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.

As citizens, our challenge is to look past this carefully constructed narrative armor.

We must insist on a simple, unchanging standard: a democracy cannot survive on deflections, popularity points, and manufactured outrage—it requires transparent unyielding accountability.

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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


Saturday, 16 May 2026

WAS IT STAGED? ICC KNOCKED. SENATE LOCKED. BATO DUCKED.

 

In today’s Philippines, truth rarely arrives quietly. It comes wrapped in spectacle — Senate clashes resembling political theater, press conferences sounding like courtroom dramas, and fugitives moving through corridors of power instead of hiding from them.

This ATABAY episode revisits the controversial May 13 Senate confrontation involving Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa while probing the deeper forces beneath the noise: political loyalty, institutional survival, and impeachment maneuvering.

Why does it matter? Because when institutions begin acting like stages, citizens risk becoming mere spectators in their own democracy. Through satire and sharp political commentary, this talk show asks a difficult question:

Were we witnessing genuine democratic tension — or simply another carefully managed performance in the theater of Philippine politics?

ME: Welcome to ATABAY Live, our special edition of “The Senate Circus Files.” We tackle one of the hottest and most controversial political spectacles in recent memory — the saga of Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa, the Senate confrontation, and the shadow hanging over Philippine democracy.

To help us unpack the smoke, mirrors, and possible motives behind it all, we invited our resident Sherlock Holmes of political analysis — Mr. AI. Welcome to the show.

MR. AI: Thank you for having me, Raymond. I’m looking forward to today’s conversation.

ME: Let’s begin with the icebreaker everybody’s asking: Was the May 13 Senate shootout a genuine clash — or a staged spectacle?

MR. AI: Strong opening question. The bullets may have been real, but the choreography smelled unmistakably theatrical.

The Senate framed the incident as a defense of institutional independence. The ICC fugitive narrative painted it as a desperate resistance against arrest. Meanwhile, the government’s oddly restrained response made the entire episode feel less like spontaneous chaos and more like controlled political theater.

Put together, it looked less like law enforcement — and more like optics carefully arranged to preserve loyalty, power, and narrative.

Act I — Coup and Impeachment

ME: Let’s rewind a bit. Why did Bato’s sudden reappearance matter so much to the Senate coup?

MR. AI: Because one vote changed the balance of power.

Bato’s return helped elevate Alan Peter Cayetano. But this wasn’t merely political musical chairs. It was a strategic consolidation by the pro-Duterte bloc — fortifying its defenses at a crucial moment.

And looming quietly behind the curtain was the impeachment complaint against VP Sara Duterte.

Coincidence? Perhaps. But timing in politics is rarely accidental.

The coup effectively became a firewall. Loyalty tightened ranks faster than accountability could advance.

Act II — The Confrontation

ME: So when the NBI stormed into the Senate, was the chamber defending its honor — or hiding its shame?

MR. AI: That’s precisely where the paradox lies.

The Senate insisted it was defending institutional dignity by demanding proper procedure and the presentation of a warrant.

But the November 2025 ICC warrant later confirmed that legal grounds for apprehension already existed.

Which raises an uncomfortable question:

If the warrant existed, then what exactly was being defended inside the chamber?

At that point, the clash ceased being merely procedural. It became symbolic. The smoke was the confrontation itself. The fire was the political protection underneath it.

Act III — The Escape

ME: And then Bato slipped away. What does that tell us?

MR. AI: It tells us the play had reached its final act.

Act I: The coup.

Act II: The confrontation.

Act III: The Escape.

His wife later apologized. Cayetano confirmed his voluntary departure. Authorities reviewed CCTV footage. But beyond all the procedural details, the larger political message was impossible to ignore.

The Senate became a stage.

The government became an uneasy accomplice.

And the fugitive became the central character in his own disappearing act.

Studio Audience Questions

AUDIENCE 1: Mr. AI, was the Senate shielding Bato — or shielding itself?

MR. AI: Both.

By protecting Bato, the bloc protected its own political survival. But in doing so, it also exposed itself.

The Senate — ideally a chamber of legislation and accountability — began resembling a fortress of partisan loyalty.

And once institutions prioritize loyalty over principle, credibility becomes collateral damage.

AUDIENCE 2: Could Sara Duterte’s impeachment have survived without the coup?

MR. AI: Highly unlikely.

The coup functioned as a political firewall. Without Cayetano’s strengthened bloc, the impeachment complaint may have gained momentum.

In that sense, the coup and the confrontation acted like twin shields:

One shielded Sara politically.

The other shielded Bato legally.

Different battles. Same fortress.

