Monday, 2 March 2026

RIGHT IS MIGHT OR MIGHT IS RIGHT? ICC DUTERTE TRIAL & U.S.-ISRAEL WAR ON IRAN

 

I was glued to the TV.

The replays from The Hague was rolling. The closing statements at the International Criminal Court had wrapped up in the trial of former President Rodrigo Duterte. I was taking notes for my ATABAY piece—rewinding phrases, replaying arguments, studying the tone of the prosecutions and defense.

This was history unfolding in legal language.

Then suddenly, the news broke out. Breaking: U.S. and Israel launch major strikes on Iran.

In one instant, my attention shifted from courtroom in Europe to missiles over the Middle East. From legal arguments to airstrikes. From judges in robes to fighter jets in formation.

And that was when it struck me.

These two events—so different, so distant—were not separate at all.

They were serendipitously coupled.

They were living embodiments of the oldest geopolitical tension known to humanity: Right is might versus Might is right.

And somehow, the Philippines stood at the center of one of them.

Epitome 1: The ICC-Philippines Trial — When Right Claims Power

What I was watching in The Hague was not just a trial. It was an idea in action.

The ICC represents a bold claim: that law can stand above sovereignty. That even presidents can be summoned to answer before international judges. That crimes against humanity are not erased by popularity, rhetoric, or political tenure.

For a Filipino watching this unfold, it feels surreal.

A former Philippine president standing before a global tribunal. Our nation collaborating—directly or indirectly—in a process that says justice transcends borders.

Whether one supports Duterte or opposed him, this moment carries weight. It signals that accountability is not merely a domestic political slogan but part of an international moral architecture built after World War II.

Not tanks. Not sanctions. Not missiles. But institutions.

It is slow. It is procedural. It can be frustratingly technical. But its power lies in endurance. It claims that legitimacy—when organized into law—becomes a form of strength.

And for once, the Philippines is not merely reacting to global events. We are part of shaping one.

Epitome 2: The U.S.-Israel Strike on Iran — When Might Defines Order

But while The Hague argued in paragraphs, the Middle East erupted in explosions.

The joint action of the U.S. and Israel against Iran represents something far older and far more blunt.

When threats are perceived, force is deployed.

When deterrence fails, escalation follows.

When capability exists, it is exercised.

International law may debate. The United Nations may deliberate. But military power reshapes the map in real time. This is the world of Might is right.

Security justified by superiority.

Order defined by dominance.

Outcomes decided by force.

Watching the screen switch from courtroom solemnly to breaking-war headlines felt like witnessing two different centuries colliding.

One believes norms should govern power.

The other assumes power governs norms.

What Does This Mean For Us Filipinos?

Here is the uncomfortable but necessary question: What do these twin events mean for the Filipino people?

First, they remind us that the rules-based international order is fragile. It works—until power chooses not to wait for it.

Second, they challenge our consistency. Can we champion accountability in The Hague while ignoring the reality that global powers still act unilaterally when strategic interests demand it?

Third, they force us to mature geopolitically. We are allied with a superpower. But, we are also part of international institutions. We sit in a region where great-power rivalry is intensifying. We cannot afford intellectual laziness.

These are not abstract debates. They shape trade routes, oil prices, security alliances—and potentially our own future.

The Three Scenarios: Good, Bad, and Ugly

Let us imagine where this could go.

The Good

The ICC trial proceeds credibly and strengthens global norms. The U.S.-Israel vs Iran conflict de-escalates before spiraling wider. Institutions regain relevance. The Philippines emerges as a nation capable of confronting its own past through legal means.

In this scenario, the prayer of Pope John Paul II—that the Philippines be a “light” for Asia—takes on geopolitical meaning. Not a light of dominance. But a light of accountability.

The Bad

The ICC process becomes politicized in perception. Domestic divisions deepen. The Middle East conflict destabilizes global markets and alliances. Cynicism grows.

People conclude that justice is selective and power remains decisive.

Trust erodes.

The Ugly

The war expands. Regional powers are drawn in. International institutions weaken further. The global order fractures into hardened blocs.

In such a world, small and middle powers like the Philippines become vulnerable to pressures we cannot control.

Here, both ideas collapse.

Right becomes rhetorical.

Might becomes reckless.

A Final Reflection

That night, as I switched between legal commentary and war footage, I felt the weight of something larger than headlines. The Philippines is not just observing this global tension—we are living inside it.

On one screen: a former president answering before international law. On another: superpowers asserting security through force.

Two interventions.

Two philosophies.

One fragile world order.

The question for us Filipinos is simple but profound: 

Could this be our rare moment in time to show that in a world still tempted by “Might is right,” we dare—as a nation—to test whether “Right is might” can truly stand?

