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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Private Campaign Donation Is 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. The Prime Example: The 75 Million "Friendly Gift"
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!"

Admitting Defeat: A Concept Lost in Transmission



An alert reader asked me this question.

Who are we going to believe, ABS-CBN or GMA? Or Nielsen vs. Kantar? All of them claim they are number 1.

The question is who tells the truth and who is peddling fake news? The audience understands the business of propaganda, but being also in the business of selling truth, does the audience deserve to know the truth?

If we demand accountability and transparency from the government, why can't these TV companies admit who wins ... and who is second? Does being second make you a lesser person?

Welcome to the ultimate arena of creative mathematics, where the laws of arithmetic go to die, and everyone lies and masks their insecurities by posturing as the one to beat.

The much-anticipated primetime clash between Coco Martin’s Sigabo and Dingdong Dantes’ The Master Cutter has officially started. And according to the subsequent press releases, both ABS-CBN and GMA are absolutely, indisputably Number 1.

How is this geometrically possible? Let us pull back the curtain on the magical world of media propaganda and data manipulation.

If you ask the data gatekeepers, reality depends entirely on which spreadsheet you decide to worship. It’s a beautifully confusing ecosystem:

The GMA / Nielsen Strategy: GMA proudly waves the Nielsen Phintam flag. Under this metric, the Master Cutter slashed its way to a single-station victory of 9.9 over Sigabo’s 8.2. To the Kapuso network, this means the case is closed. Boom. Winner.

The ABS-CBN / Megaphone Strategy: But wait! ABS-CBN doesn't just broadcast from a single tower anymore; they operate like a multi-headed media hydra. Sigabo aired simultaneously on TV5, A2Z, ALLTV, and the Kapamilya Channel. If you use Aggregate Math™ (adding the ratings of all four channels together like a frantic grocery shopper counting loose change) or point to the 404,124 peak concurrent viewers streaming online, then Sigabo is the undisputed King of the Archipelago.

It is the only business on earth where you can come in second place on a chart and confidently release a graphic with a giant "THANK YOU FOR MAKING US NUMBER ONE!" banner.

"We demand accountability and transparency from our politicians, but expecting a TV network to admit it lost a timeslot is like expecting water to flow uphill."

In the high-stakes world of corporate ego, admitting you are "second place" is a hard pill to swallow.

To admit you "played second fiddle" is treated like a corporate felony. If a network executive were to ever say, "Hey guys, we fought hard, but they beat us by 1.7 tonight. Good job to them!" the universe might actually collapse.

Instead, they treat the audience to a masterclass in spin-doctoring.

If the ratings are low, they talk about "online engagement." If the online views are low, they talk about "rural household penetration." If everything is low, they release a statement about "trending worldwide on X."

Why Can’t We All Just Get Along (And Share the Spoils)?
The funniest part about this entire numbers war is that the gap isn't even a Grand Canyon—it's a crack in the pavement. The Master Cutter is doing great; Sigabo is pulling massive crowds.

Why is it so impossible to just say: "Both shows are wildly successful, one just had a tiny bit more luck on traditional television tonight"?

Because in the entertainment business, truth is a product, and propaganda is the marketing budget.

The audience understands the game, but as consumers who buy the very truth these networks claim to report, maybe we deserve a little less corporate math and a little more honesty.

But until then, let us enjoy the spectacle. Congratulations to The Master Cutter for being Number 1 in the ratings!

And congratulations to Sigabo for being Number 1 in the universe! Truly, we are blessed to live in a country where losing simply does not exist.

The Fugitive's Sermon


In a plot twist that sounds like it was written by a comedian undergoing a mid-life 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 of 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.

Then and Now: The Tale of Two Marcoletas


It is a scientific fact that the human body cannot perform a true 360-degree turn without ending up exactly where it started. 

But in the magical realm of Philippine politics, Senator Rodante Marcoleta has achieved a rhetorical miracle: a 360-degree political spin that somehow defies both geometry and gravity.

Let us take a trip down memory lane to witness the spectacular evolution of a man done in by his own favorite pastime: bragging.

Once upon a time, in a galaxy not so far away, Congressman Marcoleta possessed the supreme confidence of a man who believed he was utterly untouchable. 

