Blog Invitation

Blog Invitation

Register -Become a Follower

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Major Accusations ... Minor Response?

 


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.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

The Monetized Lie


 In the hallowed halls of Facebook and YouTube, two DDS vlogger luminaries—Iloy Bugris and Jack Argota—have finally dropped their masks to reveal the secret business model behind the "Pro-Duterte" propaganda machine. 

It wasn't about patriotism. It wasn't about the country. It was about that sweet, sweet Engagement.

Iloy Bugris has given us the most honest admission in the history of internet deception. When asked why she churned out fiction faster than a pulp-novel writer, she didn't cite political conviction. She cited the "M-word."

  • The Strategy: Why waste time verifying facts when you can generate a "Presidential Funeral" thumbnail for $0 and get a million views?

  • The Philosophy: To Iloy, the truth is just a peasant who doesn't pay rent. "For the money" is the new "For the country." She’s not just a vlogger; she’s a Disinformation Consultant who charges by the click.

Then we have Jack Argota, who approaches fake news with the enthusiasm of a teenager trying to learn the latest TikTok dance. For Jack, politics isn't about policy—it’s about "Staying Relevant."

  • The Strategy: If everyone else is posting that the President is in a freezer, and you don't post it, are you even a vlogger?

  • The Philosophy: It’s like wearing a trendy pair of shoes, except the shoes are made of lies and they lead directly to a court summons. Jack isn't a political analyst; he’s an "Engagement Influencer" who treats the destabilization of the Republic like a viral challenge.

The most hilarious part of this saga is the shared defense: "I did it for the engagement."

Imagine a bank robber in court: "Your Honor, I didn't steal the money because I'm a criminal. I did it because my bank balance really needed the engagement! Think of the likes I would get if I posted a picture of the cash!"

In 2026, "For Engagement" has become the legal equivalent of a "Get Out of Jail Free" card. They think that as long as they can point to their high view counts and share numbers, the Cybercrime Prevention Act will just vanish into thin air. Newsflash: The NBI doesn't care about your algorithm-friendly content plan.

Let’s be clear: In a healthy democracy, we need criticism. We need people to question the government, to debate the budget, and to hold leaders accountable. That is the lifeblood of a free society.

But there is a gaping canyon between "Opinion" and "Fabrication."

  • Opinion: "I think the government is wasting money." (Valid, democratic, protected).

  • Fabrication: "The President died yesterday and is being replaced by a holographic potato chip." (Illegal, malicious, and frankly, pathetic).

Iloy and Jack are currently discovering that while "Content is King," Consequence is Queen. 

They thought they were building empires of influence, but they were just farming crops of legal liabilities.

They traded their credibility for a few coins and some "trending" status. 

It’s a bad business model. When the only thing you have to offer the Filipino people is a lie wrapped in an "engagement" hook, don't be surprised when the only thing you get in return is a subpoena.

The Moral of the Story: You can monetize your lies, but you can’t monetize your way out of the law.

How Do You Solve A Problem Like Iloy Bugris


Iloy Bugris is made.

Having a mind totally her own, she is giving us a daily dose of how Iloy thinks ... she consistently and repetitively shared her thoughts, opinions, and perspectives ... even her inner monologues.

She shovels all her nonsense down our throat full throttle to the point of suffocation.

From her high-altitude sanctuary in the UAE, she has issued a decree that would make a Supreme Court Justice weep—mostly from laughter.

In a voice trembling with the "persecuted artist" energy of someone caught stealing a candy bar, she asks: "You want to deport me for my personal opinions? My personal analysis? My personal outlook?"

It’s truly moving. It’s like watching a flat-earther (a person who believes and promotes the conspiracy theory that the Earth is flat), and she gets mad when she gets a chance to see a globe in the library.

Let’s clarify the "personal analysis" Iloy is so proud of. According to her sophisticated geopolitical "outlook," the President is currently:

  1. Residing in a freezer.

  2. Deceased.

  3. Secretly replaced by a body double who is also, presumably, refrigerated.

The satire here is Iloy’s attempt to rebrand "Blatant Lying" as "Academic Discourse." She said, "The President is a frozen popsicle at St. Luke's."

Wherever angle you look, what she said was not an "opinion."

 It was blatant disinformation ... a disinformation smoothie ... a cocktail of false information.