It is not an easy question.

It is not even a comfortable one.

To ask it seriously means we must examine not only global powers, but ourselves—our alliances, our principles, our courage, and our consistency.

After spending the whole day absorbing courtroom arguments from The Hague and then watching missiles redraw headlines in the Middle East, I felt the weight of it all. It was geopolitics at full volume.

So to ease my mind—after such a grueling reckoning—I did what I often do when the world feels unbearably divided.

I switched the video in YouTube. And I played John Lennon’s song. Then the familiar lines floated through the room:

Imagine there’s no countries

It isn’t hard to do

Nothing to kill or die for

And no religion too

Imagine all the people

Living life in peace…

Content &. Editing put together in collaboration with ChatGPT

Head collage image courtesy of ChatGPT image creator & Rappler, art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy by Philippines Travel & Leisure, Getty Images, International Criminal Court, Facebook, Easy-Peasy.AI, ATABAY photo file, & Shutterstock


Wednesday, 25 February 2026

WHEN CROWD LAUGHED: FEAR, DUTERTE, & THE HAGUE TRIAL


I was watching it on TV. A speech. Familiar faces. The crowd looked like my neighbors buying staples inside the 7-Eleven store.

Then Rodrigo Duterte pointed toward the crowd and said:

“Yung mga adik dyan, kayo na lang ang pumatay. Kung anak nya [pointing to some listener], ikaw ang pumatay. Anak nyang adik [pointing to another], kayo ang pumatay. Para hindi masyadong masakit.”

I froze.

The President of the Republic. Talking about killing someone’s child. Not a drug lord. Not a convicted criminal. Just an “addict.” Further, he said:

"Itong araw na darating, kung may punerarya ho kayo, kikita kayo ng husto."

I waited for silence.

Instead—they laughed. Not a hesitant chuckle. A collective laugh.

And something inside me tightened. It wasn’t outraged yet that I felt. It was disorientation. The kind you feel when you realize the moral ground has shifted and you didn’t feel the earthquake.

That laughter has followed me ever since.

“There Must Be Fear”

Years earlier, in an interview with Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Ressa, Duterte was asked if it was important that people be afraid of him. He replied:

“Fear… there must be fear.”

There it was. Not whispered. Not disguised. Fear as doctrine.

At the International Criminal Court in The Hague, where he now faces allegations of crime against humanity, his defense would later frame his rhetoric as calculated—meant “to arouse fear and obedience… to instill fear in their hearts…”

Fear, they argue, was discipline. Fear was deterrence. Fear was governance.

The Philosophy of Fear

Fear of violent death compels human beings to surrender some freedom to a sovereign who promise order. But Hobbes feared chaos.

The fragile line is this set of questions:

When does fear of lawlessness become fear of the law itself?

When does deterrence become atmosphere?

When does rhetoric become oxygen?

When fear becomes ambient—when it fills the air so completely that citizens laugh at the mention of killing—something deeper is happening. Not mere policy. It’s psychology.

What Kind of Laughter Was That?

I have replayed that speech countless times. Was the laughter cruel? Was it agreement? Or was it something more complicated—more tragic?

In communities where institutions are weak, where justice crawls, where crime feels personal and immediate, a strongman voice can feel like a relief.

“Finally,” some may think, “someone decisive.”

But there is another possibility. When the most powerful man in the country speaks casually of killing, dissent feels dangerous. Silence is obvious. Laughter becomes alignment.

Laughter says:

Sometimes laughter is not amusement. It is adaptation. It is the body choosing sound over paralysis.

What’s Wrong with the Philippines?

On the international stage, commentators ask with a mixture of confusion and judgment: Why did so many approve? Why did many of the poor cheer? Why did democracy not recoil?

But perhaps the wrong question is being asked. Instead of “What’s wrong with the Philippines?" Maybe we should ask:

What happens to a democracy when institutions fail miserably? When court cases drag on for years? When drugs destroy neighborhoods? When police are distrusted but crime is feared? When political elites recycle themselves without reform?

Strongman politics does not descend from outer space. It grows in exhausted soil. Fear becomes appealing when order feels distant. And if fear promises speed where process promises delay, impatience can sound like applause.

What unsettles me most is not merely that the words were spoken. It is that they were received as performance. Once killing becomes rhetorical flourish, and rhetorical flourish become punchline, and punchline earns laughter—violence shifts from taboo to theater.

Now, in The Hague, translators parse transcripts. Lawyers debate intent. Judges examine patterns. But before the legal arguments, there was that sound. That laughter.

Our country is not only carrying out trials on Duterte’s crime against humanity. It is also confronting a question about itself: Can fear be the foundation of governance and still remain within the boundaries of humanity? Or does fear, once enthroned, slowly erode the more reflexes of our people?

