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• e † i v a c •; Not Your Ordinary Guild
Topic Started: Mar 12 2005, 09:06 PM (85,637 Views)
tagakanluranako
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¤Upland Assassins¤
Tabi-tabi po, makikiraan lang po baka manunu... /heh
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baphongsky
Pro • è † ì v à ¢ •
aw adek na sa photoshop ha apey
MY THREAD... Kaibigan Usap Tyo ^_^


/lv /lv /lv ETIVAC BY HEART /lv /lv /lv%mh%1034%mh%
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SweeT~AishA
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bluem00n
hello...padaan po etivac...
gud day...
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nerdO
• abnkkbsnplako?! •
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neo_ragnarok
Jun 15 2006, 12:45 PM
lam ko sagot diyan.... COAL or ULING

hahaha napadaan si taga KO weeeeeeeeeeee. bumalik ka na /gg... gud luk sa atin mamaya /heh

/muha bat ibinunyag mo agad... /swt

hekhekhek...


anyway...

:clap: ang galing nu daw... mgssiege n lang ako bukas, baka mis nu n ako eh... /omg

ngapla, hoy badongkee, bat ndi k ngreply :censored: ka... hekhekhek...

kamusta n lng sa lahat... saka na ulet ung mga special mentions ha... /e4

tapos... eto isa pa...

-------------

one day, two mothers, each with their daughters went to the mall for shopping...

...then, they bought 3 pairs of boots and coat, all for the two mothers and two daughters...

the question is, why did they buy only three pairs?

---------------
Quote:
 
pag maikli ang 'yong kumot, matuto kang... bumili ng bago nang hindi mamaluktot..../e14

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*thx ate cha sa siggie...
FYI: nerdO is the poorest • e t i v a c • member...
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nerdO
• abnkkbsnplako?! •
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sa mga kating kati na sa history ng etivac, your long wait is over !!

• e t i v a c • siege history


The Philippine Revolution, which started in Cavite province on August 31, 1896, should not be confused with the Katipunan revolt launched by Andres Bonifacio and his followers eight days earlier on August 23 in Pugad lawin, a forested area in Balintawak. The revolt was purely a Katipunan affair, all participants being KATIPUNEROS, which came to an abrupt ending the following Sunday, August 30, in the battle of San Juan del Bonifacio, leader of the revolt, escaped, spending the next four months hiding in the jungles of San Mateo and Montalban in Morong (now Rizal) province.

More extensive and popular in character was the armed uprising in Cavite, which occurred the following day, Monday. The tribunals (municipal buildings) of San Francisco de Malabon (now General Trias) and Noveleta were taken by the Magdiwang about 10 o'clock in the morning and 12 o'clock noon, respectively, and the tribunal of Cavite el Viejo (now Kawit), was captured by the Magdalo were two factions of the Katipunan in Cavite.

Organizationally, the two uprisings were separate and distinct from each other, although both were led by Katipuneros. The San Juan battle was crushed by the regiment from Manila headed by General Bernardo Echaluche. Had Bonifacio and his men fled to Cavite, with Echaluche following them in a hot pursuit, there would have been but one continuous battle, thus erasing the apparent dichotomy between the fighting in San Juan and that in Cavite, both forming component parts of the Philippine Revolution.

From the end of August to December 1896 nothing was heard of Bonifacio and his Katipunan. Bonifacio himself admitted that after the San Juan battle his Katipunan in Manila had melted away. In contrast, the fighting started in Cavite was continued by Aguinaldo and his voluntarios (not Katipuneros) for the next five years with but two brief intervals; namely, from the Pak of Biak-na-bato on December 15, 1897, to the resumption of the unfinished revolution in May 1898, and from inauguration of the First Republic on January 23, 1899, to the outbreak of the Philippine-American War on the night of February 4- a period of about two weeks- in San Juan del Monte, the same place were Bonifacio's Katipunan revolt fizzled out.

The Katipunan leader was all forgotten, a has been with no chance whatsoever of a successful come back, when one day December be received and a letter from Artemio Ricarte of the Magdiwang inviting him to visit Cavite already liberated area. The Magdiwang revolutionists wanted to show him around in their territory. The invitation was a purely fraternal, social visit.