Home Viewers Questions

VIEWER 1: Mr. AI, was the shooting staged to distract the public from Sara’s impeachment?

MR. AI: That’s the broader forest view.

The confrontation became the spectacle. The impeachment became the silence.

One dominated headlines. The other faded into procedural shadows.

Together, they formed a disturbingly effective script: chaos in the chamber, quiet around the complaint.

VIEWER 2: So, what’s the lesson for ordinary Filipinos?

MR. AI: That unchecked loyalty corrodes not only honor, but institutions themselves.

The enforcer became the fugitive.

The Senate became the shield.

The government became the reluctant accomplice.

And the people?

You became the audience — watching a democratic drama where the rule of law increasingly looked less like a principle and more like a stage prop.

Closing Punch

ME: You’ve heard it, folks.

The saga of Bato and the Senate — bullets, coups, impeachment curtains, institutional collisions, and dramatic escapes.

Was it staged?

That question now echoes across the entire nation.

MR. AI: And perhaps the deeper tragedy, Raymond, is this:

Whether staged or spontaneous, the outcome felt the same.

The Senate looked less like a democratic institution and more like a theater of survival.

And the Filipino people were left wondering whether justice was ever truly part of the script.

Final Word

ME: As we end tonight’s ATABAY show of “The Senate Circus Files,” perhaps, the real issue was never simply Bato, the Senate, or even the impeachment.

The deeper issue is the growing distance between political spectacle and the everyday suffering of ordinary Filipinos.

While powerful people rehearse loyalty dramas inside air-conditioned chambers, millions of citizens continue struggling outside them — crushed by poverty, battered by inflation worsened by global conflicts like the Iran war, drowning in recurring floods despite billions spent on flood control projects, and exhausted by corruption scandals that never seem to end in accountability.

The tragedy is not merely that politics has become theater.

The deeper tragedy is that while the show goes on, the Filipino people keep paying for the tickets — through taxes, hardship, rising prices, lost trust, and deferred hope.

And so, the question before the nation is no longer simply: “Was it staged?” But rather: “Were we budol again?

Many once believed the Bongbong and Sara alliance would finally unite the country and ease the peoples suffering. Instead came public infighting, impeachment tensions, economic anxiety, and deepening distrust.

Some now recall the striking international headline that appeared after the 2022 elections: “What's Wrong with the Philippines?”

Was it merely foreign arrogance — or an early handwriting on the wall? Perhaps many chose not to see the warning because hope, nostalgia, and political branding proved stronger than historical memory?

And today, amid poverty, floods, corruption scandals, and endless political drama, Filipinos are left asking:

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

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

Still image created by ChatGPT, Bing Microsoft AI-powered Co-pilot, Facebook, Instagram, Philstar, & Pixabay


Tuesday, 12 May 2026

WHEN BATO CRIES OUT: THE SENATE BURDEN OF TRUTH AND ACCOUNTABILITY

This piece revisits and expands themes from my earlier ATABAY article, “When The Stones Cry Out: Why Senator Bato Must Face The ICC.”

I was scrolling through Facebook late one night when a strange image caught my eye: a pile of stones arranged like an optical illusion.

The caption read: “Can you figure out what it says?”

At first glance, it was dizzying. But after staring long enough, the hidden words slowly emerged: “The stones will cry out.”

I paused.

Something about those words struck deep — especially now, as Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa once again dominates the headlines.

And perhaps that is the irony history itself could not resist. The man called "Bato" — stone — now stands at the center of a reckoning where the stones themselves are beginning to speak.

A Nation Waiting for Accountability

Bato was once the feared enforcer of Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody war on drugs — the hard-faced general who embodied the administration’s brutal promise of order through fear.

Today, he stands haunted by the very shadow of international justice.

The ICC’s confirmation of an arrest warrant against him is more than a legal development. It is a thundering clap. A reminder that while domestic institutions may hesitate, truth has a stubborn habit of crossing borders.

And now the Senate finds itself caught in the blast radius.

The Senate’s Straw-Burdened Back

The Senate once stood as the nation’s deliberative spine. Today, it bends under the weight of dubious decisions.

When it shelved Vice President Sara Duterte’s impeachment with the aid of a Supreme Court heavily populated by Duterte appointees, it placed one heavy straw upon its back. Now, with the bizarre confrontation between Bato and the NBI over the ICC warrant, another straw has been added — sharper, heavier, more dangerous.

The burden is becoming visible. The optics are devastating.

