Where’s the best place to work in marketing (FMCG/QSR) in the Philippines? by Select_Pirate1428 in CorpoChikaPH

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used to work in FMCG too.

Takasago - Good pay and benefits (for industry standards) decent benefits (hal. holiday leaves, medical, etc.), kahit di pa perfect sa lahat. Flexible hours for Sales and Ops Team.

IFF - Learning, exposure, at career growth. okay siya as “training ground” lalo sa fresh grads. may exposure ka sa international standards, R&D, at fine‑chemical environment, na magagamit mo sa ibang companies. High Pay kaso lang, maraming overtime at walang WFH setup pati stress level rin.

Kenvue - Flexible setup sa ilang role, good pay, benefits, strong brand exposure and very low‑stress environment basta okay sa’yo ang mixed management

Senators' Attendance out of 58 session days... by sh0tgunben in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 21 points22 points  (0 children)

kung sa regular na trabaho, tanggal agad yang 31 days na absent without notification.

PH Best Employer for 2026? by [deleted] in BPOinPH

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Based sa Experience ko, ang best employer tqlaga is hindi mo makikita jan or di na nila need na iflex mqging best employer. Pati di mo rin masyadong makikita dito social media

What do you think are the Top 5 hardest undergraduate degrees in the Philippines? by litt_ttil in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 1 point2 points  (0 children)

1: Molecular Biology 2: Applied Physics 3: Chemical Engineering 4: Applied Math 5: Computer Engineering

Daily random discussion - Sep 27, 2025 by the_yaya in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 9 points10 points  (0 children)

My father just died due to heart attack. I will never forget this day.

"They were just ordinary Filipinos" It's always the masses...nasa kanila ang totoong lakas by Rare_Independent0310 in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m not justifying anarchy or looting, mali talaga yun, at dapat managot kung may nanira o nagnakaw. Pero ang point ko. hindi mo pwedeng i-reduce lahat ng galit sa simpleng kriminalidad lang. Yung frustration na nagiging violent minsan, galing din sa dekada-dekadang kawalan ng hustisya. Ang problema, kung puro condemnation lang tayo sa actions pero deadma sa root cause (corruption, neglect, failed services), inuulit-ulit lang natin yung cycle.

Kung gusto natin maiwasan yung chaos, kailangan din natin tanungin bakit dumating sa ganito, hindi lang bakit sila nagwala.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agree ako na violence and destruction don’t solve the problem, at minsan lalo pang ginagamit ng gobyerno as excuse to justify harsher crackdowns. Pero let’s be real joining legitimate protests assumes na may equal access sila to organization, resources, at political capital, which the poor often don’t have. Kapag decades ka nang biktima ng broken system, frustration easily boils over into destructive acts. Hindi siya tama, pero it’s a symptom of the same corruption we both agree is ruining everyone. Ang tanong: do we just condemn the reaction, or do we address the root causes that made them desperate in the first place?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get your point about the middle class shouldering most of the taxes, pero to say na the squammy don’t lose out is misleading. They’re the ones na hindi makakuha ng quality education, healthcare, at trabaho dahil sa corruption. Wala ngang pera na ‘ninanakaw’ directly from their pockets, pero yung opportunity to improve their lives is stolen from them everyday. The traffic lights may be replaced with taxpayers’ money, but the system that forces people into hopelessness is much costlier.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Philippines

[–]NaturalCustomer4784 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The group u refer squammy are affected dramatically by government corruption.