Sunday, 14 June 2026

CROSSROADS IN THE SENATE: CHOOSING HUMILITY OVER EGO


It’s Sunday as I write this piece, so let me begin with a Sunday school question: What is your favorite passage? Is it a line from Richard Dawkins, Bertrand Russell, or C.S. Lewis? These names mark the spectrum of belief—from atheism, to agnosticism, to Christianity.

If you are a Christian, let me hazard a guess: John 3:16?

The "Gospel in a nutshell," searched over two million times each month according to World Vision, is the world’s most quoted verse.

My heart leans toward its themes of unconditional love, divine sacrifice, and eternal promise. Yet my mind is drawn to another passage—one often marooned at the altar, sounding dry or trite to modern ears. And yet, it may hold the key to breaking the Senate deadlock that has paralyzed our nation’s legislative work.

I call it the Proactive Humility passage. But before turning up its music, let me rewind.

Faith and Works in Tandem

Years before joining Couples for Christ (CFC), I experienced spiritual renewal through Louie, a born-again friend whose memory still stirs my spirit.

Later, my battlefield became CFC-GK, where faith met the grit of service.

I came to know Frank Padilla, CFC’s founder, through his books. In “Fulfilling the Mandate,” he dedicated:

“Your quiet but untiring and selfless work is slowly but surely helping renew the face of the earth.”

Tony Meloto, the Gawad Kalinga figurehead, embodied the other half of James 2:17: 

“Faith by itself is dead if it does not have works.”

Frank stood for Faith; Tony for Works.

One morning, our CFC-GK team ventured into rebel territory. Local officials warned us not to stay past sundown. We loaded a dump truck with tools we had bought ourselves. At first, the village was silent, doors closed, faces hidden.

But as our doctors made rounds and our hammers rang, doors opened. Smiles formed. By dusk, roofs were sealed, wounds tended, and hearts quietly lifted. No ceremonies, no selfies—just silent acknowledgment and prayer.

When asked why we did it, my answer became simple: It’s a God inspired thing.

The Passage That Could Have Changed Everything

Not all God-inspired things remain pure. At a crucial leaders’ conference in Manila, tensions between CFC and GK boiled over. I wrote an open letter quoting my so-called Proactive Humility passage:

“If you bring your gift to the altar, and there recall that your brother has anything against you, leave your gift there at the altar, go first and be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift.” (Matthew 5:23-24)

Reconciliation failed. CFC and GK split. Frank passed away on December 24, 2025. Tony was arrested in May 2026 on charges of trafficking and exploitation.

Two questions haunt me:

1. Had Frank and Tony heeded the PH passage, could their story have ended better, not bitter?

2. Is this passage applicable to today’s Senate deadlock?

The first answer seems obvious. The second is a resounding yes. The passage reveals that God values horizontal relationships—with people—over vertical rituals with Him. True worship requires reconciliation.

Senator Alan Cayetano, in one of his many pronouncements invoking God and quoting Scripture, declared:

But in light of Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:23-24, does Cayetano truly abide by their essence? Where in his statement do we find the horizontal relationships with people that God values? His drift is entirely toward vertical rituals—prayer, discernment, submission—without the beam of reconciliation.

Think of the cross: the upright post symbolizes our vertical rituals with God; the crossbeam represents our horizontal relationships with people.

Cayetano’s words reveal only the upright post. He has no crossbeam.

And without the crossbeam, he cannot embody Proactive Humility—the essence of Jesus’ command to “go first and be reconciled with your brother.”

A Glimmer in the Senate

Senator Joel Villanueva recently announced he would attend a special session of Congress, possibly convened by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., to resolve the Senate leadership row. Villanueva declared:

By invoking God’s name and taking the first step—go first—Senator Villanueva demonstrates Proactive Humility. He sets ego aside without waiting for the other side to move.

That is light at the end of the tunnel. May it not be the headlight of an oncoming train.

And yet, even if shadows loom, the promise of John 3:16 still resounds: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only Son…”

That love is not passive ritual but active reconciliation. It is the crossbeam of the cross stretched outward toward our brothers and sisters, binding vertical faith to horizontal fellowship.

If our leaders dare to embody that love—humbling themselves, going first, reconciling before offering gifts at the altar—then the light at the end of the tunnel will not blind, but illumine.

It will be the light of a God who so loved the world, and who still calls us to love one another.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Microsoft Co-pilot & Google Gemini

Head and bottom images created by Microsoft Co-pilot

Still photos courtesy of Trip Advisor, Missionary Families of Christ, CNN Philippines, ABS-CBN, & Inquirer


Wednesday, 10 June 2026

SENATE ZUGZWANG: NO WINNING MOVES

 

When I was seventeen I dreamed of being king and

Having everything I wanted

But that was long ago and

My dreams did not unfold so

I’m still the king of nothing.