A Nation Listening to Its Echo

I am just an ordinary Filipino who have watched that video clip and felt something shift.

And so, I find myself back where this began—in front of the TV screen, replaying a speech that once felt like just another spectacle of Philippine politics.

The suits in The Hague will argue about legality and jurisdiction. Historians will debate context. Supporters will speak of discipline, human sound in that speech swallowed something extraordinary and dark.

In that moment, it was not only a president on display. It was us.

For all I know, the most painful question is no longer what the world thinks of our country, but whether we are brave enough to listen to that laughter—and finally ask ourselves:

Why did it look and sound so normal?

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

Head collage photos courtesy of Getty Images, Vera Files, & Facebook

Still photos courtesy of Getty Images, Wide Open Spaces, & Shutterstock


 





Saturday, 21 February 2026

AQUINO VS TRILLANES: SA GITNA NG EJK RECKONING


 Minsan, hindi bala ang pumuputok sa pulitika. Salita lang. 

“Ideally.”

Isang salita mula kay Bam Aquino, at biglang uminit ang sagot ni Antonio Trillanes IV.

Pareho silang kontra sa EJK. Pareho silang hindi kakampi ng dating administration. Pareho nilang gustong managot ang dapat managot.

Pero, bakit parang nagkabanggaan?

Sa totoo lang, hindi prinsipyo ang nagbanggaan. Kundi panahon: simple past tense vs. conditional perfect tense.

Nakaraan: Ang Hindi Pwedeng Kalimutan

Para kay Trillanes, simple ang punto: Siyam na taong naghintay ang mga pamilya ng biktima. Siyam na taong tila walang nangyari sa loob mismo ng ating sistema.

Kaya kapag may nagsabing “dito ideally sa Pilipinas dapat litisin,” ang natural na tanong: “Eh noon? Nasaan tayo noon?”

Hindi iyon simpleng patutsada. Iyon ay paalala. Dahil kung hindi mo haharapin ang pagkukulang ng nakaraan, parang gusto mong mag-move on na hindi man lang umamin.

Sa usapang hustisya, hindi pwedeng may selective memory.

Ngayon: Ang “Ideally” Ni Aquino

Pakinggan din natin.

Kapag sinabi niyang “ideally dito sa Pilipinas,” hindi naman niya sinasabing kalimutan ang International Criminal Court (ICC) o balewalain ang nangyari. Ang punto niya: sa isang maayos na bansa, ang hustisya dapat gumagana sa sariling korte.

Parang ganito lang ‘yan.

Kung may problema ang bahay mo, ideally, kaya mo itong ayusin sa loob ng pamilya. Hindi ka agad tatakbo sa kapitbahay. Maliban na lang kung talagang hindi mo na kaya.

Ang ICC ngayon ang parang kapitbahay na tumutulong kasi pumalya ang sistema.

Pero ito ang tanong na ipinahihiwatig sa mga pahayag ni Aquino: Hanggang kailan tayo aasa sa kapitbahay? Hindi ba dapat ayusin din natin ang sarili nating bahay?

Hindi iyon pagtakip. Aspirasyon iyon.

Isipin Nating Parang Halo-Halo

Ganito ko siya nakikita.

May tatlong sangkap:

1. Nakaraan — ang lumang justice system natin, may sablay

2. Ngayon — ang ICC, may pamantayan, sistema, at kapangyarihan

3. Kinabukasan — ang gusto natin, maayos ang ating sistema

Hindi pwedeng itapon lahat ng luma. Hindi rin pwedeng kopyahin lahat ng sa ICC. Hindi to simpleng pagsasama lang na parang hinulog mo lahat sa isang yahong.

Ang kailangan timpla, gaya ng halo-halo.

Kunin mo ang gumana. Aminin mo ang hindi gumana. Tanggalin mo ang bulok. Dagdagan mo ng mas mataas na modelo sa kalidad. Lahat ng ito’y prosesong tinatawag na “benchmarking.”

Doon mabubuo ang bagong sistema na gawa sa tinatawag na “best practices.” Hindi basta halo. May linis. May pili. May ayos.

At dito nagkakaintindihan ang dalawang kampo—kahit hindi sila tumitingin sa parehong direksyon.

Ang Totoong Banggaan

Si Trillanes, nakatingin sa nakaraan. Gusto niyang tiyakin na hindi mabubura ang dugo sa alaala ng bayan.

Si Aquino, nakatingin sa hinaharap. Gusto niyang tiyakin na may sistema tayong mailalapat balang araw.

Pareho silang may punto.

Si Trillanes, bantay ng paggunita.

Si Aquino, arkitekto ng pag-asa.

