Blog Invitation

Blog Invitation

Register -Become a Follower

Friday, May 15, 2026

New Defnitions: Escaping Means He Choose To Leave and Forthwith Means Maybe Next Year


We are now living in a world where English words are being butchered, spin-doctored, and manipulated to suit one's narrative and capricious whims.
As the country waits for the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte to move forward, we find ourselves back in a familiar loop.

Just last year, it was former Senate President Chiz Escudero performing semantic gymnastics with the word "forthwith."

Now, we have Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano taking the baton and running—not away, mind you, but "choosing to leave"—with the same modus operandi.

In the 1987 Constitution, "forthwith" is a fairly aggressive word. It means "immediately," "without delay," or "right now." It is the verbal equivalent of a parent disciplining her son by counting one to three.

-The Escudero Edit: Under SP Chiz, "forthwith" was redefined as a philosophical concept. It became a mood, a suggestion, a distant destination that we might reach if the stars align and the political winds blow exactly at 15 knots.

-The Cayetano Remix: Now, SP Cayetano is treating "forthwith" like a slow-cooker recipe. He says the Senate will act, but apparently, his "immediately" includes a mandatory 40-day period of fasting, prayer, and waiting for the Majority to finish their dinner with the Remullas.

The peak of this linguistic circus occurred when reporters asked if Senator Bato dela Rosa "escaped" the NBI during that cinematic "Philippine Senate Under Attack."

-The Cayetano Response: "He didn't escape... he chose to leave."

-The Satire: This is a revolutionary breakthrough in criminal justice.

-If a Bato runs out the back door, he isn't a fugitive, not yet. Because the Senate doesn't honor warrants from the ICC."

-If Bato jumps over the Senate fence to skip arrest, he was not resisting arrest; he "opted for an alternative exit strategy."

-If Bato is running up the stairs while NBI agents are shouting his name, he’s not fleeing; he’s just in a sprint mood.

-If Bato disappeared from the Senate at almost 2 AM of Mat 15, he did not escape ... he chose to leave.

Ginagago ba tayo ng mga senador?

The short answer: Yes, but they’re doing it with "Constitutional Fidelity."

Our politicians treat the Filipino public like we’re reading a different dictionary. To them, words are not tools for communication; they are smoke grenades ... otherwise known as euphemisms - the polite way of saying it.

-Corruption becomes "unintentional budget misalignment."

-Betrayal becomes "strategic political realignment."

-A Coup becomes "a divine transition of leadership."

-Hiding in the Senate becomes "seeking institutional sanctuary for the preservation of democratic balance."

Cayetano is using the same playbook as his predecessor Chiz ... because it works.

If you change the definition of "forthwith," you can delay the impeachment trial until 2028, by which time everyone will be so confused by the vocabulary that we’ll forget why we were angry in the first place.

They aren't just protecting a Vice President; they are protecting the right to be "Creatively Truthful."

In this Senate, "Yes" means "Perhaps," "No" means "Not until I check with Davao," and "Accountability" is a word that was accidentally deleted during a software update.

The Senate should probably stop pretending to follow the Constitution and just release a "Cayetano-to-English Dictionary." Example entry would be:

-Word: Accountability (noun)

-Definition: a state of being where a Senator is asked questions and replies with a Bible verse and a ₱125-million-peso shrug.

So when a politician tells you Bato is not "escaping," they are telling you that they think your IQ is lower than the price of a Buy-One-Take-One pizza.

At kung sinasabihan kayo ng senador ninyo na itago ang CCTV—ibig sabihin niya, make sure na walang makakuha.

Kayo talaga ang likot ng pag-iisip ninyo.

Pero teka lang… usually ang mga CCTV ay nakapuwesto sa isang mataas na lugar. Kung may kukuha pa diyan ... tiyak huli ka ... sa dami ba naman ng tao doon?

Sonny Trillanes is A Probiotic

 


One alert reader made this sterling observation. He said in the world of Philippine politics, where biological warfare is being used to infect the minds of the Filipino people ... there are  live microorganisms—often called "friendly" or "good" bacteria—that provide health benefits when consumed in adequate amounts or applied to the body.

He observed in his personal pathology lab a specimen that defies the laws of legislative biology. 

He’s an unstoppable, highly fermented bacterium named Sonny Trillanes.

If UP Manila hasn’t put him under a microscope yet, they are missing out on the greatest medical mystery of the century.

Most politicians are like viruses—they infect, they multiply, and eventually, the body develops an immunity, or they just fade away. 

But Sonny? Sonny is probiotic.

Sonny Trillanes is exactly like that cup of yogurt you find at the back of your fridge. You didn’t buy it recently. You didn't invite it. But there it is—sour, thick, and incredibly persistent.

The moment Sonny Trillanes appears in the Senate lobby, the entire country has a collective realization: "Ptang in*. Something happened here!"

You don't see Sonny when things are going well. You see Sonny when the political milk in the Senate has curdled. He is the physical manifestation of a "weird smell" in the hallways of power.

There is a strange scientific pattern here: Moisture first, then Sonny. 

