The Prague Post - 'Golden age': Marcos myths on Philippine social media

EUR -
AED 4.277818
AFN 79.454542
ALL 97.301069
AMD 446.713089
ANG 2.084684
AOA 1068.142803
ARS 1542.891119
AUD 1.78517
AWG 2.099594
AZN 1.98065
BAM 1.95542
BBD 2.348943
BDT 141.342501
BGN 1.955453
BHD 0.435815
BIF 3468.925095
BMD 1.164823
BND 1.495009
BOB 8.038436
BRL 6.327081
BSD 1.163374
BTN 101.867181
BWP 15.652955
BYN 3.840953
BYR 22830.538151
BZD 2.336845
CAD 1.602156
CDF 3366.339367
CHF 0.943012
CLF 0.02881
CLP 1130.190113
CNY 8.365175
CNH 8.374061
COP 4711.583327
CRC 589.485311
CUC 1.164823
CUP 30.867819
CVE 110.243551
CZK 24.44219
DJF 207.159696
DKK 7.468263
DOP 71.046177
DZD 150.163785
EGP 56.112083
ERN 17.472351
ETB 161.428293
FJD 2.623528
FKP 0.866475
GBP 0.867297
GEL 3.145645
GGP 0.866475
GHS 12.273612
GIP 0.866475
GMD 84.447429
GNF 10088.037298
GTQ 8.926263
GYD 243.392646
HKD 9.143805
HNL 30.462073
HRK 7.538735
HTG 152.220384
HUF 395.550977
IDR 18935.485267
ILS 3.996154
IMP 0.866475
INR 102.183257
IQD 1524.003494
IRR 49068.185137
ISK 143.075072
JEP 0.866475
JMD 186.263761
JOD 0.825895
JPY 171.976268
KES 150.250768
KGS 101.863944
KHR 4660.093345
KMF 491.730472
KPW 1048.341038
KRW 1617.67124
KWD 0.355889
KYD 0.969511
KZT 628.687684
LAK 25170.102971
LBP 104236.020114
LKR 349.881928
LRD 233.254619
LSL 20.620788
LTL 3.439421
LVL 0.70459
LYD 6.307773
MAD 10.53525
MDL 19.5322
MGA 5134.001142
MKD 61.52303
MMK 2445.823406
MNT 4186.700604
MOP 9.40597
MRU 46.404972
MUR 52.894866
MVR 17.946511
MWK 2017.307518
MXN 21.642301
MYR 4.939054
MZN 74.501624
NAD 20.620788
NGN 1784.846839
NIO 42.811671
NOK 11.977413
NPR 162.98729
NZD 1.952927
OMR 0.444464
PAB 1.163374
PEN 4.117699
PGK 4.907045
PHP 66.104099
PKR 330.100177
PLN 4.248973
PYG 8713.304762
QAR 4.252073
RON 5.073154
RSD 117.127212
RUB 92.881929
RWF 1682.772604
SAR 4.371305
SBD 9.57143
SCR 17.146764
SDG 699.398414
SEK 11.157613
SGD 1.497263
SHP 0.915368
SLE 26.909036
SLL 24425.76836
SOS 664.870645
SRD 43.423432
STD 24109.492094
STN 24.495234
SVC 10.17902
SYP 15144.859847
SZL 20.61299
THB 37.652901
TJS 10.865686
TMT 4.08853
TND 3.411736
TOP 2.728135
TRY 47.518945
TTD 7.896464
TWD 34.836485
TZS 2890.937547
UAH 48.124037
UGX 4151.192355
USD 1.164823
UYU 46.680918
UZS 14651.149511
VES 149.968389
VND 30547.49301
VUV 139.081649
WST 3.091343
XAF 655.829404
XAG 0.030372
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.147993
XCG 2.096692
XDR 0.815641
XOF 655.829404
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.081988
ZAR 20.683326
ZMK 10484.806623
ZMW 26.960755
ZWL 375.072652
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.1000

    82.09

    -1.34%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    15.88

    -0.76%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    23.58

    +0.25%

  • JRI

    0.0250

    13.435

    +0.19%

  • BCE

    0.5700

    24.35

    +2.34%

  • BTI

    0.5500

    57.24

    +0.96%

  • NGG

    -1.0700

    71.01

    -1.51%

  • RBGPF

    1.2400

    73.08

    +1.7%

  • RIO

    1.0900

    61.86

    +1.76%

  • GSK

    0.2200

    37.8

    +0.58%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    23.05

    +0.39%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    34.14

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    -1.0566

    48

    -2.2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    14.42

    -0.14%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    11.36

    +0.88%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    73.535

    -0.71%

'Golden age': Marcos myths on Philippine social media
'Golden age': Marcos myths on Philippine social media / Photo: Ted ALJIBE - AFP

'Golden age': Marcos myths on Philippine social media

Ferdinand Marcos Junior appears on the cusp of victory in next week's presidential polls, with his seemingly unassailable lead fuelled by a decades-long misinformation campaign to revamp the family brand.