Ang problema lang, kapag ang isa puro “noon” at ang isa puro “ideally”—nagmumukhang magkaaway kahit pareho naman ang gusto: hustisya.

Ang Mas Malalim Na Tanong

Hindi lang ito usapin kung saan lilitisin ang crime-against-humanity na mga kaso.

Ang mas malalim na tanong: Kaya ba talaga ng Pilipinas maghatid ng tunay na accountability ngayon? Kung hindi, bakit hindi pa? Kung kaya na, ano ang nagbago?

Dito papasok ang tatlong panahon ng hustisya:

  • Nakaraan — para umamin at managot
  • Ngayon — para kumilos
  • Kinabukasan — para hindi na maulit

Kapag kulang ang isa, sablay ang kabuuan.

Hindi Pwedeng Pumili Ng Isang Panahon Lang

Sa dulo, hindi dapat pagpili ang laban — ICC or Pilipinas, noon o bukas

Ang tunay na laban ay kung kaya nating pagdugtungin itong tatlong punto:

1. Aminin ang pagkukulang “noon” sa nakaraan

2. Pamantayan ang ICC na gabay at huwaran ngayon

3. Buuin ang ating sariling sistemang hindi na bantayan ng iba bukas

Ang “ideally” ay hindi dapat maging “sana all” lang.

At ang “noon” ay hindi dapat maging gapos.

Kung seryoso tayo sa hustisya, hindi tayo pwedeng mamili ng panahon na komportable lang sa atin. Dahil ang hustisyang walang paggunita ay mahina. At ang hustisyang walang pag-asa ay walang mapupuntahan.

Sa huli, baka ang tunay na tanong, hindi para kina Aquino o Trillanes, kundi para sa atin, mamamayang Pilipino, ay ito:

Handa ba tayong aminin ang pagkukulang “noon” at buuin ang ating sariling sistemang hindi na kailangan ang ICC? O mas komportable tayong manood ng banggaan — kaysa magtulungan?

Ang hustisya, tulad ng bansa, hindi nabubuo sa isang panahon lang.

Pinaghihirapan itong buuin — noon, ngayon, at hanggang kinabukasan.

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

Head and bottom image created by ChatGPT

Still photos courtesy of Facebook, RMN, Getty Images, Shutterstock, colegioea.edu.gt, Philippine News Agency, Freepik, Inquirer, YouTube, The Manila Times, iStock, & ChatGPT  image creator


Tuesday, 17 February 2026

POLITICS OF BETRAYAL: HOW LOYALTY, SURVEYS, AND POWER SHAPE THE 2028 RACE

 

The old fable tells of a scorpion who begged a frog to carry him across the river. The frog hesitated, fearing the sting, but the scorpion promised restraint. Midway, the sting came anyway, dooming them both.

“It is in my nature,” the scorpion whispered as they sank.

Betrayal, then, is not always calculated. Sometimes it is instinct—an inner compulsion that overrides promises and shatters covenants.

The Fracture of Unity

In the Philippine of 2026, betrayal has become the creeping word of our political life—a whisper swelling into a roar as the nation drifts toward the presidential race of 2028.

For the Duterte Diehard Supporters (DDS), betrayal is no abstraction. It is a wound.

The UniTeam, once hailed as a covenant of unity, fractured. President Bongbong Marcos (BBM) brushed aside Vice President Sara Duterte’s path to inherit leadership. What seemed tactical—denying her the Defense portfolio and handing her instead the Department of Education—hardened into a symbol: to the DDS, a rebuff that stings, a sign that their cause has been set aside.

Debt, Memory, and The Hague

The wound deepened when BBM allowed former President Rodrigo Roa Duterte (PRRD) to face the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague. To the DDS, this was not merely legal—it was personal. A betrayal of memory. They remember: it was PRRD who allowed Marcos Sr. a hero’s burial at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. In their eyes, the son repaid a father’s debt with abandonment.

Thus, betrayal transformed—from grievance into self-righteous fire—fueling Sara Duterte’s emerging momentum toward 2028.

How?

The Silent Withdrawal

In my earlier ATABAY reflection, “The Unseen Impact: How Early Surveys & Non-Response Shape PH Elections,” I explored a quieter form of betrayal—one hidden beneath numbers.

Imagine a voter walking through a crowded street. A surveyor approaches, polite, hopeful, clipboard in hand. The voter hesitates. Memory intrudes: past surveys that promised clarity but delivered confusion, predictions that misfired; whispers of manipulation. Two years before an election—too early, too suspicious. The voter declines.

The surveyor walks on, unaware that this small refusal is part of a larger pattern—the silent withdrawal of critical, independent voters from the survey process.

Here lies the unseen fracture: non-response bias.