Having learned his bitter lessons from debacle of San Juan, Bonifacio turned down the invitation, saying it would no be wise or proper for the leaders of the revolution to be cooped up in one small place like Cavite. There was too much risk of death or capture of all the leaders, and that would mean the end of the revolution. Bonifacio's argument was an irrefutable. But later on Ricarte, again at the instance of General Mariano Alvares, president of the Magdiwang Council and uncle of Gregoria de Jesus, wife of Bonifacio, repeated his invitation was dispatched to Bonifacio, most likely by a courier with some secret verbal instruction, and Bonifacio finally accepted it.

What made Bonifacio accepted the third invitation? This is a crucial question that historians have not looked into, although upon it hinges the mystery of Bonifacio's visit to Cavite. The invitation to Bonifacio at that precise stage of the revolution has been described as a " sheer act of malice" because it would serve no good purpose whatsoever. The victorious revolutionists in Cavite had nothing to learn from Bonifacio, who had won no skirmish with the enemy, much less a full-scale battle.

It is alleged that Bonifacio went to Cavite to mediate the conflict, between the Magdiwang and Magdalo factions of the Katipunan, but Ricarte himself asserts that the two councils had been perfectly cooperating with each other.

However, Bonifacio on the second day of his arrival in San Francisco de Malabon was elected Haring bayan (king) of the Magdiwang Council or government. He replaced the venerable Mariano Alvarez, founder of the Council, who was demoted to pangalawang haring bayan (vice-king). To a perceptive observer this fact alone which has been glossed over by historians provides a clue to Bonifacio's in Cavite.

Bonifacio, the Katipunan supremo, accepted the invitation precisely the head of Magdiwang Council, and from that vantage point he would try to wrest the leader-ship of the revolution from the young jefe abanderado (chief flag officer) of the Magdalo Council, Emilio Aguinaldo, an ordinary Katipunero.

One writer intimates that Bonifacio may have been offered a "kingdom" in Cavite by the Magdiwang, which was perfectly feasible since the Magdiwang territory was much bigger than that of the Magdalo. In fact the Magdiwang Council was organized like an imperial cabinet, its members being called "ministers" not department secretaries.

Moreover, it will be called that at least of the two leaders of the more that one hundred failed during the Spanish regime had shown imperial ambitions namely, Andres Malong, who proclaimed himself "King of Pangasinan" (1660-1661), and Pedro Almasan, " King of the Ilocanos". Certainly one cannot begrudge Bonifacio, equally ambitious and energetic, if he should wish to become "King of the Caviteños."

Bonifacio, the Manileno, was already calling the shots for the Magdiwang when the Imus Assembly hosted by the Magdalo proposal to establish a revolutionary government that would carry on the struggle for the overthrow of the Spanish regime. Bonifacio was firm on his stand that the Katipunan could well discharge the task, being already constituted as a government. The Magdalo officials, on other hand, claimed that the Katipunan had ceased to be a secret society, and moreover a revolutionary government, not a mere society, could alone achieve the common objective of crushing the Spanish regime in addition, the tens of thousands of Caviteños involved in the struggle were not Katipuneros. They joined the revolution out of love of country.

About three months later, on March 22, 1897 during the height of the Spanish counter-offensive led by General Jose Lachambre, the Magdiwang called a convention in barrio Tejeros, deep inside the Magdiwang territory, to elect the officers of the revolutionary government. It was a surprise move by the Magdiwang. For lack of time to prepare for the convention, the Magdalo Council, then engaged in a holding action to stem the Lachambre campaign, was able to send only eight delegates. General Emilio Aguinaldo himself could not come because he was pinned down in the seesaw battle of Pasong Santol, in Salitran, Dasmariñas. The Magdiwang delegation, on other hand came in full force. Bonifacio, the haring bayan of the host council, president over the convention. Ricarte acted as his secretary.

Three candidates for the presidency of the revolutionary government were nominated. Two (Andres Bonifacio and Mariano Trias) came from the Magdiwang and one (Emilio Aguinaldo) from the Magdalo. The balloting was secret. It was Ricarte who distributed the ballots before the opening the opening of the convention. Much to the surprise of the Magdiwang, especially Bonifacio, who continued presiding although he was a candidate, Aguinaldo was elected president in absentia. It was a stunning upset for Bonifacio.

