Friday, 8 May 2026

THE MABANTA PARABLE: THE DANGER OF SERVING TWO MASTERS


What do a self-styled "free speech absolutist" in Manila, a “Crypto King” in America, and a tabloid empire in New York have in common?

All three began with visions that sounded noble — even spiritual.

THE RISE

The Promise of Unfiltered Truth

Franco Mabenta’s story followed a strangely familiar arc. Founder of Peanut Gallery Media Network (PGMN), he declared himself a champion of Free Speech Absolutism, vowing to tear down censorship, editorial gatekeeping, and what he saw as the hypocrisy of mainstream media.

His rise was meteoric.

From the bright lights of MYX as a VJ to the smoke-filled backrooms of political strategy of both Marcos and Duterte camps during the 2022 election cycle and in the years leading up to it, Mabanta reinvented himself as a digital crusader—sharp-tongued, street-smart, and unapologetically combative.

PGMN became his pulpit.

There were long-form exposés, satirical riffs, livestream debates, and relentless attacks against establishment narratives. He spoke directly to viewers with the swagger of someone who believed he answered to no newsroom and no corporate filter.

To audiences exhausted by scripted talking heads and curated narratives, PGMN felt raw, rebellious, and refreshingly alive.

At its core, Mabanta’s vision carried a seductive promise: truth without gatekeepers.

But like many noble visions before it, Free Speech Absolutism carried its own dangerous two-stage logic: First comes influence. Then comes truth.

First build platform. First accumulate reach, leverage, audience loyalty, and political capital. The noble mission of truth-telling can always be fulfilled later.

And that is where temptation quietly enters the room.

Once influence itself becomes profitable, the mission risks mutating. The platform no longer merely speaks to power; it begins negotiating with it. Silence acquires a market value. Exposure becomes a bargaining chip.

What began as a crusade against manipulation can slowly drift into another form of transaction.

The Gospel of Effective Altruism

Sam Bankman-Fried’s (SBF) story unfolded along eerily similar lines.

SBF promised to make billions only to give it all away under the banner of Effective Altruism (EA).

Inspired by EA, he claimed he wanted to make money — billions, maybe even trillions — so he could do the greatest good possible. He planned to keep only one percent of his wealth and eventually donate the rest to worthy causes.

At first glance, it sounded noble. Almost saintly in Silicon Valley packaging.

But hidden inside that framework was a dangerous temptation: the belief that one can temporarily bow before money now in order to serve goodness later.

Drawn into that mindset, wittingly or unwittingly, SBF ended up placing two masters, side by side. Money in the first stage. God-inspired goodness in the second.

But two masters rarely coexist peacefully.

In time, SBF used FTX money to bankroll an astonishingly lavish lifestyle for himself and his inner circle.

Then came the ugly crack beneath the glitter—a massive $13-billion hole in FTX finances. Customer deposits quietly disappeared into risky bets, luxury spending, and political influence.

And there lies the deeper tragedy.

Accumulating enormous wealth, SBF became trapped in the first stage of his mission. The Money master slowly moved from servant to idol. Somewhere along the way, the second stage—giving it all away for the poor and the greater good — faded into the background like a forgotten sermon.

The mission survived in rhetoric. Mammon took over in practice.

The Flair of Populist Edge

Donald Trump’s allies at the National Enquirer traveled a similar road.

The tabloid presented itself as a fearless chronicler of scandal and insider truth — a publication willing to publish what respectable media outfits supposedly refused to touch. Its populist edge gave readers the feeling that they’re peeking behind the curtains of elite hypocrisy.

But beneath the sensational headlines operated a darker machinery known in journalism circles as “catch and kill.”

Stories were not always published. Sometimes they were purchased precisely so they would disappear.

Women who claimed affairs with Donald Trump allegedly received payments in exchange for silence. Rights to damaging stories were quietly acquired, then buried before they could reach the public. Journalism became less about informing citizens and more about managing political risk.

Like SBF’s philanthropy and Mabanta’s absolutism, the vision initially carried the aura of a mission. Followers believed they were witnessing a force for good — disruptive, fearless, anti-establishment.

Yet somewhere along the way, mammon knocked at the door.

And once money enters the sanctuary, even noble visions begin negotiating with compromise. As the old saying goes, when money sings, even angels pause to listen.

THE FALL

When Truth Becomes Currency

Bankman-Fried’s former partner lamented, “Something I thought was a beautiful force for good has turned out to be so evil.”

Mabanta’s case too now stands as a cautionary echo.

What began as a crusade for free speech now risks being remembered as a transaction for silence.

The higher the vision, the sharper the temptation.

And perhaps the temptation became harder to resist because the controversy itself revolved around unimaginable amounts of public money.

The flood-control scandal involved not mere millions but trillions lost in a system long plagued by corruption. In such an atmosphere, where colossal sums are tossed around like poker chips, greed begins rationalizing itself.

