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Saturday, July 4, 2026

The Parale of ther New Wine and The Old Wineskin



To understand the Parable of the New Wine and the Old Wineskins, first we have to define some terms and put them into context.

A wineskin is a traditional, flask-like bag made of animal leather (usually goatskin or sheepskin) used to store, transport, and dispense wine.

Because leather is flexible, wineskins expand to safely contain the natural fermentation and carbonation of the wine, whereas rigid containers might burst.

The parable of the New Wine and the Old Wineskin is a Biblical metaphor most famously known from the teachings told by Jesus in the New Testament (e.g., Matthew 9:17). Here's the explanation:
New Wine in New Wineskins: New wine continues to ferment and expand. It must be poured into fresh, pliable, and elastic new wineskins that can stretch to accommodate the pressure.
The Problem with Old Wineskins: Old leather wineskins become brittle and lose their elasticity. If new wine is poured into them, the expansion will cause the old, inflexible skin to burst, ruining both the container and the wine.

Did you follow, and please take note of the parallelism as we compare the parable as we fast-break our time machine to the latest political scenarios in the Philippines that are hitting the headlines.

To see this parable play out in real-time (meaning now), we don't need to visit a vineyard. We just need to look at the beautifully chaotic landscape of Philippine politics, where politicians constantly try to force fresh, explosive historical shifts into the ancient, dried-out leather of traditional political systems.

1. The Impeachment Trial of VP Sara Duterte
The House of Representatives prosecution panel is finalized, and the historic impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte is set to begin.

-The Parallel: Think of the UniTeam alliance—the massive political machinery that dominated the 2022 elections—as the Old Wineskin. It was stitched together using traditional political convenience, old family names, and patronage. But then came the "New Wine": dynamic geopolitical shifts, intense audits of confidential funds, and a sudden, fierce demand for accountability.

-The Explosion: What happens when you try to force the explosive, fermenting realities of 2026 political warfare into a fragile 2022 "unity" container? Pop. The wineskin has completely shattered. The residual pressure has caused literal political tremors, proving that you cannot contain a massive structural feud inside an outdated OLD Wineskin(the superficial contract of convenience). Both the alliance and the political peace have completely leaked out onto the floor.

2. The Plunder Case vs. Sen. Rodante Marcoleta
The Ombudsman recently filed a plunder complaint against Senator Rodante Marcoleta, causing waves across the legislative halls.

-The Parallel: For decades, the Old Wineskin of Philippine governance has been the unspoken code of “Protect your own.” Traditional politicians are used to a rigid, comfortable framework where a high-ranking position or a powerful alliance acts as a magical shield against legal consequences.

-The Conflict: Enter the New Wine: a growing, tech-savvy public demand for transparency, and independent legal institutions actually pressing charges. The old framework is stiff and unyielding, stubbornly shouting, "But we have political immunity and powerful backers!" Meanwhile, the modern demand for accountability is expanding rapidly. If the legal system tries to twist itself back into the old ways to protect political allies, the entire institutional credibility of the government will crack under the pressure.

3. The 2026 Barangay and SK Elections
The upcoming Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) elections are touted as the opening salvoes for the massive 2028 political shakeup. Young, progressive, tech-oriented youth leaders are stepping up to run.

-The Parallel: These vibrant, idealistic youth leaders are the New Wine. They want digital transparency, automated systems, and data-driven governance. But the machinery they have to use—the barangay captain system—is the Old Wineskin, deeply rooted in traditional trapo (traditional politician) habits: handing out dynamic grocery packs, loyalty pledges, and bowing down to the municipal mayor.

-The Warning: If these young leaders try to compromise and squeeze their progressive ideas into the rigid, corrupt, old-school local political frameworks, the parable guarantees a double disaster. Their idealistic principles will be corrupted (the wine is spoiled), and the local system will reject them anyway (the skin bursts).

-The Reflection: The Philippines is a country overflowing with dynamic "New Wine"—brilliant youth, progressive ideas, and an appetite for true change. But as long as we keep electing the same traditional dynasties and relying on ancient political machinery, we are just pouring premium vintage into rotten leather.

