Merlo51 , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@Merlo51@aus.social avatar

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-05-15/philippines-divorce-battle-looms-to-free-women-from-abuse/103828284
Unbelievable a country where divorce is illegal The Catholic Church again a misogynist and backwards thinking organisation.

youronlyone Mod , (edited )
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

@Merlo51

> Father Jerome Secillano from the Catholic Bishops' Conference told 7.30 the proposed law would destroy marriages and families.
>
> So that guy who may be abusive is not treated at all, he will be looking for another girl who is going to be his punching bag later on.

There's no need to explain that, it's very plain.

/facepalm

EDIT: just to clarify, it's directed to that priest and the RCC. ^_~

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar
  1. I found a way to write the leading sound /ŋ/ (Ng̃) in by “reviving” an obsolete Jamo.

(NOTE: the samples below are using the Pilipino Hangeul [work-in-progress] adaption/rules.)

Ex:

  • ᅌᅡ욘 (nga·yon) = EN: today
  • ᅌᅵ삔 (ngi·pin) = EN: tooth
  1. I also separated (R) and (L), like how they did in the language.

Same character: ᄙ

Ex:

  • 빠다ᄙᅡᆺ닷 (pa·ta·las·tas) = EN: commercial
  • ᄙᅡ밧 (la·bas) = EN: outside; go out (depending on usage)
  1. I was thinking of using another obsolete Jamo (ᅏ) for the /t͡s/ (Ts) sound, but ㅊ /t͡ɕʰ/ (Ch) can fulfill that role as well.

Ex:

  • 차차 (cha·cha) = short form of “charter change”; or the dance chacha.
  • 초꼬라데 (tso·ko·la·te) = EN: chocolate
  • 차아 (tsa·a) = EN: tea
  1. Ññ (enye) is, for now, transliterate.

  2. For the Kr sound, like in “krus”, maybe we can use ㅋ since we don't have a /kʰ/ (Kh) sound in Filipino.

  3. Vowels like Filipino “Ee” which can be either /ɛ/ (ae) or /e/ (e).

This one is tricky because the Filipino “Ee” sound can change depending on, for example, a person want to deliver a word with endearment, but the meaning never changes. So an /e/ sound can become an /ɛ/ sound, while retaining its meaning.

I actually had no idea about this “Ee” /e/ (e) vs /ɛ/ (ae). The way Filipino vowels are taught in school is simply, well, /e/ (e). But the more I read online resources, the more I learn that we do make an /ɛ/ (ae) sound for the same vowel! How crazy is that?!

Anyway…

See: https://sheet.zohopublic.com/sheet/published/l99bm2e24906e3db84e69bb509d5a4cbfb4ec

What do you think?

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar
youronlyone OP Mod ,
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

コンテクストは王様です! 外国人が他国を探検する際のアドバイスです。

https://im.youronly.one/yuki/ja/context-is-king-2024131/

youronlyone OP Mod ,
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

문맥은 왕입니다! 다른 나라를 탐험할 때 외국인들을 위한 조언입니다.

https://im.youronly.one/yuki/ko/context-is-king-2024131/

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

To all Filipinos, and foreigners planning to live in the Philippines for quite some time, a fair warning: avoid getting a Globe SIM.

Here's why: if ever you lost your phone (theft, etc.) Globe Telecom Inc. will not immediately block your old SIM for the following reasons:

  1. The SIM is STILL RINGING.
  2. You cannot PERFECTLY answer ALL THREE verification questions, which were designed to ensure you'll fail it.

I just went to a Globe store to go through the process because their online agents were heartless and very rude. While the agent in the Globe store was very helpful, and exhausted all possible options, it still was not enough to trigger the “immediate old SIM block” step.

This is after providing the following:

  1. Affidavit of Loss.
  2. 2 government issues IDs.
  3. A selfie with me holding my government issued IDs.
  4. Load amount prior to phone theft. (I even have a screenshot.)
  5. Expiry date of the load prior to theft. (I even have a screenshot.)
  6. That it is attached to a GCash account that is Tier-3 verified. (One GCash account per mobile number.)
  7. I brought all the SIM beds I ever had for the same number. (I always kept the SIM bed whenever I get a new SIM issuance for the same number.)
  8. Provided the numbers I often send SMS and the messages I sent to those numbers.

They also confirmed with me that whoever got my SIM, bought a Globe promo after it was stolen.

But, NO, absolutely nothing whatsoever can trigger the step: Block old SIM.

