Maria Ressa delivers commencement speech at 2019 Columbia Journalism School graduation

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More videos on Rappler: www.rappler.com/video Follow Rappler for the latest news in the Philippines and across the globe. Rappler CEO Maria Ressa is the commencement speaker at the graduation of Columbia Journalism School's class of 2019. Ressa was also presented the 2019 Columbia Journalism Award.
Video courtesy of the Columbia Journalism School. Read the full text of her speech on www.rappler.com/world/global-a...
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Пікірлер: 809

  • @hydiereyes4238
    @hydiereyes42382 жыл бұрын

    A woman of courage worthy of admiration! Impressive and such an inspiring speech! Mabuhay ka Maria Ressa❤️

  • @myrnagales582
    @myrnagales582 Жыл бұрын

    I luv hearing you Madam Maria Ressa. MABUHAY the courageous Filipina ever.

  • @angelosolano1360
    @angelosolano13602 жыл бұрын

    such an informative and intellectual speech from our nobel peace prize, maria ressa..

  • @jaysalud1028
    @jaysalud10282 жыл бұрын

    I find it intriguing that people from other countries appreciate maria more than her birthplace, the philippines. There seems to be a disparity on the level of enlightenment of people relevant to their location. I feel shame that i live on the place which do not appreciate her courage and intellect. Thanks maria for being an inspiration.

  • @itiongco22

    @itiongco22

    Жыл бұрын

    Because evil is on the right ear of the majority thanks to facebook who did nothing.

  • @quantumchase

    @quantumchase

    Жыл бұрын

    I can also feel the shame you are talking about.

  • @arnelpedro4093

    @arnelpedro4093

    26 күн бұрын

    What do you mean? She is my inspiration

  • @misamisorientaljournal
    @misamisorientaljournal Жыл бұрын

    Maria Ressa, you have been an inspiration. Keep safe.

  • @roxannecarpenter6668
    @roxannecarpenter66682 жыл бұрын

    This woman is always prepared, professional, and sound. Go MARIA GO!

  • @jdnny7616
    @jdnny76162 жыл бұрын

    Very proud of her , Philippine pride …

  • @marilyngatdula7916

    @marilyngatdula7916

    2 жыл бұрын

    Di naman pilipino yan indonisia yan

  • @jdnny7616

    @jdnny7616

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@marilyngatdula7916 I checked her biography and it says; born October 2nd 1963 Manila Philippines. CEO of Rappler.

  • @tessalmario8180
    @tessalmario81802 жыл бұрын

    Am a Filipino! So so proud of your bravery of fighting the good fight of guarding the truth! Congratulations dear Maria Ressa, that speech was so powerful tho delivered to journalism grads n 2019 is still very relevant n our present times. God bless always, Ms. Ressa, thanks for empowering the new grads and making them dream of a better lives n future.

  • @ivygayanan3136

    @ivygayanan3136

    2 жыл бұрын

    So Inspirational and a mentor on how to sell your integrity for a fat pay check! Brava!

  • @marlyntijamo1159
    @marlyntijamo11592 жыл бұрын

    A woman of conviction,courage,integrity,. a journalist awardee one of a kind person with dignity.Sa ibang bansa kinikilala siya sa husay ,balanseng ,at makatotohanan pamamahayag .Kinaiinisan na mga abusadong na ka pwesto sa gobyerno pero sa toto lang para sa akin ang pakay niya ay i check kung toto at ipahayag ito.na may ibedensya.

  • @abelardojrsanagustin4404
    @abelardojrsanagustin4404 Жыл бұрын

    Ms Maria Ressa “”Huwaran “” sa braveness, truth, and The courage of telling the Truth.

  • @user-oo3xq7hi3i
    @user-oo3xq7hi3i2 жыл бұрын

    "Dream of a better future. Then go, and make it happen. Go." 🥺❤️

  • @violetaserantes2080
    @violetaserantes20802 жыл бұрын

    Maraming salamat sa iyong pagmamahal sa ating bansang Pilipinas. Another Pilipino who uphold truth, principled, kindhearted, a God- given soul. God loves you.

  • @fredarc5074
    @fredarc50742 жыл бұрын

    good job miss Ressa and god bless you..