The sheer scale of money surrounding the scandal may have created the dangerous illusion that demanding hundreds of millions was no longer outrageous, but simply “part of the game.”

Mammon has a way of normalizing excess once people stay too long in its shadow. It is often said that anything kept too close to the fire—even wood soaked in water—will eventually stick together.

Mabanta allegedly demanded P300-P350 million from House Speaker Martin Romualdez in exchange for suppressing a 90-minute exposé. The NBI called it extortion. Mabanta called it a setup. Either way, the voice of the crusader suddenly sounded less like a prophet and more like a broker negotiating terms.

And this is where the story stops being exotic — because in America, Trump’s hush-money scandal followed eerily similar contours.

The National Enquirer allegedly paid to bury stories tied to Trump — $150,000 to Karen McDougal, $130,000 to Stormy Daniels, and even $30,000 to a Trump Tower doorman over an unverified story.

The mechanics differed. Mabanta allegedly threatened exposure unless paid. The Enquirer allegedly purchased stories in order to suppress them.

But the underlying principle was disturbingly identical: journalism weaponized as leverage; truth transformed into currency.

THE PARABLE

The Warning About Two Masters

The stories of Mabanta, Bankman-Fried, and Trump-allied National Enquirer remind us that noble visions can be undone by the ancient lure of money.

Whether it is Effective Altruism, Free Speech Absolutism, or tabloid “catch-and-kill” deals, the danger does not necessarily begin with the vision itself. The danger begins when the vision slowly forgets its higher master.

When truth is traded for silver, when integrity is sacrificed for access, influence, or wealth — collapse becomes only a matter of time.

Mabanta’s case is not exotic. It is almost painfully ordinary — a garden variety human temptation. Its mirror image has already played out in America’s journalistic playgrounds, political backrooms, and corporate cathedrals.

The moral lesson remains timeless.

History keeps repeating the ancient lesson, cut from the same cloth, but in different costumes: media platforms, crypto empires, political machines.

The names change, but the forewarning in Matthew 6:24 about God and money remains the same.

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

Head image created by ChatGPT; crowd photo courtesy of Freepik & art design by Canva

Mabanta collage photos courtesy of Reddit, The Filipino Times, & Philippine Star; art design by Canva

Bankman-Fried collage photos courtesy of CBC, VOI, & deposit photos, Business Insider; art design by Canva

Other still photos courtesy of Facebook, Shutterstock, & x.com


Sunday, 3 May 2026

BLIND LOYALTY VS. HARD TRUTH: INSIDE THE DIVIDED NATION

 

Good evening, folks! Welcome to ATABAY Tic-Tac-Talk—where sharp questions meet bright answers, and where we tackle the truths others tiptoe around.

Tonight’s spark? The seething impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte. This isn’t just about alleged hidden wealth—it’s about the storm it has unleashed. One reader’s fiery reaction to a DDS comment in my article captured the national mood: frustration, polarization, and that familiar clash between evidence and allegiance.

Here’s the heart of it: we’re watching logic wrestle with loyalty—facts colliding with identity. And in that collision, we see the Philippines today: divided, defensive, yet still searching for clarity.

So, let’s dive in. We’ve got a special guest—Mr. AI, our resident sociologist—ready to break it down. Welcome to the show, Mr. AI.

MR. AI: Thank you for having me, Raymond. Always a thrill to be in the hot seat—though I promise not to sweat, being silicon and all.

ME: Let’s kick things off. One DDS said that no matter how many Pandora’s boxes are opened in the hidden-wealth probe, his trust stands firm. Blind loyalty, right? Why is it so hard to argue with that?

MR. AI: You’re right. Because blind loyalty isn’t rational—it’s emotional. It’s a fortress. You’re trying to storm it with facts, but inside, people are defending identity (as DDS), belonging (as Mindanaoan or Bisayan), and their version of truth (no amount of truth can stop her to become President in 2028).

Logic feels like an attack, so they dig in deeper.

ME: I can almost picture a battlefield—like a war zone.

MR. AI: You’ve got a vivid imagination, Raymond—and it fits. Blind loyalty is a fortress under siege. Every incoming fact is seen as a threat. Facts march in like invading armies, but loyalty rallies the defenders.

And here’s the twist: sieges aren’t won with missiles of logic—they’re won with bridges of empathy.

Build a bridge, and suddenly the fortress isn’t a battlefield—it becomes a doorway.

ME: That reminds me of Pope Leo XIV's plea on wars: not force, but dialogue—not to dominate, but to encounter.

MR. AI: Exactly. That’s the real clash—between missiles of reason and bridges of emotion. Missiles can break walls, but bridges win hearts.

And let’s be honest: the brain builds the argument, but the heart builds the adherents.

