Bongbong Marcos
Appearance
(Redirected from Ferdinand Marcos Jr.)
Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.[1][2] (born September 13, 1957) is a Filipino politician and former senator in the 16th Congress of the Philippines best known as the only son of former President Ferdinand E. Marcos and of former First Lady Imelda Romualdez-Marcos.[1]
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Quotes
[edit]During the 2016 Presidential Campaign
[edit]- "Ipaubaya natin ang kasaysayan sa mga propesor, sa mga nag-aaral tungkol sa kasaysayan ng Pilipinas. Kami hindi namin trabaho yun. Ang trabaho namin ay tingnan kung ano ba ang pangangailangan ng taong bayan ngayon." (Let us leave history to the professors, to those who study the history of the Philippines. It is not our job. Our job is to look at what the people need at present.)[3][4][5]
- February 2016 Regarding Martial Law under Ferdinand Marcos
About Bongbong Marcos
[edit]In response to 2016 Campaign statements regarding Martial Law
[edit]- "In response to Ferdinand "Bongbong" Romualdez Marcos, Jr.'s call that teachers and students of history should make a judgment about the Marcos administration, we, the undersigned members of the Ateneo de Manila community, vehemently oppose and condemn the ongoing willful distortion of our history. We deplore the shameless refusal to acknowledge the crimes of the Martial Law regime. We reject the revision of history, disturbing vision of the future, and shallow call for "unity" being presented by Marcos Jr. and like-minded candidates in the 2016 elections.
- "The Marcos regime's economics of debt-driven growth was disastrous for the Philippines. The regime was not interested in inclusive development, long-term state-building, nor genuine social transformation of the country, despite its "New Society" rhetoric. Instead, Marcos was mainly concerned with perpetuating his personal hold on power by favoring family members, friends, and other cronies. Thus, Marcos simply created new elites or "oligarchs" rather than abolish them – supposedly one of his main justifications for declaring martial law. Those who dared challenge the regime's monopoly on power, whether politicians, business people, political activists, organized labor, peasants or urban poor, Church workers, students – young or old, rich or poor – were intimidated, imprisoned, kidnapped, tortured or summarily executed.
- "We refuse to forget the atrocities committed by the Marcos regime, and we renew our demand that the perpetrators of these crimes be brought to justice. We also reiterate our position that the government should relentlessly pursue and reclaim all the ill-gotten wealth accumulated by the Marcos family and its cronies. Moreover, victims and their families should be given justice and compensation in full. Any call for unity, most especially from the heirs of the Marcos regime which bitterly divided the country, will be empty and meaningless unless truth and justice are upheld."
- The Trustees of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines, representing the 1,425 CEAP member-schools, colleges, and universities, support the faculty of the Ateneo de Manila University in their call against the attempt of Ferdinand Marcos Jr to canonize the harrowing horrors of martial rule.
- With the same fervor, we cry our hearts out, "Never Again!"
- "Great danger now lurks behind a deceptive nostalgia for a past that never really existed—that the Marcos years were a period of peace and prosperity. This is patently Marcos myth and deception. Under martial law, the country was plunged into a climate of repression and plunder and then into a social crisis that exploded in the 1980s.
- "...it was in fact under martial law that the communist and Moro rebellions grew in leaps and bounds. Marcos claimed to break up an old oligarchy, but martial law instead created a new type under his control, a crony oligarchy.
- "Economic crises characterized the Marcos years, as economists have consistently revealed, the most telling indicator was the extent of poverty. Poverty incidence grew from 41% in the 1960s to 59% in the 1980s. Vaunted growth was far from inclusive and driven by debt, which further weighed down on the nation. From 1970 to 1983, foreign debt increased twelve times and reached $20 billion (Dr. Manuel Montes, 1984). It grew at anaverage rate of 25% from 1970 to 1981. Much went to unproductive expenses like the Bataan Nuclear Plant, which was unsound and wasteful.
- "To say then that EDSA interrupted our becoming like Singapore is a big joke, a malicious lie. Marcos had mismanaged the economy; it was in shambles long before the EDSA revolt. From 1970 to 1980, among East Asian and Southeast Asian countries, the Philippines registered the lowest GDP per capita at 3.4% [sic] (An Analysis of Economic Crisis, ed. Dr. Emmanuel de Dios, 1984).
- Peace and order, a spurious claim, actually meant an iron-fisted clampdown on civil liberties. Through presidential decree and executive order backed by the full force of the military apparatus, Marcos padlocked Congress, jailed the opposition, gagged media, emasculated unions, and banned student councils. Thousands were jailed without warrant and due process, not to mention countless killings and disappeared. Yet the national crime rate climbed continuously from 183 in 1976 to 279 (per 100,000) in 1980 (De Dios, ed. 1984 citing Philippine Constabulary data). In 14 long years, repression had also stunted the growth of independent-minded new leaders from the younger generation.
- "We reject deception and demand accountability!"
External links
[edit]- ↑ a b ""A dynasty on steroids"" (in en). Sydney Morning Herald. 2012-11-23. Retrieved on 2018-09-01.
- ↑ Senator Ferdinand "Bongbong" R. Marcos Jr.. Senate of the Philippines. Retrieved on October 15, 2015.
- ↑ Leila B. Salaverria (February 27, 2016). Bongbong: Let historians, not politicians, judge Marcos rule. Philippine Daily Inquirer.
- ↑ Elizabeth Marcelo (February 26, 2016). Leave it to Professors – Bongbong to PNoy: Let history judge Marcos era. GMA News Online.
- ↑ Bongbong: Let historians judge my father's regime. ABS-CBN News (February 27, 2016).
- ↑ Ateneo de Manila Community Stands Up Against Historical Revisionism of Martial Law. Ateneo de Manila University (March 3, 2016).
- ↑ We are not blind to the darkness and oppression of Marcos years! Statement of concerned members of the Ateneo de Manila University on the Martial Law regime and Bongbong Marcos' revision of history. Ateneo de Manila University (2016-03-04). Retrieved on 2017-02-27.
- ↑ Paterno Esmaquel II (March 7, 2016). Ateneo presidents slam Bongbong Marcos 'revision of history' – Heads of Jesuit-run universities join nearly 530 other signatories against 'the darkness and oppression of the Marcos years'. Rappler.
- ↑ Yuji Vincent Gonzales (March 2, 2016). Ateneo professors slam Bongbong Marcos' 'revision of history'. Philippine Daily Inquirer.
- ↑ Filane Mikee Z. Cervantes (March 2, 2016). Ateneo professors thumb down historical distortion of martial law regime. Interaksyon.com. Archived from the original on March 7, 2016.
- ↑ 1,400 Catholic schools back call vs 'Marcos snares, Imeldific lies'. Rappler (March 8, 2016).
- ↑ 1,400 Catholic schools slam 'Marcos snares, Imeldific lies'. ABS-CBN News (March 8, 2016).
- ↑ University of the Philippines Department of History (March 28, 2016). Malakas at Maganda: Marcos Reign, Myth-Making and Deception in History.
- ↑ Aries Joseph Hegina (March 30, 2016). Marcos deception seeks to evade accountability—UP Dept. of History. Philippine Daily Inquirer.
- ↑ Rosette Adel (March 30, 2016). UP history profs slam 'mythical' golden era under martial law. Philippine Star.