this is I talking BS to myself

Joined May 2008
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2026 BOOKS READ 🧵 #2026READS
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I bought my mom headphones as a present and as we were testing them I connected them to my phone. I decided to play ā€œTake fiveā€ because I knew it was her favourite as she blasted it around the house every weekend when I was a child. She paused and looked like she was in shock. Took the headphones off, stared at me and said ā€œHow did you know it was my favourite song??ā€. I thought she was joking so I laughed… then he asked me again ā€œnah seriously how did you know?ā€ There it hit me that my mom had feltļæ¼
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You don’t actually have to be good at your hobbies. You can just enjoy them and be bad at them.
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ADHD EXPERIENCES THAT FINALLY HAVE NAMES: 1. Body doubling — you can't start alone, but with someone nearby, it happens.ļæ¼
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grabe kasakit ani uy šŸ„ŗšŸ’”
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RT @ssomverse: It’s past midnight, and once again, I find myself crying over Bobet. To be honest, I don’t even know how to explain it. I n…
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#ICYMI The hiker, 31 year-old Alkharj Gomez Zamayla, of Valencia City, Bukidnon, is described as about 5 feet and seven inches (5’7″) tall and of slight build. He was last seen on Friday, 12 June 2026.Ā  Read full story: shorturl.at/hiDCX #AlkharjGomezZamayla #MtKalatungan
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fvck land grabbers. just bc some IPs don’t have the capacity to process land titles 🫩
well, actually, solar energy is privatized by megacorporations and they’re now building solar farms on stolen indigenous lands and destroying livelihoods and the ecosystem.
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TAIWAN INDIGENOUS SEAFARERS RECONNECT WITH PHILIPPINE KIN Battling huge waves, twenty Austronesian men in orange lifejackets set off on a hand-carved longboat into the western Pacific Ocean, destined for the home of their ancestral kin for the first time in 300 years. The indigenous Tao people, native to the tiny Orchid Island 90 kilometers (56 miles) off Taiwan's southeast coast, have close cultural, linguistic and historic ties with the Philippines' Batanes islands and its Ivatan communities. Read: philstar.com/headlines/2026/…
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FOLLOWING THE PATH OF THEIR ANCESTORS Battling huge waves, twenty Austronesian men in orange lifejackets set off on a hand-carved longboat into the western Pacific Ocean, destined for the home of their ancestral kin for the first time in 300 years. The indigenous Tao people, native to the tiny Orchid Island 90 kilometres (56 miles) off Taiwan's southeast coast, have close cultural, linguistic and historic ties with the Philippines' Batanes islands and its Ivatan communities. Participants say the odyssey across the Bashi Channel will trace an ancestral sea route to strengthen longstanding traditional ties between the two communities. šŸ“ø AFP/Cheng Yu-Chen Read: philstar.com/headlines/2026/…
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I think the slang word 'poganda' (tagalog from pogi-handsome and pretty-maganda) is so good it needs to be adopted internationally
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baterbonia’s story is impossible to separate from class. for kids from wealthy families, education and sports can be passions. for kids from working class households, they are responsibilities and pathways out of poverty and promises made to the people waiting for them back home.
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The UP Diliman Asian Center invites everyone to the lecture ā€œDecolonization and Imperial Agenda: The Philippine South in the 1920sā€ on June 26, Friday, at 2 p.m. via Zoom. Know more and register at bit.ly/acsouthph1920.
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tbh, sa sobrang laki ng nakukuha nila sa mga tao dapat may libreng check up na para sa lahat. May discount sa dental at vision care, professional services at medical devices katulad ng mga wheelchair, hearing aid, etc.