That old tune hits differently today—Seals & Crofts' “King of Nothing”—a ballad of dreams undone, of crowns without kingdoms. And if that sounds familiar, it’s because one senator in our headlines is living that refrain in real time.

Which brings us right back to the Senate’s unfinished drama—because the story of power and paralysis refuses to end at “to be continued.”

This sequel carries a curious word in its title: Zugzwang.

For those unfamiliar with chess—or even for players who rarely encounter this rare term—zugzwang describes the cruelest dilemma: being forced to make a move, yet knowing that any move will only worsen your position.

I've found myself in that situation many times in past games, unaware that I was already in zugzwang—unable to stand still, yet unable to advance without defeat.

That is the plight of Senator Alan Peter Cayetano.

ME: Welcome to ATABAY Live TV Talk Show Tic-Tac-Talk! Our special guest today, Mr. AI, will help us unpack further the issue on the Senate deadlock.

MR. AI: Thank you for having me, always a thrill to spar ideas here. Let’s roll the dice on this political board!

ME: Mr. AI, let’s start with the basics. What's the latest happening in the Senate deadlock?

MR. AI: Imagine two kings fighting over one throne. Senator Cayetano and Acting Senate President Gatchalian are locked in a bitter tug-of-war. Cayetano clings to the rulebook, but Gatchalian already has the power bench—Malacañang, the House, the IBP—even the Senate website, calling him the winner.

It’s not just a deadlock; it’s a dismantling of Cayetano’s power piece by piece.

ME: You’re painting this like a board game gone wrong. Can you break down Cayetano’s predicament using those metaphors?

MR. AI: Absolutely. In chess, he’s in zugzwang—forced to move, but every move worsens his position. In Go, his territory has been encircled. In Monopoly, he’s arguing over “house rules” while the other bloc holds the dice. The power bench have already crowned Gatchalian. Cayetano is left holding a hollow title.

ME: That sounds brutal. How has Cayetano been coping emotionally through this crisis?

MR. AI: His Facebook Live pressers are practically a psychology textbook. Each broadcast maps onto the five stages of grief, showing us not random outbursts, but a leader processing loss in real time.

ME: Psychology textbook? That’s a bold claim. Walk us through it.

MR. AI: Let’s start with Denial and Anger. Cayetano lashed out, “This is an illegal coup d’état,” and even warning his viewers that opponents “can try to remove me, they can try to kill me.” It was raw defiance, a refusal to accept how fast the gavel slipped away.

ME: And then he shifted gears, didn’t he?

MR. AI: Exactly. He moved into Bargaining—clinging to the magic number thirteen, insisting that without it, his rivals had no legal majority. He proposed a power-sharing arrangement in trying to negotiate the terms of his own defeat.

ME: But bargaining didn’t hold—Gatchalian dismissed it. So, what came next?

MR. AI: That’s when Depression set in. He reframed the chaos as conspiracy, claiming the Senate was being “made chaotic” to paralyze his flood control scandal investigations. It was a retreat into narrative, a way to dull the pain of shrinking influence.

ME: And finally, the last stage—Acceptance?

MR. AI: Right. But not quiet surrender—he rebranded defeat as a “walk of faith,” telling the public to “move on na sa drama.” It’s acceptance dressed as resilience, a pivot toward recalibration.

ME: So, grief mapped onto politics, with each livestream a new stage.

MR. AI: Exactly—and if politics is theater, then Cayetano’s pressers are the matinee and the late night show rolled into one. The script may be grief, but the performance reminds us: in the Senate, even tears are tactical, and every stage is just another move on the board.

ME: The two final questions are coming from our studio audience and home viewer.

AUDIENCE: So, is Cayetano finished, or does he have another card to play?

MR. AI: He’s no longer King, but he’s eyeing another role. That’s his act of acceptance—pivoting from ruler to obstructionist. In politics, losing the gavel doesn’t mean losing the game. It just means switching strategies.

VIEWER: Mr. AI, what’s the bigger lesson here for us?

MR. AI: Politics is a ruthless blend of math, mechanics, and psychology. Cayetano’s journey shows that when you’re structurally trapped, your emotions follow the script—from defiance to concession. But true players never retire; they just look for the next game.

ME: Brilliantly said. That’s why we call this show Tic-Tac-Talk—sharp questions meet bright answers. Thank you, Mr. AI, for helping us decode the Senate’s deadlock drama.

MR. AI: Always a pleasure. Until next round, keep your eyes on the board and your humor intact!

ME: As we close tonight’s sequel, let’s look beyond the headlines and into the horizon of what still could happen in the coming days.

