NTV Nasipit

NTV Nasipit 。 ₊°༺❤︎OHIYOW❤︎༻°₊ 。

。 ₊°༺❤︎༻°₊ 。Alias N. Tv。 ₊°༺❤︎༻°₊ 。
。 ₊°༺❤︎༻°₊ 。
Welcome, NTV Nasipit Family! Let’s rock this!

Just wanted to say I’m really looking forward to working with you. Hey there!
。 ₊°༺❤︎༻°₊ 。
Email : [email protected]

Nasipit, Agusan del Norte
05/08/2025

Nasipit, Agusan del Norte

Somewhere in our hearts.BY: TOTO PINEDAPLEASE SUBSCRIBE!LIKES COMMENTS SHARE.THANK YOU.Nasipit occupies the north-western portion of the province. It is boun...

03/08/2025

The moral of this story is that no matter how much we try, no matter how much we want it. Some stories just don't have a happy ending..

HINDI MADALI ANG TRABAHO NG ISANG TRAFFIC SIGNAL TECHNICIAN.  MGA BUHAY DIN ANG NAKASALALAY.😇🙏✍️        NTV Nasipit
02/08/2025

HINDI MADALI ANG TRABAHO NG ISANG TRAFFIC SIGNAL TECHNICIAN. MGA BUHAY DIN ANG NAKASALALAY.😇🙏✍️




NTV Nasipit

Billions of Pesos .Yumaman ka nga galing naman sa nakaw.
30/07/2025

Billions of Pesos .
Yumaman ka nga galing naman sa nakaw.

Kinasuhan sa Ombudsman sina House Speaker Martin Romualdez at iba pang kongresista dahil sa umano’y maanomalyang ₱214-bilyong budget insertion sa 2025 Nation...

29/07/2025

Minsan sa Buhay Mas mabuti na yung Manahimik.
Tuloy lang sa Laban ng Buhay. Papabor din sa atin ang Panahon.😘
In God's Will.🙏

Mental Block
17/07/2025

Mental Block

❌ Blame 5500+ Flood Control
✅ Blame Dolomite Beach

14/07/2025

OPINION | Powdered Power: How a Drug-Using First Family Risks an Entire Nation
OPTIC Politics DEPO | July 14, 2025

The tragedy of a nation isn’t always written in coups or foreign invasions. Sometimes, it’s quietly snorted away behind closed palace doors. Let’s ask the question nobody in power wants us to ask: What kind of First Family toys with co***ne? And what does that say about who they truly are—beyond the rehearsed smiles, designer barongs, and photo ops?

What values do they hold?

A family that turns to illegal drugs while holding the highest offices betrays more than just the law—they reveal a moral emptiness, a hollow at the core of their conscience. When private decadence meets public duty, it becomes not just a personal failing, but a national threat. Because every addict, especially in power, must protect their secret—and that defense often comes at society’s expense.

How do they see us?

If your blood runs white with powder, your view of the public becomes transactional: people aren’t citizens to serve, but pawns to control, distract, or silence when the truth creeps too close. Friends become disposable, allies become useful idiots, and the nation itself becomes a tool to shield private vice.

What happens to decision-making?

Illegal drug use is not a harmless weekend vice when you hold the codes to the treasury and the pulse of the military. It clouds judgment, feeds paranoia, and sharpens desperation. It can turn policy into personal cover-up, governance into distraction campaigns. Bad governance becomes not an accident, but an inevitable consequence of self-preservation.

Why should society care?

Because we do not merely have a family of users—we have a family of users in public service. Their personal demons become state affairs. National security can be traded for silence; appointments can be given to cronies who enable, not challenge. Public money can be wasted on image-laundering campaigns instead of schools or hospitals. And the public pays twice: once for the drugs, and again for the damage they wreak on governance.

Are these just private choices?

No. A First Family addicted to illegal drugs creates a national culture of hypocrisy. It feeds the lie that laws are only for the poor, that privilege makes you untouchable. It undercuts every honest effort in the fight against drugs and crime. It sends a brutal message to every Filipino family struggling to guide their children: “Rules don’t apply to us. Power is the ultimate rehab.”