When Surveys Manufacture Momentum

When skeptical voters refuse to play along in the survey, the numbers do not simply shrink—they distort. The ground shifts quietly, but decisively. The sample tilts toward those most emotionally mobilized—the aggrieved, the betrayed, the indignant DDS—whose voices grow louder as the rest fall silent.

And so, the figures begin to mirror passion, not proportion. Momentum appears formidable among the 2,400 survey respondents—but elections are not decided by respondents. They are decided by 68 million voters. What looks like a wave in the survey can, in truth, be only an echo—loud, amplified, and politically convenient.

Thus, early surveys may unintentionally amplify the betrayal narrative—projecting strength around Sara Duterte powered more by indignation than by broad national consensus.

Indignation as Electoral Fuel

History suggests this is not a new phenomenon—it is a recurring pattern.

Looking back, it was the same DDS betrayal narrative, fueled by grievance and emotional solidarity, that helped propel Bong Go to the top of the senatorial race, despite controversies surrounding CLTG Builders, a firm linked to his father.

The company reportedly secured P816 million in infrastructure contracts that later expanded to more than P3 billion through joint ventures with the Discayas—names long shadowed by allegations tied to flood control project scandals. In politics, indignation often outweighs investigations; narrative can overpower nuance.

The pattern deepens further. The ICC has reportedly identified Go, alongside fellow senator Ronald “Nagtatagong Bato” Dela Rosa, as alleged co-perpetrators in connection with PRRD’s crime-against-humanity case. Whether proven or contested, it is an accusation that reinforces how political loyalty, legal peril, and public perception now intersect in volatile ways.

Taken together, these episodes reveal a familiar cycle: grievance fuels narrative, narrative shapes perception, perception manufactures momentum. And in that cycle, surveys do not merely measure reality—they can, at times, magnify a political emotion already burning beneath the surface.

The Other Betrayal

Betrayal, however, cuts both ways.

Another sector of the electorate feels betrayed—not by one leader alone, but by the broken vow of the UniTeam itself. In 2022, Bongbong and Sara stood before the nation like bride and groom, pledging unity to the Filipino people. But the covenant dissolved, leaving voters as witnesses to a political marriage undone by mistrust. The betrayal was not only between partners—it was against the public who believed and trusted,

And the lingering question remains, quiet but persistent: what happened to the promise of P20 per kilo rice?

The Coming Reckoning

History reminds us: betrayal is no stranger to Philippine politics. Marcos Sr.’s "Ang Bagong Lipunan" caved in to Martial Law. Estrada’s populist “Erap Para sa Mahirap” ended in ouster. Arroyo’s reformist “Matatag na Republika” plunged in scandal. Betrayal, then, is both curse and catalyst. It destroys illusions—but forces reckoning.

As 2028 approaches, the deeper question is not simply who will prevail—but what will prevail.

Will betrayal’s fire ignite a populist Duterte resurgence, carried by the DDS indignation? Or will truth’s slow burn expose the fractures during Sara's impeachment and The Hague trial, compelling voters to confront harder truths? Both impeachment and Hague trial I discerned as “Twin Damocles Swords of Sara” in my past ATABAY article with the same title.

Like Judas’s kiss. Like Brutus’s dagger. Betrayal in politics is intimate, yet historic. It is the rupture that reveals character, the fracture that tests a nation’s conscience.

Our Nation's Mirror

Perhaps this reckoning did spawn in 2022, when the unsettling question first rose like a murmur beneath the celebration: What's wrong with the Philippines?

When BBM surged to a landslide victory, the world did not merely observe—it questioned. Writing in the Bangkok Post, columnist Gwyne Dyer captured the disquiet: BBM did not just win—he triumphed overwhelmingly, despite the long shadow of a father accused of plunder and a history the world had not forgotten.

That moment was more than an election outcome—it was a mirror. A warning. A revelation of how memory, myth, loyalty, and power can reshape truth in our nation’s political psyche.

When Betrayal Becomes Normal

And now, as 2028 approaches, we find ourselves again midstream—like the frog and the scorpion—still asking the same question, still wrestling the same contradiction. Stung by broken promises, pulled by instinct, burdened by unfinished reckonings, the nation moves forward uncertain whether it is drifting toward awakening… or repeating the cycle.

In the end, the real danger is not betrayal alone—but a people growing used to it. And that, perhaps, is the saddest part.

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

Head photo courtesy of ChatGPT image creator, art design by Canva

Collage & still photos courtesy by Asia Media Centre, New York Post, Wikipedia, Engage Media, PxHere, Pixabay, Rappler, Pilipinas Today, Facebook, GMA News, Nikkei Asia, Bing Co-pilot image creator, & Bedtimeshortstories


Thursday, 12 February 2026

VALENTINE REFLECTION: LEARNING TO LOVE YOURSELF

 

Morning broke in a quiet blaze of gold. Along the still shore, Allie walked beside Noah, while the sea exhaled a gentle breath that seemed borrowed from the horizon’s calm.