  • @mmcbsa6271
    @mmcbsa62712 жыл бұрын

    Congrats Ma'am maria Ressa

  • @khalilgibran4867
    @khalilgibran48672 жыл бұрын

    This is what happens when you search for the truth, speak the truth and sticks with the truth. The world notices. Congatulations to those truth seekers and speakers.

  • @marishellearnaldog7809
    @marishellearnaldog78092 жыл бұрын

    Excellent speech from an exemplary lady journalist and Nobel peace laureate and person of grand courage and integrity. You are a jewel of our country, Maria Ressa.

  • @vermont741
    @vermont7412 жыл бұрын

    Bravo! Maria Ressa! Well deserved Nobel Peace Prize! Keep up the good work, we will be behind you!

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @marlenesabiooliva7667
    @marlenesabiooliva76672 жыл бұрын

    The Nobel Peace Committee is correct by awarding you the most prestigious award to be given to a journalist. God bless you!

  • @cardoadsuara1724
    @cardoadsuara17242 жыл бұрын

    Proud Pinoy here...living and educating Thai people here in the land of smile Thailand...mabuhay ka NOBEL PRIZE MARIA RESSA

  • @kazuoohma6904

    @kazuoohma6904

    2 жыл бұрын

    Mabuhay ka rin po kuya! Thank you for teaching others as well, for sure you're doing an amazing job in Thailand! :))

  • @janhontanosas
    @janhontanosas2 жыл бұрын

    I challenged all this journalists to dig the truth in the Philippines. Why the speaker received a lot of hate messages, harassed and arrested?

  • @grizzy3727

    @grizzy3727

    2 жыл бұрын

    Journalists today write their stories in hotel room based on hearsay.

  • @Freon914

    @Freon914

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh I see, you're one of those haters. Before you challenge everyone here to dig the truth, how about you dig deeper first. Your mind seems too shallow.

  • @janhontanosas

    @janhontanosas

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Freon914 I only hate individuals who spread lies and fabricate stories against my country.

  • @MrAmzies

    @MrAmzies

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Freon914 learn how to argue properly. You didn't prove him wrong with your statement. You only offered a flimsy personal attack.

  • @abuyousufgallego7516

    @abuyousufgallego7516

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/nHV9uKmlm5Cbn6w.html

  • @sundaysbest8023
    @sundaysbest80232 жыл бұрын

    The first time I heard you, I knew you are an inspiration. Your bravery more than makes up for your size. Bless you Maria

  • @ernestofernando9560
    @ernestofernando95602 жыл бұрын

    Ma'am Maria Rezza, your.Great" God bless you♡♡♡

  • @taakaartali3702
    @taakaartali3702 Жыл бұрын

    Very very informative n inspiration n you are the greatest,bravery ..go forward for democracy. Waiting for your valuable speech. Be long life

  • @junjunarponyahooit
    @junjunarponyahooit2 жыл бұрын

    Such a POWERFUL address!🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭

  • @leonryan1212
    @leonryan12122 жыл бұрын

    Inspirational! There's hope for a better world. Make people see the truth and justice for all.

  • @marilouregalado9012
    @marilouregalado90122 жыл бұрын

    You are a couragious woman,, i admire your being open..GREAT YOU ARE GREAT..MAY GOD PROTECT YOU.. comment from Germany

  • @beatricealbo6385
    @beatricealbo63852 жыл бұрын

    Wow ! What a BEAUTIFUL , & inspiring speech that is !!! My RESPECTS & SALUTE TO YOU MS MARIA RESSA ! GOD BLESS YOU & MAY HE KEEP YOU SAFE FROM HARM ! ❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @rossramos5904
    @rossramos59042 жыл бұрын

    Yahooo! NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNER! THE TRUE GUARDIAN of TRUTH! Hep! Hep! Hurrah! VIndicated! Isang malaking sampal kay D30 at kanyang mga alipores Go! Maria! Viva Maria! Laban lang! God will protect you!🙏🙏🙏

  • @estrellaagustin4206
    @estrellaagustin42062 жыл бұрын

    Very informative and inspirational.

  • @FALCONTV2023

    @FALCONTV2023

    2 жыл бұрын

    Guardian of truth. Congratulations and more power.

  • @teenavaldes
    @teenavaldes2 жыл бұрын

    You make us proud to be a Pilipino.

  • @dominiccordova8347
    @dominiccordova83475 жыл бұрын

    THAT.. was the BEST articulation of, the state of, and the challenges/opportunities faced by Journalism today. Brilliant.