Tapos, nagtataka siya kung bakit siya hinahabol ng mga awtoridad?

You aren't being chased for your "viewpoint," sweetie... you’re being chased because you’re trying to manifest a funeral through a YouTube livestream.

Iloy claims the Philippines has no jurisdiction over her because she is breathing UAE air. Espesyal ba ang hangin doon?

She’s even bragged about her "Lawyers"—take note, plural daw. 

We assume these are the same lawyers who represent Mary Grace Piattos, Kokoy Villamin, and the 18 Invisible Marines. 

If these lawyers actually exist, they clearly skipped the day of law school where they taught RA 10175 (The Cybercrime Prevention Act).

-The Fact: If you’re a Filipino and you commit a cybercrime, the law has "Long-Range Wi-Fi." Abot hanggang 163rd floor ng Burj Khalifa.

It doesn't matter if you’re in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, or on a space station—if your fake news hits a server in Manila, you’re caught, and you are trapped.

-The Advice: If your lawyers told you that being abroad makes you "untouchable," you should probably need reimbursement ASAP. 

Or at least check if their law degrees were printed on the back of a Piattos bag.

Iloy is acting like she’s being exiled for being a modern-day Jose Rizal. 

She wants us to believe she’s a brave truth-teller being silenced by the state.

In reality, she’s a Certified Scammer who got caught in the crosshairs of accountability. 

No one cares about your "outlook" on life, Iloy. We care about the fact that you’re using your platform to destabilize the country with "Freezer" fantasies.

Freedom of expression doesn't mean the freedom to announce someone’s death while they’re busy attending diplomatic functions in full view of the world. 

That’s not "free speech"; and freedom to be heard ... that’s a system error.

Iloy Bugris is currently discovering that the world is much smaller than her ego. 

You can’t hide behind a "Personal Opinion" defense when your opinion involves fabricating medical records and presidential obituaries.

The UAE might have tall buildings, but they don't have walls high enough to protect you from the Cybercrime Act. 

So, keep your "Analysis" coming, Iloy. 

Just don't be surprised when your "Personal Outlook" eventually includes a view of a Philippine courtroom.

Friday, April 17, 2026

What's In ... And What's Out?

What is in ... and what's out? What is passe... and what has novelty?

I was reading a post from Juan Luna's blog, and after having a rude awakening and a thorough reality check, I thought he had a point ... a point all Filipino voters should take note of.

So ...if you have not been serious all your life ... or if you have been living carelessly and have not cared about the leaders you vote into office ... the present moment is a critical time to start acting with purpose.

It is a call to end horsing around and trash your cavalier attitude (lack of proper concern for serious matters ... a careless or offhand approach to important issues, often showing a disregard for consequences or outcomes).

Its time to end the bahala na attitude ... it is time to end all procrastination and take control of your future before time runs out, highlighting that the "now" is all you have to make a change.

In a world where we spend all our time looking at the West Philippine Sea through binoculars, wondering when the next water cannon will hit, Juan Luna’s blog has dropped a reality check that suggests we might be looking in the wrong direction.

According to the l paratroopers. 

It’s happening via Direct Deposit. 

Why go through the hassle of a military blockade when you can just buy a "Gold Subscription" to a national candidate?

The satire here is almost too real to be funny. 

We used to worry about fon powers taking our islands; now we have to worry about them taking our Decision-Making. 

If the allegations are true, we aren't dealing with a simple campaign finance violation—that’s for amateurs. 

We’re dealing with a Sovereignty Sale. When foreign money enters a campaign, it’s not a "donation";it’s a Venture Capital Investment. The Product: A Philippine Leader.

  • The ROI (Return on Investment): Access, influence, and a very specific type of "selective amnesia" regarding maritime borders.

It’s the ultimate "Soft Power" hack. No need for soldiers when you have "Utang na Loob" (Debt of Gratitude). 

Why fight a war when you can just own the guy who will ultimately open the gates with a red carpet and a lot of revelry?

Juan Luna points out the deafening silence from the accused.

In the world of high-stakes politics, silence is usually treated as "Dignified Restraint," but in 2026, it’s starting to look like a Buffering Screen. 

If your campaign funds are as clean as a newly bleached barong, why not just show the receipts? Here are the options. 

