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Ferdinand Marcos
Full Name: Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos Sr.
Alias: FEM
Andy
Father of the Nation
Ferdie
Macoy
McCoy
Origin: Sarrat, Ilocos Norte, Philippine Islands
Occupation: President of the Philippines (1965 - 1986)
Skills: High Intelligence
Political Influence
Eidetic Memory
Leadership
Charisma
Military Training
Goals: Helped his father Mariano murder political rival Julio Nalundasan (succeeded)
Become President of The Philippines (succeeded)
Have complete control over The Philippines (succeeded temporarily)
Stay in power as long as possible (failed)
Enemies: Julio Nalundasan
Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr.
Corazon "Cory" Aquino
Jose W. Diokno
New People's Army
Anyone who opposses him
Crimes: Human rights violations
Electoral fraud
Authoritarianism
Abuse of power
Oppression
Crimes against humanity
War crimes
Embezzlement
Torture
Genocide
Mass murder
Misogyny
Fascism
Xenophobia
Islamophobia
Anti-Semitism
Type of Villain: Power Hungry Tyrant


My countrymen: we have reached a turning point in our history. The choice is yours. Shall we venture into this brave new world, bright with possibilities, or retreat to the safety of our familiar but sterile past? I am for crossing the frontier.
~ Ferdinand Marcos

Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos Sr. (September 11th, 1917 – September 28th, 1989) was a Filipino politician, strongman, authoritarian and dictator who held the title of the 10th President of the Philippines from 1965 to 1986. He was a lawyer, a member of the Philippine House of Representatives (1949 – 1959) and a member of the Philippine Senate (1959 – 1965). He was Senate President from 1963 to 1965.

While in power he implemented wide-ranging programs of infrastructure development and economic reform. However, his administration was marred by massive authoritarianism, corruption, despotism, nepotism, political repression, and human rights violations. The controversy was that he may have been an extremely polarizing figure as his loyalists, cronies, and critics call him the best president they ever had and the most corrupt one.

Early Life edit

Ferdinand Edralin Marcos was born on September 11, 1917, in the town of Sarrat, Ilocos Norte, to Mariano Marcos and Josefa Edralin (1893–1988). He was later baptized into the Philippine Independent Church, but was first baptized in the Roman Catholic Church at the age of three.

Marcos studied law at the University of the Philippines in Manila, attending the prestigious College of Law. He excelled in both curricular and extra-curricular activities, becoming a valuable member of the university's swimming, boxing, and wrestling teams. He was also an accomplished and prolific orator, debater, and writer for the student newspaper. While attending the UP College of Law, he became a member of the Upsilon Sigma Phi, where he met his future colleagues in government and some of his staunchest critics. When he sat for the 1939 Bar Examinations, he received a near-perfect score of 98.8%, but allegations of cheating prompted the Philippine Supreme Court to re-calibrate his score to 92.35%. He graduated cum laude. He was elected to the Pi Gamma Mu and the Phi Kappa Phi international honor societies, the latter giving him its Most Distinguished Member Award 37 years later.

Life as a President edit

File:Ferdinand Marcos 2.jpg

Ferdinand Marcos was inaugurated to his first term as the tenth President of the Philippines on 30 December 1965, after winning the Philippine presidential election of 1965 against the incumbent President, Diosdado Macapagal. His inauguration marked the beginning of his two-decade-long stay in power, even though the 1935 Philippine Constitution had set a limit of only two four-year terms of office.

Before Marcos' presidency, the Philippines was the second-largest economy in Asia, behind only Japan. He pursued an aggressive program of infrastructure development funded by foreign loans, making him very popular throughout almost all of his first term and eventually making him the first and only President of the Third Philippine Republic to win a second term, although it would also trigger an inflationary crisis which would lead to social unrest in his second term, and would eventually lead to his declaration of martial law in 1972.

