WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Aftermath of Recent Earthquake in the Philippines-Sea Vanished


Something strange happened after Monday's earthquake.
When the powerful 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck on June 8, 2026, residents along the coast of Barangay Kitayo in Jose Abad Santos, Davao Occidental watched the sea suddenly pull away from the shoreline, exposing a massive stretch of land that had previously been underwater.
Many expected the water to return once the shaking stopped. But days later, locals say the coastline still looks dramatically different, with the newly exposed land continuing to stretch far beyond where the shore once stood.
The unusual scene quickly drew attention as photos and videos spread online, showing what appeared to be a vanished sea and an expanded coastline. Experts say powerful earthquakes can sometimes cause the ground to rise or sink, permanently altering the shape of coastal areas.
For families who have lived beside the water for years, the transformation has been difficult to comprehend. A place that looked the same for generations changed in a matter of minutes.
Nature can redraw the map without warning. If the coastline near your home suddenly shifted overnight, would you see it as a disaster, an opportunity, or something else entirely?

Meanwhile, 

In today's spirit of America's historic corporate UFC fight in front of the public White House lawn on trump's birthday, here is our revolutionary painter Juan Luna's masterpiece: "Spoliarium".
Luna painted this piece in 1884 while the Philippines was under Spanish colonization, and Filipinos were on the eve of revolution. Luna's work won the gold medal at Madrid's Exposición Nacional de Bellas Artes. Jose Rizal was inspired to finish Noli Me Tángere shortly after.
Just as the Roman Empire disposed of gladiators for their entertainment, who is entertained by the suffering of others in America today?
Who benefits and profits from our people's suffering?

Finally, 
Mother Nature Crashes Trump's $60 Million Birthday Party With Tornado Warning
Trump wanted a birthday party. Mother Nature had other plans.
The president spent $60 million turning the White House South Lawn into a UFC cage fight extravaganza to ring in his 80th birthday, complete with a massive steel structure nicknamed "The Claw," hundreds of trucks, nearly 500 portable toilets, and support from at least seven federal agencies. What he did not account for was the weather.
Forecasters are calling for heavy thunderstorms, lightning, and the possibility of a tornado in Washington, DC on Sunday, threatening to derail the entire spectacle before a single punch is thrown. The giant steel structure on the lawn, which conducts electricity efficiently according to the National Weather Service, becomes a particular problem when lightning enters the picture.
Even Trump's friend Joe Rogan saw this coming. "I would have never wanted to do it," Rogan said on his podcast. "They have to be in a controlled environment." UFC CEO Dana White piled on, saying he was "sick and tired of hearing about the weather."
And the weather was not the only thing raining on Trump's parade. A federal judge ruled the same day that Trump's name had been unlawfully slapped onto the Kennedy Center, ordering its removal while workers hung giant white tarps to hide the embarrassing process from cameras.
Trump himself admitted he was already unhappy about turning 80. Nature just made sure everyone knew it

Growing Old in the Oval Office: A Reflection on Age, Health, and the Presidency

Growing Old in the Oval Office: A Reflection on Age, Health, and the Presidency

The American presidency has always been one of the most demanding jobs in the world. It requires long hours, constant travel, difficult decisions, and the ability to respond to crises at any moment. It is a position that tests not only intelligence and judgment but also physical stamina and mental resilience.

In recent months, numerous articles and social media posts have focused on President Donald Trump and his health. Photographs showing him appearing tired during meetings, reports discussing bruising on his hands or swollen ankles, and videos analyzed frame by frame have fueled endless speculation. At the same time, the White House has maintained that the President is fully capable of carrying out his duties and is physically fit to serve.

So where does the truth lie? The honest answer is that none of us outside the President's medical team truly knows.

Photographs can be misleading. A single image captures only a fraction of a second and may reflect nothing more than fatigue after a long day or an awkward camera angle. Bruising can occur from ordinary medical procedures or simply from aging skin, which becomes thinner and more fragile. Swollen ankles may have several possible explanations, many of which are common among older adults and not necessarily debilitating.

On the other hand, public concern about the health of a president is understandable. The office carries enormous responsibilities affecting not only the United States but also the entire world. Citizens naturally want assurance that their leader possesses the physical and cognitive capacity to fulfill those responsibilities.

As someone who has reached the age of 91, I view this discussion from a different perspective. Aging is inevitable. None of us escapes it.

I know firsthand that our bodies change. We may walk more slowly, require more rest, or deal with chronic medical conditions. Yet many seniors remain intellectually active, productive, and capable of making sound decisions. Some continue writing books, practicing law, teaching university courses, leading businesses, or serving their communities well into their eighties and nineties.

Chronological age alone is not a reliable measure of ability.