  • Option A: "Here is the list of my donors, all of whom are Filipino citizens who love their country."

  • Option B: (Silence)... "It’s a technicality!" ... (Silence) ... "You're just politicking!"

When you hide behind legal maneuvering and technicalities, you aren't defending your name; you’re just building a Legal Great Wall around your bank account.

The blog rightly notes that the front line isn't just a shoal or a reef anymore; it’s inside our institutions. 

The "Breach" is already internal. If foreign funds influenced a national campaign, then the enemy didn't have to break down the door—they were invited in for tea and were given the Wi-Fi password.

This is why this isn't just a "scandal." A scandal, unlike your favorite snack delight, Mary Grace Piattos, or Madriaga's painting gift to the Vice President.

This is a System Failure. If a leader’s loyalty is bought in installments, then every time they sit at the Cabinet table, there’s an invisible "Foreign Consultant" sitting right next to them, whispering in their ear.

The country deserves answers "under oath." 

Not a TikTok dance, not a pre-recorded vlog with a "sad" filter, and definitely not a "No Comment" from a high-priced lawyer.

In matters of national security, silence isn't "neutral"—it’s a Confession of Complexity. 

If the lines between "External Aggression" and "Internal Compromise" are blurring, we need to adjust the focus.

We’ve been so busy guarding the "West" Philippine Sea that we forgot to guard the "Western Union" branch in the campaign headquarters.

It’s time to find out if our leaders are standing for the People, or just standing for the person who signed the check.

It is also time to out donors to their campaign who among them has MARITIME CONFLICT OF INTEREST!

Do You Believe Bato de la Rosa?


In the last impeachment hearing, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) can find 144 "Irene Tans" faster than you can order a milk tea.

But when they were searching for Mary Grace Piattos. They could not find a trace.

That was not a technical glitch ... but more of  a spiritual anomaly. 

It appears the Office of the Vice President (OVP) ... when they want a name to appear badly ... the opposite happened.

During the April 14 impeachment hearing, the PSA confirmed what we all suspected: Mary Grace Piattos, Kokoy Villamin, and Milky Secuya do not exist. 

They haven't been born, they haven't married, and they haven't died. 

They are the ultimate "Confidential" citizens—so private that even the government that gave them money has no idea who they are.

But wait! Before we call for an exorcism of the OVP’s ledger, Senator Bato Dela Rosa is here to save the day with some "expert" local knowledge. 

According to the Senator—who definitely isn't just making things up with his interview with Karen Davila—the Piattos family is real, wealthy, and lives in Davao.

Apparently, in the Davao social registry, "Piattos" isn't a hexagonal potato chip with a satisfying crunch; it’s a prestigious surname. 

Perhaps they are cousins to the "Chippy" clan of Cebu or the "Nova" aristocrats of Northern Luzon?

  • Bato’s Logic: "I’ve seen them! They aren't snacks, they’re people!" Karen D. can't hold her laughter ... but she tried to control it ... as she protested: With all due respect.

  • The Reality: The Senator is "lying through his teeth" with such vigor that he might need a dental referral. When your boss’s budget is on the line, apparently the first thing to go isn't the fund—it's your grip on reality.

  • While "Irene Tan" is so common she has 144. birth certificates, Milky Secuya and Kokoy Villamin remain as elusive as a politician’s promise
  • Milky Secuya: Sounds less like a confidential fund recipient and more like a rejected brand of evaporated milk.

  • Kokoy Villamin: Sounds like the name of a character in a 1980s sitcom that was cancelled after one episode.

The PSA’s "Negative Record" is essentially a polite way of saying, "These people are imaginary friends who happen to be very expensive to maintain." 

It’s a miracle! The OVP has managed to distribute millions of pesos to people who don't have biological footprints. It’s not just "Confidential Funds"; it’s Supernatural Finance. 

The Commission on Audit (COA) is now in the awkward position of trying to track down receipts from ghosts. 

How do you issue a subpoena to a potato chip? How do you verify the signature of a man named "Milky" who has some feminine undertones?

This isn't just a "technicality" or a "clerical error." This is Narrative Absurdism (a kind of storytelling that is irrational .... illogical ... and nonsensical).

If the OVP’s defense is that these are "real people," then we are witnessing the greatest witness-protection program in history—one that protects people from the burden of ever being born.

