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Monday, June 23, 2025

2025 GameZone Tablegame Champions Cup(GTCC) winners

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In a powerful testament to the strength of friendship and family, 62-year-old Benigno De Guzman Casayuran from Candelaria, Quezon Province rose as the Grand Champion of this year's GTCC (GameZone Tablegame Champions Cup). But more than the trophy and the prize, it was the road he took to get there that truly touched hearts.


Photo above: Tatay Benigno holding his Trophy


Benigno almost didn't make it to the competition. Facing financial constraints due to his wife's ongoing battle with Stage 2 breast cancer, he was unsure if he could attend the event. But in a remarkable display of unity and compassion, his friends, relatives, and family members stepped in collecting funds and sending money just so Benigno could travel and represent their community.


Tatay Benigno winning moments

"Para sa pagpapa-chemotherapy ng misis ko," Benigno shared tearfully when asked where he would use his winnings. His wife, 65, began chemotherapy treatments just this June. "Pag naka-recover siya, sana makapag-travel din kami sa ilang lugar dito sa Pilipinas." His dream is simple yet profound: to see his wife healed and to explore the beauty of the country together.


Tatay Benigno with the press

Benigno's story moved many in the crowd, a reminder that champions are not just defined by talent, but by love, purpose, and perseverance. His victory is not his alone; it belongs to his friends, relatives and family who believed in him, his wife who gives him strength, and everyone who has ever fought for something bigger than themselves.


Crowd Reaction

While 1st Place Winner: Ryan Dacalos, 38, from Lipa City, Batangas, plans to use his prize to build a home and support the education of his children, especially his eldest who is entering college next year. "Kung may matitira," he said, "pang malit na negosyo gaya ng sari-sari store."


Ryan Dacalos hugging Tatay Benigno

And the 2nd Place Winner: Cesha Myed A. Tupas, 37, from Rizal, will use her prize money to pay off loans and contribute to the renovation of their home to build a better space for her family.


Cesha receiving her rewards


Together, this year's GTCC winners reminded us that behind every contestant is a story worth telling stories of sacrifice, resilience, and dreams for a better tomorrow. There are more stories that are yet to unfold next season. This is just the beginning!


Winners of GTCC

How Sara Duterte’s Propaganda, Projections, and Political Evasions Undermine Philippine Sovereignty


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In the face of an imminent impeachment trial threatening to expose her alleged misuse of ₱650 million in confidential funds and other grave accusations—ranging from plunder to betrayal of public trust—Vice President Sara Duterte has found a cunning refuge: diversion through disinformation. But her recent forays into geopolitical commentary go far beyond mere deflection—they suggest allegiance to a narrative not her own, one that eerily mirrors Beijing’s. And it’s not only dangerous—it’s treacherous.


Sara Duterte is no longer just dodging accountability. She’s performing a new role in what could very well be a foreign-scripted political play. Her recent public statements—delivered from overseas platforms—are not just tone-deaf. They are strategically calibrated to downplay China’s aggression in the West Philippine Sea (WPS), redirect outrage toward allies like the United States, and confuse a nation already grappling with disinformation fatigue. This isn’t leadership. It’s a textbook case of subversion masquerading as neutrality.


Projection and Propaganda: The Vice President’s Political Sleight of Hand

On June 22, in Melbourne, Australia—ironically while calling it a “personal trip”—VP Duterte publicly declared that the country’s maritime conflict with China “does not define our China relations.” She even questioned the utility of strengthening ties with the United States, deriding hypothetical defense scenarios as absurd. “Where will you use the missile? Who would wage war in our country?” she asked mockingly, as if our soldiers and fisherfolk weren’t already under attack by Chinese vessels within our Exclusive Economic Zone.


These statements didn’t just echo the rhetoric from Beijing—they almost quoted it. From dismissing escalating tensions in the West Philippine Sea to undermining the Philippines’ defense agreements, Sara Duterte’s foreign policy commentary suspiciously mirrors the very nation militarizing our reefs and bullying our boats.


This isn’t just tone-deafness. It’s projection as political strategy—accusing others of warmongering while ignoring her own role in inflaming divisions at home. Instead of addressing her impeachment charges, she reroutes national focus to foreign policy theater. Rather than confront questions of fiscal abuse, she flirts with foreign narratives. This is deception by design.