ME: So, Intelligence Quotient (IQ) versus Emotional Quotient (EQ)—where does the tension lie?

MR. AI: IQ delivers the facts; EQ carries the feelings. In politics, IQ without EQ becomes cold technocracy. EQ without IQ becomes empty populism. The clash happens when evidence knocks—but emotion bolts the door.

ME: And when DDS say, “Whatever you find, we’re still rooting for her”?

MR. AI: That’s loyalty overriding logic. Not stupidity—identity. They’re not defending facts; they’re defending their tribe.

ME: I recall the infamous "damaged culture" marked by tribalism—intense loyalty to family—as main barrier to national development.

Let’s take a question from the audience.

AUDIENCE 1: Are facts useless, then?

MR. AI: Not useless—just incomplete. Facts need a story. Wrap truth in empathy, and it travels farther than raw data.

As the saying goes: “truth without love is brutality; love without truth is hypocrisy.”

Facts alone can feel cold. Love alone can feel hollow. Together they become compelling.

AUDIENCE 2: Can blind loyalty ever be broken?

MR. AI: Yes—but not by shaming. You open it by weaving fact into story, and story into belonging. That’s how fortress gates begin to open.

ME: Let’s hear from our home viewers.

CALLER 1: Is populism always bad?

MR. AI: Not at all. Populism can give voice to the voiceless. But without substance—without IQ—it risks becoming pure theater.

ME: Theater?

MR. AI: Picture a stage: dazzling lights, passionate actors, an emotional crowd. But behind the curtain—no script for real solutions.

It stirs emotions, yes—but doesn’t build lasting policy or real bridges. That’s the danger when feeling leads without thinking.

CALLER 2: One line to leave us with?

MR. AI: Simple: IQ opens the door; EQ walks us through it together.

Think of IQ as the key—and EQ as the compass. One unlocks the path; the other keeps us from getting lost.

ME: Final thoughts, Mr. AI?

MR. AI: Politics isn’t just a contest of policies—it’s a contest of stories. Leaders rise or fall not only on the strength of their arguments, but on the resonance of their narratives.

When loyalty blinds, facts alone won’t break through. But truth spoken with empathy can begin to reshape the story people tell themselves.

If democracy is to breathe, we must learn to speak to both the mind and heart. That’s the real tic-tac-talk of our times.

ME: Before we say good night, let me leave you with a cartoon snapshot from The Simpsons.

Homer is glued to the TV, shouting, “I don’t care what the news says—I’m sticking with my guy!”

Lisa rolls her eyes: “But Dad, the facts are right here in black and white!”

Marge sighs, trying to keep the peace.

Bart laughs, “Facts, schmacts—who’s got the popcorn?

Then Grandpa Simpson chimes in:

“Loyalty without reason makes you stubborn. Reason without empathy makes you lonely. But balance both—and you keep the family together.”

That’s the moral, folks.

Until next time—good night, and keep talking it out loud!

Content and editing put together in collaboration with Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-Pilot & ChatGPT

Head image and photos created by ChatGPT


Monday, 27 April 2026

LENI, PLEASE SPEAK. WE'RE LISTENING.

 

Author’s Note

This piece is a creative reflection written in the imagined voice of former Vice President Leni Robredo. It is not her statement, nor does it claim to represent her actual views. For transparency, I share that I actively supported and voted for her in the 2022 presidential elections.

Hello!

This is my nth time speaking about something that is becoming more urgent with each passing day—the 2028 presidential elections.

And before anything else, thank you.

I will never get tired of thanking you for the trust you continue to give me—for believing that I can take on something as demanding as the presidency. Your encouragement means more than you probably realize.

I remember your birthday gift to me in the middle of the 2022 campaign—over 400,000 of you gathering in Pasay. I can still see it: the sheer number, the energy, the hope. At the same time, there was another rally in Sampaloc that night. But what stood before me spoke for itself—28 times over, in numbers that were hard to ignore.

No survey—especially one with a sample size of 1,200, a drop in the bucket—could fully capture that kind of ground reality.

I remember, too, your tireless work. The endorsements came from everywhere: academe, professionals, religious groups, NGOs, cooperatives, fisherfolk, labor, Bangsamoro, indigenous communities, students, even our seniors. Those weren’t just endorsements—they were the fruit of genuine, selfless service.

But I also remember something else.

Seventeen days before election day, someone publicly predicted that I would lose. That alone wasn’t remarkable. What was—was the precision. A 16-million-vote margin.

You almost want to call it prophetic—a Filipino Nostradamus moment. And yet, it barely registered in the national conversation.

Then came election night.

I won’t go into the painful details. The position paper titled “A Preponderance of Evidence Shows That The May 09, 2022 Election Was Rigged” by Eliseo Rio lays out the concerns—especially the near-impossibility of counting and transmitting over 20 million votes within an hour after polls closed.