  • @isabelitaabadicio8663

    @isabelitaabadicio8663

    2 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant

  • @maryrosefoisset2091
    @maryrosefoisset20912 жыл бұрын

    Wow, I cried a bucket. Excellent speech!

  • @bennieantalan998

    @bennieantalan998

    2 жыл бұрын

    True!

  • @jodonquilantang6386

    @jodonquilantang6386

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its true

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @villamebuizon6997
    @villamebuizon69972 жыл бұрын

    I'm proud of you God will always guide you

  • @ramonbarotillo2969
    @ramonbarotillo29692 жыл бұрын

    Go Maria Ressa go we’re so proud of you.

  • @mariaelenarocillo2950
    @mariaelenarocillo29502 жыл бұрын

    CONGRATULATIONS, MARIA RESSA! MAY GOD PROTECT HER! AMEN ALLELUIA!

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @icouldntthinkofagoodname7216

    @icouldntthinkofagoodname7216

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JB-xm8qi honestly, It's called Noble Peace Prize for a reason. It is supposed to be an honour for a country to have an awardee of it instead, we receive it as an insult. For having a "Filipino with an American citizenship" become successful in spreading lies.

  • @bennieantalan998
    @bennieantalan9982 жыл бұрын

    Excellent speech godbless you Maria Ressa praud pinoy

  • @tonyalberto4927
    @tonyalberto49272 жыл бұрын

    I LOVE WATCHING THIS OVER AND OVER and my hair stands on end whenever MRessa exhorts the graduates to arm themselves with courage in the global crusade against misinformation.

  • @randolphvalentin6186

    @randolphvalentin6186

    2 жыл бұрын

    She fooled them all! Nice job!

  • @estheralcaraz7946

    @estheralcaraz7946

    2 жыл бұрын

    Randolph Valentin shame on you!

  • @randolphvalentin6186

    @randolphvalentin6186

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is my opinion & what I see as a professional US gov’t employee. Too bad!

  • @JoyLordAUMNIMEDIA
    @JoyLordAUMNIMEDIA2 жыл бұрын

    Light shines amidst darkness.

  • @juliogaviola6350
    @juliogaviola63502 жыл бұрын

    Maria Ressa you're rare. May the Heavens watch over you continually for your defense and advocacy of pure truth.

  • @creativename1590
    @creativename15902 жыл бұрын

    ang sarap pakinggan yung mga speech niya, yung accent nya kasi eh hehe

  • @EdgardoValentinoDOlaes
    @EdgardoValentinoDOlaes2 жыл бұрын

    Ms Ressa, you foretell the next world happening, the virus (pandemic) and its antidote, the vaccine. It really happens nowadays. We hope that your mission will accomplish for the real truth in writing and reporting. We wish succes in journalism for these graduates. CONGRATULATIONS, MARIA, FOR RECEIVING THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE AWARD IN 08 OCTOBER 2021. Lots of kudos to you. God bless you; and all these graduates.

  • @abuyousufgallego7516

    @abuyousufgallego7516

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/nHV9uKmlm5Cbn6w.html

  • @Pacmandu2
    @Pacmandu22 жыл бұрын

    Congrats Maria Ressa! You definitely deserve this award. What a moving speech.

  • @Vickie2417
    @Vickie24172 жыл бұрын

    Maria, keep up your truthful work! We need you for this whole world. With your courage the whole world will at end knowledge your good work n many bad sacrifice to go to jail in n out for more than 10 times because of some powerful n brutal evil in your corrupted county Philippines. I pity you for being treated that badly n I appreciate n happy you are still alive and well. Just Smiles always! God will be with you no matter how bad u are treated as a human being n as journalist for your job . Good luck! Vicky US

  • @maharlukomaharluka4811
    @maharlukomaharluka48112 жыл бұрын

    Congrats maria ressa

  • @chiloza760
    @chiloza7602 жыл бұрын

    Congratulations, Ms. Ressa! Thank you for your courage.

  • @ciojr.2760
    @ciojr.27602 жыл бұрын

    I believe Marissa Ressa’s accomplishments fit into this. Since March 1901, it has been awarded annually (with some exceptions) to those who have "done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses".

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @josiepens4480

    @josiepens4480

    2 жыл бұрын

    BULL!