Senator Bato can keep insisting that the "Piattos" family is a prominent Davao fixture, but until Mary Grace shows up at the PSA with a birth certificate and a bag of her namesake chips, we have to assume the only thing "wealthy" about this situation is the imagination of those writing the reports. 

So next time, if you’re going to invent names for your confidential liquidation, maybe pick something less likely to be found in a vending machine. 

Because when the PSA starts looking for "Mary Grace Piattos," the only thing they’re going to find is a lot of salt ... and very little substance.

The Pusakal and Askal As Impeachment Judges

Is Philippine politics really going to the dogs?

Or are we seeing the rise of Zoomorphism - technically attributing animal traits to humans, or the behavioral adoption of animalistic traits?

Well, we can help but notice it ... Atty Salvador Panelo calling some senators as PUSAKAL ... and some neutral netizens firing back that some Sara Seantors are also ASKAL.

Wait a minute, does it imply that they have deteriorated to some lowly animal level?

Or something once good or reputable has fallen into a poor state?

Well, that's what we are staring at now, the political environment has become a canine or feline show.

And the Philippine Senate is its grand arena, where legal luminaries and neutral observers have concluded that the best way to describe the impeachment process is through the lens of stray-animal management.

In one corner, we have the ever-fashionable Atty. Salvador Panelo, who has traded his usual silk scarves for a metaphorical net. 

He has identified four specific "PUSAKAL" (Stray Cats) who are apparently "poisoning" the minds of the Filipino people: Hontiveros, Pangilinan, Lacson, and Sotto.

According to the Gospel of Panelo, these four are the villains of the story. 

If they were in charge, a conviction for the Vice President would be "guaranteed."

  • The Logic: If you ask questions about confidential funds, you are a stray cat.

  • The Symptom: "Mind Poisoning." Side effects include: reading the budget, asking for receipts, and a sudden urge to understand the 1987 Constitution.

  • The Sentence: In Panelo’s dream courtroom, these four wouldn't just be legislators; they’d be a four-headed Hydra of Opposition that needs to be "domesticated" by the ruling party.

But wait! The "Neutral Observers" (who have clearly had enough of the feline metaphors) have fired back with their own list. 

They’ve identified TEN "ASKAL" (Street Dogs)—the loyal enablers who are ready to protect the VP at any cost.

From Bong Go and Bato to the "TikTok-Dancing" Marcoleta and the "Action-Movie" Padilla, this pack is ready to bark down any inquiry.

  • The Prediction: For these ten, an Acquittal is already written in the stars (or at least in the committee report).

  • The Counter-Argument: If asking questions is "poisoning" the mind, then what do you call blindly defending a snack-food-based liquidation report? Is that "Mind Detoxification" or just a very high-sodium diet of disinformation?

The most satirical part of this exchange is the debate over who is actually holding the bottle of "Mind Poison."

  • Panelo says: The critics are the toxic ones. They make people think that accountability is a real thing! How dare they!

  • The Netizens say: Panelo himself is the chief pharmacist of this "poison." He’s the one mixing the cocktails of legal jargon and "pogi points" to convince the public that a landslide vote in 2022 is a permanent shield against the House of Representatives.

It’s a beautiful, symmetrical mess. On one hand, you have the "Pusakal" who are accused of being too aggressive with their Claws of Justice. 

On the other, you have the "Askal" who are accused of being too loyal with their Leashes of Loyalty.

And in the middle? The Filipino People, who are just trying to figure out if anyone is actually going to feed the pet called Accountability. 

The Moral of the Story: In the Philippines, the law isn't a "Blind Lady" with a scale; it’s a neighborhood dispute between a cat lover and a dog lover, and the only thing getting "poisoned" is our collective patience.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Visual Gaslighting


Visual Gaslighting

"We are living in the world of oddballs".

Our society now is increasingly embracing situations or individuals who are peculiar, eccentric, and anyone can just tailor a script from heaven knows where and make it a gospel truth.

It suggests a shift away from strict conformity, highlighting a world where the unique, bizarre, or untraditional behaviors and ideas are increasingly accepted and tolerated.

In the DDS multiverse ... for instance, in VP Sara's impeachment hearing ... anything that will help the cause ... bahala na kung makakatulong talaga or hindi.