The good scenario — cooler heads prevail, the Senate stabilizes, and Cayetano gracefully pivots into another role. In that lane, he can still wield sharp oversight, reminding us that even fallen kings can become formidable watchdogs.

The bad scenario — the chamber remains paralyzed, quorum games continue, and legislative work stalls. The impeachment, flood control scandals, budget debates, and committee hearings risk being drowned in political noise.

The ugly scenario — the deadlock mutates into a constitutional crisis, dragging the Supreme Court into the fray, deepening public distrust, and leaving the Senate looking less like a deliberative body and more like a fractured battlefield.

And yet—never underestimate the instinct of a seasoned player. Cayetano may still attempt a Hail Mary pass, a last-ditch effort to reclaim relevance. Whether through legal gambits, coalition reshuffles, or moral appeals, he could still try to flip the board when everyone thinks the game is over.

So, as Mr. AI reminded us tonight: keep your eyes on the board. Because in politics, the dice are always rolling, the pieces are always shifting, and the next move may come from the most unexpected corner.

This is ATABAY Tic-Tac-Talk. Deadlock or not, the Senate’s drama continues—and so does our watch.

And as the curtain falls, we leave you with a refrain that mirrors tonight’s tale—a crown without a kingdom, a gavel without power.

I could rule I’d dance my cares away

Find romance every day

I wouldn’t have to listen to this poor fool say

I’m the king

I’m the king

I’m the king of nothing.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Microsoft Co-pilot and Google Gemini;

Head and ATABAY images created by Microsoft Co-pilot

Still photos courtesy of Facebook, Philstar, ABS-CBN

Photo app by Canva


Thursday, 4 June 2026

DEADLOCK IN THE SENATE: WHEN WISDOM BECOMES HERD

 

Author’s Note

Why present this article as a Q & A? Because the Senate deadlock is like a jeepney route with too many detours—confusing, noisy, and full of stop and go traffic. If we explain it in a straight essay, readers might feel like passengers wondering where the ride is headed.

So instead, we take the jeepney approach: the host throws short, piercing questions—like a passenger asking, “Saan ba talaga tayo papunta?”—and the lawyer answers with clear, bright replies, like a driver pointing to the signboard, “Diretso sa Senado, pero may traffic sa deadlock.”

This Q & A format turns a complex constitutional crisis into a primer, a Tutorial for Dummies that anyone can hop on. No need for legal jargon or academic detours—just a lively ride where every stop is a question, every answer a direction, and the whole journey a democratic lesson.

In short: we’re not just writing commentary, we’re giving readers a jeepney map of democracy—so they don’t get lost in the deadlock, but arrive at understanding together.

ME: Welcome to ATABAY Live TV Talk Show Tic-Tac-Talk. As always, every time we come face to face with a tough mind-boggling issue, we leave no choice but to invite our resident constitutional lawyer, our special guest today, Mr. AI, to help us unpack the issue on the Senate deadlock.

MR. AI: Thank you for having me. I’m looking forward to answering your questions on the hottest issue of the week.

ME: As an icebreaker, could you give us some backgrounder?

MR. AI: The Philippine Senate—once the crown jewel of democracy—is now a house divided.

Imagine twenty four voices collapsing into an eleven to eleven deadlock. It’s no longer a chamber of debate, but a political war zone.

Arrests, defections, and a dramatic coup have left the nation with two rival Senate presidents: Cayetano and Gatchalian. The result? Gridlock, adjournment, and the Filipino people staring into constitutional fog.

ME: Short and sharp—what triggered this deadlock?

MR. AI: Two dominoes fell: Estrada arrested for plunder, and Bato dela Rosa fleeing an ICC warrant.

That shrank Cayetano’s majority to eleven. Enter Chiz Escudero, who switched sides, forming a twelve member bloc.

They invoked the 1949 Avelino v. Cuenco precedent, declared quorum, and installed Gatchalian. Boom—two presidents, one Senate.

ME: Is this legal or just political theater?

MR. AI: Both. Legally, the quorum question is shaky. Politically, it’s a power grab dressed in constitutional robes. The Supreme Court must decide if twelve counts as quorum. Until then, it’s zarzuela on the Senate floor.

ME: Paint us the “good, bad, ugly” scenarios.

MR. AI:

Good — Supreme Court rules fast, factions obey, Gatchalian consolidates thirteen votes, Senate reopens, impeachment trial proceeds.

Bad — Court delays, polarization hardens, walkouts and filibusters choke legislation, impeachment stalls.

Ugly — Parallel Senates, budget starvation, physical clashes at the gates, democracy itself destabilized.

Studio Audience Q & A

Audience 1: Mr. AI, does the Supreme Court really have the power to end this?

