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.
Magalong and Lacson’s resignations reveal a government where corruption thrives, allies stay untouchable, and Marcos Jr.’s promise of reform sinks under the weight of impunity.
Teaching children about good governance plants the seeds of integrity early on, because shaping future leaders begins not in boardrooms or ballots, but in classrooms where values, courage, and curiosity take root.
Amid the flood-control scandal that has shaken Congress, Senator Alan Peter Cayetano’s call for snap elections exposes not reform but reinvention, a political performance meant to distance, distract, and disguise ambition as moral reckoning.
Philippine politics unfolds like a Godfather saga where power is masked by legality, scandals echo loyalty oaths, and the true cost of corruption is borne not by the dons, but by ordinary people left drowning in broken trust.