On the evening of September 23, 1972, President Ferdinand Marcos announced that he had placed the entirety of the Philippines under martial law. This marked the beginning of a 14-year period of one-man rule which would effectively last until Marcos was exiled from the country on February 25, 1986. Even though the formal document proclaiming martial law - Proclamation No. 1081 - was formally lifted on January 17, 1981, Marcos retained virtually all of his powers as dictator until he was ousted by the EDSA Revolution.

Martial Law Torture edit

The various torture methods used by the Marcos dictatorship in the years between the declaration of martial law in 1972 and the Marcos family's ouster during the People Power Revolution in 1986 included a range of methods Philippine forces picked up during its long periods of colonial occupation under Spanish, American, and Japanese forces, but also a number of new methods arising from the modern technologies of the later 20th century. These included sexual assaults including rape and degradation; non-sexual physical tortures including variants of electrocution, waterboarding, suffocation, burning, and beating; and various forms of psychological torture. It was lesser known as it was in Nazi Germany with tortures.

For Marcos to continue to act as head of state and government, his declaration of Martial Law had to achieve seven objectives:

  1. . Control the military and police.
  2. . Control the Supreme Court.
  3. . Undermine the Philippine public's faith in democracy.
  4. . Exploit and abet lawlessness and instability.
  5. . Exaggerate the Communist threat
  6. . Get political backing from the United States.
  7. . Hijack the constitutional convention.

Various forms of torture were used by forces under the Marcos regime, usually combined with each other.

Physical torture edit

Physical torture was also often inflicted upon victims. Aside from deadly weapons, implements of torture included water, pliers, thumbtacks, ballpoint pens, and flat irons. Physical torture took the forms of:

  • Beatings. Almost all who were tortured were subjected to beatings. 
  • Electric shock (also known as the Meralco treatment) - where electric wires were attached to fingers, genitalia, arms or the head of the victim
  • San Juanico Bridge or air treatment - Victim lies between two cots. 
  • Truth serum. Victims include Pete Lacaba, Danilo Vizmanos, Fernando Tayag, Bernardo Escarcha,
  • Russian Roulette - a revolver with one bullet loaded in the chamber is spun up, aimed at the head of the victim, and then the trigger pulled, a one-in-seven chance that the bullet will discharge.
  • Pistol-whipping - beating with rifle or pistol butts.
  • Water cure (also known as the Nawasa treatment)- large amounts of water would be forced through the victim's mouth, then forced out by beating.
  • Wet submarine - victims' heads would be submerged in a toilet full of urine and excrement.
  • Dry submarine - victims' heads would be inserted into plastic bags, causing suffocation. 
  • Strangulation - Done by hand, with electric wire or steel bar.
  • Ashtray - cigarette burns would be inflicted on the victim. 
  • Flat iron burns - feet are burned with flat irons. 
  • Candle burns. 
  • Sinusunog na rekado (burning spices) or Pepper torture - concentrated peppery substance placed on lips, ears and genitals. 
  • Animal treatment - victims are manacled and caged like beasts.  Some were made to drink their own urine and others were forced to eat their own feces.
  • Cold torture - Forcing victims to sit against air conditioners set on maximum while shirtless, or to sit or lie down on blocks of ice while naked (sometimes with electric wires). 
  • Food deprivation. Victims include CPP founder Jose Maria Sison and Rev. Cesar Taguba.
  • Pompyang (cymbals) - ear clapping. 
  • Putting bullets between fingers then squeezing the hands tightly. 

Sexual torture edit

  • Rape. Victims include Maria Cristina Pargas-Bawagan, Etta Rosales, and Erlene Dangoy.
  • Gang Rape. Victims include Hilda Narciso.
  • Molestation. Victims include Judy Taguiwalo, Erlinda Taruc-Co and Cristina Pargas
  • Sticks inserted into penises. Victims include Bonifacio Ilagan.