The only thing they did is escalate the case. However, it will take 3-5 business days to be processed.

They also informed me that it can be declined, too, even after proving my ownership of the SIM beyond any reasonable doubt.

So, yes, that's GLOBE TELECOM INC. for you.

AVOID THEM AT ALL COSTS!

Get a SMART or DITO SIM instead.

I don't even know what to do next if it gets declined. Probably go to NTC, which means, I have to go through a hundred processes again, spend money I don't have to get this and that, and still no guarantee.

All I can do right now is continue removing that number from my accounts. Banks are done, already filed requests.

I'm already very tired. Sorry, but I really have to say this: .

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar
youronlyone Mod , (edited ) to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Why Telecom Inc. has the worst in history.

  1. They ask verification questions guaranteed to fail.
  2. Their agents are heartless and rude.
  3. They are above the Law of the land.
  4. They don't care about their customers.

Here are the verification questions they asked me:
> 1. Can you provide the exact date when your SIM was activated? Ex. March 2023.
>
> 2. What’s the last promo that you purchased before your phone was lost? When did you register it?
>
> 3. What was your remaining load balance before your phone was lost?

All three verification questions are guaranteed to fail.

#1: Can you honestly remember the exact date when your SIM was activated, especially if it has been with you for at least a decade?

#2: Can you honestly remember the last promo you purchased when you did not purchase any promo for the last 5 years?

For the third question, I provided the CORRECT answer, and I even submitted a screenshot taken on April 12th, very recent.

And yet, Globe Telecom Inc.'s agent replied with the following:

> We have to follow the process before we proceed with the deactivation.

> Unfortunately the details you have provided, do not match our record.

> Yes, the details you have provided do not match our records.

> We can only block the number if you were able to provide the correct details we need.

After this, their agent copy-pasted their spiel in a rush to close the chat conversation.

I've worked in the customer service field for 20 years, and I can tell you this is the worst agent and the worst process I've seen and experienced.

  1. Verification questions guaranteed to fail.
  2. Not exploring other avenues of verifications, that actually are logical to ask.
  3. Totally heartless and rude.
  4. A company process. In other words, this is how they were trained.
  5. End the chat conversation as fast as you can.

To the agent, “I deeply apologise for disturbing your sleep and giving you some work to do.”

To Globe Telecom Inc., “Shame on you for having such a process, and yet you continue to claim awards for having the best service.”

@pilipinas @philippines @pinoy

youronlyone Mod , (edited ) to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Apparently, the Mongol Khans did try to conquer pre-Colonial , but miserably failed.

=))

https://youtu.be/20IFdD_IOyI?si=AxuMZ1X27URBisaN

Also see this 2008 blog post from another: https://sambali.blogspot.com/2008/04/setsuko-matoba-zipangu-and-philippines.html

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

I blocked because they force people to accept their for 1,422 ‘partners’.

There are better websites than them anyway. ^_~

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

As usual, the could have done this, but because the government and its agencies are managed by old people, they still think like it's the 1940s. /facepalm

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2024/04/23/japan/science-health/japan-special-heatstroke-alert/

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to UNIS
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Two of the members of the new K-pop "idol" group, UNIS / U&iS, are pure Filipino, they are "Elisia" and Gehlee.

But how do you pronounce their names?

If you write their names in Hangul, you can get the pronunciation correctly.

  • Elisia = 엘리시아 = e·li·si·a = eh-lee-si-ah (not e-lai-sha)
  • Gehlee = 젤리 = je·li = je-lee (sounds like jelly)

P.S. Happy Birthday Elisia!

Or, in Filipino, Maligayang Kaarawan Elisia!

  • Maligaya (ma-lee-ga-ya) = happy
  • Kaarawan (ka-ah-ra-wan) = birthday, anniversary

"Maligayang kaarawan", when used in context to refer to a single person, is generally understood as "happy birthday".

@pilipinas
@philippines
@kpop
@kpop
@unis

Tags:

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Huh, so what other have mentioned, South-East Asia now have a better ping to European gaming servers than US West Coast (or any US-based gaming servers).

This is interesting. I'm going to expand my test in the future. But for now, the results are the same with or without VPN. I guess ASEAN now have a direct connection to the EU IX and uses the latest technology?

I wonder where our connection passes through to get to the EU.

Here in the Philippines, our connection goes through:

  1. Taiwan or Hong Kong
  2. From there it travels the Pacific Ocean to US West Coast.
  3. From US West Coast, it travels to Central.
  4. From Central to East Coast.
  5. From East Coast to Europe.

