Inquirer columnist predicted winners in presidential, VP races
THE NATIONAL board of canvassers started the official tally of the results of the presidential and vice presidential contests, coinciding with the 58th birthday of the late Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo.
Jesse’s widow, Leni, the incoming vice president, found the timing “meaningful.”
“It’s as if everything happened in perfect timing,” said the vice president-elect.
Madame Vice President, nothing in this universe happens by accident.
Everything is in perfect timing or preordained.
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Article continues after this advertisementWho knows, The Source took Jesse away so his widow would become vice president someday; and perhaps our president six years from now.
Article continues after this advertisementWho knows, Sen. Ninoy Aquino had to die so his widow, Cory, would become president.
And Cory had to die so her only son with Ninoy, Noynoy, would become our president.
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George Sison, lifestyle columnist of Sunday Inquirer, is probably the happiest man in the country today with the victory of Rodrigo “Digong” Duterte and Leni Robredo.
Sison, considered a clairvoyant by friends but who hates that label, predicted a “Ro-Ro” (Rodrigo-Robredo) win way before the May 9 election.
He was laughed at and mocked behind his back when he told strangers and acquaintances that Duterte and Robredo would win, after the two filed their certificates of
candidacy.
Sison was called “weird” and “crazy” for predicting the Ro-Ro victory.
The wave of criticism reached its peak after Sison wrote about the Ro-Ro win on his April 10 column.
“Not in a million years!” a reader said.
“You are weird. How can Duterte, who’s trailing Poe, win?” said another reader.
“You must be crazy to predict Robredo’s victory because she is last in the surveys,” still another reader remarked.
At that time, Grace Poe was ahead of Duterte by 10 percentage points and people expected she would maintain her lead until election day.
How did George predict Duterte’s and Robredo’s victory?
Through their birthdays in relation to May 9, the day of the election.
Duterte, whose birthday is March 28, and Robredo, on April 23, were on their first cycle on Sison’s astrology chart.
The first cycle, Sison said, is the “best cycle in one’s biorhythm calendar.”
“Expected and unexpected blessings come into one’s life during the first cycle,” said Sison.
Jojo Binay, who was leading in the surveys long before
May 9, was on his fourth cycle when election time came.
Persons on their fourth cycle should never enter into a contest because they will surely lose, according to Sison.
Poe and Bongbong Marcos were on their fifth or “success” cycle on the day of the election.
But the fifth cycle can be easily overcome by the first or the “best” cycle, Sison said.
Mar Roxas was on his seventh cycle, when good or bad karma visits a person depending on what he has done in the previous months.
Sison’s astrological chart is divided into seven cycles, with each cycle having 52 days from one’s birthday.
To have a complete picture of Sison’s cycles, visit him on YouTube—for his video “Your Yearly 7 Planetary Cycles”—or write to him at his email address: [email protected].
So, how do you explain Sison’s correct prediction?