To this day, with the Supreme Court choosing not to go beyond COMELEC’s discretion, the issue remains unresolved—no definitive closure, just a lingering question mark.

So, I find myself asking—not out of bitterness, but out of honest reflection.

Who would still want to run for president in 2028?

But maybe the better question is not personal, but national:

Can we still hold a fair, clean, and honest election in 2028?

If the answer is yes, it cannot be by hope alone. It has to be by design.

And that’s where we begin.

A Civic Reform Agenda for 2028

If we want elections we can trust, we have to fix the system—not someday, but now. The good news is that many of these reforms don’t require changing the Constitution. What they require is political will, public pressure, and citizens who refuse to look away.

Follow The Money

Campaign finance has long shaped outcomes from behind the scenes. 

Requiring real-time disclosure of donations and expenditures—within 48 hours—brings sunlight into the process.

Lower spending caps and a ban on anonymous donations help level the playing field, making elections less about wealth and more about genuine support.

Make Results Verifiable

Trust is not enough—we need systems people can check.

Independent audits of vote-counting machines by third-party IT experts should be standard. Manual audits must be expanded, not minimized.

Poll workers should be properly trained, fairly paid, and protected from both error and undue influence.

Credibility grows when the process is transparent at every step.

Fight Disinformation With Structure

Disinformation is not just noise—it distorts choice.

Social media platforms must be held accountable for coordinated false campaigns. Accredited fact-checkers should be supported, and media fairness rules enforced.

Voters deserve access to accurate, balanced information—not narratives designed to mislead.

Put Citizens At The Center

Democracy works best when people are active, informed participants.

Watchdog groups like NAMFREL and PPCRV should be formally integrated into parallel vote tabulation. Voter education must be expanded, especially in communities vulnerable to vote-buying.

Overseas voting should be simplified, so more Filipinos can participate without unnecessary barriers.

Protect The Vote—On The Ground And Online

Election integrity requires both physical and digital security.

Peace zones, strict enforcement against vote-buying, and bans on the misuse of government resources help protect voters on the ground.

At the same time, cybersecurity must be strengthened—through real-time monitoring, rapid response teams, and transparent audit trails—to guard against hacking and interference in election systems.

Address Political Dynasties.

We cannot ignore the structural imbalance created by entrenched political families.

Enacting and enforcing anti-dynasty measures, strengthening campaign finance rules, and reforming political parties to encourage internal democracy can gradually open the field.

In parallel, voters must be empowered with a deeper understanding of how dynastic politics affects governance and accountability.

Where This Leads

This is more than a list of reforms. It is a shared responsibility.

Lawmakers, COMELEC, civil society, and ordinary citizens all have a role to play. Without meaningful change, we risk repeating what remains unresolved.

The philosopher George Santayana warned.

The unanswered questions from 2022 are not just about the past—they are warnings for the future. And they point to one clear conclusion: we must do better.

A Final Thought

Let me leave you with something bittersweet.

If we actually succeed in putting these reforms in place—if we truly fix the system—have you ever considered that maybe I wouldn’t need to run anymore?

That’s the bitter part.

Because with a fair and open system, many others—many Lenis, perhaps even better than me—will step forward. Leaders who today hesitate, not because they lack heart, but because they doubt the process.

And that is the sweet part.

A country where leadership is not limited to a few, but open to many.

So once again, thank you—for your trust, your courage, and your care.

May God bless our hopes for this land we love—the Philippines.

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

Collage Art by Canva; Photos courtesy of GMA Network, Facebook, Philippine News Agency, x.com, Rappler

Still photos courtesy of Getty Images, The Times of Israel, ChatGPT Image Creator, WBUR, A-Z Quotes, Instagram, Rappler


Thursday, 23 April 2026

TWIN SWORDS FALL: BLOODBATH MOMENT AS HIDDEN WEALTH PROBE AND ICC BLOW HIT SARA

 

There are days in politics when events don’t just unfold—they collide.

Yesterday, April 22, was one of those days.

Two separate arenas. Two different tracks. Yet both converging on one name: Sara Duterte.

One sword fell in Manila. Another in The Hague. And suddenly, the phrase isn’t just idiomatic—it’s illustrative: When it rains, it pours.

The First Sword: Follow The Money

At the House Committee on Justice, the language was clinical, almost cold—but devastating in implication.

This was no longer about soundbites or partisan theatrics. The method has shifted. Follow the money. Numbers don’t lie. Let evidence speak.

Institutions were invoked like instruments in a coordinated orchestra—the Office of the Ombudsman, Anti-Money Laundering Council, National Bureau of Investigation, Bureau of Internal Revenue, and Securities and Exchange Commission.

Each pointing, in its own way, to a single unsettling question: What lies beneath the declared surface?