Until we build New Wineskins—true electoral reforms, an end to bloc voting, and actual enforcement of anti-dynasty laws—we will just keep cleaning up the same old sticky, expensive mess every election cycle.

The Viral Post of INC's Denomination


Ah, the eternal internet battlefield, where complex theological debates are boiled down to a Facebook comment thread and a challenge of epic proportions.

Enter Janet Zaragoza, who proudly dropped the ultimate theological mic-drop: "We aren't a cult because we don’t worship statues. Now, who is the cult? Please answer."

It was a flawless chess move—if chess only involved moving one pawn and declaring yourself the Grandmaster. 

Naturally, netizen logic immediately entered the chat, completely bypassing the "Statue vs. No Statue" clause and taking a scenic detour straight into the heart of INC operations.

Here is a satirical breakdown of the internet’s collective, multi-layered clapback to Janet’s challenge.

As alert bloggers... we are only documenting this saga as neutral observers and non-partisan bystanders. 

The fact of the matter was ... we were amazed by the audacity of Janet in her views, and that we were doubly astonished by the swift, sharp, and stinging retaliation from netizens irked by the insult.

Netizen's Counter-Punch 1: 

Netizens were quick to point out that having a checklist for salvation is one thing, but running a church like a corporate dictatorship is another.

"A cult is an organization where if the leader says jump, you don't ask 'why?'—you just ask 'how high?' And if you dare suggest taking the stairs instead, boom. Tiwalag (Excommunicated)."

It’s the ultimate spiritual terms-and-conditions agreement.

 Scroll to the bottom, click "I Agree to Everything the INC Says," or get booted from the server entirely. 

No room for free thinkers, just immaculate attendance.

Nerizen's Counter-Punch 2: 

Janet brought up statues, but the internet brought up block voting—and a healthy dose of political skepticism.

According to the comment section, the INC’s electoral process isn't guided by a divine vision, but rather by the mysterious weight of a politician’s traveling luggage. The netizens alleged a very specific formula:

Votes Endorsed equals Sky Is The Langit Utang Na Loob

The internet pointed out the beautiful irony: “INC members don’t have the right to choose their own politician, because the organization chooses for them based on who brings the biggest goods and promises!”

And the track record? Truly blessed. 

Netizens noted that the INC's endorsed candidates have a near-perfect tendency to end up on the government's most-wanted or most-corrupt lists. 

It’s not just mixing Church and State; it's blending Church, State, and a Netflix crime documentary.

Netizen's Counter-Punch 3: 

But the piece de rĂ©sistance of the netizen clapback was the absolute destruction of Janet’s "no statues" defense.

“You don’t worship statues,” the internet roared, “you worship carton!”

Specifically, the life-size cardboard standees of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in The Hague.

Netizens pointed out that while the INC chapel might be free of marble saints, the leadership's altar seems heavily dedicated to the ultimate earthly deities: The Duterte Family.

In a plot twist worthy of a telenovela, the netizens declared that the INC doesn't need a wooden replica (the statues) of a saint when they have the living, breathing, press-conference-holding gods and goddesses from Davao to venerate. 

If the leadership bows down to political power and financial convenience, does it really matter if the idol is made of plastic or political influence?

So, Janet, the internet has spoken. It turns out that, according to the court of public opinion, avoiding a cult isn't just about a lack of wood carvings. 

It’s about not letting a guy in a suit dictate your ballot, your bank account, and your brain cells.

But hey, at least there are no statues, right?

The Economics of the Utang na Loob (Debt of Gratitude)


Welcome to the masterclass of Philippine political mathematics, a magical realm where $2.6 > 78.8.

If you ask a scientist, 78.8% of a population represents an overwhelming, crushing majority. 

But if you ask a Philippine politician running for office, 78.8% of Catholics are just a chaotic, unmanageable crowd of free agents who might vote for a saint, a celebrity, or a TikTok star on any given Sunday.

