepoints sound coherent at first. Yet this shows vassalization: drawing the country into networks serving the patron’s agenda. It raises clash risks with the top trading partner. Trade-offs detailed here: x.com/angeloinchina/…. Autonomy shrinks. The Political Weaponization Behind the Policy Marcos pursues a slow constitutional coup to sideline Sara Duterte and the China-engagement faction. Impeachment drives with questionable charges clear obstacles to the pro-US tilt. This is not organic reform — it paves the way for vassalization at the expense of unity and economic ties with Beijing. Leadership in Action and the Path Forward Ambition exists in active zone protection, but Horizon 3 plans erode sovereignty. De Castro’s linked-chain vision skips wiser balance: limited deterrence plus pragmatic engagement with China. The Philippines gains little volunteering as America’s aircraft carrier. Closing Thoughts The paper sparks talk, but the posture needs scrutiny. Under “strategic autonomy,” the country drifts toward full vassal status. Course correction is urgent before over-militarization and divisions cause lasting damage. Prioritizing Philippine interests over becoming Southeast Asia’s pawn is the rational choice. Momentum heads the wrong way. A rethink is overdue.
Angelo Giuliano 🇨🇭🇮🇹 tweet mediaAngelo Giuliano 🇨🇭🇮🇹 tweet mediaAngelo Giuliano 🇨🇭🇮🇹 tweet media
Angelo Giuliano 🇨🇭🇮🇹@angeloinchina

The Leverage: US Kept the Wealth as a Collar This is the ugly truth that the video reveals when you watch it with clear eyes: The United States deliberately maintained control over Marcos ill-gotten wealth as a tool of political influence. Think about it. Why has the US not simply returned every stolen cent to the Filipino people? Why have the asset recovery cases dragged on for four decades? Because a Marcos who is desperate to reclaim his family's fortune is a Marcos who will do whatever Washington asks. In the 1989 interview, Marcos Jr. talks about wanting to return to the Philippines and clear his family's name. But he does not talk about the elephant in the room: the billions sitting in US-controlled accounts that he cannot touch unless he plays ball. And play ball he has. From Hostage to Vassal: The Complete Surrender Fast-forward from that 1989 video to the Marcos Jr. presidency today. The same man who admitted American control in the interview has now completed the transformation of the Philippines into a US vassal state. •Nine EDCA bases — up from five under previous administrations. US troops now operate from Philippine soil with what amounts to extraterritoriality. •US missiles on Philippine territory — including the Typhon system capable of striking Chinese targets. The Philippines is now a launchpad for US war plans. •Pax Silica — a reported 99-year, 2,000-hectare US-controlled zone in Tarlac that critics have called a treasonous surrender of Philippine sovereignty. •The Negros 19 massacre — the April 2026 killing of 19 Filipinos, which progressives have tied directly to Marcos Jr.'s fascist policies and his subservience to the US. The pattern is unmistakable. Every time Washington asks for more, Marcos Jr. says yes. More bases. More missiles. More surrender of sovereignty. And the US, in return, continues to dangle the possibility of releasing the frozen billions. The Unbreakable Chain: Money, Blackmail, and Surrender This is the full picture that the 1989 video reveals—if you are willing to see it. The Marcos family stole billions from the Filipino people. The United States helped them hide it, then froze it, then used it as leverage. Bongbong Marcos Jr. spent his entire adult life knowing that his family's fortune was in American hands. And when he became president, he repaid the US by turning the Philippines into a military colony. Every US base on Philippine soil is built on Marcos stolen wealth.
Every US missile pointed at China from Philippine territory is financed by Marcos loot.
Every surrender of sovereignty to Washington is a payment on a debt that Marcos Jr. believes he owes. The 1989 interview is not ancient history. It is the confession of a man who has always known who owns him. And now, as president, he has sold out the entire nation to the same power that held his family hostage. You must watch this interview. Find the original 1989 video. Watch the young Bongbong Marcos Jr. with your own eyes. Listen to him say that America determines everything. Then ask yourself: why, after nearly 40 years, has the US not returned every stolen cent to the Filipino people? Because the US does not want to. Because keeping that money frozen gives Washington leverage over a compliant puppet president. Because the billions in Marcos loot are not just stolen wealth—they are a bribe to keep the Philippines subservient. The Philippine government should demand the immediate return of all frozen Marcos assets. Every dollar. That money belongs to the Filipino people, not to a criminal family, and not to the United States as a tool of blackmail. But Marcos Jr. will never make that demand. Because asking the US to return the stolen wealth would mean admitting that the US has been using it as leverage, it would mean admitting that he is not a president—he is a hostage. Share this article. Find the video. Watch it. Then demand justice. Wake up, Filipinos. The puppet master is still pulling the strings.

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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
It’s high time that a new regional alliance be formed. The time of war is approaching. Senile old men are again running around playing with fire. God forbid this happens in my lifetime.
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@Chinaembmanila Barking like a true loser. You lost the ruling, that’s it. Mad? Bring it up again to the UNCLOS!