Text size:

The clan's comeback from pariahs in exile to the peak of political power has been built on a relentless barrage of fake and misleading posts on social media.

Pro-Marcos pages have sought to rewrite the family's history, spreading fallacies about everything from the patriarch's dictatorship to court rulings about the billions of dollars stolen from state coffers.

AFP's Fact Check team has debunked many of the myths swirling around the Marcoses.

Here are five of the most shared:

- Assassination attempt -

An alleged attempt to kill Marcos Jr ignited social media at the beginning of February, days before the presidential election campaign season kicked off.

A video posted on a Facebook account named Anti bias, which has repeatedly attacked Marcos Jr's main rival Leni Robredo and her opposition party, showed a news report about a bullet hole in a window of Marcos Jr's office.

It was viewed more than three million times.

But AFP fact-checkers found the video was more than six years old.

It had been taken from a news report published by GMA News on its social media accounts in August 2015 when Marcos Jr was a senator.

- Ignored by the media -

On the presidential campaign trail, Marcos Jr has shunned most media interviews and largely ignored journalist questions at rallies.

Yet multiple posts swarming social media claim he is the one being ignored.

A video posted on YouTube on March 16 asserted that Marcos Jr's rally in the northern province of Nueva Ecija was "not covered by the media".

The clip was viewed more than 23,000 times after it was posted by a YouTube channel called Showbiz Fanaticz, which has a history of peddling election-related misinformation.

But the reality was very different.

Local broadcaster ABS-CBN and other news outlets including News5 and OnePH published video reports of the rally.

Another video posted on the Facebook page Para sa Pagbabago showed Marcos Jr speaking in 2014 about rebuilding efforts following Super Typhoon Haiyan.

It was shared 12,000 times and viewed 555,000 times, with many users commenting that the interview was not broadcast by the media.

But AFP fact-checkers found various news outlets had aired portions of the interview while other organisations produced reports based on his remarks.

- Golden age -

Pro-Marcos pages have long sought to portray Ferdinand Marcos's dictatorship as a "golden age" of peace and prosperity, rather than a violent and corrupt regime that left the country impoverished.

One claim that the Philippines was the second-richest country after Japan during the Marcos regime was posted in March 2020 on the Facebook page DU30 MEDIA Network, which pretends to be a legitimate media outlet.

It was shared about 300 times.

AFP fact-checkers consulted experts who said the economic data from the Marcos years told a very different story.

Philippine gross domestic product actually went from being fifth in Asia at the start of the dictator's rule to sixth by 1985, as the country languished in a deep recession.

Another post on the Facebook page Bangon Bansang Maharlika in October 2020 claimed the elder Marcos and Filipino nationalist Jose Rizal set up the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

It was shared nearly a hundred times.

Both institutions were created in 1944, five decades after Rizal's death and 20 years before Marcos was elected president of the Philippines.

- No plunder -

The Philippines' highest court said in 2003 that the legitimate income of Marcos and his flamboyant wife Imelda during their 20 years in power was $304,372.43.

Yet more than $658 million was found in their Swiss bank accounts, which the court ordered to be handed back to the government.

It was a fraction of the $10 billion estimated to have been plundered from state coffer during the regime.

But a Facebook account named Ghee Vin Walker posted a claim in 2018 that no court had ever ruled the Marcoses had stolen money from the treasury.

It was shared nearly 9,000 times.

Many Filipinos have been deceived into believing Marcos made his wealth when he was a lawyer, before becoming president.

One such claim posted on the Facebook page Gabs TV in September 2020 asserted Marcos received a massive gold payment from a client in 1949.

- Abuses downplayed -

A misleading video posted on Facebook during the 2022 election campaign sought to downplay human rights abuses committed during the Marcos years.

Amnesty International estimates Marcos's security forces either killed, tortured, sexually abused, mutilated or arbitrarily detained about 70,000 opponents.

But the video shows the elder Marcos alleging the rights group did not visit the Philippines and had relied on "hearsay" in its reports about the abuses during his dictatorship.

It was shared more than 3,000 times and viewed 184,000 times.

Multiple historical accounts indicate Amnesty International visited the Philippines at least twice during the Marcos presidency.

X.Vanek--TPP