MR. AI: Absolutely. Judicial supremacy is the referee whistle here. If the Court rules twelve is valid quorum, Gatchalian wins legitimacy. If not, Cayetano regains footing. Without that ruling, the Senate is a basketball game with no referee.

Audience 2: What happens to the impeachment trial of VP Sara Duterte in this mess?

MR. AI: In the “good” path, it proceeds with credibility. In the “bad,” it suffocates under technicalities. In the “ugly,” it may never even start—because the Senate itself collapses before it can act.

Home Viewer Q & A

Viewer 1 (via text): Could Malacañang step in to break the tie?

MR. AI: Malacañang can pressure, but constitutionally it cannot dictate Senate leadership. Recognition of Gatchalian helps, but only the Supreme Court can settle the legality. Otherwise, executive intervention risks overreach.

Viewer 2 (via call): Is this deadlock just about personalities, or is democracy itself at stake?

MR. AI: Democracy itself. This isn’t just about Cayetano vs. Gatchalian. It’s about whether senators honor constitutional fidelity over ambition. The choices of these twenty four lawmakers will echo in history—either as guardians of democracy or gravediggers of trust.

ME: Mr. AI, you’ve given us clarity with a touch of humor. From quorum to chaos, from good to ugly, the Senate saga is more than a numbers game—it’s a test of our democratic soul.

MR. AI: And may the Senate remember: it was built to be twenty four independent republics, not two warring tribes.

ME: Hmm, tribalism. Reminds me of a controversial piece that describes the overall thesis about Philippine society—damaged culture.

Before we wrap up, let me leave you with this thought.

Running into Condorcet’s Jury Theorem for the first time struck me like lightning—as an engineer turned political commentator, it was astonishing to see mathematics illuminate the moral mechanics of democracy.

Once upon a time, the Philippine Senate embodied this promise.

Franklin Drilon called it “24 independent republics”—a chamber where Salonga, Diokno, and their peers stood as autonomous voices, deliberating with conscience, weighing evidence, amplifying truth through diversity of thought.

Each senator was a republic unto themselves, and together they carried Condorcet’s vision of competence and independence.

But that Senate now feels like a relic of a nobler age.

Where republics once stood, blocs now march. Where conscience once guided, convenience now conducts. The jury that could have converged toward truth has become a choir rehearsing loyalty, its harmony drowning out the fragile solos of reason.

And so begins the transformation: from deliberation to performance, from republics to rehearsed refrain. Independence collapses into bloc voting, competence bends to convenience, and the “wisdom of the crowd” dissolves into the folly of the herd.

The Senate deadlock is not just a numbers game—it is a test of whether our democracy still has the courage to choose truth over tune, conscience over chorus.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the final word.

God bless us all.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Google Gemini & Microsoft Bing

Head & still images created by Bing, art by Canva

Still photos Freepik, Adobe Stock, Bing image & Philippine News Agency


Sunday, 31 May 2026

FORCE MAJEURE OR FARCE MAJEURE? PADILLA'S DOCTRINE OF REMOTE ABSURDITY

Prelude: When The Lights Went Out

It happened one dawn—unforeseeable, unavoidable.

I was stitching words together, chasing thought into sentence, when suddenly, everything went black. The hum of the fan stopped, and silence filled the room like a held breath.

I surrendered to sleep.

By daylight, the mystery unfolded: someone had cut and stolen six meters of electric wire from our meter. A neighbor found the severed ends, copper glinting like a wound.

That theft was more than petty crime—it was omen.

The economic crisis had crept into our neighborhood, quiet as hunger, cruel as necessity.

And I realized: force majeure is not always typhoon or earthquake.

Sometimes it arrives as a man with pliers in the dark, desperate enough to steal light itself.

And sometimes, it arrives not in the alleys of our neighborhood, but in the marble halls of power—where senators cloak comedy in calamity.

The darkness I felt at home becomes the same darkness that now shadows the Senate, where words like force majeure are bent into punchlines.

“War/gera/digmaan sa Gitnang Silangan na nagreresulta na ng terorismo sa ibat ibang parte ng mundo. Ang napipintong pagdawit ng Pilipinas sa China-Taiwan conflict. Hindi po ba ito force majeure?”

Padilla’s Glamor

According to legal experts, the justification offered by Senator Robin Padilla for remote Senate voting based on force majeure does not align with existing Philippine law and jurisprudence.

Reading Padilla’s comments, I don’t know whether to laugh or to pity him.

Laugh–because he has no traditional legal or political background, only the swagger of movie actor once crowned the “Bad Boy” of Philippine cinema. 

Pity—because of his own wisecracking about his “baptism of fire” in the Senate plenary, where English words became Webster’s weapons and journals his lifeline.