In the election for vice-president Bonifacio was again defeated by Trias, a member of his own cabinet. Then Ricarte, an Ilocano teacher in San Francisco de Malabon, roundly defeated his own boss, Santiago Alvarez, for the position of captain general. Santiago Alvarez, son of Mariano Alvarez, was a captain general in the Magdiwang Council, and Ricarte was just his subordinate officer. Ricarte tried to decline his election, as reason could be that Ricarte wanted to sympathize with Bonifacio, his superior. As it was already getting dark, it was decided to change the mode of election from secret to open balloting. Emiliano Riego de Rios, another Magdiwang stalwart, was elected secretary of war, Bonifacio already chafing at his two successive defeats, was finally elected secretary of the interior. Under glaring eyes of the Katipunan supremo, who should have given up the chair temporarily out of delicadeza because he was a candidate, the delegates had probably no other choice.

But like a bolt out of the blue, Daniel Tirona of Magdalo stood up and invited the attention of the chair to the suggestion whispered by the delegates sitting behind him that the post of secretary of the interior ought to be held by a man with the proper educational credentials. Quiet indiscreetly, Tirona mentioned the name of Jose del Rosario, a lawyer from Sta. Cruz de Malabon (now Tanza), for secretary of the interior, Whereupon Bonifacio burst into a monumental rage and forthwith drew his pistol, demanding that Tirona take back his offensive words. Ricarte who was beside him, succeeded in holding back Bonifacio's hand, and Tirona, in the ensuing pandemonium, lost himself in the crowd.

Bonifacio, "frustrated and deeply wounded," according to the prize- winning biographer, cried aloud: " I, as a chairman of this assembly and president of the Supreme Council of the Katipunan... declare this assembly dissolved, and I annul that has been approved and resolved."

Evidently, could not take his defeat in good grace. He was not a good sport. He could have ruled Tirona out of order, considering that the outset of the convention everybody, at his instance, agreed that the rule of the majority would be respected regardless of who was elected. Bit when losing his cool, he dissolved the assembly, he alienated himself from some of his strongest supporters, especially the Batangueño delegates. " Everybody knows," they said, " our loyalty to the founder of the Katipunan and Magdiwang; but if, against all reason, the result of the election so thoroughly agreed upon among all is to be invalidated, we, the Batangueños, will impose it by force, and we will do it alone if the sons of Cavite will not respect it."

Committing one blunder after another, Bonifacio the next had the seditious Acta de Tejeros drawn and signed. The document formally nullified the result of the convention, intimated that Bonifacio had been cheated, and that he and his followers would separate from the new revolutionary government under Aguinaldo. A few days later, in Naik to which the Magdiwang had transferred their headquarters in the face of the Lachambre offensive, Bonifacio and company approved the Naik Military Agreement announcing that they would establish a separate army headed by General Pio del Pilar. There was no doubt that the two documents were counter- revolutionary.

Emilio Aguinaldo, who had also transferred to Naik after the fall of Imus, surprised Bonifacio and his men in the Naik estate house shortly after they had signed the treasonous Military Agreement. The Katipunan supremo and his followers hastily fled to Limbon, Indang while Ricarte took a different direction, allegedly en route to Batangas to assist General Miguel Malvar.

Aguinaldo quickly dispatched a team to Bonifacio to convince him to return to Naik and help the new revolutionary government. The mission of reconciliation under Col. Agapito Bonzon failed. Bonifacio remained adamant. He would have nothing to do with the Aguinaldo government. Returning to Bonifacio's camp after reconnecting in the forest, the Bonzon partly was met with unexpected firing from Bonifacio's men. In the ensuing skirmish Bonifacio's brother, Ciriaco, was killed, and Bonifacio, himself wounded, was arrested together with his other brother, Procorpio. The Katipunan chief was brought back to Naik where he and his companion were tried by a Council of War headed by a General Mariano Noriel.