On the other hand, that 2.6% of the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC)? That is not a minority. That is a disciplined, synchronized, remote-controlled army of voters. It is the ultimate political cheat code.

And as we all learned once again on a glorious, traffic-choked Tuesday on EDSA North, that 2.6% doesn't just hold political leverage—they hold the keys to the highway.

In a true democracy, power belongs to the people. In Philippine democracy, power belongs to whoever can deliver a pre-packaged, vacuum-sealed bloc of votes.

When election season rolls around, politicians don’t court the 78.8% with policy platforms; they court the 2.6% with promises of eternal friendship. 

The transaction is beautiful in its simplicity:

  1. The Endorsement: The church leadership drops a list of names.

  2. The Bloc Votes: The members vote in perfect unison.

  3. The Political Debt: The politician wins and incurs a massive, spiritual utang na loob.

What happens when that debt comes due? Accountability is the very first thing thrown out the window of a heavily tinted government SUV.

We saw this divine political leverage in full action on Tuesday on EDSA North. While ordinary Filipinos were trying to get to work, school, or run businesses, a massive chunk of the highway was paralyzed.

For the average citizen, parking illegally or blocking a major thoroughfare results in a swift ticket, a towed vehicle, and an aggressive lecture from an MMDA officer. 

But when you belong to the VIP 2.6% club? The government suddenly treats the traffic violation like a delicate diplomatic incident.

The law, it turns out, is like a pair of stretch pants: it accommodates the big and powerful, but tightly suffocates the ordinary commuter who just wants to get home before midnight. 

While thousands of workers paid the price in lost hours and sweat, the government exercised "maximum tolerance"—a political euphemism for "We can't apprehend them, they voted for us."

The New Electoral Formula:

{1 Principle} = 0 Political Leverage
{1 Bloc Vote} = {Immunity from Traffic Laws + Special Treatment}

It’s time to face the satirical music. Democracy is supposed to reward principles, platforms, and track records. 

Instead, our system rewards the highest bidder in the endorsement market. No religion, organization, or VIP sector should ever receive a "Get Out of Jail Free" card—or a "Block EDSA for Free" card—just because they checked the right boxes on a sample ballot.

If the Philippines ever wants true transparency, perhaps it's time to audit the electoral system instead of just complaining about the traffic. 

Because until we talk about ending the political stranglehold of bloc voting, the ordinary Filipino will keep paying the price—stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic on EDSA, watching the minority cruise down the counterflow lane of justice.

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Catholic Church - In The Middle of All This Mess

 



The universe has just witnessed a moment of absolute comedic genius. 

Former Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque—speaking from a highly classified, subterranean coordinates known only to himself, his mobile data provider, and presumably the angels—looked out at a Tuesday morning traffic jam on EDSA and hollered across space and time: “Catholic Church, where are you?!”

It is an enchanting question. It implies that the largest spiritual institution in the archipelago, with its 80 million members, massive stone cathedrals on every street corner, and centuries-old parish networks, has somehow misplaced itself. 

Did it fall behind the couch? Is it stuck in the EDSA Ortigas split?

The response from the Catholic faithful has arrived, and it is a masterclass in polite, devastating reality.

The Catholic Church’s official reply is beautifully simple: We have always been exactly where we’re supposed to be.

For decades, while various political actors were busy switching parties, rewriting their resumes, or perfecting TikTok dances, the Church has been on a rather monotonous loop. 

Election after election, century after century, bishops, priests, and lay leaders have consistently repeated the exact same, seemingly boring advice:

"Do not sell your votes. Do not be blinded by popularity. Choose leaders who are morally upright, honest, competent, and committed to the common good. Do not support candidates known for corruption, dishonesty, or those carrying serious legal baggage."

It is a steady, unwavering message. The Church didn't suddenly wake up this Tuesday morning and discover that corruption is a sin. 

They didn’t wait for a 75 million pesos "private donation" controversy to realize that public office is a public trust. They’ve had this on the syllabus since the year 1521.

The absolute irony of Harry’s question is that it ignores a fundamental law of physics: To hear a message, you actually have to stop talking long enough to listen.

