I was listening to a song by the Police on the radio this morning, and I was thinking VP Sara can relate to the lyrics if only she listens: "Every move you make ... Every step you take ... I'll be watching you."
In the opening Salvo of the impeachment hearing last week, Madriaga launched a major carpet-to-carpet missile attack, and the only thing we heard from the VP's camp was SILENCE with a capital S?
This is something above and beyond extraordinary knowing how Sara reacts even to even petty little issues.
There was minimal resistance, my colleague says it is bizarre that it deserves its own chapter in "How to Lose Friends and Alienate People (But Stay in Power)."
When Ramil Madriaga—a man who has seemingly memorized every ledger, bank account, and "bagman" route in the country—drops a bomb, the standard response would be: "Here are my bank statements," or "That is a malicious lie."
But not this time. The Office of the Vice President has unveiled a revolutionary tactical maneuver: The Academic Shield of Invincibility -a nurturing environment where students are protected from ignorance and empowered to overcome challenge.
Imagine the scene: The House Committee is presenting allegations about confidential funds, missing receipts, and "SeƱorita" paintings.
It is a dense, high-stakes investigation into systemic corruption.
The defense’s response? "I was a great law student."
It’s the ultimate "I’m not a criminal, I’m a Dean’s Lister" defense.
It’s like being accused of robbing a bank and telling the judge, "Your Honor, you cannot convict me; I actually got a high score in 'Introduction to Legal Research' during my freshman year."
Does a high grade in Civil Procedure make a bank account vanish?
Does an "Excellent" rating in Criminal Law allow you to ignore a subpoena?
If being a good law student is the new standard for innocence, then the Philippine Bar Exam pass rate is about to become the most powerful legal immunity in the land.
Leila de Lima, who has spent enough time in the crosshairs of political attacks to know a "distraction" when she sees one, hit the nail on the head.
She noted the deafening silence on the actual crimes vs. the shouting about the GPA.
The Accusation: "Where did the millions go?"
The Response: "Look at how well I analyzed this case study in 2008!"
It is a masterful use of the "Look Over There" technique.
If you talk about school records long enough, maybe the public will forget that school records don't pay for confidential-fund-funded lifestyle upgrades.
The most satirical part of this entire "Impeachment-as-a-University-Viva" format is that the silence regarding the actual allegations is deafening.
In politics, silence is rarely "neutral."
When a witness accuses you of being a bagman and you respond by posting your transcript of records, you aren't clearing your name; you are admitting that the transcript os the only thing you have.
It turns out that if you have the receipts, you show the receipts.
If you have nothing but a degree, you show the degree. And if you have a degree and a confidential fund scandal, you hope that everyone in the Philippines is as obsessed with your academic performance as you are.
If the OVP’s legal team thinks that a 20-year-old law school record is going to hold up against sworn testimony in an impeachment court, they might want to re-enroll in Evidence 101.
The Filipino people are not looking for a valedictorian; they are looking for an honest official.
A grade of 1.0 in Torts is impressive, but it doesn't balance a ledger.
A diploma is a nice piece of paper to hang on the wall, but it’s not an "Anting-Anting" (amulet) that protects you from a House inquiry.
You can study law, you can ace your exams, and you can become the most "excellent" student in the history of your university.
But at the end of the day, an impeachment hearing isn't a Bar Exam. The professors don't care about your handwriting; they care about the missing zeros in the budget.

.jpg)