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ChineseEmbassyManila
ChineseEmbassyManila@Chinaembmanila·
1. Huangyan Dao is China's inherent territory, and China has indisputable sovereignty over Huangyan Dao and its adjacent waters. China's activities, including scientific research, in the relevant waters are normal actions within the scope of its sovereignty, which are beyond reproach. 2. In recent years, the Philippine side has continuously stirred up trouble and provoked China in and around Huangyan Dao under the pretext of "transparency." The Philippine military and coast guard have even clamored for "retaking" Huangyan Dao, which is the very root cause of the escalation of tensions at sea. 3. The so-called "transparency" initiative is nothing but a pretext Mr. Tarriela uses to cherry-pick facts, manipulate public opinion and attack and smear China. China has repeatedly pointed out that if "transparency" is what Mr. Tarriela truly wants, then every time he goes on an attack, post the full facts that China has laid out right alongside it. But Mr. Tarriela plays deaf and dumb on that, never daring to respond, because presenting the full picture would instantly expose its fake "transparency" ploy. 4. China's position on addressing the maritime disputes with the Philippine side is consistent and clear. China remains committed to settling differences and managing the situation at sea through dialogue and consultation, and rejecting the amplification of differences through megaphone diplomacy. ——Deputy Spokesperson of the Chinese Embassy Guo Wei
ChineseEmbassyManila tweet media
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@wooyh0706 @liusanchuani @DWalpiri So this is your position? You’re using UN when it’s convenient and saying that UN is irrelevant when it’s not? China is part of UNCLOS signatory. See, this is the reason why no one likes you.
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
For those who followed me via insider secrets. I’ve only 30% left of my capital in the local markets the rest are invested internationally. I have ICT so far and the remaining are cash. Waiting for the bigger dips. Not much of a catalyst anymore in the PSE.
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@globaltimesnews The both parties are members of the UN. Guess who doesn’t ABIDE to the UNCLOS and expects neighboring countries to be ok with it. Laughable.
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Global Times
Global Times@globaltimesnews·
Chinese experts said that Teodoro has repeatedly misrepresented China’s rights-protection actions in the South China Sea and China’s assistance to the Philippines, causing serious damage to bilateral ties. The sanctions also serve as a warning to certain Philippine politicians who are hostile toward China not to further sabotage China-Philippines relations. globaltimes.cn/page/202606/13…
Global Times tweet media
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@globaltimesnews The Chinese wants indebted friends apparently. You can go back to making friends in Africa for all we care.
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Global Times
Global Times@globaltimesnews·
If individuals like Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro are allowed to repeatedly undermine efforts to stabilize bilateral relations, it is ultimately the fundamental interests of the Philippine nation and its people that will suffer, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said Friday. Lin made the remarks in response to a media inquiry on that given Chinese officials recently said criticism from the Philippine side could make it more difficult for China to continue aiding the Philippines, whether China's announcement of sanctions against Teodoro will affect future Chinese aid to the Philippines. globaltimes.cn/page/202606/13…
Global Times tweet media
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@liusanchuani @DWalpiri That would have mattered if the Chinese can follow the binding agreements of the UN as well. But apparently they don’t know how to read the UNCLOS. Then they expect countries will agree to the new proposition. Crazy as hell.
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劉三川i
劉三川i@liusanchuani·
@DWalpiri Don't you know the differences between victorious nations and defeated nations under the United Nations and international law?
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@wangfei693370 @DWalpiri Why should Japan follow these rules when the Chinese can’t even follow it? Are you saying that the Chinese is the only country allowed to disregard the rules? Maybe you should open your eyes a bit more la?
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wang fei
wang fei@wangfei693370·
@TradingPinoy @DWalpiri Idiot, the UN stipulates that Japan and Germany, as defeated nations in World War II, cannot possess offensive weapons or armies; they can only have self-defense forces. You uneducated fool, you should read more books.
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@ReutersWorld Good. Sometimes you need to reign these punks from time to time. They don’t rule the free world, only those who are indebted to them like Myanmar and African countries.
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Alex
Alex@TradingPinoy·
@chuckpogi This is stupid. 1. We don’t only have the US as our only allies 2. We buy military hardware from our other countries 3. We have economic pacts with other countries 4. We have multiple VFA and other def pacts with other countries. So what’s your point singling out US?
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Richard 🇵🇭 🏀
Richard 🇵🇭 🏀@chuckpogi·
Philippines can never be genuinely independent as long as the claws of US imperialism continuously grips the country. Mutual Defense Treaty, JUSMAG, VFA, EDCA, and now Pax Silica are the US' boots pinning the country's neck down to the ground.
Richard 🇵🇭 🏀 tweet media
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@ChinaDaily The longer these people speak, the funnier it gets. The Chinese can’t hide their shamelessness
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China Daily
China Daily@ChinaDaily·
#FMsays FM spokesman Lin Jian said Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr is a representative figure among a handful of anti-China elements in the Philippines who have been making trouble. He warned that such reckless behavior will inevitably backfire, damaging the interests of the #Philippines and all its people. #China
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Alex@TradingPinoy·
@rphkg @ABC Idiot. Who placed the missile first near the Philippines.
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ABC News
ABC News@ABC·
The Philippine government says China’s imposition of sanctions, including an entry ban, against Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. was “an unfriendly act” that could further strain relations. abcnews.link/Ec35SZc
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