Monday 16 December 2019

BSP Launches New 20 Peso Coin




New Generation Currency Series; In July 2019, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) announced that the 20 peso note will be changed into a coin due to the overuse of the banknote, since each individual note only lasts a year in circulation whereas the new 20 peso coin but would last for 10 to 15 years even if it costs more to manufacture. The decision is based on a research by the University of the Philippines. The coin was planned to be released in late 2019 or early 2020, and in September 2019, the ₱20 coin was finally designed and will be released in December 2019. Diokno mentioned that the design would retain Manuel L. Quezon as the person on the obverse], that the coin would be two-tone (in a manner similar to the old 10-peso coin), and that it is slightly bigger than the P10 coin. He also mentioned there would be other features making it distinct from the other New Generation coins.


Did you know that having a relationship with your fellow women is a very extreme experience

Did you know that having a relationship with your fellow women is a very extreme experience

First of all because you are the same girl your girlfriend will understand. She can understand things you like or complain about. You can understand why he sometimes gets angry.
You can also understand all the pain she feels every time she has a menstrual cycle.

The percentage of men who had had sex with at least one man rose from 4.5% to 8.2%, and the percentage of women who had sex with at least one woman went from 3.6% to 8.7%.


Almost all of this increase is due to more people having sexual partners of both genders—bisexual behavior. People generally felt freer to have sex with both men and women if they chose. Acceptance of same-sex sexuality also shot up, with 49% saying it was “not wrong at all” in 2014, compared to 13% in 1990. Millennials—those who were 18-to-29 in 2014—were the most accepting, with 63% reporting that same-sex sexuality was “not wrong at all.” This reflects an enormous cultural change in a relatively short period of time. It is partially due to a time period effect—with all generations growing more accepting over time—but also partially to a generational shift, with a continuing generation gap between millennials and older generations. 

Here's a sample video (Click the link)


Why has this happened? We all know that society has embraced lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) causes in the last few decades: Same-sex marriage, banned as of 1996, was the law of the land in 2015. When Ellen DeGeneres came out in 1997, she faced a furious backlash and her sitcom was cancelled. Just six years later, in 2003, her talk show debuted and it’s been a success ever since. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender characters have regularly appeared on TV shows since the late 1990s, from "Dawson’s Creek" to "Modern Family." More and more LGBT individuals have had the courage to come out, and more of those announcements have been greeted with acceptance (or even yawns) instead of derision.