02/03/2026
Kung wala itong mga Chinese Drug Lords na ito, wala sanang Pilipino victims !!! Pero anjan eh, nasa likod ng dating Pangulo para sa Negosyo at pananamantala sa Kapangyarihan... Imbes na ang mga Drug Lords ang Problema na dapat pagbayarin, mga biktima ang pinagbayad... Napakawalang Puso, Tuso, Ruthless and Notorious President of the History talaga! Ginawa pang 10 years kono yung passport for the ofw's, yun pala para sa mga millions of illegal Chinese immigrants to operate illegal Pogos ang mga gago!!! Kunyari mga Pilipino Born Citizen para labas loob sa ating bansa itong mga syndikato... Ganyan ka tuso ang Best President ninyo..Billion billion ang kinita kada bwan may kasama pang 12 Thrillion na utang pero mga substandards ang mga proyekto, 12 lang ang tinapos daan daan ang iniwan ang dami pang Ghost Projects! ANG DAMING SINAYANG NA PERA AT MGA BUHAY ANG INUTANG NG BUANG NA PRESIDENTENG ITO! AT ANG DAMIG MGA BULAG, BOBO, BINGI AT MANHID SA PILIPINAS!!!
The Irony of Duterte’s Drug War and His Suspected Druglord Allies
Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs was one of the bloodiest campaigns in modern Philippine history. Thousands of poor Filipinos were killed or jailed for petty possession, while the powerful were shielded. The irony is stark: several figures close to Duterte have been named in investigations and Senate hearings as suspected drug personalities or linked to massive smuggling operations.
The Names That Expose the Contradiction
• Michael Yang – Duterte’s former economic adviser, accused of being a “drug lord partner” and linked to the smuggling of billions worth of shabu, as well as the Pharmally scandal.
• Alan Lim (Lin Weixiong) – Business partner of Michael Yang in Pharmally, identified in intelligence reports as a suspected drug personality.
• Charlie Tan – Best friend of Paolo “Pulong” Duterte, implicated in drug smuggling complaints and connected to the ₱6.4 billion shabu shipment case.
• Richard Chen (Chen Ju Long) – Owner of Hong Fei Logistics, charged in connection with the 2017 smuggling of 602 kilograms of shabu worth ₱6.4 billion.
• Sammy Uy – Davao businessman alleged to have ties to Duterte’s circle and flagged in drug-related financial trails.
The Hypocrisy of Selective Justice
• Poor vs. Powerful: Ordinary citizens were executed for sachets of shabu, while alleged smugglers tied to Duterte’s circle remained untouchable.
• Weaponized Morality: Duterte’s rhetoric dehumanized drug users, yet when allegations touched his allies, silence and denial prevailed.
• Control, Not Eradication: The drug war appears less about ending the trade and more about monopolizing it—deciding who profits, who dies, and who is protected.
Why This Matters
The hypocrisy undermines the legitimacy of Duterte’s drug war. It reveals a system where morality was performative, justice was selective, and violence was wielded to consolidate power rather than dismantle crime. For victims and survivors, this irony is not abstract—it is the lived reality of losing loved ones while watching alleged perpetrators sit in government offices.
The Duterte era’s greatest irony is that the war on drugs may have been waged not to destroy the trade, but to control it. The blood spilled on the streets was not the price of justice, but the cost of maintaining impunity.