When the Church repeatedly warned the nation against voting for candidates with active plunder cases, history of anomalies, or unexplained wealth, what did the political ecosystem do?

 They turned up the volume on the campaign jingles, handed out the crisp bills, and told the voters that "good morals" are a luxury we can't afford in real politics.

And now, when the inevitable harvest arrives—when a politician proudly brags about taking millions in cash and the Ombudsman comes knocking with a non-bailable arrest warrant—the very people who ignored the warnings turn around and gasp: "My goodness! Where was the Church to protect us from the consequences of our own choices?!"

Rather than asking, "Where is the Catholic Church?" perhaps Harry and his fellow rally-planners should ask a few questions that are a bit more introspective:

Did we listen when the Church spoke about human dignity and the rule of law?

Did we heed the moral guidance when we were told that loyalty to truth must always prevail over loyalty to personalities?

Did we vote according to conscience, or did we treat our sample ballots like a transaction sheet?

The Church is right where it has always been: offering prayers, running hospitals, feeding the poor, and quietly reminding everyone that you reap exactly what you sow. 

They don't need to rent a stage at the People Power Monument to prove they exist.

So as we pray for the country, let us also pray for Harry. Not just for his spiritual enlightenment, but also that he finally finds his way out of hiding. 

Because it is incredibly difficult to hear the Church’s answer when he is shouting from an undisclosed location.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Imee Marcos Double Standard

 



Philippine politics has officially entered the twilight zone, a magical place where two blood relatives can stare at the exact same suitcase and see two completely different dimensions of reality.
Senator Imee Marcos recently took to the stage at a massive, traffic-stalling EDSA rally to deliver a fiery, microphone-gripping speech.

With absolute confidence, she branded the current administration—which, awkward reminder, is led by her own brother, President Bongbong Marcos—as a "gobyernong tulog" (sleeping government) that is "lasing sa kapangyarihan" (drunk on power) and heavily addicted to international flights.

It was a theatrical masterpiece. There was just one massive, howling problem: Netizens possess this incredibly annoying thing called retentive memory.

According to the new Imee Matrix of Geographic Morality, the status of a government official’s overseas trip is determined by a very specific set of spiritual rules:

A. If the Traveler is... -President Bongbong Marcos
-And the Destination is...- Canada (Official State Working Visit)
-Then the Trip is classified as... - "An absolute outrage! A sleeping government abandoning the homeland while inflation rises!"

B. If the Traveler is ... - Vice President Sara Duterte & Allies
-And the Destination is ... - Anywhere International (Personal / Private Vacation)
-Then the Trip is classified as ... - "A well-deserved, quiet moment of spiritual reflection that requires zero public scrutiny."

The internet immediately achieved collective whiplash. Netizens flooded social media to ask the Senator a rather basic question: Where was this fiery, anti-travel energy when her close political allies were jetting off on highly private, unannounced family excursions?

When the President goes to Canada on an official state visit, invited by international leaders to conduct government business, Imee sounds the alarm.

But when the Davao faction packs their bags for private getaways, the Senator suddenly practices the ancient art of holy silence.

It turns out, frequent flying is only a sin if you share the same last name and DNA.

Enter Palace Press Officer Claire Castro, who stepped to the briefing microphone to perform a public vibe-check.

Instead of engaging in a shouting match, Castro essentially looked at the Senator’s speech and sighed, calling the narrative a masterclass in "sowing hatred" through fictional storytelling.

Castro lamented that the people applauding the "sleeping government" speech were simply being kept ignorant of actual state achievements.

"It must be an incredible medical miracle to be blind, deaf, and selectively mute all at the same time—but only when looking at your political allies."

The irony is richer than a Malacañang banquet. Imee stood at the People Power Monument—a place historically built on protesting her family—to protest her own brother, alongside a religious group protesting a plunder case, while defending a political faction notorious for its own luxury travel logs.

Ultimately, the Senator’s grand attempt to harvest public sympathy blew up in her face like a poorly timed firecracker.

