Manny Pacquiao Set To Retire (Again) After Saturday’s Boxing Match With Jessie Vargas

 

IMG_6803.JPGLAS VEGAS, Nevada (The Adobo Chronicles, Las Vegas Bureau) – Win or lose, Filipino boxer and Senator Manny Pacquiao will retire again after this Saturday’s fight against American Jessie Vargas for the welterweight title.

Pacquiao, who is ten years older than Vargas, announced his retirement shortly after his unanimous decision victory over Timothy Bradley just in April of this year.  He came out of retirement to fight Vargas.

When asked by The Adobo Chronicles why he has decided to retire again after Saturday, Pacquiao said that since becoming a Philippine senator, he has found his new calling to serve the Filipino people.

“I’m enjoying my work as a senator,” he said, “questioning witnesses at Senate hearings, delivering privilege speeches, ousting fellow senators from committee chairmanship, and occasionally preaching about God and religion right inside the Senate chambers.  He has also formed an intimate group of senators and staff for regular bible studies.

“I may have been the number one absentee congressman, but now as a senator, it is my intention to have an almost perfect, if not perfect attendance.  I cannot do that if I continue with my boxing career.”

How long will Pacquiao stay in retirement this time around?  Only time will tell.

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EDITORIAL: Ah, Freedom Of Speech

IMG_6793.PNGAh, freedom of speech. The world wide web has given it the platform to flaunt itself, and to flourish. Netizens are enjoying the opportunity to say what they want to say and are out to test the limits of their freedom, if there are any.

The pros and the cons equally take to social media to make their case to praise as well as to condemn. They are feeling the power of their word or of their signature. Even a simple thumbs up or emoji gives them the satisfaction of having their thoughts and feelings made known to the world.

The legitimate news media are feeling threatened. Now, they are hardly the only source of news. At the same time, news takes on a different meaning, depending on its source. Fact-checking is no longer a luxury but a necessity.

In the Philippines, which has one of the world’s highest percentage of citizens connected to the Internet, we have seen a digital divide — not the original concept of who has or doesn’t have access to the web. Rather, it is a divide that separates one side of politics from the other.

One is either pro-Duterte or anti-Duterte, a “yellowtard” or a “Dutertard.” You either follow Mocha Uson or Raisa Robles, Cynthia Patag or Sass Rogando Sassot, Secretary Andanar or Senator Trillanes. Boxing fan or not, you are either pro or against Senator Manny Pacquiao.

Filipinos have learned to use online petitions to seek change or status quo.

Early on, pro-Aquino tour guide-turned-activist Carlos Celdran petitioned Rodrigo Roa Duterte to resign, even before he actually assumed the presidency. Celdran gathered some 5,000 signatures. Meanwhile, a counter-petition registered 8,000 supporters.

In another petition that failed to gain ground, Catholic Filipinos were asked to sign a demand for Duterte to resign or be impeached. It gained just about 300 signatures.

Mimicking Celdran’s Duterte resignation petition, a self-described Filipino American human rights lawyer residing in the San Francisco Bay Area just posted a call for Filipinos worldwide to demand that the president step down. Ted Laguatan’s petition has over a thousand signatures as of this writing.

But nothing has shown the digital divide more than the ongoing rift between Uson fans and her critics. A petition asking Facebook to shut down her political blog reached as many as 33,000 supporters. But then, a counter-petition authored by a Filipina living in Canada, generated 35,000 signatures.

In tweets and op-ed pieces published on Rappler, its CEO Maria Ressa made the case that it was “time to take back the Internet.”

But the question for Ressa is: “From whom?” From the pros or the cons? Because in either case, what will be taken away is precisely the freedom of speech that allowed her and her media organization to flourish in the online world.

In other online news, have you heard about the letter asking the Miss Universe Organization to cancel its planned beauty pageant in Manila this coming January? It was on the grounds that the atmosphere under the Duterte administration is not conducive to an international competition for women. Well, that too has divided the country, although we suspect, unequally — with the pro-beauty pageant  Filipinos having  the upper hand…

(The opinions expressed in this editorial are those of The Adobo Chronicles only.  Any similarity to actual opinions by others is purely coincidental.)

President Duterte To Ban All Philippine Beauty Pageants

img_6784MANILA, Philippines (The Adobo Chronicles, Manila Bureau) – While Philippine President Rodrigo Roa Duterte is a known lover of women, he is just sick and tired of Filipinas winning international beauty pageants.  So he has issued an Executive Order banning all Philippine beauty pageants.

“The results are so predictable, Filipinas will win most of the international beauty crowns,” Duterte said.

Duterte issued the EO after yet another Filipina won an international beauty crown, that of Miss Diamond of the World 2016. The pageant was held in Algeria.

The Philippines holds both the incumbent titles of Miss Universe (Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach) and Miss International (Kylie Verzosa), not to mention other previous recent titles like Miss World (Megan Young), Miss Earth (Angelia Ong), Miss Globe (Ann Lorraine Colis).

Oh, and as far as male beauty pageants are concerned, we’re not even going to go there.

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