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8 responses to “Where are the Filipino Youth?”

  1. Mars

    Hindi naman lahat ng kabataan ngayon ay wala nang pakialam. Sa katunayan nga, kahapon lang ay nagkaroon pa ng prayer rally at noise barrage sa UST para lamang doon. Nakikita ko pa ring handang ipaglaban ng mga kabataan ngayon ang kanilang mga karapatan.

  2. ArtM

    I recently came across the website below regarding Mr. Jun Lozada and I thought I should share it with you:

    patriots4truth.blogspot.com

    The soundtrack it provides might help us discern the truth better about the man.

  3. ramil

    http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?Neri

    “In times of change, the Patriot is a scarce man; brave, hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, however, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a Patriot.” –Mark Twain

  4. nelson

    What is evident is that the fiction of law is used to milk the masses. Gloria had the chance to implement the gov’t truer to the consensus of the filipino people but she has aggravated this palakasan, bribery, blackmail thru wiretapping and personal dosiers, kidnapping, etc.

    I would prefer a totally open money system where everyone else sees what everyone has and that money can freely flow to the masses. Where every national is entitled to draw a subsistance amount from the financial system but the talented can increase their wealth up to a certain wealth. Big changes, but it can be done with small steps of honesty that should come from implementors of gov’t.

  5. criselda

    We are here. Looking for answers. Preserving our country from the evil forces of the facist, feudal and corrupt minds of such individuals. cying for truth and accountability for our future and the coutries too. living a destiny that soon to be nation builders in our dreams and aspirations of making changing history of difference.

  6. sikwate

    I don’t need to blame the government for a poor country. I am a Filipino youth but rather than wasting my time joining rallies and speaking out my sentiments against the administration, I strive for my own future. I look for ways to contribute to the economy in my own little ways. I am an urban youth. I am a Filipino.

  7. zheri

    I came from one of the state universities and every day I encountered students rallying for certain reasons. Like tuition fee hike, fare hike, unemployment. They even encourage other students to join them and walk out from their classes. Well, I sympathize with them and their belief but for the youth, I think rallying is not the only thing that we can do to change the government and the country as a whole. We can even replace the people that we think corrupting our country’s treasure. I think we can make ourselves wothy. Have our selves educated. We follow the even the simplest law. I believe that doing simple and small things can be a big leap for our country. Sometimes, people say they don’t want to be poor and yet they won’t work but rather spending and wasting their time gambling. Sometimes, the change need to come from us. It’s not always them. It’s sometimes us.

  8. kring

    yes, its true. I greatly affirm to sikwate and zheri. if we all really want to prosper let us start within ourselves. at our own level as students let us as act as students,an educated one I should say. I mean educated not to take sides abruptly, for this may talke us in vain. Rather studying and understandinf issues raised.. can we not focus of changing ourselves first before we change others?

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