Gaslighting the Filipino Psyche: The Case of San Juanico Bridge

Sara’s manipulation didn’t end with geopolitics. In a bizarre tirade against a Philippine Airlines ad that described the iconic San Juanico Bridge as “not long enough” for tourism, she doubled down—calling the landmark unworthy of being a tourist attraction and instead pointing to a 264-kilometer bridge in China as the “real” standard.


Let’s be clear: this wasn’t about engineering. It was a deliberate attempt to devalue Filipino identity, diminish national heritage, and glorify China—at a time when the country’s sovereignty is under siege. Sara wasn’t simply offering an opinion on bridges. She was injecting cultural self-doubt, sowing the seeds of inferiority, and doing so while trying to erase scrutiny over her questionable use of taxpayer money.


Gaslighting isn’t always aggressive. Sometimes, it’s as subtle as mocking our landmarks or redefining “tourism” with Chinese benchmarks. And it’s always calculated to make us question what we know to be true.


Avoidance as Doctrine: A Vice President in Flight, Not in Service

Instead of addressing the Senate’s calls for transparency or facing impeachment head-on, Sara Duterte has chosen a globe-trotting strategy of delay and deflection. From her Australia visit, where she lobbied for her detained father and accused President Marcos Jr. of being a "scammer," to her refusal to directly answer summons in the Philippines, every step she takes seems choreographed to blur accountability.


Her legal team’s use of ad cautelam appearances—a tactic to dispute jurisdiction without showing full cooperation—only reinforces her effort to weaponize technicalities over truth. She is not defending herself. She is fleeing from scrutiny in slow motion, hoping the noise she generates will outlast the justice she owes.


Manchurian Candidate: A Trojan Horse in Philippine Leadership?

The term Manchurian Candidate has become shorthand for leaders who, wittingly or not, advance the interests of foreign powers. It’s no longer a conspiracy theory when the evidence plays out in real time, in public statements, and on international stages.


Sara Duterte has consistently:


Downplayed China's militarization of the West Philippine Sea


Questioned the Philippines' defense partnership with the U.S.


Ridiculed Philippine infrastructure while glorifying China's


Parroted Beijing’s diplomatic language in policy discussions


This isn’t mere rhetoric—it’s a disturbing alignment with a country actively undermining our sovereignty. When our Vice President starts sounding more like a Chinese diplomat than a Filipino official, alarm bells must ring—not out of paranoia, but out of patriotic duty.


The Inconvenient Truth About Debt and Deflection

In Melbourne, Sara had the audacity to ask, “Nasaan ang inutang?”—referring to the Philippines’ ₱16.6 trillion national debt. But here’s what she failed to mention: ₱12.8 trillion of that debt was incurred during the Duterte administration, under her own father. The Marcos Jr. administration added the remaining ₱3.96 trillion due to pandemic recovery and infrastructure needs.


By pointing fingers at PBBM over the debt, Sara wasn’t asking questions—she was rewriting history. She was gaslighting the nation into forgetting where the lion’s share of the borrowing began: under Rodrigo Duterte’s tenure. This is not a call for fiscal transparency. It’s political externalization—classic psychological projection in action.


The Damage Done: Sovereignty for Sale?

When the country’s second-highest official begins to behave like a propaganda arm of a foreign state, we are no longer just witnessing poor governance. We are confronting a national security risk.


Sara Duterte’s words carry weight. When she downplays territorial incursions, she weakens our diplomatic leverage. When she questions our alliances, she emboldens our enemies. And when she mocks national symbols in favor of foreign benchmarks, she insults every Filipino who ever believed in the nation’s dignity.


This isn’t just incompetence. It is subversion wearing the mask of public service.


2028 and Beyond: A Cautionary Preview

As Duterte eyes a presidential run in 2028, the nation must ask: What kind of leader weaponizes disinformation to evade accountability? What kind of candidate praises an aggressor while condemning her own people’s protectors? What kind of Filipino undermines the Philippines?


If Sara Duterte becomes president, will she govern the nation—or serve the narrative of a foreign power?


Filipinos deserve answers, not smoke screens. We deserve leaders who protect the truth, not distort it. We deserve a government grounded in principle—not propaganda.


Final Word: We Must Not Be Silent

In a time of creeping foreign occupation, domestic gaslighting, and systemic avoidance, silence is complicity. To remain quiet is to accept that our waters, our history, and our dignity can be traded for political convenience.