Instead of being hailed as a bold truth-teller, netizens crowned her the Queen of Selective Auditing.

The lesson here is simple: If you are going to accuse a government of being "lasing sa kapangyarihan" because of their passport stamps, you have to make sure your best friends aren't currently holding the cocktail menu in the business class lounge.

Otherwise, the only thing truly "tulog" (asleep) is your own sense of consistency.

The Fugitive's Sermon


In a plot twist that sounds like it was written by a comedian undergoing a midlife crisis, former Presidential Spokesperson, certified TikTok dancer, and currently hiding-in-plain-sight lawyer Harry Roque has re-emerged from the digital shadows.

While the Iglesia Ni Cristo (INC) was busy turning the EDSA Ortigas flyover into a massive, unauthorized parking lot to defend a politician facing a 75 million pesos plunder case, Harry looked at the sea of uniform polo shirts and had a profound spiritual awakening.

He didn’t ask about the plunder. He didn’t ask about the traffic.

Instead, he shook his fist at the heavens and yelled a question that echoed across social media: “Catholic Church, where are you in the people’s fight against evil?!”

He then delivered the ultimate theological threat: “Your ranks will wither, and the ranks of the INC will balloon!”

Let us marvel at the sheer, unadulterated comedy of Harry Roque lecturing the Catholic Church on morality.

According to the Gospel of Harry, "fighting evil" does not mean standing up for human rights, feeding the poor, or demanding accountability from public officials.

No, true righteousness is apparently achieved by standing on EDSA on a Tuesday morning to make sure a senator who confessed to taking millions of pesos from private individuals doesn't have to go to jail.

If the Catholic Church isn't joining a flash mob to protect a non-bailable plunder defendant, Harry considers them spiritually bankrupt.

Unfortunately for Harry, the internet does not suffer from short-term memory loss. Netizens immediately unleashed a tidal wave of reality checks that sent his sermon straight to the digital garbage bin:

-The "Not an Appendage" Doctrine: Netizens quickly reminded Harry that Catholics do not operate on a hive-mind system. As one comment noted: "Catholics move by choice, not by the command of a church leader. We aren't yes-men. Does the INC not have its own brains that their leaders have to decide everything for them?"

-The Litmus Test for Rallies: Other netizens pointed out that the Catholic Church actually does go to EDSA—but usually for minor things like toppling dictatorships or fighting systemic oppression, not acting as a corporate legal defense team for a politician's questionable campaign donations.

The Church tends to reserve its presence for leaders who are honest, trustworthy, and not currently being investigated by the Ombudsman.

The Legal Standing of the Preacher: But the absolute gold-medal internet clapbacks targeted Harry's current "residential status."

"How can we believe a word you say when you are literally a fugitive? Roque, come home first before you tell us to go to EDSA!"

It is beautifully ironic. A man who spent years defending the drug war and is currently evading legislative hearings is standing on a virtual soapbox, telling millions of Catholics that their souls are in danger because they refuse to join a traffic-stopping protest for Rodante Marcoleta.

Don't worry, Harry. The Catholic Church has survived Roman emperors, the Spanish Inquisition, and the Protestant Reformation.

It will probably survive your prediction that everyone is going to convert to the INC just because they missed out on blocking the EDSA Carousel busway.

In the meantime, the public has a counter-question for the former spokesperson: "Harry, nasaan KA?" (Harry, where are YOU?)

Because the police and the House of Representatives would really love to know.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Lawyers Mumbo Jumbo: Plunder



Iglesia Ni Cristo witnessed the grand unveiling of the newest legal doctrine sweeping across the EDSA People Power Monument: The Friend Fund Exemption!

As thousands of passionate rallyists waved cardboard signs proudly declaring, "Private Donations Are Not Plunder!" it appears the collective understanding of Philippine criminal law has successfully achieved absolute zero.

To clear up the magnificent cloud of confusion currently settling over the Iglesia Ni Cristo (INC) camp, the Duterte Diehard Supporters (DDS) ecosystem, and the suddenly very nervous legal team of Senator Rodante Marcoleta and Mike Defensor, let us break down this legal phenomenon with the proper dictionary definition and a healthy dose of reality.