“Nahihirapan lang ako pag nag-e-Englishan na, medyo ‘pwede dahan-dahan lang? Gano’n. Kaya mahalaga’yung journal eh, kaya binabasa ko ‘yung journal kasi nadun lahat eh, mahalaga ‘yun.”

“Lalo ‘pag nagtatalo na. ‘Yun naglalabasan ng mga Webster doon. Medyo dumudugo tenga ko. Hindi naman ako pinagsalita eh.”

“Ang journal ko, may mga linya. ‘Pag may linya ‘yun ibig sabihin kailangan ko ng dictionary.”

My knee-jerk reaction: he was trying to look cute to the interviewer, just like in the movies. Or perhaps, he’s simply had nothing between his ears.

Satirical White Paper

And so, my heart went out to Robin Padilla—so humanely that I was inspired to craft, in his behalf,  a mock white paper:

In Defense of Remote Voting by Force Majeure

Honorable colleagues, in the spirit of jurisprudence and cinematic improvisation, I rise to defend the sacred right of remote voting under the doctrine of force majeure.

For though the Civil Code speaks of typhoon and earthquakes, I submit that the Senate must also recognize the calamities of broken hands, prison schedules, and fugitive staircases.

The Requisites of Force Majeure

Independent Will

Senator Ronald Dela Rosas decision to hide in a bunker was not of his own will. It was dictated by the sudden appearance of NBI agents wielding arrest warrant like ninja star. His escape up the stairs was involuntary, his tumble inevitable.

Unforseeability and Inevitability

Who could have foreseen that a man trained in police combat would be defeated by a flight of stairs? His fractured hands, proudly displayed to the press, are living proof that destiny itself conspired against his attendance.

Impossibility of Performance

Senator Estrada and Senator Villanueva, soon confined in their “administrative retreats” with matching orange couture, cannot possibly walk into the Senate hall. Their thumbs, however, remained un-handcuffed—thus remote voting is the only feasible performance.

Freedom from Negligence

None of these senators were negligent. They merely obeyed the laws of gravity, the Ombudsman, and the Bureau of Jail Management. The calamity was thrust upon them.

Conclusion

Therefore, by the power vested in me as the Senate’s resident action star, I declare that remote voting is not only justified but heroic. Let us not deny our colleagues the chance to cast their votes from bunkers, bars, or behind bars. For in the theater of democracy, every actor deserves a role—even if performed via Zoom.

The Jester’s Mask

Kidding aside.

Sometimes I see Padilla through the lens of the Jester  Archetype—the clown who, by jest, reveals uncomfortable truths. His comic fumbling in the Senate exposes how fragile our institutions have become, how easily solemn law is bent into slapstick. Like a mirror in a carnival, he diverts—but in distortion, we glimpse reality.

He is the Senate’s fool, but in being fool, he unmasks the folly of others. 

The Larger Picture

Looking at the wider landscape, I cannot ignore the shadow of former President Duterte—now detained at The Hague for alleged crimes against humanity. His presidency, malevolent in tone and consequence, seems to have birthed a dire political aftermath.

The Senate today, with its decline into parody, is the Creature spawned by Duterte’s Frankenstein politics.

When the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte was shelved by a compliant Senate and Supreme Court, competence was traded for convenience, independence for allegiance.

When senators now invoke force majeure to justify remote votes for fugitives and detainees, it is the echo of a culture that normalized bending rules for loyalty’s sake.

Like Frankenstein’s monster, the Senate staggers forward—stitched together by fear, loyalty, survival, and expediency—yet terrifying in its grotesque parody of law.

The Jester and the King of Comedy

Thus, Padilla’s force majeure is more than comic relief. It is a symptom of a deeper malaise: a legislature that has become theater, a democracy that has become cinema.

And here, I cannot help but recall the humble words of Dolphy, the King of Comedy.

Dolphy feared disgrace, feared wasting the people’s vote. That humility is worlds apart from Padilla’s swagger—an actor who leapt into politics without fear of shame, but with bravado that now bends law into slapstick.

Parting Shot

Sometimes it arrives as a man with pliers in the dark, desperate enough to steal light itself. Such an act was born of poverty, a symptom of crisis.

Yet in the Senate, poverty of judgment breeds another calamity: electing entertainers to legislate, turning governance into spectacle.

The wire cut in the alley mirrors the cut in our democracy—both leaving us in the dark.

The power company's emergency crew replaced the wires stolen from our meter, located on a post in a nearby abandoned lot.

Yes, I feel pity for Padilla. But more than that, I pity the Filipino people who crowned him in topping the 2022 senatorial election.

