• decadentrebelM
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    1 year ago

    As a foreigner mod, we have three Independence Days.

    • @cottonmon
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      31 year ago

      Lol, mark mo ito ng /s baka uminit nanaman ulo ni MRA and gamitin ito as “evidence”

  • Ahri Boy
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    71 year ago

    July 4th here is Republic Day, not a holiday anymore. I always say Happy Fourth of July to my grandma, who is a dual US and Filipino citizen now residing in my country for good. Yesterday I greeted my American aunt vacationing in my country too.

  • @Gigan
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    51 year ago

    Was there a war or did we just give it up?

    • @BB69
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      121 year ago

      There was a war prior to that that the US won and caused the Philippines to be considered an “unincorporated territory” then a “commonwealth”.

      In 1898, the US was already determining what to do with the islands, noting that there was a strong desire for independence. There was a lack of a “Philippine nation” that stopped President McKinley from pushing for release.

      By 1934, congress passed the Tydings-McDuffie Act that started the process of Philippine independence after 10 years to assist in a transition to a functioning government. WWII slowed this down after Japanese occupation.

      This is just a (very) quick summary, there’s a lot more to the story, including the scorched earth campaign the US employed during the rebellion. But no, the US did not “lose” a war and the Philippines did not “win” independence in the same way the US did.

      As a tidbit, Philippine independence is observed on June 12th, because that’s when independence from Spain occurred.