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Duterte denies being a ‘strongman’

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Published May 4, 2018

President Duterte denied that he is a ‘strongman,’ saying he has not imprisoned anyone who has criticized him or his government.

Time-Magazine-May-14_CNNPH.jpg


Duterte made the statement after the TIME Magazine labeled him as a “strongman” and included him in the cover of its May 14, 2018 international edition.

Joining him in the cover are Russian President Vladimir Putin, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, and Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The story described the Philippine President as a “former mayor who talked more like a Mob boss than a President, on his promises to wipe out the drug trade with his own brand of justice.”

Duterte, in a speech in Davao City Friday evening, denied that he is a strongman and said that he can take any criticism to him by the Filipinos.

“Isa raw ako sa mga strongmen. Hindi naman ako strongman (They said I am one of the strongmen. I am not a strongman). I have never sent anyone to prison because they criticized me. I have never sent anyone to jail for talking or badmouthing me,” Duterte said.

“You can criticize me and bullshit me to no end. I can take that because you are my employer. I am just a government worker. Use your freedom of expression,” he added.

However, Duterte said that while he can take the words of his fellow Filipinos, he will not allow other countries to badmouth or criticize him.

“Pero kung foreigner ka, that is another thing. Maski madre ka, maski sabihin mo religious ka (But if you are a foreigner, that is another thing. Even if you are a nun, or religious), Duterte said.

The President was referring to the order of the Bureau of Immigration to Australian nun Sister Patricia Fox to leave the country for her alleged participation in political rallies.

The President also said that he is only trying to fulfill his campaign promise of ridding the country of illegal drugs, corruption, and criminality.

“Kailan pa ba ako nag-hari-hari sa Pilipinas (When did I ever act that I rule this country)? That is my promise,” Duterte said.

Malacañang earlier said that despite the slant presented by TIME Magazine, Duterte’s administration is well appreciated by the Filipinos as evidenced by his high trust and satisfaction ratings.

The Palace also said that Filipinos are now used to Duterte’s colorful language and know that while his words are sometimes extreme, his commitment to serve the country is real.

This was not the first time that President Duterte has been featured in the TIME Magazine. In April last year, Duterte led TIME’s online poll for the 2017 Top 100 most influential people. He had also graced the cover of TIME Magazine where he was dubbed as ‘The Punisher’ in its May 23, 2016 issue.
 
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You become "strongman" if you care about sovereignty. They treat you nicely (like they treat and use Japan's leaderships) if you simply follow the instructions and never pull the rope held by the master.

This is a usual neo-fascist US regime-friendly media tactic.

They start to paint you under a general brush, by giving a colorful name for quick memorizing by their gullible low-IQ public.

Then, based on how far you go in seeking sovereignty, they continue with light or dense demonization.

The media acts as the spearhead. Academia puts scientific wraps on it.

In the end, demonization prepares the ground for US best foreign asset to take over: military-intelligence complex.

The only way to beat the US in their own game is to equally attacks and paint them in simplistic, memorize-able brushes. Give them names, repeat, and repeat more, and use media and academia to sell it over. Make it a concept and then a discourse.

This is how Russia scared the entire US regime establishment and threw them into mild chaos.
 
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You can't order such a strong persecution of the drug war without being a strongman.

Not that the term 'Strongman' is inherently negative. That's just what the westies would want ya to believe. :toast_sign:

Italy has had 60 administrations in 70 years, Australia has had 5 prime ministers in 8 years. Wanting to avoid such non-leadership in the highest echelons of state is a valid reason for empowering a strongman.

After-all, unpopular strongmen are deposed ones. The fact he's in power is proof enough that the people support him.
 
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