Armed with a microphone and an irresistible urge to flex, he essentially went on air and declared to the nation:

"Yes, I accepted 75{ million} pesos from three very generous people! Look how influential I am! People just hand me sacks of cash because of my undeniable charm and legislative prowess!"

It was a beautiful, cinematic moment. He didn't just admit to it; he celebrated it. 

He wore that $75 million like a badge of honor. It was the ultimate "flex" to show the world that he wasn't just any ordinary public servant—he was a public servant who could attract multi-million peso "donations" like a magnet.

At that exact moment, lawyers across the country—including Atty. Levito Baligod—probably spat out their coffee, grabbed a copy of Republic Act 6713 (The Code of Conduct for Public Officials), and pointed frantically at the text that reads, in very clear, un-sentimental English: BOYS, IT IS ILLEGAL FOR GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS TO ACCEPT GIFTS. ANY GIFTS. PERIOD.

Fast forward to the present. The legal system, slow as it is, finally caught up with the audio recording. Suddenly, the brag became a liability. The trophy turned into a smoking gun.

And what does the honorable lawmaker do? He activates the Ultimate Gaslight Protocol.

With a straight face and an Oscar-worthy look of persecution, he now proclaims: "This is a witch hunt! They are inventing cases against me! They just want to throw me in jail because they are jealous of my righteousness!"

Hold on. Pause the tape.

"They" invented it? By "they," does he mean the voice box inside his own throat? Because last time the public checked, the primary witness who pinned Marcoleta to the $75\text{ million}$ gift was... Rodante Marcoleta.

This isn't a conspiracy by the opposition, the media, or deep-state matrix operators. This is a classic case of Kadaldalan and Kayabangan (Extreme Loquacity and Hubris).

If you are going to violate RA 6713, the golden rule of being a corrupt politician is supposed to be: Keep your mouth shut. 

You don't stream your violations in high definition. You don't brag about the loot while standing next to the vault.

But Marcoleta chose the path of the storyteller. He wanted the applause. Now that the Ombudsman is holding the script he wrote, he’s trying to claim it’s a fictional novel.

So let us applaud the Senator for his contributions to Philippine law. He has proven that while the law says public officials cannot accept gifts, the universe ensures that if you brag about those gifts long enough, the law will eventually give you the ultimate gift: an iron-clad accountability checkmate.

Not to mention RA 3019 (The Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act), which treats multi-million peso "presents" to lawmakers less like a birthday celebration and more like a felony.

But back then, who cared about laws? He had the stage, he had the microphone, and he had the unshakeable urge to gloat and brag.

When Implementation of the Law is Twisting The Law.


Happy Tuesday from the People Power Monument, where thousands of deeply spiritual citizens have gathered for an unannounced, completely permit-free flash mob.

Why? To defend the ultimate martyr of modern legislative eloquence: Senator Rodante Marcoleta.

As commuter traffic slowly grinds to a halt all the way to Guadalupe, Iglesia Ni Cristo Spokesperson Edwil Zabala stepped to the microphone to deliver a statement that should officially be registered as a weapon of mass confusion.

"We are against twisting the law!" Brother Edwil proclaimed with a straight face. "We do not oppose the implementation of the law, but we oppose twisting it to cover up corruption!"

It is a beautiful, dazzling piece of rhetorical art. Let us dissect the pure, unadulterated satire of this historic announcement.

According to the church, filing a plunder case against Senator Marcoleta for accepting $75\text{ million}$ pesos from private individuals is "twisting the law."

Netizens, however, are pointing out a slight structural flaw in this logic: The law didn't twist; Marcoleta’s tongue did.

The prosecution's entire evidence folder doesn't consist of secret wiretaps or forged documents.

It consists of Marcoleta himself, standing in front of a microphone during the 2025 elections, bragging about how much money people were shoving into his pockets.

To claim the government is "twisting the law" by using a politician's own loud, voluntary confession against him is spectacular.

In this new legal system, reading the actual text of Republic Act 6713 (which strictly bans public officials from accepting any gifts) is considered an act of aggression.

If the law says "bawal," and you say "ginawa ko," prosecuting you isn't twisting the law—it's just basic reading comprehension.

The climax of Brother Edwil's statement deserves an award for Dramatic Irony:

"Even if they imprison Senator Marcoleta, we will not stop demanding justice for our fellow Filipinos who have been robbed!"