PhilHealth is omnipresent in every Filipino’s payslip, taking money whether workers like it or not. Yet in moments of greatest need, it often feels absent. That’s what happened in the viral case of Maria Lourdes Sulit. Her husband Marvin contributed for over 25 years. When he died of a brain hematoma, PhilHealth declined to cover their nearly ₱200,000 hospital bill. The reason: a technicality. He was confined for less than 24 hours. Under PhilHealth Circular No. 2020-0007, inpatient benefits require a 24-hour stay. But Circular No. 2025-0020 allows outpatient emergency benefits in cases ending in death within 24 hours. So which is it, then? Sulit’s case is yet another crack in a system already under strain. PhilHealth is mandatory under the Universal Health Care Law. Every Filipino is automatically enrolled, meaning every worker is required to contribute—regardless of income, preference, or private coverage. And that has long been a point of frustration. Ask any tito, tita, tropa, or kakilala, and a familiar story emerges: PhilHealth often covers only a fraction of the bill. Families still shoulder significant out-of-pocket expenses. Then come the administrative failures: the delays, the waiting, the stress on top of the hospitalization stresses. Private health maintenance organizations help fill some of the gap. But even they can only do so much, often still leaving families exposed to catastrophic expenses that the public system is supposed to cushion. And then, there’s the issue that refuses to go away: corruption. PhilHealth has been repeatedly drawn into controversies involving anomalous claims, questionable reimbursements, and fund management issues that have reached Congress and the courts. The latest one involved around ₱60 billion in excess funds—transferred to the national treasury. The Supreme Court later ruled that it’s unconstitutional, questioning whether health funds were being redirected away from their intended purpose. The money has since been restored to PhilHealth, but its image isn’t getting any better. To many, it remains an agency that collects mandatory contributions, yet Filipinos don't get what they pay for. Calls to abolish PhilHealth continue to surface. Let Filipinos keep their money. Rely on private insurance or personal means instead. It’s understandable—especially in cases like Sulit’s—but abolition without replacement risks dismantling the country’s only nationwide health risk pool. For all its flaws, PhilHealth remains the only attempt at universal coverage at scale. Removing it wouldn’t erase the need for protection. So the real issue is not just whether to abolish PhilHealth, but what must replace or radically reform it. Our Asian neighbors have made clearer choices. Thailand funds universal healthcare through general taxation, allowing patients to access care with minimal or no out-of-pocket costs. Malaysia heavily subsidizes public hospitals, keeping treatment affordable and predictable. South Korea operates a hybrid system where mandatory contributions are matched with reliable, structured coverage at the point of care. The Philippines remains stuck in between: compulsory contributions without guaranteed protection, universal enrollment without universal certainty. Now, the question is no longer whether PhilHealth should exist. Can it continue in its current form when the gap between contribution and protection remains this wide? Can Filipinos still afford to pay premiums to a system they cannot rely on in a life-and-death situation? Otherwise, PhilHealth only gives Filipinos hell.
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Learned a ton and cleared up some nagging questions about the Rene B. and Divine drowning—and Ateneo’s callous, lawyered-up response—from this sports lawyer interview. It turns out the silence, the sudden resignations, and the paper trail aren't just bad PR. It’s a calculated legal strategy. youtube.com/live/lRGo1pvIjBg…

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the rich eating each other
MVP Sports Foundation said it does not own the Ateneo Men’s Basketball Team, noting that it supports collegiate and national sports campaigns and its role is limited to funding. @bworldph
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Yung pag-rescue kay Bobet is one of the many cases that highlight why the government should prioritize proper EMS training and consider making it a college program. having responders is one thing; having properly trained responders is another. super sad yung vid sa true lang 🄲
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The most moving thing I watched today was not Ateneo’s press conference. It was Jessica Soho’s report from Agusan showing Rene Baterbonia’s home, his grandparents, and the makeshift basketball area where he practiced long before he became an Ateneo player. Seeing where Rene came from changes how you view today’s developments. Fr. Bobby Yap issued an unreserved apology. Ateneo accepted the resignations of Tab Baldwin and Epok Quimpo and pledged full cooperation with investigations. But the story is already moving beyond Baldwin. Once the coach and team manager are gone, attention shifts to the larger system that planned, approved, supervised, and assessed the risks of the Aurora activity. The next turning point will not be another apology. It will be a TIMELINE. youtu.be/oxdTPPlv28c?si=QpTt…
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