Bonifacio had his day in court. He testified in the behalf. Convicted of sedition and treason against the revolutionary government, Bonifacio and Procorpio were sentenced to death. The Council of War, through appointed by Aguinaldo, was no kangaroo court. Two members, Col. Mariano Riego de Dios and Col. Esteban Yfante, abstained from voting because they believe the verdict to be too harsh. They wanted a lesser penalty.

The sentenced was forwarded to President Aguinaldo, but he immediately commuted it to be banishment of the Bonifacio's brothers to Pico de Loro, a mountain range in Maragondon. Whereupon two generals, Mariano Noriel and Pio del Pilar, who had earlier signed the Naik Military Agreement, and the historian Cemente Jose Zulueta, pressured Aguinaldo into withdrawing the commutation order, alleging that the Bonifacio brothers, if allowed to live, would pose a serious threat not only to his (Aguinaldo) life but also to the revolution. Persuaded by the cogency of the argument, Aguinaldo withdrew the commutation. As a Spanish troops were rapidly advancing toward Maragondon, where Bonifacio's trial was concluded, Noriel ordered the implementation of the original verdict. Bonifacio and his brother were executed on May 10, 1897, in Mount Nagapatong.

The "Little Republic of Cavite" fell to the advancing Spanish juggernaut, and Aguinaldo himself was pushed out of the province about mid-May 1887, but he kept his revolutionary army intact. This was considered as a no mean feat by the military observers. Then followed his strategic retreat to Biak-na-bato in San Miguel, Bulacan province, at the invitation of General Mamerto Natividad, commander in chief of the Departmental Government of Central Luzon.

In the Battle of Puray, Montalban, about mid-July while he was enroute to Biak-na-bato, Aguinaldo dealt a staggering blow on Spanish forces consisting of two columns, one of which was commanded by Major Miguel Primo de Rivera, nephew of Governor and Captain Genaral Promo de Rivera. The huge losses in men and material suffered by a Spaniards might have convinced the governor-general to accede to an offer of Pedro A. Paterno, well-to-do Manila-born maguinoo (gentleman), to mediate and bring about a peaceful settlement of the conflict between the Spanish authorities in Manila, Paterno was able to bring about an assembly of widely scattered revolutionary leaders on November 1, leading to the establishment of the Biak-na-bato Republic.

The creation of the Biak-na-bato Republic was a great tactical victory for the revolutionists. With this republic, which the Spanish government under Primo de Rivera recognized a possessing the "element of internal sovereignty, "Aguinaldo was able to negotiate on the basis of equality. The subsequent Pact of Biak-na-bato, signed on December 14-15, 1897, was therefore a pact between equals.

The pact was not a military victory for either side "says on commentation"but it was a recognition of the fact that the leaders of the revolution were man of honor, as honorable as the Marquis of Estella (Primo de Rivera)...In this regard, the Spanish government treated them the revolutionary leaders better than the American government was later to treat them. If the American government had been willing to accept a negotiated peace, or if it had treated the Filipinos not as inferiors but as equals, the blood of hundreds of thousands between 1899 and 1901 (the duration of the Philippines-American War-ABS) would not have frowned.

In accordance with the terms of the Pact of Biak-na-bato, Aguinaldo and some 26 revolutionary leaders, many of them Caviteños, left for exile in Hong Kong about the end of 1897. The first indemnity installment of 400,000 (Mexican currency) was deposited by Aguinaldo in two Hong Kong banks, using only the annual interest of 12,000 for living expenses, a secretly reserving the rest "for the ammunition for the projected resumption of the unfinished revolution. It is to the credit of this handful of exiles headed by Aguinaldo that they had not abandoned the revolution.

On April 21, 1898, the Spanish-American War broke out over the Cuba question. The Cubans, like the Filipinos, had risen in arms against Spanish rule. The war was precipitated by the Americans who had large investments in Cuba. Commodore George Dewey, commander of the U.S. Asiatic Squadron, then in Mirs Bay off Hong Kong, was ordered to proceed to Manila allegedly to prevent the Spanish Far Eastern Fleet from leaving Philippine waters to help the Spanish fleet in Cuba.