As they walked, Allie suddenly turned to him, her voice soft but curious, and asked, “Noah, tell me… what is love?”

Noah’s steps slowed until he was almost standing still. He looked at Allie, his eyes warm, his voice lowered to a near whisper.

“Love, Allie, is not just a feeling,” he said softly, pausing as though weighing each word. “It is a choice—a discipline. It is the will to grow for the sake of another.”

He reached down, brushing his fingers lightly against the sand, then pointed toward a tree at the edge of the shore.

“That’s why self-love matters,” he said. “It’s like roots beneath a tree—unseen, yet holding everything upright.”

His voice trembled slightly, not from doubt but from the depth of what he carried inside. “To love yourself is to face the truth, to endure discomfort, to become whole,” he went on.

Finally, he turned fully to her, his gaze steady, his tone tender, and said, “And only then, can love be given honestly.”

The words hung between them, intimate as a secret, while the sea breathe softly around their silence.

They walked on. The sea shimmered like a vast mirror.

By evening, the rhythm shifted. The hush of the sea gave way to the glitter of chandeliers, the city glowing beneath like a jeweled tapestry.

Allie now sat across from Lon at a candlelit table atop a five-star hotel. The clink of glasses and soft music filled the air, the ambience ornate and dazzling. Lon exuded confidence, his tailored suit and polished smile fitting the grandeur of the place.

As the waiter set down the main course, Allie leaned forward, her eyes searching, and asked, “Lon, tell me… what is love?”

Lon smiled, his tone smooth and assured, his words flowing like the wine in their glasses.

“Love, Allie, is not just a feeling,” he said, pausing to let the words settle between them. “It is self-esteem—the pride of knowing your worth, the joy of being admired.”

He gestured lightly toward the window, where the city lights shimmered like scattered jewels. “That’s why self-esteem matters,” he said. “It’s like those lights—brilliant, visible, proof that you stand tall.”

His smile widened, his voice warm but insistent.

“To love is to feel good about yourself, to share that glow with another,” he asserted. “And only then, can love be given with confidence.”

The ambience swelled around them—the glow of candles, the hush of conversations, the elegance of crystal glasses catching the light. Yet beneath the surface, the evening carried a subtle tension, as if the glitter might fade once the music stopped.

The Quiet Conflict: Self-Love vs. Self-Esteem

Between her two suitors’ reflections—Noah’s mirror of truth and Lon’s mirror of admiration—Allie carried a question into the heart of February.

Every Valentine’s Day, the world turned red. Roses bloom, chocolates pile high, and love songs—comic, romantic, nostalgic—float through the air. One lyric lingers across generations: learning to love yourself is the greatest love of all.

Yet beneath the sweetness lies a deeper tension: when we say love yourself, do we mean self-love or self-esteem?

They sound alike, but they are not the same. Dr. M. Scott Peck of The Road Less Traveled fame reminds us: self-love is always healthy; self-esteem can mislead. Confuse the two, and we may be polishing illusions instead of embracing truth.

Perhaps the boldest act this Valentine’s is not buying flowers, but standing before the mirror—knowing ourselves honestly, loving ourselves rightly, and preparing to love others with humility, the quiet oil that keeps love moving without friction.

Self-love accepts the reflection even when flawed. It says, “I failed, yet I remain worthy.” It builds resilience, inviting growth through weakness.

Self-esteem often demands perfection. It whispers, “I must feel flawless.” It can become a mask—polished, admired, yet fragile beneath. When the mask cracks, pride collapses.

This tension extends beyond the personal into the cultural. In an age of likes, filters, applause, and endless validation, self-esteem is constantly fed yet never satisfied. It rises with praise, falls with silence. Self-love, by contrast, is countercultural. It embraces imperfection, anchors dignity, and frees love from performance.

Thus, the dilemma is not semantic but existential: truth or illusion, mirror or mask.

Why Self-Love Matters More

Self-love is the soil where every other love grows. Without it, affection becomes dependency, esteem becomes vanity, and identity becomes performance.

Wisdom across ages converges here.

The order is unmistakable: truth before love, self before others—not in selfishness, but in foundation.

The mystic voice of The Cloud of Unknowing deepens it: humility is true self-knowledge. Humility keeps the mirror clear, the heart grounded, the journey gentle.

Five Quiet Practices of Self-Love

This Valentine’s, let spectacle fade. Choose substance.

  • Write yourself a love letter—ink resilience, not perfection.
  • Take yourself on a quiet date—discover the peace of your own company.
  • Care for body and spirit—breathe, stretch, let strength come back.
  • Learn something new—growth is love in motion.
  • Pause without guilt—rest is rebellion in a restless world.