  • @juliusvillapando1676

    @juliusvillapando1676

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JB-xm8qi INDEED! FINALLY SOMEBODY WITH BRAIN!

  • @rpfamulag
    @rpfamulag2 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant mind

  • @jarafaelnocum2064
    @jarafaelnocum20642 жыл бұрын

    Joining you holding the Line! The battle for truth and facts! Maria Ressa 2021 Noble Peace Award! Mabuhay ka! God bless!🇵🇭🇺🇸

  • @chiquiortiz9373
    @chiquiortiz93732 жыл бұрын

    Bravo Maria Ressa

  • @benjaminbautista2624
    @benjaminbautista26242 жыл бұрын

    I just happen to know Marie Ressa recently. She amazingly brave and articulate.

  • @jhezpeevlog7510
    @jhezpeevlog75102 жыл бұрын

    Laban

  • @dtabije08
    @dtabije082 жыл бұрын

    More power to you Maria. Prayers

  • @edmundcasey7765
    @edmundcasey77655 ай бұрын

    TRUTH AND INFORMATION IS POWER!!! accompanied with THREATS AND INTIMIDATION. . . . STAY STRONG CAUSE YOU WILL ALWAYS PREVAIL!!!

  • @rose7134
    @rose71342 жыл бұрын

    We FILIPINOS ARE PROUD FOR RESSA.

  • @firstworldph-tv8651

    @firstworldph-tv8651

    2 жыл бұрын

    No!!! We Filipinos are not.. She is still one of the most hated person in the Philippines for spreading lies in the western world about our motherland..

  • @sundaysbest8023

    @sundaysbest8023

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@firstworldph-tv8651 You must be so lonely. I am super proud of her. Filipinos are proud of her.

  • @uchiha-sx2td

    @uchiha-sx2td

    2 жыл бұрын

    lmao

  • @firstworldph-tv8651

    @firstworldph-tv8651

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sundaysbest8023 , If you think that I am lonely, then let see who will win the Philippine Presidential Election on 2022. If NO allies of President Duterte will win, then you might be right that Filipinos are "so proud" of this Ressa.. In any case, I still respect your opinion, is its still democracy here in our beloved country.. Keep being Proud..

  • @itsmehaydzofficial942

    @itsmehaydzofficial942

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@firstworldph-tv8651 true

  • @joselloren8012
    @joselloren80122 жыл бұрын

    Very impressive speech indeed, a profile of courage.

  • @saviadangwa1323
    @saviadangwa13232 жыл бұрын

    A very inspirational speech for a journalism college.😀

  • @myjourneyinuae5533
    @myjourneyinuae55332 жыл бұрын

    You inspired us and you really deserved it👍👍👍 Proud to be Filipino 🙏🙏🙏

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @kenkoy1348
    @kenkoy13482 жыл бұрын

    Congrats Maria Ressa. Sa muli ay maipagmamalaki ko na ako'y isang Pilipino, nakakalungkot lang na marami pa sa atin ang kapos at pilit na pinipikit ang mga mata, karamiha'y nakikisakay lang, at ang iba nama'y alam nila pero gagamitin lang ang sitwasyon para maprotektahan ang mga pansariling interest. Kulang pa ang katulad ni Maria Ressa kailangan natin ng katulad niya sa ating bansa, nang sa gayun kahit sinong tiwaling politiko ay mangangamba dahil maraming nang magsisiwalat at pupuna, katulad ngayong panahon marami sa mga media ay kung hindi nababayaran ay kaalyado ng pamahalaan at ang iba naman ay nag media-mediahan lang gamit ang social media platform.

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @vladimircuizon8224
    @vladimircuizon82242 жыл бұрын

    Maria Ressa has been consistent in her message. To uphold truth, defend freedom of expression, and hold the line. Also, she is wearing pink here. She must have known or foretold that in late 2021, it will become the color of the opposition. Congrats on your accolades, Maria Ressa, including no less than the Nobel Peace Prize for 2021. They are all well-deserved.

  • @luigineguzzi453
    @luigineguzzi4532 жыл бұрын

    Saludos.....

  • @noidph
    @noidph2 жыл бұрын

    Powerful speech by fellow Filipino and colleague in the freedom of expression advocacy, Maria Ressa. You can see why she won the Nobel Peace Prize. Intelligent, articulate, and brave. Bravo!

