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Mar 11 2008, 1:27 AM EDT (current) filresist 11 words deleted
Mar 10 2008, 10:30 PM EDT filresist 11 words added

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The Guessing Game is On:
.
Who is the next witness
that could finally end it all?
As if Lozada's testimony is not enough.

It's Leo San Miguel!Are we ready for the whole Truth?

A new witness with personal knowledge of the excessively overpriced and kickback-laden ZTE-National Broadband Network (NBN) contract who can “pin down the principals in Malacañang” may surface soon, as the “new witness” has expressed willingness to testify before the Senate and bare all he knows about the goings-on in the scandal-tainted NBN contract.
?What are they saying lately...

teves


Are you resigning, Sir?
"As I have always said, we serve at the pleasure of the President."




Romeo Neri



!Sounds like...


Did you say "She is Evil", Sir?
"I can't recall saying that "The President is Evil."


cruz

?But, previously...


When can we expect this witness to come out?
"This witness has been confiding with me for some time... saying he's willing to come out in due time."


?Is this another clue...

Under pressure. Under intense media and Senate criticism for reducing the tax on Pall Mall cigarettes. Finance Secretary Margarito Teves finally gave in and imposed a P26.06 tax per pack on the cigarette brand, finally upholding BIR Commissioner Jose Maria Bunag who resigned in protest against the earlier DoF decision.

Now the question is: Like the ZTE big bribe money given by British American Tobacco and La Suerte Cigar and cigarette company reportedly to be P1 billion, will the recipients give it back?

Meanwhile expectations are higher that Secretary Teves will soon resign his post to avoid rejection by the Commission on Appointments.

Remember, it was his father who complained about “payola” for every Commission on Appointments approval.

____________________________



The end of tyranny and terror is near.

What we do after this long nightmare, will determine if we truly deserve a better country for our children, and the next generations of Filipinos.

After the initial celebration, will we just return to our comforts and sleep quietly into the night hoping the same nightmare will never come again?

Shall we allow the opportunists stole the gains of thisRevolution once again?

Or, will we start right away, on the overhauling of the existing socio-political system that allows this nightmare to creep into our society's consciousness in the first place?

Will we start rebuilding from our deeply eroded moral foundation into one that deserves respect even
from those who caused such erosion.

Are we willing to go the extra mile? And realize that this Last Revolution is not a one-day picnic, but is meant to last?