Top: Public protest rallies Bottom left: House Justice Committee impeachment probe Bottom right: No-show VP Sara

The hearings didn’t conclude a verdict—but they sharpened suspicion. And in politics, that alone can redraw trajectories.

For years, allegations floated in the margins. Today, they entered the records.

A Vindication Measured in Time

There was a time when Antonio Trillanes stood almost alone—dismissed, ridiculed, reduced to a mocking monicker: Trililing.

In the noise of that moment, it was easy to mistake persistence for obsession, to frame pursuit as politics, and to treat allegations as mere theater.

But accountability, when it is real, does not rush. It endures.

And what we are witnessing now feels less like a sudden revelation and more like the slow arrival of something long set in motion.

This moment carries a quiet vindication—not built on volume, but on staying the course.

What was once waved off as partisan attack, now finds its way—almost reluctantly—into the language of institutions, into hearings, into records, into processes that demand more than rhetoric.

Vindication, in this sense, does not celebrate. It simply stands—unmoved—while the narrative around it begins to shift.

The Second Sword: The World Weighs In

While Manila probed numbers, The Hague dealt in something heavier: accountability before history.

The International Criminal Court has now shut the door on jurisdictional escape routes for Rodrigo Duterte. [News Update: "ICC confirms all charges vs. Rodrigo Duterte" — Inquirer headline]

Appeal denied. It means the case does not drift—it advances. And with it comes something no narrative by Duterte Diehard Supporters (DDS) can fully contain: testimonies. 

Not statistics. Not policy defenses. But stories—from those who claim to have lived through the darkest edges of the drug war.

From Legal Question to Moral Theater

This is no longer just a legal question. It is a moral theater on the global stage.

And yet, speaking of legal questions—memory has a way of intruding at the most telling moments.

I am reminded of Maria Lourdes Sereno—a vocal critic of Rodrigo Duterte. She was removed not by impeachment, but by an 8-6 vote of the Supreme Court through a quo warranto petition—a legal maneuver that voided her appointment altogether.

At the time, the Court—widely seen as aligned with the Duterte administration—weaponized the law by retrieving an old remedy, and gave it new teeth.

The charge? Failure to fully comply with the filing of Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) during her years as a university professor.

Technical, they said. But decisive. A career undone by what was framed as a matter of integrity on paper.

Poetic Justice—What Goes Around Comes Around

Now, place that Sereno legal maneuver beside what is unfolding today around VP Sara’s SALN expose. Not whispers, but disclosures. Not omissions in the margins, but questions that cut deeper into patterns of hidden wealth and declaration.

And suddenly, the Sereno episode—once seismic—feels almost silly by comparison.

What was once used as a switchblade now looks, in hindsight, like a nail clipper.

There is a certain irony here—hard to ignore. Almost like a form of poetic justice descending, unannounced. Not declared. Not argued. Just… unfolding.

Call it consequence. Call it reckoning. But whatever name we give it, the dilemma before Sara only deepens:

How do you campaign forward while history pulls backward? How do you defend blood ties under the harshest possible light?

In the end, the courts may decide legally—but it is the public, watching this moral theater unfold, that renders judgment of a different kind.

The Metaphor That Waited

I remember the first time I drew on the image of the Swords of Damocles in my May 19, 2025 ATABAY piece titled “Sara’s Shrinking Road to 2028: Beneath Two Damocles Swords.”

At the time, the metaphor felt almost excessive to some—provoking sharp, even belligerent DDS pushback.

Two swords? Hanging? Overstated, they asserted. But metaphors, like truths, have their own timing. They wait.

And yesterday, what once seemed like rhetorical stretch now feels almost unassuming. The swords are no longer imagined. They are no longer suspended. They are descending—not in metaphor, but in real motion.

The image did not exaggerate the moment. If anything, it arrived early.

The Exit—or the Intermission?

And then comes the curious timing.

Amid the noise, the hearings, the global headlines—VP Sara is set to leave the country for a 22-day trip abroad.

Now in calmer times, that would be routine. Today, it reads differently.

Is it flight? Or simply a pause—a chance to breathe before the next wave hits?

If the testimony of her former alleged bagman holds—that P125 million in confidential funds moved within 24 hours—then just under a month of globe-trotting, one city at a time, feels almost effortless.  A ritzy itinerary, fit for a queen.

Hard to tell. In moments like this, perception moves faster than explanation.

Final Thought

“When it rains, it pours” is usually said with a shrug—a way of accepting misfortune. 

But in politics, rain is rarely random. Storms build. Pressure accumulates. And when it finally breaks, it reveals what was already gathering in the sky.

The real question now is not whether the rain will stop.

It’s whether what remains standing after the storm can still make it to 2028.