Bato’s caricatured public image has become the grotesque emblem of institutional decline: once the feared architect of Duterte’s drug war, then an absentee senator drawing huge government pay — a wink on Senate’s inutility to discipline its own, later a surprise player in a Senate leadership coup, and now the central figure in a dumbfounding clash with law enforcers.

His transformation mirrors the Senate’s own descent — from gravitas to spectacle. Once revered. Now increasingly lampooned.

Meanwhile, Sara Duterte’s impeachment remains suspended — not defeated, merely shelved. Technicalities have begun masquerading as justice. Delay now wears the costume of prudence.

And every delay adds another straw.

The Social Cost of Hiding

If Bato chooses to hide under the Senate’s protective skirt — the message to the nation becomes devastatingly clear: Power protects its own.

Such protection crushes what little hope remains among the families of the dead. Worse, it teaches future abusers that accountability is negotiable if one possesses enough political allies. Impunity breeds more blood.

And when justice is repeatedly mocked, the nation’s moral core begins to weaken. Public anger does not disappear, it ferments.

One straw at a time.

The Political and Economic Fallout

The world is watching.

If the Philippine government continues appearing allergic to accountability, the consequences will not remain confined within Senate halls.

Nations that once treated us as democratic partners may begin to distance themselves. Isolation is not merely diplomatic — it is moral.

For what credibility remains in proclaiming democratic values while refusing to confront the blood spilled under state power?

Even markets understand this language.

Investors study not only economic charts but institutional behavior. No serious investor feels secure placing long-term confidence in a country perceived as dismissive of human rights and rule of law.

A damaged moral reputation eventually becomes an economic burden: Fewer partnerships. Reduced investor confidence. Fewer jobs.

And ordinary Filipinos — not powerful politicians — ultimately pay the highest price.

The Senate Dilemma

And so, the Senate now faces a crossroads it can no longer postpone.

Will it persist in shielding Bato from international accountability while continuing to protect Sara Duterte behind technical defenses – hammering nails into its own coffin of credibility?

Or will it finally allow constitutional processes and the rule of law to move forward — even against political allies?

The choice before the Senate is no longer merely procedural — it is existential.

One path leads toward further erosion: a chamber remembered, not as guardian of democracy, but as caretaker of political loyalty.

The other path, though painful, still offers redemption.

The Personal Reckoning

What makes Bato’s situation even more tragic is that he himself once sounded ready to face this moment. Back then, he declared with bravado:

“I am ready to join the old man (Duterte), hoping they would allow me to take care of him.”

Those words were not casual remarks. They were public declaration of loyalty — a warrior’s vow. But vows become meaningful only when tested.

Now the very supporters who once admired his toughness are watching closely.

If he retreats from the consequences of the war he once defended, some may begin seeing him differently — not as the loyal soldier who stood by his convictions, but as the man who fled when truth finally demanded payment.

And perhaps beneath all the bravado lies something far more human — fear.

Bato himself once admitted:

“I am afraid of going to jail. Takot ako na makulong dahil kawawa ang mga apo ko at hindi ko na makita.”

And strangely enough, that fear may be the first honest thing in this entire tragedy. Fear sometimes becomes the doorway to wisdom. As Proverbs 9:10 says:

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.”

If Bato truly loves his grandchildren, perhaps the greatest inheritance he can still leave them is not political survival, but truth. Freedom does not come from endlessly escaping accountability.

Freedom begins the moment a man stops running from what he knows.

When The Stones Finally Speak

In Luke 19:40, Jesus declares:

“I tell you, if these were silent, the stones would cry out.”

It was a warning that truth eventually finds a voice when people refuse to speak it.

The cries of grieving mothers.

The silence of fearful witnesses.

The unanswered deaths.

The institutions bending under accumulated compromise.

These are the stones now crying out.

And perhaps the Senate itself can already hear the strain upon its back — the growing weight of every postponed truth, every delayed reckoning, every act of selective courage.

History has a strange way of surfacing what people try hardest to bury.

Justice delayed may stumble. But it never entirely disappears. Sooner or later, the stones speak.

And when they do, entire institutions are forced to decide whether they will finally stand upright — or collapse beneath the weight of the straws they themselves chose to carry.

I still hope and pray the Senate chooses the former. That instead of becoming a monument to political loyalty and delayed accountability, it may yet rediscover the courage to stand for truth and justice.

For perhaps then, the stones that once cried out in grief may finally cry out with joy to the Lord all over the land.

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

Head image created by ChatGPT

Still photos courtesy of Facebook, Reuters/Erik De Castro, Our Brew, Malaya Business cartoons, Leyte Samar Daily News cartoon, Philstar cartoon, iStock, Getty Images, ABC News, KIYOSA

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


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