If we now have a connection direct to EU IX, then it means we're no longer passing through the US?

Any IX experts out there?

@pilipinas @philippines @gaming @asean

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

- https://c.im/@youronlyone/112249064745762276

Re: K-drama “Vagabond” Season 02 to film in the Philippines.

There appears to be much confusion about this, with most calling it a “rumour”.

A “rumour” is something that is being talked about in whisper, usually without any “notable” source. However, in this particular case, a lot of Philippine news media outlets reported this revelation from a former politician and businessman, Chavit Singson, who claims to be a co-producer.

Philippine news media are members of various legal journalism organisations. If you trust your own local media if they are members of a legal journalism organisation, then I think Philippine media should be accorded the same respect. No one is saying they have not, nor will not, make a mistake. But, at least, give them some credit, no matter what our personal feelings and thoughts about them in other matters (like in politics).

Anyway, instead of calling it a “rumour”, it is more fitting to call it “unconfirmed” or “leak”. I think the latter 99% fits. Why?

Chavit Singson talked to the media about it. He “revealed” it himself, and he claimed he is the co-producer. He also revealed that the writers of Vagabond Season 02 visited the Philippines in 2023, looking for filming locations.

Since he was the first to break this news, then it is a “leak” rather than a “rumour”. Regardless of my personal feelings and thoughts about the man, I doubt he'll risk his political and business reputation for a K-drama. I mean, if you are going to put your reputation on the line, would you do it for a TV show or for something bigger and more significant?

Also, think about it this way:

  • If Chavit Singson was lying about it, then he will be roasted alive by mass media. From notable media outfits to social media. We all know what happens if one lies to, and use, the media.
  • If he was not lying about it, but the project doesn't push through because of his early revelation (or “leak”), then the fans will roast him instead. Still, we cannot fault him for that other than “being too excited” about it. The ultimate decision lies with the production team, and the actors, producers can only do so much.

Him as a businessman, I think it was a calculated move to “leak” it at this time. They probably have reached a MOA (Memorandum of Agreement) already, thus, he is confident it will push through. Leaking it may increase support for it, especially in Korea, where the ultimate decision lies. Imagine if it doesn't push through, Chavit Singson can explain that the powers-that-be in Korea decided against it. So, yeah, strategic leak; or strategic early announcement.

Obviously, the production team cannot leak anything, and it is better for them to have a plausible deniability about any leaks or agreements. They want to film in the Philippines, they got support from Chavit Singson, now they just have to convince the powers-that-be in Korea. Hence, the “leak”, not a “rumour”. Get everyone to talk about it, and use it to convince the powers-that-be in Korea to green lit the project and to film in the Philippines.

^_~

@kdrama @kdrama @asiandrama

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Today's is 「Shout For Joy」 by Gary Valenciano. A fitting song after Passover, Resurrection Day, and the Feast of Unleavened Bread.

https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=D4NHAwgnpIs&si=ejBJubEj94qNrs-u

@ppop @ppop @asianpop

18+ youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

More and more Filipinos I personally know are earthquake ready. Today, even more are + war ready too.

Q1: Are you ready?
Q2: Are you ready?

Have you prepared these?

  1. Flashlights. (Ones with batteries, not USB.)
  2. Batteries. (Include rechargables.)
  3. Instant food (especially those with very long expiry dates; yes, not healthy, but…)
  4. Drinking water.
  5. Traditional radios. (Preferably ones that can be recharged so you can reserve your batteries for other purposes.)
  6. Two-way radios (a.k.a. walkie-talkie).
  7. Backpacks, belt bags.
  8. Maps and compass. Do you also know how to read maps and use a compass?
  9. Escape routes.
  10. Do you know which places were marked for emergencies?

Some of the people I know also have generators, gas, and bunkers already. Yes, bunkers in the Philippines (oh, and guns, really).

Don't rely on electronic gadgets. The first things to go fast are electricity supply and communication network.

Remember there are 3 major fault lines in Luzon.

  1. East Valley Fault System
  2. West Valley Fault System (100+ km long; from Angat Dam to Luzon-Batangas boundary)
  3. Manila Trench. On the West Philippine Sea, running from Northern Luzon to near Mindoro Island.

We haven't even considered the 1,200-km Philippine Fault System (which itself is major too, but we rarely hear about it). It runs from Northern Luzon to Southern Mindanao.