After Ramil Madriaga was introduced via the House of Representatives impeachment process, there was no letup; everyone from the aggrieved camp wanted to question his credibility and pin him down - that he was not credible, for crying out loud.

Remember Paolo Marcoleta… after his HOR colleagues struck out everything he said from the record … that Madriaga was not credible ... nakita pa siyang lumapit kay Ramil Madriaga, kung ano ang pumasok sa isip niya at pinaplano niya, siya lang ang nakaalam.

Mabuti na lang, inilayo na siya ng mga NBI at baka ano pang isip batang laro in the likes of Barzuela and Leviste ang kanyang gagawin. Well ... enough of him.

Well, what do you know? The latest "scandal" threatening to bring down the house isn't about the ₱805 billion or the mysterious "Mary Grace Piattos."

No, we are currently locked in a life-or-death struggle over the tale of Two Senoritas.

Duterte defenders have pounced on a painting behind the Vice President, screaming "Liar!" at Ramil Madriaga because Davao artist Tanya Gaisano Lee claimed the artwork as hers.

It was the perfect "Gotcha" moment—if you happen to be legally blind.

The satire here is that the "investigative experts" on social media have apparently skipped the part of their kindergarten where you learn to "Spot the Difference."

In one corner: Tanya’s work—tight, geometric, intricate, and very "Davao Chic."

In the other corner: The scholar’s painting—broader patterns, different hair rendering, and a sleeve design that wouldn't even pass as a knock-off at a night market.

To call these the same painting is like looking at a poodle and a wolf and saying, "Look, they both have four legs and fur, so the wolf must be a deep-fake poodle!"

When a photo surfaced of Madriaga’s scholar actually holding her version of the painting, the Dutertes' narrative didn't just leak—it capsized.

It turns out Madriaga didn't hallucinate a scholar in Laguna; he just happened to commission a painting of a woman in a baro't saya, which—shocker!—is a popular subject in Filipino art.

But in the world of Narrative Sabotage, facts are just annoying speed bumps.

The goal wasn't to be accurate; it was to be viral. So these what we are going to do.

-Find an image that looks vaguely similar.

-Ignore the textile patterns and brushstrokes.

-Scream "FALSE!" until the algorithm picks it up.

Let’s be honest: reading a sworn affidavit line-by-line is hard. It requires brain cells, patience, and a lack of bias.

But getting angry at a painting? That’s easy! That’s a snackable, 15-second "Fact Check" that you can consume while waiting for your Starbucks.

The defenders latched onto the painting because it was a Visual Smear Campaign.

They hoped that by proving Madriaga "lied" about a piece of wall decor, the public would assume he also lied about the bagman duties, the confidential funds, and everything else.

It’s the "Small Crack" theory: if you can't find a hole in the ship, just draw one with a Sharpie and tell everyone to start bailing water.

The real comedy here isn't that Madriaga might have a different taste in art; it’s that the people accusing him of deception are the ones using the wrong painting to "prove" his dishonesty.

It’s like a prosecutor trying to convict a man of stealing a car by showing the jury a picture of a bicycle.

If the paintings are different—and even a casual glance at the torso composition says they are—then the "scandal" isn't Madriaga's credibility.

The scandal is the Intellectual Dishonesty of the people who tried to frame a false contradiction.

In 2026, being a witness in an impeachment hearing means you don't just need a lawyer; you need an Art Historian.

The Duterte camp’s desperation is showing. When you have to resort to "Pattern Analysis" and "Sleeve Comparison" to discredit a witness because his actual testimony is too uncomfortable to face, you aren't looking for the truth—you’re just looking for a better scriptwriter.

The Moral of the Story: Before you try to assassinate someone’s character using a painting, make sure you aren't holding the wrong canvas.

Otherwise, the only person you’re painting as a liar is yourself.

Flag Counter

free counters

Be A Follower

Be A Follower

Blog Of The Week

Blog Of The Week

Blog of The Week

Blog of The Week

Revolver Map

Powered By Blogger

Search This Blog

Visitors Stats Today

  • …

    Posts
  • …

    Comments
  • …

    Pageviews

Today Is

Calendar Widget by CalendarLabs

World Time

About Me

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

Back To Top

”go"

Labels

Major Accusations ... Minor Response?

  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...

Popular Posts