Psychological torture edit

Among the forms of psychological torture performed were:

  • Solitary confinement. Victims include Ninoy Aquino, Danilo Vizmanos, CPP/NPA Leaders Victor Corpus, Bernabe Buscayno, and Jose Maria Sison, and World War II Hunter's Guerrilla forces commander Eleuterio "Terry" Adevoso, who was accused of plotting a coup.
  • Sleep deprivation. Victims include Ninoy Aquino and Maria Elena-Ang.
  • Playing loud, repetitive music. Victims include Ninoy Aquino.
  • Forcing victims to strip naked. Victims include Virgillo Villegas, Maria Elena Ang, Erlene Dangoy, and Monica Atienza

Exile and death edit

When EDSA People Power was near, Marcos and Aquino were in voting. At Comelec, Marcos got 10m votes over Aquino but she got 7m votes over Marcos in Namfrel, this sparked much controversy and she called for civil disobedience. After Marcos was ousted from the Philippines and exiled to Hawaii, he later died on the day of September 28, 1989, succumbing to lupus.

Legacy edit

According to the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG), the Marcos family have looted ill-gotten wealth from the Philippines which even until now, has an undetermined amount, although it was estimated to be around $5-10 billion of the country's treasury. As of April 1986, the Guinness World Record considers the Marcos family to have the greatest ever robbery of a government.

Controversy edit

After his burial in Libingnan ng mga Bayani and declaring Araw ng Magnanakaw in Ilocos Norte, people might think he's the soldier or most decorated war veteran. His loyalists and loyal supporters were attempting to bring him to life as the eternal president of the Philippines and a hero despite his death in 1989, but they were trying to lash out and red-tagging critics and activists to whitewash the atrocities and falsely accuse them of being terrorists/communists and members of the New People's Army. These "bad" sites were GetRealPhilippines and "bad" fan pages on Facebook, VOVPH, Marcos Loyalists, etc. would attempt to rehabilitate and sanitize Marcoses and have reunification of the Philippines to regain control of what Aquinos "liberated it". They would attempt to make FEM ascend to godhood regardless of any religion much more like Kim Il-sung and Adolf Hitler combined.

His loyalists want to make necrocracy for him to be the eternal president of the republic and need government support to revise the constitution if need be. His loyalists also want to return his legacy by electing his son, Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. as the next president of the Philippines in the upcoming 2022 elections.

Possible return to Power edit

All thanks to his supporters who later allied with the DDS (Die-Hard Duterte Supporters), they were currently supporting the potential leadership of his son Ferdinand " Bongbong " Marcos Jr. as the next President along with Sara Duterte as his Vice-President of the Republic of the Philippines, they will willing to bring back once the Philippines liberated by the Aquinos, deny all the Martial Law atrocities and revise all the country's history in honor to his father, the similar thing that Japanese government's denials of all of their War Crimes during WW2, the Neo-Nazis denial of the Holocaust and the Turkish government's denial of Armenian Genocide.

Anti-heroic acts or evil acts edit

  • Ferdinand Marcos attained 32 medals, which was later proven to be false by the USA.
  • He completed 200 achievements such as buildings.
  • He formulated 7,000 decrees,
  • But he and the army killed 3,200 people and tortured 34,000 of them.
  • Before his death, the debt was $28 billion dollars.

Quotes edit

Nobody is impervious to misfortune.

Trivia edit

  • According to Mister C.F.'s image in Google Plus before it was closed down. This is to say that is a trinity of the power of propaganda where Ferdinand Marcos is alongside Kim Il-Sung and Adolf Hitler. Despite being hated by many people worldwide, they are respected and beloved by their loyalists.
  • He made false claims that he was a survivor of the Bataan Death March, the forcible transfer by the Imperial Japanese Army of 60,000–80,000 American and Filipino prisoners of war from Saysain Point, Bagac, Bataan and Mariveles to Camp O'Donnell, Capas, Tarlac, via San Fernando, Pampanga in April 1942 during the Philippines campaign of World War II to promote his presidency. This was heavily disproven as Major Robert Laphram, leader of the LGAF during World War II, exposed that Ferdinand's own father Mariano is a Japanese collaborator.
  • He was the husband of Imelda Marcos and sired 3 children with her: Imee, Bongbong, and Irene.