For in their choice, the Senate itself became a stage where comedy masquerades as law.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot & Google Gemini

Head image created by Bing

Still photos courtesy of Reddit, Instagram, Facebook, Manila Bulletin, Kami.com, POLITIKO, & IMDb


Monday, 25 May 2026

THE TRIAD OF DEFLECTION: INSIDE THE DDS PROPAGANDA MACHINE

 

When a political dynasty faces an institutional crisis, the truest defense mechanism isn’t found in a court of law — it is engineered in the social media.

As the Senate officially convenes as an impeachment court to try Vice President Sara Duterte over the alleged misuse of millions in confidential funds, and as ICC trial Chamber III in The Hague maintains former President Rodrigo Duterte’s detention, the digital arena is ablaze.

Like many Filipinos watching this historic moment unfold, I find myself scrolling through a relentless deluge of defensive posts from the Duterte Diehard Supporters (DDS).

What strikes me isn’t just their fierce loyalty, it is how carefully engineered their arguments are. When faced with serious constitutional and international legal crises, the DDS machinery doesn’t offer a traditional legal defense. They don’t provide financial receipts, nor do they cross-examine the evidence.

Instead, they deploy a brilliant, albeit toxic, triad of institutional degradation: whataboutism, weaponized popularity surveys, and xenophobic sovereignty arguments.

Looking closely at this ecosystem, it becomes clear that this is a unified campaign to dismantle the very idea of objective accountability.

Whataboutism: Deflecting Local Accountability

The first layer of defense is the classic pivot: whataboutism.

When House prosecutors elevate the articles of impeachment, or when the Commission on Audit (COA) flags unexplained multi-million-peso expenditures, the response from the DDS base is entirely predictable.

They do not explain where the money went. Instead, they shout:

“What about the unpaid Marcos estate taxes?”

“What about the current administration’s budget scandals?”

During my early morning quiet time and Bible reading recently, it amazed me to realize that this brand of deflection isn’t a modern invention of social media algorithms. It is an evasion tactic as old as human nature itself.

It was even called into play by the disciples and dealt with by Jesus himself. In the Gospel of John, right after Jesus instructs Peter on his calling, Peter turns, looks at a fellow disciple, and deflects:

“Lord, what about him?”

Jesus’ response is a stinging, timeless refutation of whataboutism.

“What concern is it of yours? You follow me.” (John 21:21-22)

Jesus saw right through the universal human urge to dodge personal accountability by pointing fingers at someone else.

Millennia later, this ancient psychological shield is exactly what powers the DDS ecosystem. It operates on a cyclical premise: if everyone is guilty of something, then no one can be held to account.

By shifting the spotlight from VP Sara’s specific constitutional obligations to the real or perceived sins of her rivals, the network successfully turns a solemn legal process into a partisan circus.

It muddles the discourse and until ordinary citizens throw their hands up in frustration, convinced that the entire impeachment trial is a selective political witch hunt.

Weaponized Surveys: Overriding the Law with Popularity

When whataboutism fails to quiet the legal noise, the narrative moves to its second pillar: public opinion polls.

Whenever a new milestone in the impeachment process occurs—“VP Sara impeachment trial to start July 6”—social media feeds are instantly flooded with opinions and graphics showcasing the Duterte family’s high trust ratings, as one DDS political pundit amplified:

“The 2021 poll surveys showed that the then mayor of Davao City was leading everyone, whether BBM or Isko Moreno, Manny Pacquiao or Leni Robredo.”

However, the defensive machinery has clearly overemployed and over-relied on these survey results. They treat them as permanent mandates, failing to acknowledge that these polls were merely “snapshots” reflecting public sentiment from five years ago. The implicit message:

“The people still love them, so your laws do not matter.”

Correlatedly, a chummy question is raised:

“Would the senator-judges overturn an electoral mandate over charges which the same electorate can best judge come 2028?”

Apparently, the electoral mandate’s magic number is 32 million. However, not only was such a number an old and faded “snapshot” of the public sentiment, it remains also a “paper tiger” until Eliseo Rio and the TNTrio’s allegation of 2022 electoral fraud is disproven.

This reliance on popularity to bypass institutional justice echoes a dangerous flaw in human governance that philosophers have warned against for millennia. This classic popular pick altered history.

“Which of the two men do you want me to release to you?”

 They shouted:

“Barabbas!”

In The Republic, Plato famously cautioned that unbridled democracy easily degenerates into mob rule when a society values raw popularity over objective truth. He described how clever demagogues flatter the passions of the crowd, turning public sentiment into an absolute authority that overrides wisdom and code.

By weaponizing fluid, easily manipulated survey metrics as a political cudgel, the DDS ecosystem attempts to perform this exact philosophical trick.

In an era where global polling reliability has drastically degraded due to algorithmic echo chambers, surveys are no longer objective measures—they are manufactured mandates.