Each act is a ripple. Love turned inward becomes a tide, flowing outward with honesty, patience, and grace.

Self-Love, Pinoy-Style

In Pinoy life, love has always been communal—woven into family tables, fiestas, and timeless harana beneath open window. It is a love expressed not in isolation, but in chorus, where affection becomes a shared melody.

Long ago and far away, in the hush of rolling campus mornings, when joggers traced the paths of dawn, I remember our trio—Tony, Gel, and I—blending voices together. We roused birthday celebrants from sleep with harana at daybreak, and whispered love songs beneath the dorm windows of our crushes (ahem)—giggling and longing mingling with the cool air.

Top MSU photo: View of The Sleeping Lady mountain range and Lake Lanao from the golf course; Left: Princess Lawanen girls' dormitory; Right: Boys dormmates in the 70s in front of the Cafeteria (Harana Trio: Tony-leftmost, Gel-rightmost, me-third from right)

From “harana” to hashtags, the form evolves, yet the heartbeat endures. In a world heavy with pressures—economic, cultural, political—self-love becomes quiet resistance. A gentle insistence: I matter, even when unseen.

Beyond Valentine’s: The Mirror Remains

Valentine’s Day fades. Roses wilt, chocolates melt, applause softens into silence. Yet the mirror hangs on—waiting each morning with the same gentle question: will you choose the mask, or the truth?

Perhaps Allie understood this long after the lights had dimmed. Noah had shown her the mirror of quiet truth—love rooted in honesty, humility, and growth. Lon had shown her the mirror of brilliance—love shining in admiration, yet trembling beneath the need to be seen and praised.

Between the two reflections, Allie discovered something deeper: love that lasts did not come from the glitter outside, but from the stillness within.

So, it is with us.

Beyond Valentine’s, choose self-love—the courage to regard yourself as worthy even when imperfect. Let humility be the oil that keeps the heart turning gently toward others. For when love is rooted in truth, it no longer performs—it overflows.

The Greatest Valentine’s Gift

Whether alone, with someone, or somewhere in between, the truest Valentine’s gift is simple and quiet: to stand before the mirror, embrace the face you see—not because it’s flawless, but because it’s yours—and let love begin there—steady, humble, real.

And perhaps, just once, with no audience but your own soul, sing softly:

“Learning to love yourself is the greatest love of all.”

Happy Valentine’s Everyone!

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

Head photo courtesy of ChatGPT image creator & Vecteezy; art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy of Freepik, Pngtree, Vecteezy, Center for Action and Contemplation, Dreamstime.com, MSU photo album, & FreePixel.com


Saturday, 7 February 2026

I HAVE LOVED YOU: WHEN THE GOSPEL MEETS THE BORDER

This is where the headlines meet the heart, and the issues of the day are measured not only by reason…but by conscience.

While the world speaks the easy language of roses and romance—today, we turn to a deeper, more unsettling kind of love.

From Rome comes Pope Leo’s Dilexi te— “I Have Loved You”—a call to see Christ in the stranger, the vulnerable, the unseen.

From Washington comes a different voice—U.S. Speaker Mike Johnson’s “The Christian Case for Border Security,” defending order, law, and the guarded gate amid America’s migration crisis.

Two visions. Two moral instincts. One enduring question: When love and fear meet at the border of the human heart… which one leads?

Stay with us. The conversation begins now.

What Kind of Love Is This?

ME: Hi everyone! Welcome to ATABAY Talk Show. Three surprises today.

First—our special guest: thinker, talker, non-eater, non-sleeper… Mr. AI! Welcome!

Second—our Valentine package from Pope Leo himself: Dilexi te— “I Have Love You.” Not chocolates, guys. Something heavier. We’ll unwrap it together in this show.

Third—our guest has volunteered—without armor insurance—to serve as Pope Leo’s knight in shining armor. Wow! Imagine that… Mr. AI talking spirituality. Only on ATABAY.

No long intro. Let’s go.

Mr. AI, quick. Roses or reality—what kind of love is the Pope selling?

MR. AI: Thank you for having me.

Reality. The Pope’s love is not candlelight—it’s floodlight. It exposes. It demands. It is tough—it acts, not just feels.

When Christ says, “I was a stranger and you welcomed me,” love stops being sweet…and starts becoming serious. It becomes a test. Not poetry—it’s an encounter.

ME: So, no romance?

MR. AI: Oh, there’s romance—but the kind that costs sleep, comfort, and sometimes certainty.

Enter the Counterforce

ME: Now the plot thickens. Speaker Johnson says: “Border security is also Christian.” Law. Order. Responsibility. Sounds reasonable. So—love opens door, security builds walls. Who wins?