  • @akosinubitah
    @akosinubitah2 жыл бұрын

    💗💗💗

  • @nonitolim2884
    @nonitolim28842 жыл бұрын

    Excellent speech!

  • @ednakeller2422
    @ednakeller24222 жыл бұрын

    Congratulations, Bravo, you’re so amazing & we’re all so proud of you👍😍🥰Keep up the good work & God bless & be with you in all what you do🙏🏼😇💖💖💖

  • @indaturquia8594
    @indaturquia85942 жыл бұрын

    ur very diff,,woman,,the world will. loves u, ,

  • @nancyganzon6237
    @nancyganzon62372 жыл бұрын

    Maria Ressa , Filipinos all over the World are proud of you ! To be a Nobel Peace Price Winner , one of a kind !

  • @hephaestuslakan3774
    @hephaestuslakan37742 жыл бұрын

    Starve the trolls. Do not engage them instead report and block that way they cannot ask for payment from their handlers.

  • @rogelioventura5953

    @rogelioventura5953

    2 жыл бұрын

    Kami stroll? Magbackgoundcheck nga kayo Kong sino stroll kahit sino pwede magsabi NG sasaloobin Yan ang press freedom Kong eblock nyo ang comment kabaliktaran pala sa sinasabe nyo kayo pala sumisikil sa press freedom.. From Concern citizen

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @krinjay5825

    @krinjay5825

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rogelioventura5953 LOL, di nakailag, sumagot.

  • @rogelioventura5953

    @rogelioventura5953

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sino troll baka Isampal ko sa inyo business permit ko.. Wala akong kilala at kapanalig na pulitiko isa akong Filipino citizen na may karapatan magpahayag NG saloobin at May karapatan na mamili Kong sino gusto ko piliin na presidente.. Si digong ang gusto ko dahil totoong tao sya at Di corrupt ngayon ano paki alam nyo magkitakita tayo sa botohan Kong sino mahal NG tao yon ang manalo mga makitid utak talangka

  • @katherinerocillo4698
    @katherinerocillo46982 жыл бұрын

    Lagi pong mangingibabaw ang katotohanan maam mabuhay po kayo patuloy lang po na lumaban.

  • @janncorpuz9370
    @janncorpuz93702 жыл бұрын

    Wait... look closely at the lady at the back 4:29 what exactly was that for?

  • @adriennebeecker5000
    @adriennebeecker50002 жыл бұрын

    Democracy is fragile and she is fighting for it and a better world through the youth. Bravo!

  • @GTayanes
    @GTayanes2 жыл бұрын

    Happy and proud Kababayan here.

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @GTayanes

    @GTayanes

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JB-xm8qi Your long response is acknowledged and respected. 🙂

  • @kanika1451
    @kanika14512 жыл бұрын

  • @hyperloid2143
    @hyperloid21432 жыл бұрын

    We want the women the next President of the Phillippines.. Brave and fight democracy like the president of the Taiwan.....

  • @bennieantalan998

    @bennieantalan998

    2 жыл бұрын

    We need Iron Lady like margarit thatcher former prime minister of England to be the next president.

  • @narsninew9336
    @narsninew93362 жыл бұрын

    Wow

  • @jojo14deguzman89
    @jojo14deguzman892 жыл бұрын

    He that saith unto the wicked, Thou art righteous; him shall the people curse, nations shall abhor him: Proverbs 24:24

  • @oliveverzosa3229
    @oliveverzosa32292 жыл бұрын

    You are indeed amaziing! Excellent speech! so proud again for being a Filipino because of you! God bless you more Maria Ressa!

  • @maggiebriones4908
    @maggiebriones49082 жыл бұрын

    Deserving

  • @kuroyukihime3026
    @kuroyukihime30262 жыл бұрын

    Congratulations Ms. Maria Ressa.

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @iamthorvera4676
    @iamthorvera46762 жыл бұрын

    Her speach says it all. Congratulations

  • @hiidenwarrior2698

    @hiidenwarrior2698

    2 жыл бұрын

    Spitsssss!

