Panay News

I’ve done my share

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SOME PEOPLE go campaignin­g house to house. Some people go to rallies. Some people campaign online. Some people do it in (and from) the Philippine­s.

Some people do it wherever they can.

*** I do it all wherever I can. I did a Pink Ambassador­ial Tour of the UK and Europe from December to February.

I also had a few days in Mexico, and a week in Iceland.

And if you see my social media, you will understand how much I have done.

*** In the UK, I visited several homes. Mostly, homes of nurses and their families.

They knew I was there to campaign for my Pink candidates, and to squash the opponent/s.

I’d say my audience stats was 5050 in the beginning.

But I managed to change some minds towards my candidate.

In the end, I could say I did 60-40 in favor of my Pink candidates.

It was hard to change the former Filipinos in the UK.

And I say “former Filipinos” because, thanks be to God, they are now British citizens, and cannot vote for their candidate.

*** What is sad about all this is that, they really don’t care about the Philippine­s.

They don’t care about the Filipinos in the Philippine­s rotting in poverty.

If you have to manage your own finances in the UK (and elsewhere in the world), would you really care about the national economy of the Philippine­s?

If you are no longer a Filipino citizen, and are living in the UK (or elsewhere in the world), who cares if you push Filipinos in the Philippine­s to hell and their destructio­n, right?

It’s so easy to say, “I pushed them in the wrong direction, and they were so stupid to jump when I said, ‘Jump!’” And that thought makes me sad. Because I see that as irresponsi­ble, and a little psychotic.

*** I’ve engaged in a lot of debates with former Filipinos in the UK. It was just December. I was invited to holiday gatherings. Drinking sprees, eating parties. And the Philippine elections was a hot topic among the inebriated.

*** I argued because a little alcohol always makes me very eloquent, and more uninhibite­d to insult people’s stupidity.

I always triumphed in those debates. I’ve enlightene­d many. And when my opponents concede defeat, they just say, “Relax, Mr. Pete, we can’t even vote because we don’t have dual citizenshi­p.”

*** The women are easier to convince. (Because they are smarter?) Anyway, because t hey are convinced with my ideas, I end up telling them to “pressure” their families in the Philippine­s to vote for my Pink candidates.

Because if they are still remitting money to their dependent families in the Philippine­s, couldn’t they create that little pressure?

Luckily, they agree. And I have had updates that their families are voting Pink.

*** It’s a different story in the rest of Europe.

I still met some nurses, but most of the people that I talked to were non-healthcare workers.

They were chefs, teachers, store managers, librarians, consultant­s, and real estate agents.

They were mostly also rooting for my Pink candidates.

I’d say it’s 90-10% in my favor because I only met one strong Duterte fanatic.

My ambassador­ial work for my European contacts consisted mostly of giving them ammunition­s to help convince their families in the Philippine­s, if they aren’t Pink already.

*** As for Cancun, Mexico, well, I haven’t met a Filipino there.

Was it because I went to an expensive exclusive resort? Haha.

OK, OK, I met a Filipino family at the airport, but they’re already Pink.

I mean, they’re the intelligen­t bunch.

And rich Filipino- Americans! Haha.

MY LIFE AS ART/14

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