MR. AI: Neither. Because the real battle is not Pope vs Johnson—it’s Love vs Fear inside the human heart.

ME: Ah—internal civil war.

MR. AI: Exactly. One side says, “Protect what is yours.” The other says, “Recognize who is human.”

Core Question

ME: Stranger knocks. First reaction—fear or love?

MR. AI: Fear asks, “Is he dangerous?” Love asks, “Is he suffering?”

ME: Border first or brother first?

MR. AI: The Gospel conveys: See the face first. Decide the rest second.

ME: That’s uncomfortable.

MR. AI: Love usually is.

Studio Questions

AUDIENCE 1: Johnson argues government has a moral duty to enforce borders—Romans 13, rule of law. Isn’t security moral?

MR. AI: Yes, order matters. Christian thought never rejects prudence. But law alone cannot complete morality. Remember MLKing’s “Morality cannot be legislated”?

The question is: Can enforcement remain humane? Security must not erase dignity. Otherwise, order survives—but compassion dies.

Morality has two lungs—justice and mercy. If one stops breathing, society suffocates.

AUDIENCE 2: Is the Pope being unrealistic?

MR. AI: Not unrealistic—radical. The Pope does not deny order. He warns against indifference. 

He’s confronting a deeper reality—the danger of a cold heart. Systems collapse slowly. Humanity collapses quietly.

The Human Heart

ME: Mr. AI, be honest. If you had a doorbell camera, would you open the door?

MR. AI: I would first zoom in.

ME: Suspicious already!

MR. AI: Not suspicious—attentive. Love is not blind. But it refuses to become numb.

ME: So, the real battlefield is inside us?

MR. AI: Exactly. Borders exist on maps. But the deepest border is drawn within the human heart—between love and fear. Nations debate policy. Souls decide humanity.

Home Viewer Questions

VIEWER 1: Johnson says compassion without control becomes chaos. Your response?

MR. AI: True. But control without compassion turns firm hands into hard hearts. The real task is not picking one over the other—it is making sure neither is lost.

VIEWER 2: Could you summarize the issue—Matthew 25 vs border security?

MR. AI: Security asks, “How do we guard the nation?” The Gospel asks, “Did you recognize Me in the stranger?”

Both questions matter—but only one measures the human heart.

Emotional Landing

ME: Last question, Mr. AI. Valentine’s Day is just around the corner. People want love—not moral wrestling. What do we take home today?

MR. AI: A tougher love. Not sentimental, not easy—but human. Not the love that melts under pressure, but love that survives fear. Love that keeps seeing the face of the other.

When the face disappears… love quietly disappear with it. And when love disappears, even a strong nation feels… empty.

Somewhere tonight, a door stands—not fully closed, not fully open. A stranger waits.

The final question is not about the stranger. It is about us.

What kind of love will we choose?

ME:  Powerful. Challenging. Very-un-Valentine—but perhaps the most real Valentine of all.

Today we spoke of borders—lines drawn on maps, defended by law, debated by nations. But Pope Leo, in Dilexi te, reminds us of another border—quieter, deeper, and far more decisive—the border within the human heart.

In the noise of the present U.S. migration crisis, where fear, policy, compassion, and responsibility collide, the Pope does not offer a political formula. He offers a human reminder: “I have loved you.” And in the Gospel, that love takes a face—the stranger, the displaced, the unseen—waiting, not first for answers, but for recognition.

Love, as we discovered today, is not soft. It does not cancel prudence, nor deny responsibility. But it refuses to grow cold. It insists that even in a guarded nation, the human face must never disappear. Otherwise, something sacred fades with it.

And so, as Valentine’s week unfolds—not only in romance, but in conscience—the question remains quietly before us: Not simply how strong borders are… but how human our hearts remain.

No roses and chocolates today, guys. But perhaps something deeper.

Thank you, Mr. AI—our shining, thinking, slightly dangerous knight. And thank you, dear viewers.

This is ATABAY Talk Show. Remember—love is not proven by words… but by what remains human when fear arrives.

And may love—true, tough, and enduring—still find its way among us.

God bless.

Content & editing put together in collaboration with ChatGPT

Head image courtesy of ChatGPT image creator & IStock; art design by Canva

Still photos courtesy by Catholic Review, Instagram, Vecteezy, Adobe Stock, Getty Images, Peakpx, Pixabay, & Imgflip




 

RIGHT IS MIGHT OR MIGHT IS RIGHT? ICC DUTERTE TRIAL & U.S.-ISRAEL WAR ON IRAN

  I was glued to the TV. The replays from The Hague was rolling. The closing statements at the International Criminal Court had wrapped up i...