History offers many examples of leaders who governed effectively despite advanced age, just as it offers examples of younger leaders who failed despite having youth on their side. Leadership depends on judgment, experience, temperament, character, and the ability to surround oneself with competent advisers.

The modern media environment complicates the issue. Every stumble, every yawn, every facial expression, and every brief moment with closed eyes is instantly shared millions of times online. Political supporters and opponents alike often interpret the same image through completely different lenses.

This makes objective evaluation increasingly difficult.

The public deserves transparency regarding the health of any president, regardless of party. Medical reports should be as complete and factual as possible while respecting reasonable personal privacy. At the same time, speculation based solely on isolated photographs or edited video clips should be viewed cautiously.

As an immigrant who became an American citizen more than fifty years ago, I have watched many presidents come and go. Some inspired me, some disappointed me, but all carried burdens few of us can fully appreciate. The presidency ages every occupant.

Perhaps the larger lesson is not about one individual but about society's attitude toward aging itself.

Too often, we equate wrinkles with weakness and gray hair with decline. Yet many older adults possess qualities that only decades of living can provide: patience, perspective, resilience, and wisdom born from experience.

I see this every day among my fellow residents here at The Heritage Downtown in Walnut Creek. Many are in their eighties and nineties. Some move with canes or walkers, yet their minds remain sharp, their humor intact, and their life stories richer than any history textbook.

Age should invite careful evaluation, not automatic dismissal.

Whether one supports or opposes President Trump politically, discussions about his health should be grounded in evidence rather than rumor, medical facts rather than internet speculation, and fairness rather than partisanship.

In the end, history will judge every president by the quality of the decisions made while in office, not by a single photograph, a viral video clip, or the appearance of aging hands.

For those of us fortunate enough to grow old, aging is not a sign of failure. It is a privilege. The real question is not whether a leader has wrinkles or gray hair, but whether that leader still possesses the judgment, energy, and wisdom to serve the nation faithfully.

That is the standard by which every president, past, present, and future should be judged.

AI Overview:
The presidency is widely recognized as one of the most mentally and physically demanding jobs in the world. With President Donald Trump reaching the historic milestone of 80 years old, the debate surrounding age, cognitive agility, and health disclosure in the Oval Office has taken center stage.
The Medical Reality
While the Constitution sets a minimum age requirement of 35 for the presidency, modern elections have pushed the median age of inauguration higher. Official medical evaluations from White House physicians have continually declared the president in "excellent health". However, physiological aging brings inevitable changes:
  • Physical Symptoms: The President’s advanced age has been accompanied by benign but visible conditions, such as superficial chronic venous insufficiency (which causes leg and ankle swelling) and hand bruising linked to medication and frequent handshaking.
  • Cognitive Metrics: The White House has consistently reported that the President has scored perfectly on standard cognitive assessments (such as the MoCA, initially designed to screen for dementia). ]
Official Reports vs. Public Perception
Despite official sign-offs from medical professionals, the physical toll of holding office remains a point of intense scrutiny and debate. The conversation is split along two main fronts:
  • Stamina & Demeanor: The President's aides and supporters often praise his vigorous routine, but critics have raised red flags over moments of perceived fatigue, such as reports of appearing drowsy during cabinet meetings or switching to more comfortable footwear.
  • Lack of Transparency: Because presidents are not legally obligated to release their full medical records, administrations historically curate the health information that is shared with the public. This selective disclosure naturally fuels public doubt regarding true mental and physical fitness. 
The Broader Debate
Ultimately, the conversation goes far beyond chronological age. Historically, experts note that the immense pressure of the presidency can accelerate aging and degrade health. As the country grapples with an octogenarian president in the highest office, public concerns highlight a persistent divide between official physician evaluations and the trust of the electorate.
Lastly, here are some photos I took at our Crafts Workshop Yesterday Afternoon. Kudos to Alexis for a well-organized and Fun activity.







 

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Putin’s Inner Circle Mocking Trump?

From My Recent Readings on Trump and Putin: 

Putin’s Inner Circle Mocking Trump? What British Intelligence Reports Say and Why It Matters

Are Putin’s Advisors Really Mocking Trump?

Recent reporting has reignited global debate after The Spectator cited a senior British security source claiming that intercepted Kremlin communications show Russian officials privately ridiculing former U.S. President Donald Trump. According to the source, these officials allegedly view Trump as overly trusting of Vladimir Putin, particularly regarding Russia’s intentions in Ukraine.

The claim: despite repeated intelligence briefings shared with U.S. counterparts, Russian leaders privately believe Trump accepts Putin’s statements about wanting peace at face value, while Russia continues its war against Ukraine.