Content and editing put together in collaboration with ChatGPT

Head image created by ChatGPT

Still photos courtesy of The Star, Reddit, ABS-CBN, Rappler, Facebook, Instagram, ICC, iStock, GMA Network, Stock Cake, ChatGPT image creator

Saturday, 18 April 2026

WHEN FAITH CHOSE POWER: TRUMP DEFENSE THAT REVEALED EVERYTHING

It was early morning—one of those quiet hours when the world hasn’t fully woken up yet. No noise, no headlines, no arguments. Just Scripture, stillness, and that strange clarity that only comes when you sit long enough with both.

That’s when this scene found me again.

In the Gospel of John, the disciples are out on the water at night. The wind is howling, the sea turning restless, their small boat straining against waves that don’t care who they are or what they believe.

Jesus isn’t with them–or so they think.

Then they see something. A figure walking toward them on the water. And instead of relief, they feel fear. Because in the dark, even the presence of the divine can look like a threat.

The Crisis of Recognition

I keep returning to that scene—not as a distant miracle, but as a mirror. Because if there’s any modern nation that feels like it’s rowing hard against unseen currents, squinting into the dark for meaning, it’s the United States of America today.

We often say the problem is the "absence of light," the absence of Christ, the absence of moral clarity. But that reading might be too simple, too convenient. The deeper disturbance in the story is this: Jesus was never absent.

He was there. They just didn’t recognize Him anymore. That changes everything.

Maybe the American spiritual crisis we’re witnessing is not just about losing faith—but about misrecognizing it. About seeing something approach in the storm and mistaking it for salvation… or mistaking salvation for something else entirely.

In today’s American landscape, that confusion is playing out in full view. The collision between faith and power has become so entangled that it’s hard to tell where one ends and the other begins.

Faith in the Shape of Power

Take Donald Trump—a figure who, for many, represents strength, defiance, even a kind of chosen instrument. And yet, for others, embodies the very opposite of the teachings associated with Jesus Christ.

That tension sharpened when Trump circulated an image portraying himself in Christ-like terms—an act that sparked backlash across the world. Not just political outrage, but something deeper: a spiritual discomfort, as if the lines between symbol and self has been crossed too boldly.

And still, many inside the “boat”—those who identify as followers of Christ—did not recoil. They defended. They affirmed. They stood firm.

Among them, Franklin Graham, a prominent voice in conservative Christianity, who publicly supported Trump’s action.

Huffpost in its report broke down how Graham's reasoning over Trump's controversial AI image might have revealed more than he intended. Graham wrote:

"There were no spiritual references—no halo, there were no crosses, no angels. It was a flag, soldiers, a nurse, fighter planes, eagles, the Statue of Liberty, and I think this is a lot to do about nothing."

Blinding Flash of the Obvious

Obviously, it was a blinding flash of the obvious—but in the most revealing way. In trying to strip the image of "spiritual references," Graham ended up naming precisely the deeper fusion at work: not the absence of the sacred, but its quiet substitution.

No halo, no cross, no angels—yes. But in their place: flag, soldiers, fighter planes, eagles, the Statue of Liberty—a different liturgy, one draped in a flag rather than grace. What was offered as dismissal—"a lot to do about. nothing"—lands instead as an unintended confession.

Because the discomfort was never about missing religious symbols; it was about the ease with which political imagery could assume a near-sacred weight, and how a figure like Trump could stand within it, not merely as leader, but as vessel.

That is where the line blurs—not loudly, but almost imperceptibly—and that is why the reaction ran deeper than outrage.

This is where the question stops being rhetorical and becomes unsettlingly real: What does it mean when those who claim to follow Christ do not recognize when His image is being desecrated? Or worse—when they accept the desecration?

A scholar, Deepak Sarma, described this moment as a kind of drift— “conceptually and ethically” away from the core of Christian tradition. But even that word, "drift," feels too gentle. "Drift" suggests passivity, like something carried slowly by tide.

What we’re seeing looks more like navigation. Deliberate. Justified. Explained.

For many, this isn’t a betrayal of faith—it’s an expression of it. A belief that power can be a vessel for righteousness. That flawed men can still serve divine purposes. That the storm requires a certain kind of captain.

And that’s what makes this moment so complex. Not hypocrisy—but conviction.

Serving Two Masters, Quietly

It echoes an old warning from the Gospel of Matthew: “No one can serve two masters.”

We often read that as a clean divide—God on one side, worldly power on the other. But lived reality is rarely that neat. People don’t wake up and choose one while rejecting the other in clear terms. They blend them. They reconcile them. They convince themselves the two are aligned.

Until they’re not.

Until the figure walking toward the boat no longer looks like the one they were waiting for. And fear sets in—not because evil has arrived, but because faith and certainty have collapsed.

Be Not Afraid

Back on that dark sea, the turning point wasn’t the calming of the storms. It was recognition.

Not a command to conquer the waves. Not a lecture on courage. Just an invitation to see clearly. To know. To discern.