We must expose the propaganda, reject the projection, and demand truth.


Because the future of the Republic is not a campaign slogan. It’s a line in the sand.


And it’s up to all of us—citizens, patriots, Filipinos—to defend it.


Reject the double-speak. Confront the lies. Defend the Philippines.

Seeds of Change: How Bataan is Mobilizing Farmers and Fisherfolk Toward a Sustainable Future


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Dinalupihan, Bataan – In the heart of Central Luzon, where the fertile land meets the abundant sea, the hopes of farmers and fisherfolk in the towns of Dinalupihan and Hermosa are taking root in fertile ground—not just of soil and water, but of collaboration, empowerment, and bold vision.


On May 28, 2025, a pivotal stakeholders’ meeting was held at the Dinalupihan Municipal Hall, uniting farmers, fisherfolk, local government officials, and representatives from the Peace and Equity Foundation (PEF). Their mission was clear: to forge a united front against the enduring challenges plaguing rural livelihoods and agricultural productivity in Bataan.


What unfolded that day was more than just a meeting—it was a convergence of voices determined to break free from the cycles of poverty, climate vulnerability, and limited access to resources. It was a moment where shared dreams met strategic action.


A Community-Driven Blueprint for Progress

At the center of this gathering were the men and women who till the fields and cast their nets—members of the Dinalupihan Integrated Farmers Agricultural Cooperative and the Almacen Fishermen Cooperative. Representing the frontlines of Bataan’s food system, these groups outlined the very real and urgent support they need: access to affordable farming inputs, improved machinery, and stronger marketing channels.


“We will focus on building the capacity of farmers, especially in production and marketing,” said Arlene Javier, Dinalupihan’s Municipal Agricultural Officer. She underscored the town’s plans to establish a local agricultural supply store, a critical move to lower the cost of fertilizers, seeds, and tools that currently strain local farmers’ income.


From neighboring Hermosa, Municipal Aquaculturist Michelle Juliano shared equally pressing concerns. "Flooding has repeatedly threatened fishponds and aquaculture systems," she explained, pointing to the town's plans to improve water management infrastructure and develop climate-resilient fishery practices.


Laying the Foundation for Long-Term Resilience

The meeting featured breakout sessions designed to tailor solutions to each municipality’s unique challenges. What emerged were community-specific action plans that will feed into a broader Area Development Plan for Bataan, one that is being co-created by local stakeholders and championed by the Peace and Equity Foundation.


Signaling the gravity and scope of this effort, the meeting was attended by PEF stalwarts including General Assembly member and former Agriculture Secretary Senen Bacani, Deputy Executive Director Cauchie Garcia, and Area Manager Peter Nabong—a testament to the foundation’s deepening commitment to inclusive, sustainable rural development.


Bataan: A New Frontier in a Growing Movement

While Bataan may be the latest addition to PEF’s expanding network of priority areas, the work being done here reflects a broader evolution in development strategy—one that values local leadership, multi-sector collaboration, and systems thinking.


Through Project TRANSFORM, launched in 2023 by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Bataan joined a nationwide movement advocating for resilience and environmental sustainability through multi-stakeholder engagement. This transdisciplinary initiative is a living example of how government agencies, development institutions, and grassroots actors can work in unison to address the complex, interconnected challenges facing rural communities.


Currently, PEF operates its social enterprise programs in diverse areas—from the rice fields of Nueva Ecija and coconut farms in Quezon to the uplands of Bukidnon and the coastlines of Zamboanga Sibugay. With the inclusion of Bataan, the foundation is not just expanding geographically—it is deepening its commitment to places where the stakes are high and the opportunities transformative.


The Road Ahead: Not Just Survival, But Thriving

For too long, farmers and fisherfolk in Bataan have had to navigate harsh economic realities on their own. But now, with their needs being heard, and their voices shaping policy and intervention, a new chapter is being written.


This is not simply about giving aid. It’s about fostering dignity. It’s about building the tools and networks that allow people to own their progress. As the seeds of collaboration are planted and the soil of local governance is tilled with intention, Bataan stands as a beacon—showing what can happen when communities, governments, and changemakers unite around a shared vision.


In Bataan, the tide is turning. And it begins, as it always has, with the hands of the people—steady, calloused, and determined to grow a better future from the ground up.

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