This report has not been officially confirmed by the UK or U.S. governments, but it fits a broader pattern of Western intelligence assessments that question Moscow’s stated goals.

What Is Actually Confirmed and What Isn’t

It’s important to separate verified facts from intelligence-based reporting:

 What we know

  • British and U.S. intelligence services routinely intercept Russian communications and share assessments through formal alliances.

  • Western intelligence agencies have consistently assessed that Putin’s strategic aims in Ukraine have not fundamentally changed, regardless of diplomatic rhetoric.

  • Trump has publicly stated multiple times that he believes he can personally negotiate an end to the war with Putin.

 What remains unverified

  • The exact wording of any intercepted Kremlin messages.

  • Whether Putin himself made mocking remarks, or whether they came from lower-level advisors.

  • Whether these views influenced Russian policy or were merely internal commentary.

In short: the story is plausible and consistent with known intelligence practices, but it remains based on anonymous sources, not declassified evidence.

Why This Story Resonates Globally

The significance isn’t just about personalities, it’s about power, perception, and intelligence credibility.

  1. Intelligence vs. intuition
    Western allies reportedly worry that personal diplomacy can override hard intelligence assessments.

  2. Alliance friction
    When intelligence is shared but interpreted differently, it can strain long-standing U.S.–UK cooperation.

  3. Strategic miscalculation risk
    If adversaries believe they can manipulate a leader’s perceptions, deterrence weakens.

A Timeline of Key Trump–Putin Moments

2016

  • U.S. intelligence agencies conclude Russia interfered in the U.S. presidential election.

  • Trump publicly questions those assessments, creating early tension with intelligence agencies.

July 2018- Helsinki Summit

  • Trump and Putin meet privately in Helsinki.

  • At a joint press conference, Trump appears to side with Putin over U.S. intelligence on election interference, a moment widely criticized across party lines.

2019–2020

  • Trump repeatedly praises Putin’s leadership style while maintaining sanctions imposed by Congress.

  • U.S.–Russia relations remain adversarial but unusually personalized at the presidential level.

February 2022

  • Russia launches a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

  • Trump calls Putin’s initial moves “savvy” while later condemning the violence.

2023–2024

  • Trump states he could end the Ukraine war “in 24 hours” if re-elected, without detailing terms.

  • Western intelligence agencies publicly warn that Putin seeks territorial consolidation, not compromise.

2025–2026 (reported)

  • British intelligence sources tell The Spectator that intercepted Russian communications mock Trump’s perceived trust in Putin’s stated intentions.

  • No official confirmation is released, but the report gains global attention.

What This Means Going Forward

Whether or not Kremlin officials actually mocked Trump, the perception alone matters. Intelligence communities operate on probabilities, patterns, and behavior and the consistent pattern from Moscow has been strategic deception paired with military escalation.

For allies, the lesson is clear: Intelligence ignored is intelligence wasted.

For adversaries, perceived gullibility can be an invitation.

Bottom Line

  • The reports are credible but unconfirmed.

  • They align with long-standing Western intelligence assessments of Putin’s strategy.

  • The real story isn’t mockery, it’s the danger of mistaking rhetoric for reality in geopolitics.

In an era where wars are fought with missiles, misinformation, and manipulated perceptions, who believes whom can matter as much as who has the bigger army and money. 

Meanwhile, Do you still remember This News?

Last March, The Trump administration accidentally texted Jeffrey Goldberg war plans. His reporting about the Signal chat and its national-security implications has been nominated for a National Magazine Award in the public-interest category: https://theatln.tc/rGbmm3nH

Bridge, Friendship, and the Long Journey of Retirement

Bridge, Friendship, and the Long Journey of Retirement

When I first arrived in the United States as a graduate student in Chicago many decades ago, I was introduced to a strange new word: bridge.

Growing up in the Philippines shortly after the devastation of the Japanese-American war, the word “bridge” meant only one thing to me - a construction project made of steel and concrete crossing rivers and highways. I had never imagined that bridge could also refer to a card game considered by many to be one of the most intellectually demanding games ever invented.

In graduate school, life revolved around laboratory work, examinations, research projects, and the endless writing of Master’s theses and Ph.D. dissertations. The pressure was intense. Yet during weekends, my dorm mates and classmates would gather around small tables with decks of cards, cups of coffee, and animated conversations. That was where I first learned the game of bridge.

At first, it seemed impossibly complicated.

The bidding alone sounded like a secret language. Terms like “trump,” “finesse,” “slam,” and “dummy” were completely foreign to me. But gradually, I began to appreciate the beauty of the game. Bridge was not merely gambling or entertainment. It was a game of logic, memory, psychology, teamwork, and discipline. Unlike chess, it required partnership and trust. Success depended not only on one’s own skill but also on communication and cooperation with another human being.