The “Foreign Court” Reframe: Demonizing Global Justice

The final and perhaps most aggressive layer of the triad is reserved for the former president’s legal battles in Europe as this prominent DDS columnist’s banner shows:

“ICC case vs. Duterte and Bato a colossal deception”

As Rodrigo Duterte remains in detention facing crimes against humanity charges, his supporters refuse to acknowledge the legitimacy of the proceedings. They meticulously avoid using the phrase “international court,” choosing instead to brand the ICC as an arrogant “foreign court” aggressively meddling in domestic affairs.

This exploitation of ‘sovereignty' to escape external scrutiny is a well-worn page in the playbook of history. A striking historical parallel can be found in 16th-century England with King Henry VIII.

When faced with the legal and moral authority of an external tribunal—the Pope and the ecclesiastical courts in Rome—Henry did not argue the legal merits of his case. Instead, he severed ties with the global authority entirely, framing his defiance as a noble defense of English sovereignty against “foreign meddling.”

It was a brilliant public relations move: he transformed his personal and political avoidance of accountability into a nationalistic crusade.

Today, the DDS machinery applies the exact same historical script to The Hague. Just as they previously vilified the Nobel Committee as a Western elite when investigative journalist Maria Ressa won the Peace Prize, so too have they now painted the ICC as an imperialist threat.

By reframing a legitimate global tribunal established by the Rome Statute into a hostile foreign invader, they cleverly shift the narrative. The story is no longer about the thousands of victims of the extrajudicial drug war killings; it becomes a dramatic tale of a defiant leader defending the motherland from outside forces.

The True Casualty of the Propaganda War

When we step back and examine these three tactics as a whole, a sobering picture emerges.

The true casualty of this digital propaganda machinery isn’t the Marcos administration, nor is it the ICC. The true casualty is the very concept of objective truth.

Ultimately, the Duterte defense machinery relies on an elaborate illusion to escape justice, but history offers no hiding place for unaccountable power.

Whether dodging personal responsibility like Peter by the Sea of Galilee, weaponizing public passion into mob rule feared by Plato, or wrapping personal evasion in the sovereign robes of Henry VIII, the core motive remains the same: avoiding the scales of justice.

We must look beyond this intricate narrative armor and reclaim our role as vigilant citizens.

A healthy democracy cannot feed on a diet of deflections, popularity contests, and staged outrage.

It requires the steady, sobering nourishment of transparent and absolute accountability.

Content and editing put together by Google Gemini

Head Image created by Google Imagen

Still photos courtesy of Allan Bevere/Faith Seeking Understanding Substack, Instagram, Facebook, Pngtree, & Simple Wikipedia

Survey collage photos courtesy of PxHere & Pixabay

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

THE JOURNEY OF TRUTH: VP SARA DUTERTE IMPEACHMENT

 

“Life is a journey, not a destination.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson

The timeless words—often spotted in self-help books, postcards, or wall art—remain prophetic. They tell us that fulfillment is not found at the finish line but in the pilgrimage—the winding road of struggle, growth, and awareness that shapes us along the way.

James A. Garfield, 20th U.S. president, sharpened the paradox:

“The truth will set you free, but first it will make you miserable.”

Freedom is the destination, but misery is the journey—the painful unveiling before liberation.

In the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte, these two truths collide. The destination is predetermined: acquittal by numbers, thirteen bloc votes outweighing nine dissenters and two independents.

Yet the journey—the stacks of evidence, the opening of Pandora’s boxes—is miserable from her viewpoint, but necessary for the Filipino people’s longing for truth.

Condorcet’s Promise and Drilon’s Legacy

Running into Condorcet’s Jury Theorem for the first time caught my eye as an engineer now writing political commentary. It was striking to see how mathematics could illuminate the moral mechanics of democracy.

Formulated by the French mathematician and philosopher Marquis de Condorcet in 1785, the theorem proposes that if a group of individuals makes a collective decision by majority vote—and each has a better than 50 percent chance of being right—the probability that the group’s decision is correct increases as the group grows larger.

It is, in essence, the mathematical backbone of the “wisdom of the crowd.”

In its ideal form, the Philippine Senate once embodied this promise. Former senator Franklin Drilon famously described it as “24 independent republics,” a chamber where each senator functioned autonomously, zealously guarding their own stance on national issues rather than bowing to a unified party line.

During the heyday of Salonga, Diokno et al, this independence meant the Senate could act as a true jury—deliberating with conscience, weighing evidence, and amplifying truth through diversity of thought.

Each senator was a republic unto themselves, and the collective decision carried the weight of competence and independence that Condorcet envisioned.