The internet immediately exploded into a collective facepalm.

As netizens quickly noted, the irony here is heavy enough to collapse the EDSA flyover.

If you want to find the people who have been robbing the Filipino people, you usually don't start by holding a massive rally to defend a guy facing a non-bailable plunder case for taking millions in illegal cash.

The strategy is breathtaking: We are going to fight the thieves by blocking the highway to protect a guy who admitted to taking the money, because clearly, the real crime here is the Ombudsman doing his job.

For years, the public was told that the bloc vote was just a private, spiritual matter.

But as thousands of members shut down major thoroughfares on a workday morning over a standard anti-graft case, netizens are officially filing for a change of status on social media:

Old Status: Religious Organization.

New Status: Highly disciplined, traffic-stopping political party with a really great choir.

When a religious group's official doctrine becomes "We support whatever Senator Marcoleta upholds," the separation of church and state doesn't just get blurred—it gets completely run over by a fleet of rally buses.

So, let us salute the spokespersons and the strategists. They have taught us a valuable lesson in modern democracy: No one is above the law unless they can mobilize 7,000 people to block the Tuesday morning rush hour.

To the daily wage earners who lost their pay today because they were stuck in traffic: Do not worry. The rallyists are out there demanding justice for the "robbed"—even if your time, your wages, and your sanity were the first things taken.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Rodante Marcoleta: Faith: The Ultimate Teflon Shield

 



In a vibrant democracy, we must always defend the sacred, constitutional right to assemble, protest, and completely paralyze traffic in the name of righteousness.

Every citizen, including the fiercely united members of the Iglesia Ni Cristo, deserves the freedom to take to the streets.

But as the old saying goes, freedom of speech is a two-way street—even if that street is currently blocked by thousands of rallyists.

While one group exercises its right to chant, the rest of us are exercising an equally exhausting right: the right to scratch our heads and ask incredibly awkward questions.

Let us take a moment to marvel at the latest masterclass in political theology involving Senator Rodante Marcoleta.

The Senator, in an admirable display of absolute transparency, publicly and voluntarily admitted to receiving substantial sums of money from private individuals while serving in the government.

No coercion, no truth serum, no hidden cameras. Just a man and his microphone, casually redefining public ethics.

Naturally, the response from his faithful backers wasn't, "Wait, isn't that a textbook violation of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act?"

Instead, it was: "Quick! To the rally mobiles!"

It is a breathtaking new legal doctrine: The Transubstantiation of Cold, Hard Cash.

Through the power of a divine endorsement, a legally questionable financial transaction is miraculously transformed into a "blessing," completely immune to the probing eyes of secular investigators.

We must applaud the sheer, inventive genius of the human mind. For centuries, humanity has struggled to find a way to escape the grueling reach of accountability.

We tried hiding in caves; we tried offshore bank accounts; we tried claiming we forgot.

But the ultimate shield was right in front of us all along: Organized Devotion.

Why bother hiring expensive defense lawyers when you can just invoke a higher power? The formula is beautifully simple:

1. Get elected.

2. Admit to something that would get any ordinary government clerk fired and jailed.

3. Have a massive religious organization declare that scrutinizing you is an attack on them.

In this system, allegiance to truth and the rule of law are treated like outdated fashion trends—quaint, but terribly impractical.

Why be sentimental about the Constitution when you can be sentimental about your favorite politician?

It must be a wonderful feeling to live in a reality where the size of your congregation determines the depth of your immunity. It gives a whole new meaning to "safety in numbers."

Unfortunately for the rest of society, the law is supposed to be notoriously unfeeling, blind, and profoundly lacking in religious fervor.

The blindfold on Lady Justice isn't there so she can ignore who is breaking the law; it's there so she doesn't care how many voters they can mobilize on a Tuesday afternoon.

So, let the rallies continue! Let the banners fly! But as the chants echo through the streets, remember the golden rule of modern democracy: No one is above the law—unless, of course, they have a really good choir backing them up.

When accountability is treated like an option rather than a rule, it makes you wonder: do you think these institutions genuinely believe in their own defense, or is it just a strategic flex of political muscle?

Satire: Did INC Have Permit?