Years later, when my wife, Macrine, joined me permanently in America, I taught her how to play. What began as a pastime slowly became one of the enduring social activities of our married life. For more than twenty years, we played Party Bridge simply for enjoyment and companionship.

Bridge became part of our social circle. Friends gathered around card tables, sharing laughter, stories, food, and occasional disagreements about missed bids or risky contracts. The game helped strengthen friendships and created moments of relaxation amid the demands of work and raising a family.

After my retirement from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and our move to California, our involvement in bridge took a more serious turn. We joined a bridge club in El Cerrito near our home in Pinole and began playing Duplicate Bridge.

Duplicate Bridge was very different from the relaxed Party Bridge we had known for years. It was competitive, disciplined, and often intense. Every bid, every play, and every mistake mattered. Rankings and master points became the measure of success. Over four years, Macrine and I accumulated more than 100 Junior Master Points. Together with another couple, we traveled throughout Northern California participating in tournaments and duplicate games.

For retirees, it gave us purpose, travel, and intellectual stimulation. Bridge players often say the game helps keep the mind sharp, and I believe there is truth in that. One must constantly analyze probabilities, remember played cards, and anticipate opponents’ strategies. In many ways, bridge is mental exercise for aging minds.

Yet there was also another side to competitive bridge.

What had once been relaxing slowly became stressful. The pressure to perform well, avoid mistakes, and accumulate points began to overshadow the simple joy of the game itself. Friendly recreation had transformed into competition. After several years, Macrine and I made a difficult decision: we stopped playing Duplicate Bridge altogether.

For the next twenty-two years, bridge disappeared from my life.

Only after moving to The Heritage Downtown senior community in Walnut Creek did the game return once again - not as competition, but as companionship.

Today, I play Party Bridge four days a week here at THD. I manage the Monday games, helping organize players and keeping the activity alive within our senior community. At this stage of life, bridge has returned to its original meaning for me: not stress, not rankings, not master points, but human connection.

In retirement, social interaction becomes increasingly important. Many seniors experience loneliness, isolation, or declining social networks. Activities such as bridge provide structure, conversation, laughter, and mental engagement. Around the card table, people forget for a while their aches, medications, doctor appointments, and worries about aging.

For me personally, bridge now complements my daily blogging and writing activities. Writing exercises memory and reflection; bridge exercises concentration and social connection. Together, they provide balance in my retirement years.

Looking back, I realize that bridge has mirrored the stages of my own life journey in America.

As a young immigrant student, it represented learning and adaptation.
As a husband and father, it became family recreation and friendship.
As a retiree, it became competition and travel.
And now, in senior living, it has become community and companionship.

The game taught me something deeper than strategy or card play. It taught me that life itself is a partnership. Like bridge, life requires patience, communication, trust, and the ability to recover gracefully from mistakes.

And perhaps that is why, after all these years, I still enjoy sitting down at a bridge table. Not because of the cards alone, but because every game is really about people - their stories, their personalities, and the invisible bridges we build between one another across time, culture, and generations.

Meanwhile, here are the basic Differences between Party vs Duplicate Bridge: 

Bridge is a four-player partnership trick-taking game played with a 52-card deck, split mainly into social Party Bridge (often Rubber or Chicago style) and competitive Duplicate Bridge. Party bridge emphasizes relaxed, cumulative scoring, while Duplicate removes luck by having multiple tables play the same cards, comparing scores against others. 
Party Bridge (Social)
  • Structure: Usually 4 players, often played as "Rubber Bridge" (best of 3 games) or "Chicago" (four-deal bridge).
  • Atmosphere: Casual, often played in homes, focusing on social interaction.
  • Scoring: Cumulative points for tricks bid and made, honors, and penalties.
  • Rotation: Players may rotate partners or seats after a "rubber" or 4 hands. 
Duplicate Bridge (Competitive)
  • Structure: Played at clubs or tournaments. The same hands are played by different sets of players at other tables. 
  • The "Board": Cards are not reshuffled. They are placed in a tray called a "board" after a hand, keeping them in their original slots for the next table to play. 
  • Scoring: Your score is compared to others holding the same cards (matchpoints or international matchpoints). Luck is removed; skill is measured by doing better with the same cards than opponents. 
  • Movement: Players (and often boards) move around the room to compete against different partners and opponents.
Comparison Table
Feature Party/Rubber BridgeDuplicate Bridge
Primary GoalSocializing & FunCompetition & Skill
Luck FactorHigh (luck of the deal)Low (cards are balanced)
ScoringCumulative (rubber)Comparative (Matchpoints)
SetupShuffled and dealt each handPre-dealt in boards
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