1. The Term: Plunder
Plunder is the "Final Boss" of Philippine anti-graft laws. It isn't a simple misdemeanor, and it isn't something you can settle with a polite apology or a compromise agreement.

It is a massive, non-bailable felony handled by the Sandiganbayan (anti-graft court) that carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

2. Definition
According to Republic Act No. 7080 (The Plunder Law), plunder is committed when a public officer, by himself or in connivance with family or business associates, amasses, accumulates, or acquires ill-gotten wealth through a combination or series of overt or criminal acts in an aggregate amount of at least 50 million pesos.

But here is where the EDSA placard-makers are getting a bit creative. They think "ill-gotten wealth" only applies if a politician sneaks into the National Treasury at midnight with a burlap sack.

Let us consult Section 1(d) of the actual law. "Ill-gotten wealth" is defined as any asset acquired by a public official "under color of paramount authority, influence, connection, or by reason of the office."

It explicitly includes receiving commissions, percentages, kickbacks, and—most importantly for our current Marcoleta's legal drama—taking advantage of an official position to enrich oneself.

3. Example
Enter Senator Rodante Marcoleta, who is facing a looming plunder charge alongside his co-accused, former lawmaker Mike Defensor, and two other generous associates.

The defense strategy presented on the streets of EDSA is nothing short of comedy gold.

The narrative goes: "Hey, Marcoleta didn't steal government funds! He just accepted a total of 75 million pesos from his best friends, Mike, Joseph, and Aristotle, over four days in January 2025, for his Senate run. Since it came from private wallets, it’s not plunder!"

THE MARCOLETA LEGAL MATRIX:

-Is the amount over P50 Million? ---------> YES (P75 Million)

-Was he a public official? --------------> YES (Sitting Congressman)

- Is it illegal to accept multi-million ----> YES (RA 6713 & RA 3019) "gifts" while in office?

Let us unpack why this logic falls completely flat on its face before the eyes of the law:

-The Scope of Plunder: The law does not care if the money came from the tax pool or a private bank account. If you are a sitting Congressman, and three individuals hand you 75 million pesos, you cannot just call it a "gift." Under RA 6713 (Code of Conduct) and RA 3019 (Anti-Graft Act), it is highly illegal for public officials to accept any gifts of significant value. Doing so transforms those private donations into "ill-gotten wealth" acquired by reason of your office.

-The Magic Threshold: The magic number for a plunder charge is 50 million pesos. Because the private handouts totaled $75 million, the Ombudsman skipped the minor league charges and went straight for the heavy artillery.

-The Ghost Assets: To make matters funnier, Marcoleta allegedly forgot to declare this massive pile of cash in his Statement of Contributions and Expenditures (SOCE) and his Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN).

His defense? “I already spent it all on the election, so it’s no longer an asset!” It’s a bold strategy: arguing that a crime disappears the moment you finish spending the money.

To the loyal crowds blocking traffic at EDSA: No one made baluktot (twisted) the law. The law has said the exact same thing since 1991.

If a regular government clerk accepts a free box of donuts from a private citizen, they can be investigated by the Civil Service Commission.

If a high-ranking lawmaker accepts 75 million from private businessmen while sitting in office, they get hit with a plunder case.

Private donations are wonderful—right up until they cross the 50 million threshold and are accepted by someone holding public office.

At that point, the law stops looking at them as "acts of friendship" and starts looking at them as a non-bailable ticket to jail.

Perhaps the next batch of EDSA placards should read: "Please read RA 7080 before handing out millions!"

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Wretired writer, Malayang Free Thinker, Probing Blogger, Disenteng Dissenter, Tempered temperamental, Liberal-Conservative, Grammar and Syntax Police, Pageant Connoisseur, Hibiscus Collector

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The Parale of ther New Wine and The Old Wineskin

To understand the Parable of the New Wine and the Old Wineskins, first we have to define some terms and put them into context. A wineskin is...

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