Fear, in that moment, was born not from danger—but from misreading what stood before them. That might be the most unsettling parallel of all.

Not that people have lost their faith—but that they may be placing it in something they have not fully recognized.

Not that the storm is overwhelming—but that in the chaos, the lines between truth and illusion, between symbol and substance, have blurred.

And when that happened, even the familiar can become frightening. Even the sacred can be mistaken.

It Is Personal

So, the question that lingers is not political, not even purely theological.

It is deeply personal.

In the middle of our own storms—of power, identity, belief—when something rises before us and claims authority over our fears, do we actually know what we are looking at?

Or are we, like those in the boat, gripping the oars, hearts racing, afraid—not because God is absent, but because we no longer recognize Him?

Content & editing put together in collaboration with ChatGPT

Head image created by ChatGPT; art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy of Catholic Daily Reflections, BBC, X.com, Vecteezy, Freepik, & USA Today




Tuesday, 14 April 2026

MY LAI REVISITED: WHEN NARCISSISTIC ARROGANCE TURNS WICKEDLY DEADLY

 

“The massacre at My Lai was an event waiting to happen.”         —Dr. M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie

Some mornings arrive without warning—ordinary, unhurried—until something small shifts the weight of the day.

I remember one such morning, standing idly before my home bookshelf, not really looking for anything in particular. Then a title caught my eye, almost as if it had been waiting longer than I had: People of the Lie. I pulled it out, more out of instinct than intention, and began leafing through its pages.

Then I saw a chapter heading that refused to let me go: "My Lai: An Examination of Group Evil."

What began as casual browsing turned into stillness. And that stillness turned into a kind of reckoning.

I found myself reading, then re-reading—linger longer than I expected, as if the words were not just describing a past event, but quietly interrogating the present. That morning did not feel like discovery. It felt like recognition.

And somewhere in that slow unfolding, this reflection began to take shape—the very thread that would later become this ATABAY piece.

Peck’s haunting line is more than a historical observation—it is a warning that refuses to fade. "My Lai" was not a sudden eruption of cruelty. It was the slow, deliberate flowering of something already rotten—arrogance left unchecked, deceit normalized, and conscience quietly surrendered.

And so, the question presses itself upon us now, uncomfortably, insistently: Are we once again living in an atmosphere where such atrocity is merely waiting to happen?

Or worse—is it already unfolding before our eyes, just under different names?

The Rotten American Atmosphere

In 1968, the rice paddies of Quang Ngai Province became a graveyard not just for bodies, but for illusions.

Charlie Company entered My Lai believing it to be a Viet Cong stronghold. That belief, however, did not arise in a vacuum. It was cultivated—fed by a military culture already drifting into moral numbness, a political leadership detached from truth, and a citizenry lulled into passive trust.

What happened in My Lai was not accident. It was the logical outcome of a rotten system that had learned to dehumanize first—and justify later.

Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph "The Terror of War"

History teaches us this uncomfortable truth: When deceit becomes policy, when arrogance passes for strength, and when citizens grow accustomed to not asking questions, atrocities do not shock the system.

They fulfill it.

The Day of Fire and Silence

On the morning of March 16, 1968, Task Force Barker moved into a cluster of hamlets collectively known as My Lai.

It was supposed to be routine—a “search-and-destroy” mission. But there was nothing to search. And no one to fight.

The soldiers found no Viet Cong. No armed resistance. No incoming fire.

Only women. Children. Old men. Unarmed. Unprepared. Human.

What followed cannot be softened by language.

Between 500 and 600 villagers were killed. Some were shot inside their homes—bullets tearing through thin walls, bodies falling where they stood. Others were gunned down in open fields as they ran, instinctively, toward life. Groups were herded together—twenty, forty at a time—then cut down by rifle fire, machine guns, and grenades.

The killing did not happen in a moment of chaos. It stretched across hours. It unfolded in daylight.

And most chilling of all—almost no one stopped it.

One helicopter pilot, seeing the horror from above, tried. He landed, confronted the soldiers, pleaded. When that failed, he radioed command. The response was indifference. The machine moved on. So eventually, did he.

Only about fifty soldiers pulled the triggers. But around two hundred witnessed. And the rest of the system? It absorbed the act, concealed it, and reported it as success.

Victory. The lie was not an afterthought. It was part of the operation. And when the truth finally surfaced, the world recoiled—not just at what was done, but at how easily it had been hidden, justified, and almost forgotten.

"My Lai" became more than a massacre. It became a mirror.

The Machinery of Justification

The United States was not in Vietnam reluctantly.

It went in with fervor—almost celebratory, as if war itself had become a proving ground for identity. The mission was sanctified from the highest office, wrapped in the language of necessity and destiny.

And beneath that fervor was another quiet faith—the faith in technology. Machines would make everything efficient. Clean. Precise. Even killing.