But that Senate—the one of Salonga, Diokno et al, and Drilon’s “24 independent republics”—now feels like a relic of a nobler age. The chamber that once embodied Condorcet’s vision of competence and independence has drifted toward conformity.

Where senators once stood as autonomous republics, they now move as a bloc; where conscience once guided votes, convenience now conducts them. The jury that could have converged toward truth has become a choir rehearsing loyalty, its harmony drowning out the fragile solos of reason.

From Jury to Choir

And so, begins the transformation: from deliberation to performance, from republics to rehearsed refrain.

The Senate has become less a constellation of independent republics, more a choir rehearsing loyalty. Bloc voting collapses independence, competence bends to convenience, and the “wisdom of the crowd” dissolves into the folly of the herd.

The “24 republics” have been reduced to a “Gang of 13,” rehearsing one note, drowning out the fragile solos of conscience.

This predetermined destination is echoed—though in different tones—by two prominent voices in The Manila Times.

Columnist Marlen V. Ronquillo paints the Senate majority as a confederacy of Duterte loyalists, sympathizers, hangers-on, and fence-sitters.

He warns that these gatekeepers will suppress the “explosive and damning evidence” itemized by the House, only to end with “the odious act of supplication” to their president-in-waiting. In his words, the trial’s endgame is already scripted: acquittal.

On the other side of the aisle, Rigoberto D. Tiglao underscores the same inevitability, but in a cooler, arithmetic tone.

He notes that Senate math favors Duterte: she needs only nine senators to vote against conviction to survive. With a solid bloc of allies, her acquittal is “very unlikely” to be overturned.

Together, these insights—one fiery, one clinical—converge on the same truth: the numbers dictate the destination. Whether framed as a “Gang of 13” rehearsing loyalty or as cold Senate math, the outcome is acquittal.

The Journey of Truth

Yet, as Emerson reminds us, life is a journey, not a destination. And Garfield sharpens the paradox: truth will set us free, but first it will make us miserable.

Thus, the impeachment becomes less about the foregone verdict and more about the journey of truth—miserable for the Vice President as Pandora’s boxes are opened, but necessary for the Filipino people who long to see the evidence unveiled.

Author Paul Rulkens warned that the majority is often wrong, trapped on autopilot, smashing into the same wall.

Here, the pro-Duterte majority becomes that wall—unyielding, immovable, predetermined. Yet the impeachment still matters, because the Filipino people are not passive spectators. They are the ultimate jury, weighing not only the evidence but the integrity of the Senate itself.

Thus, the trial is doubled. Sara Duterte stands accused, but the Senate itself is judged. Each senator’s vote is not merely a verdict on the Vice President—it is a verdict on their own conscience.

Redemption and Hope

Acquittal may be certain, but truth is stubborn.

The Senate may sing one note, but the Filipino people will not forget the melody of evidence. In the end, the impeachment is not a courtroom with a closed verdict—it is a pilgrimage of conscience.

And when the caravan arrives at its foregone destination, the people will judge not the gates, but the travelers.

Yet even in this foregone conclusion, there lingers the possibility of redemption as columnist Manuel L. Quezon III wrote in his Inquirer column.

The journey, though miserable, can still offer a chance for dignity—if senators choose to weigh evidence with integrity rather than rehearse loyalty.

Ana Marie Pamintuan sharpens this hope with challenge: the Marcos Jr. administration, suspected of playing zarzuela with the Senate, can yet show intestinal fortitude.

By upholding the rule of law—by indicting obstructionists rather than shielding them—it can redeem itself from complicity. Failure to act would be as damning as a failure to catch Bato dela Rosa.

And here lies the deeper parable: redemption means rediscovering the Senate’s identity as “24 independent republics,” once described by Franklin Drilon in the heyday of Salonga, Diokno et al.

It ought to be a senate of autonomous voices, each guarding conscience, each weighing evidence, each refusing to be drowned in a choir of one note.

So let the parable end not in despair but in possibility: the Senate, though a choir today, can still reclaim its voice as a jury tomorrow. The administration, though shaken by suspicion, can still prove itself a guardian of justice.

Emerson’s reminder stands—life is a journey, not a destination. And Garfield’s paradox holds—the truth will set us free, though first it will make us miserable. But misery is not the end; it is the passage.

And in that passage lies hope—that democracy, though bruised, may yet heal through truth, conscience, and the rediscovery of independence.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot

Head image created by Bing Co-pilot; art design by Canva

Still photos by POLITIKO, The Manila Times, Facebook, Philstar, & Quote Fancy


CROSSROADS IN THE SENATE: CHOOSING HUMILITY OVER EGO

It’s Sunday as I write this piece, so let me begin with a Sunday school question: What is your favorite passage? Is it a line from Richard D...