-The Observation: For a man named "Bato" (Rock), Senator Dela Rosa has been remarkably damp lately. 

He’s sweating. He’s crying. He’s leaking anxiety from every pore.

-The Analysis: Why? Because Trillanes is standing nearby, looking at him with the cold, clinical gaze of a man who has already color-coded Bato’s future mugshot. 

You can almost hear the Senate’s collective stomach acids churning: "We are sick, Alan! The political intestines are failing!"

The most dangerous man in the Philippines is not the one with the private army; it’s the man with no visible civilian hobbies.

-Other Politicians: They golf. They collect vintage watches. They have mistresses. They go fishing in Subic. They have lives that require them to occasionally "chill out."

-Sonny Trillanes: His only hobby is your downfall. He spends 24 uninterrupted hours a day imagining scenarios where Bato wakes up at 3:00 AM because he heard a spoon tap against a saucer in the kitchen and thought it was the NBI.

And the terrifying part? Bato would check. Sonny doesn't need a shift. He doesn't need a weekend. He is a perpetual-motion machine of spite and subpoenas.

Most politicians follow a very natural, "upholstered" aging process. They enter the Senate angry and radical, and ten years later, they are "statesmen." 

They become softer, rounder, and start calling their mortal enemies "Ninong" at weddings. They become "bridge-builders."

Not Sonny. Twenty years in politics has only made him more... Sonny. 

He is like a banana that refuses to become banana bread. He just gets more yellow, more banana-smelling, and more aggressively banana-shaped. 

He refuses to "move forward together." He refuses to mellow. He is a "System Update" that you’ve ignored for 20 years, and now your entire political OS is crashing because of it.

The Philippine government has spent two decades trying to classify him. Is he a mutineer? A traitor? An epal? A hero? 

The country has finally realized the truth: He is the immune system.

Every administration follows the same Five Stages of Sonny:

  1. Doubt: "He's just a crazy mutineer."

  2. Anger: "Investigate him! Flatten him! Put him in jail!"

  3. Bargaining: "Maybe if we ignore him, he'll go play golf."

  4. Depression: "He just won a Senate seat from a jail cell. How?"

  5. Acceptance: "Wait... everything he said three years ago is actually happening now."

For twenty years, we called Sonny Trillanes "annoying." We complained that he was "too much." 

We wished he would just find a hobby—maybe pick up pickleball or start a garden.

But as the ICC warrants fly and the "Renaissance" politicians start sprinting up the stairs, the country is starting to realize: The annoyance was the point. 

You don't want a "mellow" immune system. You want the kind of bacteria that is so sour, so fermented, and so powerful that it makes the salmonella of corruption think twice before entering the fridge.

This is what I discovered.  If you see yogurt in the Senate, check your expiration date. 

Because Sonny Trillanes is right again, and he has 24 hours a day to remind you of it.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Morning After Blame Game


The Morning After Blame Game

It is 5"58 PM ... the Senate session was adjourned ... and it is time for the senators to go home. That's exactly what Risa Hontiveros, Bam Aquino, Kiko Pangilinan, Ping Lacson, and Tito Sotto did.

According to the internet’s most creative "fact-creators," these five senators didn't just go home after a long day of work on May 13, 2026.

No, they apparently have a crystal ball that allowed them to see that gunshots would ring out at 7:40 PM, and they have to"flee" at 5:58 PM (or else)—that's roughly 102 minutes before the action started.

In the corporate world, leaving at 6:00 PM when the session adjourns is called "efficient time management." In the Senate "DuDirty" Multiverse, they rebrand it as "Prior Knowledge."

-The Logic: If you leave your office when it closes, you are a co-conspirator. If you choose to stay ... you play the victim ... and you were under attack.

-The New Rule: To prove you aren't part of a plot, you must stay in the building until at least midnight, preferably hiding under a desk, just in case a security breach happens.

If you go home to be with your family, you’ve clearly been "tipped off," ... warned ... alerted ... and received advance information—about something that is going to happen.

While the Minority is being roasted for following a clock, let’s look at the "Majority" who stayed behind.

Reports indicate that while the shots were being fired, the Majority was busy enjoying a casual dinner with Jonvic Remulla.

-The Vibe Check: The way they look at pictures, there is nothing that says "imminent security threat". They have a three-course meal and a casual chat with the DILG Secretary.

As Madam Aimee reported on her Facebook: "Oh, they are already drilling in the building, but she looks as calm and as cool as a cucumber while continuing to record the footage."

"If I probably got showered with bullets... I'd dive immediately into the nearest foxhole."

Wize Estabillo wizely said ... "Fires were already shot ... but Sen Aimee managed to look for the right hashtags in her live broadcast. Para trending ... Sayang ang kita sa Meta."

-The Satire: The Majority (the Dudirty senators) didn't "flee" because they enjoyed acting and playing as online vloggers ... turning the scenario into a social media backdrop.

While the Minority was likely stuck in the snail-paced traffic or eating dinner at home, the Majority was "bravely" documenting the chaos for their Facebook Lives.