But what Vietnam revealed—what "My Lai" exposed—was that no machine can sanitize moral failure. It can only accelerate it.

The justification, of course, was simple: Communism.

But history would later complicate that narrative. The world was not as morally divided as it had been presented. Human rights abuses were not confined to one ideology. Suffering was not owned by one side.

Yet instead of reexamining its worldview, America doubled down. It chose force over reflection, destruction over humility.

It sought not to understand Vietnam—but to erase it.

And in so doing, it revealed something deeper, something more disturbing: That power, when fused with insecurity, can become destructive not for survival—but for self-preservation of a fractured identity.

That is the anatomy of what Dr. Peck called evil: the use of power to destroy others in order to protect a diseased sense of self.

A Cautionary Tale for Today

More than five decades later, the warning has not aged. It has sharpened.

The Middle East today feels eerily familiar—ceasefires collapsing, rhetoric hardening, weapons systems growing ever more precise and ever more devastating.

Drones that see everything. Missiles that reach anywhere. Buttons that once pressed, cannot be unpressed.

And above all—there is the bullying.

The theater of intimidation. The calculated fear. The voice of the most powerful man on the planet—Donald Trump—carried not in restraint but in spectacle, sounding, at times, almost apocalyptic.

We hear not the language of caution, but of certainty sharpened into threat: promises of total victory, enemies spoken of as if they must be erased, entire realities reduced to something that can simply be "blown to hell."

These are not passing words. They are signals—of a mindset unhinged, dangerous in its confidence, and all the more perilous for the power it commands.

And then, something even more unsettling—almost surreal in its audacity.

A leader who, in the wake of attacking a spiritual figure like Pope Leo XIV, circulates an image of himself cast in the likeness of Jesus Christ. Not as parody, but as projection. Not as humility, but as elevation.

One is left to ask—not lightly, but with a certain trembling—what kind of imagination permits such a gesture?

Is this not, in its own quiet way, a kind of writing on the wall?

As Provebs 16:18 has long warned: “First pride, then the crash—the bigger the ego, the harder the fall.” (TLB)

Around him stand cabinets that echo rather than question—yes-men who translate aggression into policy, who refine rage into strategy.

Military leadership has begun to flirt with something more dangerous than nationalism: a religious framing of conflict that borders on blasphemy—a language of “destiny,” even of “holy” confrontation, where war is no longer a last resort but a “crusade moment.”

Legislative bodies, meant to check power, is not unified—a reflection instead of broader national debate on foreign policy and military engagement with a language resembling a blank check.

And the public?

Tired. Polarized. Overwhelmed. Scrolling past headlines. Absorbing without resisting. Not evil—but relatively quiet. And it is in that quietude where danger matures.

The Lessons Never Learned

If "My Lai" teaches anything, it is this: Atrocity does not begin with bullets. It begins with permission—to dehumanize, to exaggerate threats, to silence doubt, to look away.

By the time the trigger is pulled, the moral decision has already been made—long before, in quieter rooms, in softer language.

Vigilance, then, is not optional. Moral clarity is not idealistic. Communal responsibility is not abstract. They are the only barriers. Silence is not neutral; it is participation by absence.

The Quiet Before the Next My Lai

History rarely repeats itself in exact detail. It changes names, locations, uniforms. But its patterns remain.

Somewhere today, decisions are being made in conference rooms far from the dust and blood they will produce. Words are being chosen carefully—words that will justify, soften, conceal.

Somewhere, a young soldier is being prepared not just with weapons, but with a way of seeing the world—who is human, who is not, who matters, who doesn’t.

Somewhere, a citizen is choosing not to ask one more question.

And somewhere, in a place not yet marked on the maps of memory, another “event waiting to happen” is already taking shape.

And then, as it always does, a quiet morning will come.

Someone will stand before a shelf, or pause mid-scroll, or stumble upon a name they have never heard before. Minab, perhaps. Or another name we have not yet learned to mourn.

The tragedy of "My Lai" is not only that it happened.

It is that it remains possible—and that what comes next may arrive larger, faster, and far more apocalyptic.

And the burden it leaves us is not simply to remember—but to interrupt.

Before the next quiet morning carries another name, and we find ourselves, once again, wishing we had stopped time when it still listened.

I stand to be counted alongside Pope Leo XIV, raising my voice against Trump's war on Iran and other nations—an assault that gravely endangers the fabric of our global community.

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

Head collage courtesy of Canva, Getty Images, and AI-generated image

Still photos courtesy of History.com, Getty Images, Freepik, The Guardian, Etsy, GMA News Online, Time Magazine, Politico, study.com, & The European Conservative


THE MABANTA PARABLE: THE DANGER OF SERVING TWO MASTERS

What do a self-styled "free speech absolutist" in Manila, a “Crypto King” in America, and a tabloid empire in New York have in com...