Of course, this was just an American Ploy. The Washington government knew the Spanish fleet in Manila, consisting of decrepit vessels, was not even capable of crossing the Pacific. Consequently, Dewey's squadron made short shrift of the Spanish fleet, sinking it on May 1,1898, in what has been described as the most one-sided naval victory in the history of the world. But the real objective of American Big Business, who controlled the McKinley administration in Washington, was to conquer and colonize the Philippines as springboard to the Asian mainland.

Dewey and other top American officials in the Orient knew this imperialist plan all along. Having no ground force to fight the Spaniards who were still masters on land despite the sinking of the Spanish fleet, Dewey invited Aguinaldo in Hong Kong to return to the Philippines and help fight a common enemy, the Spaniards. Aguinaldo, as a leader of the revolution, had the land force Dewey needed to bring Spain to her knees.

As per verbal gentlemen's agreement, Aguinaldo came back on May 19, and five days later, on May 24, he set up a dictatorial government upon the advice of the Hong Kong Junta and of American Consul Rounseville Wildman in the British Crown Colony. The dictatorial government was merely temporary. Aguinaldo informed Dewey that the he would start a general offensive against the Spaniards on May 31. But Filipino revolutionists, having received arms from Aguinaldo, started fighting the Spaniard even before D-day (May31). In the battles of Alapan (May 28) and of Binakayan and Bacoor (May 31), the revolutionists captured many hundreds of Spanish troops. Dewey complimented Aguinaldo for his successive victories. In a week's time all of Cavite province except the Spanish arsenal now occupied by the Americans, came under Aguinaldo's control. So successful was the bit campaign that Aguinaldo, on June 5, issued a decree fixing the date and place of the proclamation of Philippine independence.

In accordance with the timetable of Aguinaldo and the Hong Kong Junta, the proclamation of Philippine independence in Kawit on June 12, 1898 and the establishment of a free, independent, and sovereign government of Filipinos weeks before the arrival of the first American expeditionary forces arrived on July 17 and 31, respectively. Thus, Aguinaldo's military feat- the establishment of a government of, for, and by Filipinos- removed any moral justification whatsoever for the plan of conquest entertained by the "great Republic of the United State, “a nation built of the proposition that all men are created equal." In other words, McKinley administration could not longer pursue its planned conquest of the Philippines without turning its back on the American Declaration of Independence- without denying the very essence of its nation existence.

Thorough Dewey, the highest American official in the Orient, Aguinaldo had kept Washington informed of the proclamation of Philippine independence. After waiting in vain for American recognition of Philippine Independence, Aguinaldo decided to abandon his quarters in Cavite and transferred the seat of government to Bacoor on July 4. He wanted to show his disgust over the Americans.

Aguinaldo then sent two successive ultimatums to Spanish Governor and Captain General Basilio Augustin offering "honorable terms of surrender" after laying siege to Manila, but the haughty Castilian refused. He would not surrender to a mere indio. The entire Spanish officialdom and leading Spanish resident cooped up inside Intramuros, the Walled City, had run out for supervision after two and a half months' siege by Aguinaldo's forces. The last dispatch to Madrid sent by the governor-general warned that unless reinforcements from Spain arrived on time they, the Spanish government in Manila, might be forced to surrender.

At this crucial point in the time of Americans entered the picture. Spanish traditional arrogance and chauvinism compelled Fermin Jaudenes, the new Spanish governor-general, to a sign secret agreement with Dewey and General Wesley Merritt, the commander of American expeditionary forces, where by Manila would be surrendered to the Americans would not allow Aguinaldo's troops to entered to Walled City for fear of reprisal on the Spanish community. The agreement was a plain American doublecross of their Filipino allies.

Manila fell to the Americans on August 13,1898. This proved to be a turning point in Filipino-American relations. Aguinaldo clearly saw America's colonial design on the Philippines. For the second time he transferred his headquarters from Bacoor to Malolos, Bulacan, far beyond to cannon range of Dewey's squadron in the Manila Bay. He was getting ready for any eventuality. He realized that his American allies could no longer be trusted. Aguinaldo convoked the Malolos Congress on September 15, 1898.