Welcome to the newest episode of Philippine Legal Physics, where the laws of the land operate entirely on a slider scale based on how many buses you can lease before dawn.

Today, Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA) experienced a complete reality breakdown.

Ordinary Filipinos know the drill: if you so much as stop your car on the EDSA yellow lane to pick up a text message, an MMDA officer will appear out of nowhere like an angry anime character to fine you.

If a small student group tries to hold a peaceful rally with cardboard signs, they are instantly met with anti-riot shields, water cannons, and a lecture on Batas Pambansa Blg. 880.

But on this spectacular Tuesday morning, 10,000 members of a highly disciplined organization magically bypassed the entire legal framework.

No coordination. No advisory. No permit. Just pure, unadulterated "surprise" choreography.

Let’s look at the satire, the reality, and the legal gymnastics of how this went down.

Is the Iglesia Ni Cristo a Special Group of People, and is the Government Afraid to touch them with a 10-foot pole?

To answer the question: Yes, and yes. (It is just how we feel.)

In the Philippines, there are two types of citizens subject to the Public Assembly Act:

Normal Citizens: Bound by the laws of physics, the local government, and the PNP. They need permits.

The Bloc-Voting Elite: Blessed with the divine right to create spontaneous gridlock.

When the MMDA and the Quezon City government woke up at 3:00 a.m. to find White Plains Avenue completely shut down and buses blocking the EDSA Carousel busway, their response wasn't a swift enforcement of the "No Permit, No Rally" policy.

Instead, they activated the highest tier of government strategy: Extremely Maximum Tolerance. Which is almost a cliché to us.

While daily wage earners were stranded in traffic, losing their daily pay, officials pleaded on the radio for the rallyists to "please respect other people's rights."

It turns out, when you possess a unified voting base that politicians rely on to get elected every three years, "illegal assembly" is reclassified as a "spontaneous festival of expression."

The government isn’t just afraid of them; they are actively auditioning for their future endorsement.

Can They Be Sued? Technically, yes. In a parallel universe where the law is blind and un-sentimental, the organizers and participants could face a mountain of legal trouble.
If a brave soul actually decided to file a case, they could do so on several distinct grounds:

1. -Legal Ground/Law - Batas Pambansa Blg. 880 (Public Assembly Act)

-What It Covers - Section 13 penalizes holding a public assembly without a written permit, carrying a penalty of imprisonment.

-The Irony - The law explicitly states the rally is illegal, but police spent the morning negotiating with organizers rather than serving citations.

2. -Legal Ground / Law - Article 351 of the Revised Penal Code (Grave Public Nuisance)

-What It Covers - Any act that annoys, offends the senses, obstructs, or interferes with the free passage of any public highway.

-The Irony - Shutting down the EDSA Ortigas Flyover on a Tuesday morning is the literal textbook definition of a public nuisance.

3. -Legal Ground/Law - Article 2176 of the Civil Code (Quasi-Delict / Torts)

-What It Covers - Suing for actual financial damages caused by negligence or intentional disruption.

-The Irony - Thousands of daily wage earners lost their hourly pay today because they couldn't get to work. Millions of pesos in economic productivity vanished in the Ortigas split.

4. - Legal Ground/ Law - Land Transportation Rules

-What It Covers - Illegal parking, blocking the EDSA busway, and obstruction of traffic by the transport buses.

-The Irony - One bus driver was almost arrested, leading to a scuffle where protesters chanted "We are one," effectively using collective unity as a shield against a traffic violation.

Ultimately, today's EDSA event successfully updated the legal precedent for protests in the Philippines. Moving forward, the rule of law has been simplified into a handy mathematical equation:

Severity of the Violation
Legal Liability = ------------------------------------
Number of Voters in Your Congregation

If the number on the bottom is large enough, the legal liability drops to zero, traffic laws become mere suggestions, and the highway becomes your stage.

So, to all the commuters who were late, docked of pay, or stranded in the heat: just remember, your constitutional right to travel is incredibly important—it’s just slightly less important than a politician's need to stay on the good side of a non-bailable plunder defendant’s support group.

(Just In Report: Nakakuha na raw ang INC ng permit.) The question remains ... di ba dapat sa simula pa lang ng rally nandiyan na ang permit ... hindi yong pinahabol na lang?)

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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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Private Campaign Donation Is Plunder

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

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