Then the currently unstable and volatile China issue, which, as I've talked about previously, can easily turn into a major regional or world war.

Are you ready, or, “bahala na si Bathala” again?

@pilipinas @philippines @pinoy


[a] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marikina_Valley_Fault_System
[b] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manila_Trench
[c] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_Fault_System

Image source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Relief_Map_of_Metro_Manila_and_nearby_provinces_showing_the_West_and_East_Valley_Fault_Line_(cropped).jpg

Image License: CC By-SA 4.0 International

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

The most accepted theory about migrations in Southern and Eastern is .

From , to the , and then the rest of , , , , and as far as .

If I'm going to interpret this, the natives of Taiwan survived as the primary people in what we know today as the Philippine archipelago. From the Philippines, they spread everywhere.

In other words, they're all ! ᜑᜑᜑᜑ 😹 (Or, native Taiwanese to be exact.)


Image source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chronological_dispersal_of_Austronesian_people_across_the_Pacific.svg

Licensed under 4.0 by Pavljenko.

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar
Yoshi , to Random stuff
@Yoshi@toot.community avatar

@NPR Hate to say it but among older , is the norm. No one is allowed or encouraged to think "outside the box" so is futile. Among Japanese (and I suspect other Asian cultures) the party line is "shigata-ga nai" (can't be helped) or, colloquially, "shit happens." invented, "go along to get along." That's why I've never fit in with other Asians.

youronlyone ,
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

@Yoshi Yep, even here in the / , you should follow your clan/familial traditions and whatever the eldest generation still living decides.

Although, I think it's safe to say that sometime mid to late 90s, things started to change. For our own clans/families, those of us born from mid-70s onwards broke free from it. We did still obey the decisions of our grandparents on certain areas, but not for personal matters. And when their generations passed away (RIP), no one of us kept that tradition of group thinking alive. Especially now that our generation are in mid-life. Our parents who still think that way no longer say anything about it. :p

@NPR

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Visiting the or already here? Here's yet another set of tips from !

Topic: Fruits!

Never leave the Philippines without eating these fruits, and taking a bunch with you when you fly home.

Mangosteen

While popular in Southeast Asia, the Mangosteen in the Philippines is the best variant in the world. Mangosteen is plenty and cheap in the country. You can find it anywhere, from wet markets to supermarkets to street stalls.

There are also many other products made from Mangosteen, from coffee to juice to daily supplements, even a candy and cookies!

Banana (local: saging)

Like Mangosteen, Philippine bananas are the best in the world. There was even a joke how a Philippine banana was exported in the West, and a local restaurant bought banana supplies from those countries and used it, hence, their very simple banana dish (that is ₱20 elsewhere) is worth a Big Mac (₱200). Without them realising the banana they imported originated from their neighbour.

Of course it's a joke. Or maybe not. (We did have an incident like this decades ago, for shoes. Marikina-made shoes were exported. Branded. And then that brand sold it here. 🤣)

Trivia: An endemic banana, "abaca", is also used to produce "Manila Hemp", which is expensive.

Mangoes (local: mangga)

Yes, the best in the world too! Some of our Asian neighbours visit the Philippines just to eat Philippine mangoes, because it's very expensive in their country.

Pineapple (local: pinya)

The best? Well, some of those popular foreign pineapple brands actually have farms here in the Philippines because they found that Philippine-produced pineapples are better.

Trivia: Pineapple was brought here during the colonial era. It's not endemic.

Trivia: Pineapple fibres are used to make clothes, and are usually expensive. It's the most common Philippine linen. Filipinos were the first to create clothes from Pineapple fibres. In fact, like the Coconut, Filipinos found use to everything Pineapple, generally, nothing goes to waste.

(1/2)

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone OP Mod ,
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

Coconut (local: buko, niyog)

Yes, you guessed it right again! The best coconut in the world. It's also exported as well. Ask a Filipino how to properly eat a coconut. Most foreigners only drink the juice. You should eat the "white" part, that's the actual coconut. Never ever throw it!

After eating, you can use the coconut case for various things. One such is what we call "bunot", it helps shine flat wooden floors after putting floor wax on it.

No part of a coconut goes to waste in the Philippines. It is also used in a lot of Filipino foods!

Durian

No comment on this one. Just look for it. 😉 It's sweet, promise.

Jackfruit (local: langka)

A must! It is also part of the famous "halo-halo" summer crushed ice drink/food. A halo-halo without langka is incomplete.