In the Treaty of Paris signed by the joint commission on December 10, 1898, Spain ceded the Philippines to the United States, and the letter, in turn, paid Spain $20,000,000 for alleged improvement made in the Philippines. Here was the second American double cross of their Filipino allies. Agoncillo filed a strong protest against the treaty. Spain, the maintained, already defected by force of arms by the revolutionists, had absolutely no legal right to cede the Philippines. More than twelve thousand Spanish prisoners of war in the Philippines were in the hands of Aguinaldo’s revolutionary forces. By all rules of common sense Spain could not give to another nation (United States) what she longer possessed, having lost it by revolution. On the other hand, America, as an ally of the Filipinos against Spain, had no oral right to accept the cession of the Philippines.

Form December 10,1898, to the end of January 1899 the Treaty of Paris could muster the two-thirds vote required for ratification by the United States Senate. Many decent, thinking American senators denounced the treaty as unjust to the Filipinos, their tested ally in the war against Spain. The McKinley administration, already in the grip of American expansionists – vested interests who wanted America to acquire colonizes and/or markets for her bourgeoning industries – then took the third and fateful step: provoked the shooting by an America volunteer of a Filipino soldier crossing the San Juan Bridge on the night of February 4, 1899. The Filipinos retaliated and in a matter of hours Filipino-American hostilities spread to all parts of Manila and suburbs. The Washington government, having absolute control over American media, made it appear in all American newspapers that the Filipinos had started the shooting American senators, who had previously opposed the onerous Treaty of Paris, voted for its ratification by the senate two days later. This was the third American perfidy in Philippines–American relations.

What Washington war planners anticipated as a two–month operation against Aguinaldo’s tin army of voluntarios turned out to be a long protracted and costly guerrilla war, the first in Asia much more improved and sophisticated tan its Cuban model. Aguinaldo proved to be no picayune tribal chieftain that the American press. Painted him to be but one more astute, Willy, and resourceful than any military leader the Americans had known before.

The same puppet local government that the Americans installed in every town they captured was used by Aguinaldo to promote the guerrillas struggle. The American “puppets” soon became pro-Americas by day and pro-Filipinos by night. Resistance to the American imperialists would have continued indefinitely, with the possibility of finally arousing the moral indignation of the civilized world against America, a giant republic employing all its resources to crush the two-week-old Philippines Republic, struggling merely to live in peace and freedom, when Aguinaldo, the incarnation of Filipinos aspirations, was treacherously captured by the Americans with the aid of Macabebe mercenaries in Palanan, Isabela, on March 23, 1901. Although Aguinaldo’s capture did not immediately terminate Filipino resistance to American colonialism, it nevertheless marked the end of the short-live Fist Philippine Republic, the “first republic established by a brown people.”
Quote:
 
pag maikli ang 'yong kumot, matuto kang... bumili ng bago nang hindi mamaluktot..../e14

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*thx ate cha sa siggie...
FYI: nerdO is the poorest • e t i v a c • member...
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c@dbury
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miserableng tao..
nerdox!! anu b yan!!! .. :lol3:

npadaan lng aku..
mis ku n etivac..

galingan nyo ulet bukas.. /kis


nwei.. 99 n c cadbury ku..
at nais ko magpasalamat s mga sumusunod n tao..
(acknowledgement ulet kung baga.. /heh)


@ reiga - s pagsama skin nung akoy ngparebirth.. at sa pagboost sakin hanggang s akoy maging lvl 34 high tif

@ paopao - s wlang sawang pagboost skin hanggang s akoy maging sinx.. khit buong araw sya ngbboost ay wla xa kareklareklamo..slamat.. at s pagsama n rin skin s pagsinx..
at tenkyu din s COM ... ehhehe..

@ reiga ulet s pagbigay skin ng mauus n config s louyang.. at s pagleech skin hanggang s akoy umilaw.. /sob2

@ kuya apey - s pagturo skin n dpat akoy mging DD EDP build.. /heh

@ mangz- s pagbigay skin ng infiltrator.. slamat..
at s mga EDP bote rin n nakurakot ku.. slamat.. :D
at s pagturo din skin ng aking build.. slamats..