What dangers lie ahead?

A nation led by users is a nation forever vulnerable. To blackmail. To policy shaped by paranoia, withdrawal, and chemical highs. To institutions corrupted not just by greed, but by desperation to protect the family’s darkest secrets. And most dangerously, to a public slowly conditioned to accept it all as normal.

The bigger question:

If the most powerful family in the country can choose co***ne over character, cover-up over confession, and private pleasure over public good—then what stops them from choosing betrayal over loyalty, tyranny over democracy, and impunity over accountability?

We aren’t just dealing with an embarrassing family scandal. We are confronting a political cancer: drug addiction at the heart of national power. And every citizen has the right—and the duty—to ask:

What else will they sacrifice to protect their vice? How long will we allow the nation’s fate to be dictated by a family ruled not by principle—but by powder?

That’s the conversation this country desperately needs.

And until we have it—openly, bravely, and relentlessly—don’t wonder why things keep getting worse.

In the end, it’s not just the family that’s high on co***ne—

it’s the entire country forced to live with the crash.











✅ (True Freedom – connects to anti-corruption, SEO local)




10/05/2025

02/04/2025

Mag ingat sa Daan, mga Ka Ohiyow. 50K Saudi RIYALS ang buhay ng 1 CAMEL.

30/03/2025

Bawal ang Tamang sagot, Ano to sila mga ka Ohiyow? Hahaha Basta yung Last alam ko Unggoy yun.😂

28/03/2025

"The greatest thing in the world is to know how to belong to oneself." - Michel de Montaigne
NTV Nasipit yanbu city corniche

SOMETIMES YOU NEED TO BE ALONE. (Unwind) Subukan niyo po mga ka OHIYOW!

16/03/2025

Intro+Content+Outro
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Nasipit

*NASIPIT* NASIPIT, officially the Municipality of Nasipit (Cebuano: Lungsod sa Nasipit; Tagalog: Bayan ng Nasipit), is a 3rd class municipality in the province of Agusan del Norte, Philippines. According to the 2015 census, it has a population of 41,957 people. The Port of Nasipit is the major seaport or base port in Agusan del Norte. The Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) assigned PMO Nasipit as an International Base port.

*Geography* According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the municipality has a land area of 144.4 square kilometres (55.8 sq mi) [2] constituting 5.29% of the 2,730.24-square-kilometre- (1,054.15 sq mi) total area of Agusan del Norte. Nasipit occupies the north-western portion of the province. It is bounded in the east and south by Buenavista, west by Carmen, and north by the Butuan Bay. It is 24 kilometres (15 mi) west of Butuan and 175 kilometres (109 mi) north-east of Cagayan de Oro. The town is accessible by sea through the inter-island vessels docking in the Nasipit International Seaport, to destinations such as Manila, Cebu, Bohol, and Cagayan de Oro.

*Barangays* Nasipit is politically subdivided into 19 barangays.[6] Of these, 5 are urban and 14 are rural. Of the 19 barangays, 9 are coastal: Cubi–Cubi, Ata–Atahon, Punta, Barangay 1 Apagan (Poblacion), Talisay (home to the Port of Nasipit), Santa Ana, Camagong,

*History* The recorded history of Nasipit can be traced back to as early as 1880s when it was declared as a pueblo by the Spanish colonizers. According to townsfolk, its name may have been derived from an incident where a native, immediately after being bitten by a crab, was asked the name of the place by an immigrant. Misunderstanding the question, the native answered na-si-pit meaning "bitten by a crab". Since then, the town became known as Nasipit. Nasipit was officially separated from the municipality of Butuan on August 1, 1929. It became a municipality by virtue of Executive Order No. 181 issued by Acting Governor General of the Philippines Eugene Allen Gilmore. A proposal to change its name to Aurora was initiated by then Governor Teofisto Guingona Sr., but due to the strong opposition from townsfolk, the name Nasipit was retained. In 1949, the barrios of Carmen, Tagcatong, Cahayagan and San Agustin were separated from Nasipit and constituted into the new town of Carmen by virtue of Republic Act No. 380 which was approved on June 15, 1949.[9]