Papaya

If you haven't tried Papaya, you definitely should. Usually included in dishes to give a dish a different taste, but eating Papaya by itself is better because you'll be able to taste it fully.


Special mention: Calamansi

Usually called Philippine lemon. Calamansi is small. This is endemic as well. According to foreigners, it is better than the regular lemon.

You'll often see this in restaurants. We use this in almost every food, either as part of the ingredients, or as a condiment. For example, combine soy sauce + calamansi and you get an exotic dip for your chicken, pork, fish, and so on.

We use it for pansit (Filipino noodles) like in pancit canton and pancit palabok. Also in goto and lugaw (porridge). Once you've tasted calamansi in various ways, you'll replace your regular lemon, and other ingredients, with it.

(2/2)

@pilipinas @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

I'm very impressed with the adaptation of / . Modern production style, not the old Filipino style. No overused special effects. Fun comedy too!

Feedback 1: No reason to copy the Korean pinky swear. The thumb step is a Korean culture to seal agreements. But it's fine. A good nod to the original. ^_^

Feedback 2: Seatbelts, even for passengers on the back. Shows are a good opportunity to instil the importance of seatbelts in the people's mind.

@pdrama @asiandrama @pilipinas @tv @philippines

youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar
youronlyone Mod , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

@pilipinas

Here's another thing most are not aware of: Mainland Chinese were an important factor, if not crucial, in the fight against colonial invaders.

Andres Bonifacio, the father of Philippine revolution, and one of the founders of the , is often depicted as a poor farmer. This is very far from the truth.

Andres Bonifacio came from a rich, if not wealthy, family with a lot of connections. If I remember correctly, he hailed from a "Royal Class" clan, and his family was one of those who kept communication lines intact before and after they started the revolution.

Secondly. Starting a revolution requires a continuous flow of funds. Farmers cannot support a revolution. In addition, farmers will not even think of a revolution by themselves, family comes first. However, a rich or wealthy person is capable of thinking about it and starting it.

So, Andres Bonifacio a "farmer"? Not at all.

Third. What schoolbooks don't tell us (they refuse to update it too) is that mainland Chinese (meaning, pure Chinese from mainland China) were also involved. They mainly provided funds and armaments. The Chinese in the Philippines and Chinese from China, were in constant communication. They send funds and arms. Which then are channeled to support the KKK.

Yet during the 80s and 90s, Chinese-Filipinos, or , were targeted for kidnappings and hate. To this day, discrimination still happens just because they're Chinese, even though they have nothing whatsoever to do with Communist China.

youronlyone OP Mod ,
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

@pilipinas

Here's the kicker.

This relationship between the Philippines and mainland China, continued up to . Funds and arms flowed between the Philippine guerilla network and mainland China, to fight against Imperial Japanese forces.

Douglas MacArthur was even surprised that there was a strong guerilla network in the entire Philippine archipelago! He was recorded saying that because of this network, they were able to quickly land in the Philippines to retake it.

The guerilla network succeeded because both Filipinos and Chinese (and some Americans who were trapped in the country) helped each other.

Whenever China needed help because the Imperial Japanese forces were pushing inland, the Filipino guerilla network will send money and arms. And then the Chinese did the same for the Philippine guerillas.

The Imperial Japanese forces tried very hard to dismantle the guerilla network, but they failed.

youronlyone OP Mod ,
@youronlyone@c.im avatar

@pilipinas

Another kicker: the guerilla network was filled with politics too. There were even cross-camp battles! Imagine that!

The Philippine guerilla network was not an organised entity or anything. It was multiple cells working independently of each other.

The reason Imperial Japan failed to dismantle it was exactly that, they're working as independent cells. Each guerilla camp, more often than not, was not aware of each other.

And once they discover each other's presence, that's when politics begin. Both camps want to absorb each other. Or, one camp wants to keep the status quo.

This Filipino-style guerilla warfare became a hot subject later. It was later called "cells", and often used by the military, spy agencies, and terrorists.

Yes, the "cells" set up originated from Philippine guerillas during . Cells are independent. Cells are not aware of each other. And the only time they communicate is if there's a dire need, like when General Douglas MacArthur planned on going back, the entire guerilla network worked together for the first time (they shipped the armaments sent by MacArthur).


You wouldn't find it in schoolbooks. I learned this from two sources:

  1. My war veteran grandfather.

  2. Sometime 2015-2017 when I visited the "Quezon Memorial Museum" in Quezon City, Philippines.

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