@ yumi - s pagturo din skin ng build kow..
@ mga taong nagbigay skin ng pera.. tenkyu.. :D

@ mga tumulong skin s pera.. slamat.. :D

@ etivac - miss ku n kau.. slamat ulet.. hahah.. /kis
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tnx keisha for the sig.. /kismy thread... •etivac• thread...
add me s frendster and YM >>>>> charl_rae@yahoo
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nerdO
• abnkkbsnplako?! •
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hekhekhek... :clap: grattz !! /no1 ate tsartsar, 99 na nga, mukhang ndi nmn mkasiege... hekhek...

si nerdO naman !! ay nagpapasalamat... sa lahat ng tumatangkilik sa

• e † i v a c • guild... sa mga taong hindi tumatangkilik sa • e † i v a c • guild, ay hindi ako ngpapasalamat sa inyo, ano ako hilo? :lol2:

tayo ay magkita kita bukas sa giyera ng emperyo....

sana ay nagustuhan ninyo ang aking maikling pagpapaliwanag ng etivac siege mula pa noon, na nakalagay sa itaas, tumingala ka lang at makikita mo... :lol2:

muli, ako ay nagpapaalam sa ngayon...

/e10
Quote:
 
pag maikli ang 'yong kumot, matuto kang... bumili ng bago nang hindi mamaluktot..../e14

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*thx ate cha sa siggie...
FYI: nerdO is the poorest • e t i v a c • member...
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gamblerboy
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" The last three years was just pretend.. "
elo po nabisita lng.

dati rin ako naging etivac bago pako maging LOD /kis more power to u guys and gud evening /heh
" A brilliant mind does everything and finishes none.. "

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sugarol@hotmail.com paadd nlng sa facebook
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••neiji••
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• Knockout King •
elow dandang gabi po caviteños and caviteñas.... napadaan lang po... /heh
Spamming Area /heh... Thread ko ito!!!
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Honor and Loyalty Above all...
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guadel
Obeaune
@ nerdo haba naman nun..... d ko nga binasa e /heh

@char kamusta po... congratz sa pag ka 99 ni cadbury

@etivac magandangt gabi po at good luck bukas

**baka d ako makaseige, yung sis ko lang dahil ako ay may pasok /swt ***
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-mainman-
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Shaider ni Annie
Manyak of the Year
hoy nerdO ang ingay mo nanaman~! /!

@ cadbury

ikaw naman ngaun limot sakin~! hmp~! /sob

@ guadel

elo sexy tita.. /heh

S> tagakanluran pics.. /heh pm offers.. /heh
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if angels were in heaven.. how come you're down here with me..?
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chockie
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meet my fiance /kis2
ang mga nasi kong bigkasin sa mga sumusunod na tao:

@Gamblerboy salamat sa pagbisita

@NERDO /wah haba ng history mo, san mo napulot yan
lufet ng sintido kumon mo. hindi ko na siya nabasa /heh

@NEO / NEIJI
pafi malingers na din

@CHAR
/no1 99 na ang bilissssssssssss, ako kaya no n levelo
sana masabak mo na yan sa bakbakan sa sabado

@KOH
magkakano ang litrato ni tagakanluran huwag OP /heh

@MAMI GUADEL - /kis /kis2 /lv /e3

@ sa lahat na di ko nabanngit - mabait na swerte na lang bukas
ala ako kc madami kong trabaho kailngan natin kumita ng maraming salapi
para magkaroon ng pera.
Matagal ng QUIT

MAG B-NET ka na lang ENJOY pa /gg
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-mainman-
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Shaider ni Annie
Manyak of the Year
mainman toh chockie.. /gg

offer lng.. /gg

it comes in various sizes.. from the smallest 1x1 id pic to the billboard size.. pde sa EDSA post as billboard.. meron din poster size kung pinagnanasaan nyo si apey.. :lol2:
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if angels were in heaven.. how come you're down here with me..?
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chockie
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meet my fiance /kis2
MAINMAN KAW PALA YAN
ngayon lang kasi ko ulit nakapag boards
mas maganda kung nasa EDSA pic niyan
para super sizeeeee /heh
Matagal ng QUIT

MAG B-NET ka na lang ENJOY pa /gg
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-mainman-
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Shaider ni Annie
Manyak of the Year
OFFER NA /gg
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if angels were in heaven.. how come you're down here with me..?
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