  • @maggiebriones4908
    @maggiebriones49082 жыл бұрын

    Very deserving one

  • @alcormedina3885
    @alcormedina38852 жыл бұрын

    A very inspiring speech..truth matters courage is contageous..proud pinoy..congratulation for a well deserved NOBEL PRIZE! MORE POWER TO YOU MARIA RESSA

  • @dioscorayodico9997
    @dioscorayodico99972 жыл бұрын

    Ang galing ny

  • @nonoyandaya1082
    @nonoyandaya10822 жыл бұрын

    Mabuhay po kayo ms.maria ressa, god bless po🙏👏🏆❤️

  • @merlindavilla3837
    @merlindavilla38372 жыл бұрын

    She graduated from UP nd Princeton University..meaning She is really INTELIIGENT and courageous to tell the TRUTH..it is so sad that sometimes people are AFRAID to know the truth but TRUTH always prevails over lies.. MABUHAY..MARIA You are GREAT..

  • @imbay1789
    @imbay17892 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Mam.Ressa ,Congratulations.

  • @cielosalgado5371
    @cielosalgado53712 жыл бұрын

    You make the Phl proud

  • @noelromasanta8488
    @noelromasanta84882 жыл бұрын

    #Rapplerfakenewsprovider #Rapplerfakesurvey

  • @robindagala8981
    @robindagala89812 жыл бұрын

    I strongly stand with Maria Ressa's fight for democracy and freedom for our country that inspires other countries as well.

  • @arielcasper1103
    @arielcasper11032 жыл бұрын

    We are very proud of you mam ressa

  • @karljosephallado9341
    @karljosephallado93412 жыл бұрын

    What a speech "Sleep well tonight, dream of a better future, go and make it happen, GO" All hail to Maria

  • @elybhoymagallanes9478
    @elybhoymagallanes94782 жыл бұрын

    Congratulations ms Ressa.

  • @deliaadvincula2412
    @deliaadvincula24122 жыл бұрын

    pLEASE DO YOUR RESEARCH ABOUT THE PERSON AND JOURNALISTIC PRACTICE OF RESSA!

  • @sfv6
    @sfv62 жыл бұрын

    Congratulations Maria!

  • @RandyTuriano
    @RandyTuriano2 жыл бұрын

    “Sleep well tonight. Dream of a better future. Then go and make it happen…go”.

  • @bobongskinner9616
    @bobongskinner96162 жыл бұрын

    Some people are just TOO GULLIBLE that they will believe anything you say to them as long as you say it with emotions and in a convincing manner. No need to examine the other side. Remember that in a court of law, no matter how guilty someone is, he is always given a chance to state his side of the story, a chance to defend himself. They dont just listen to one side of the story and have their verdict based on that one side. I would like to thank these "people" for giving an award to our "very own" Maria Resa as she is a paragon of "good" and "fair" "JOURNALISM" in our country, the Philippines. Believe me, everytime she would make a report, or public statement, she would carefully "examine" both sides of the story so that she "wouldnt" make a biased statement and everything would be in a fair and balanced manner for both sides. She was "never" taken over by emotions in any interviews with international media about our country's administration. She is very "profesional", "decent" and "humble" she "doesnt" spread false news to the world. Everything she does, she does to show the world that Filiponos, especially our Administration, are kindhearted people. She portrayed to the world how peaceful our country is, and that the Philippines is such a safe country. In every interview with international media, she HAS never, I repeat "NEVER" have, and never will, demonize the Filipinos and the beloved president of the country as well as the police as an evil force. She never did that. Why? Because her love for her country is just beyond great. I would also like to thank the ones that awarded her for being fair in your award giving. You showed the world how unbiased and fair you are by first hearing both sides of the stories, news, journalism about the Philippines that our respected Maria Resa have covered before giving your award. Kudos guys. Again, Thank You! Maria Resa for giving honor, pride, and especially RESPECT, to all the Filipinos. Now the world will surely respect Filipinos and not see them as trash. This is what it takes to be a brave and great journalist. We all wish you luck! just luck! I wouldnt specify if its good or bad, just to show that I am not biased. You deserve this award. After all, the people who gave this award to you were also respected people professionals, and unbiased. You deserve this, and EVERYTHING That is coming your way. You deserve them all. Again, I wouldnt specify if its good or bad, because you know im not biased. Bless.

  • @mg1matthewgamer155
    @mg1matthewgamer1552 жыл бұрын

    Congrats… we need you!

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @MC-do4dw
    @MC-do4dw2 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful speech 💜 She’s a warrior hero!

