Impeachment is framed less as accountability and more as background noise, teaching citizens that power absorbs shocks without consequence while governance quietly loses direction and urgency.
Power remains intact, but direction has faded. What looks like movement in politics increasingly feels like noise, leaving citizens with uncertainty, rising costs, and the quiet erosion of trust in leadership.
Impeachment is framed less as accountability and more as background noise, teaching citizens that power absorbs shocks without consequence while governance quietly loses direction and urgency.
Power remains intact, but direction has faded. What looks like movement in politics increasingly feels like noise, leaving citizens with uncertainty, rising costs, and the quiet erosion of trust in leadership.
Impeachment is framed less as accountability and more as background noise, teaching citizens that power absorbs shocks without consequence while governance quietly loses direction and urgency.
The ICC’s rejection of Rodrigo Duterte’s release revealed not only his personal reckoning, it also exposed the enduring cycle of power, privilege, and impunity that continues to dominate Philippine governance.
The ICC’s rejection of Duterte’s plea was a moral awakening, reminding the nation that justice is earned through accountability, not emotion or influence.
A nation with a full government but no governing, the Philippines now drifts in the emptiness between power and accountability, its institutions intact in form yet hollow in function as corruption thrives and conscience resigns.
The appointment of Justice Secretary Boying Remulla as Ombudsman signals not reform but retreat, turning what should be the nation’s final guardian of accountability into a protective wall for those in power and reducing the fight against corruption to mere political theater.
Ayon kay Senate President Sotto, makabubuti ang desisyon ni Pangulong Marcos dahil magbibigay ito ng oras para sa maayos na deliberasyon ng pambansang badyet.