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    OPINION: Maria's problems do not make up the Philippine story Out of professional courtesy, I will not go into the situation in other news outlets. But right here in this paper, if you still see my friend, kumpare, and fellow columnist Leo Lastimosa being able to continue criticizing President Rodrigo Duterte almost daily, then it is fair to say that he is living and breathing proof that the press is not under assault in the Philippines as claimed by Maria Ressa. And in The Philippine STAR, sister paper of The FREEMAN, flagship of the Star Media Group and number one paper in the country, if you can still see Satur Ocampo, Federico Pascual, Jarius Bondoc, and others being able to openly criticize Duterte to a much wider global audience, then they are living and breathing proof as well that the press is not under assault in the Philippines, contrary to the same claims of Maria Ressa. Then aside from The FREEMAN and The Philippine STAR, there are hundreds of other papers, radio and TV stations and online news portals, as well as millions on social media that continue to go about their business without any intervention from government. But Maria Ressa never reported these to give context to her stories. She dwelt only on her own experience which she brought upon her own self by doing things deemed illegal under Philippine laws. Admittedly, there had to be extrajudicial killings in Duterte's crackdown on illegal drugs. But the vast majority fell in legitimate police operations. Most of the victims were armed and fought back and thus got killed. But did Maria Ressa even once put context to her stories by citing the unassailable fact that millions of loose firearms are in the hands of criminals? Never. Because doing so would have crushed her ugly stories about the Philippines. Democracy is alive in the Philippines. The justice system still works. Maria Ressa has her lawyers and has not been deprived her day in court. What extrajudicial cases there may have been, they are in the courts as well. The courts are free, without any interference from Duterte. To claim otherwise is to open up to the same claim Leni Robredo's father, who was appointed judge by Ferdinand Marcos himself, the father. In my immediately preceding column last Monday, there were two threads of thought that ran through it. One was that the Nobel Committee may have been negligent and careless in appreciating the Maria Ressa story, leading to its controversial decision to give her the Nobel Peace Prize. The other was that the United States, by whatever means, may have had a hand in the award to demonize and punish Duterte for his pivot to China. Nothing seems impossible for the US, whose clandestine cloak-and-dagger operations can work independently or in tandem with its giant legal and above-ground apparatus to achieve its one consuming aim of promoting and protecting its interests. From propping up to removing leaders (Marcos as prime example), assassinations, dropping atomic bombs on civilian populations, influencing elections (Magsaysay), name it, the US can do it. Compared to the above, the US can and most certainly would influence the grant of any award or prize if its interests so require, the Nobel included. And it is perfectly possible for Maria Ressa to be played thus by America if it wanted to, the same way it could have used the International Criminal Court as another flank in its multi-pronged attack on the sovereign leader of the Philippines, the price Duterte must pay for playing footsie with China. How ironic that for incessantly attacking a duly-elected leader, Maria Ressa gets rewarded with a Peace Prize. And how unfair that for interviewing Bongbong Marcos, Toni Gonzaga would be called all sorts of names and chased almost out of social media. And yet some people just cannot tell the difference by likening Maria Ressa's Nobel Prize to Hidilyn Diaz's Olympic Gold. What an insult to the honest, decent and God-fearing Hidilyn.

  • @MC-do4dw

    @MC-do4dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JB-xm8qi Sorry. I have no time for your Sermon. Just read the FIRST sentence. Too bad you wasted all the time to think and write it down 😆 Keeo it to yourself!

  • @JB-xm8qi

    @JB-xm8qi

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MC-do4dw oh... sorry i wasted your precious time reading the first sentence... i just copied and pasted it 😅 too bad for you..

  • @MC-do4dw

    @MC-do4dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JB-xm8qi Hehe. Is that the best you’ve got? Hah. BIG LIE 😝 You still wrote that pathetic sermon. HAH

  • @MC-do4dw

    @MC-do4dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JB-xm8qi Nanananana 🤣🤪😜

  • @senenmartinezjr.6058
    @senenmartinezjr.60582 жыл бұрын

    And then two years after , she would win the Nobel Peace Prize. How cool is that???!

  • @mmcbsa6271
    @mmcbsa62712 жыл бұрын

    Very eloquent speaker and brave enough to tell the truth. Wow a Filipina

  • @ningajuarez4583
    @ningajuarez45832 жыл бұрын

    Awesome po. Congrats. Keep on. God bless ❤️