It’s hard to believe they were "traumatized" when they enjoy checking their ring light and making sure the "shots fired" caption has the right emojis.

The best part of this narrative is how President Bongbong Marcos himself accidentally sabotaged the script of their improvised drama.

By releasing a video statement clarifying that neither the PNP nor the NBI initiated the shooting, he effectively killed the "State-Orchestrated Tip-Off" theory.

-The Dilemma: If the state didn't do it, who "tipped off" the Minority? Did they get a WhatsApp message from a "mysterious external force" that said, "Uwi na kayo ng 6 PM kasi may magaganap na sirkus ng 7:40 PM"?

-The Logical Wall: You cannot claim the opposition is part of a state plot when the head of state is busy saying, "It wasn't us."

The trolls are currently trying to climb a vertical wall of lies, but they keep slipping on the President’s own official statements.

Legally, you need evidence. Logically, you need a motive.

-The Evidence: A timestamp. 5:58 PM.

-The Motive: Hunger? A desire to avoid the traffic and the rush hour?

-The Troll Theory: "They knew!"

-The Satire: This is a "vertical climb up a wall of lies" indeed. To prosecute a narrative based on an "early departure" is to admit that your investigative skills are roughly on par with a toddler playing "I Spy."

The Minority left because the job was done. The Majority stayed because there was a buffet and a chance to be seen on camera.

In the Philippines, the only thing more dangerous than a security breach is a politician who knows how to use "Live" features during a crisis.

If you want to look "innocent," you apparently have to stay in the building until the walls fall down, or at least until you've finished your dessert with Jonvic.

The picture says it all. The Senate was under attack ... (the senate president was almost pleading for people to believe him) ... "but they don't look stressed at all," the netizens are complaining.

They said: "emotions are high," ... but their demeanor does not match the emotion they show.

One word to the wise: for the pictures to be believable ... you have to act like it. When you say emotions are high ... you don't need to smile or find your best angle when you pose for the camera.

Nagkaratratan na nga ... naka-pose pa sila? Ham actors ... flawed script ... or bad directing?

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Can We Trust Cayetano With The Impeachment?



As of now, the Senate of the Philippines, which, as of May 11, 2026, has been officially christened and saddled with satirical monikers and sobriquets by some proactive Facebook netizens, is so amusing that I was almost in tears from laughing.

These names are: Bato-Bahayan (referring to playing house or bahay-bahayan and his possible long-term stay in the Senate) ... Senate Hotel and SPA (highlighting the accommodation provided to him), Fortress Bato (referring to the lockdown and protective measures)...Taob Senate (A pun on "Bato" and "taob" (overturned), suggesting the minority became the majority when it flipped because of his unexpected homecoming.)

And not only that, following Alan Peter Cayetano's election as Senate President, social media users and critics have humorously and cynically labeled the upper chamber with nicknames highlighting his dramatic style and frequent Bible quoting.

Common nicknames include The Holy Chamber (referring to his Bible-quoting reputation (The House of 13 Disciples) in reference to the 13 votes that secured his position,

The vote was 13-9-2. A thin majority, sure, but in the world of Alan Peter, "thin" is just another word for "I can work with this as long as nobody mentions 2019."

If you’re wondering whether the Senate is "safe" in his hands, just remember: those are the same hands that once slammed a phone on a desk while shouting profanities at a colleague over a barangay dispute.

Let’s look at the "Natural History" of the Cayetano Presidency. It required a miracle.

-The Specimen: Senator Bato dela Rosa, who had been "extinct" from the Senate for six months—presumably hiding in a crawlspace to avoid the ICC—suddenly reappeared.

-The Event: On the exact same day the House impeached Sara Duterte (again), Bato walked in, smelling mothballs (specifically Naphthaline balls) and panic, to cast the deciding vote for Alan Peter.

-The Claim: Cayetano told the press, with the straightest face in political history, that this had "nothing to do with Sara's impeachment."

-The Satire: Of course it didn't! It was just a coincidence. Bato just happened to wake up that morning, realize he missed the smell of the Senate's hard-driving tempo, and decided to vote for the one guy who treats the Duterte family like a hallowed devotional item. It’s a "Gentleman’s Agreement" between a man avoiding a warrant and a man who treats agreements like disposable napkins.

If you want to know if Alan Peter will honor the "forthwith" transmission of the impeachment, just ask Lord Allan Velasco.

-The 2019 Flashback: Remember the 15-month term-sharing deal? Rodrigo Duterte himself brokered it. When the 15 months were up, Alan Peter suddenly developed "Power-Induced Amnesia." He held onto the Speakership like a barnacle on a ship, even stalling the national budget during a pandemic.

-The Verdict: Even Duterte called him swapang (greedy). When the man who literally invented the "Davao Style" of politics calls you greedy, you know you’ve reached a level of avarice that should be studied by NASA.

If you want to see how "neutral" and "composed" our new Senate President is, just watch the video from September 2024.

-The Plot: Alan Peter wanted to expand his family’s political bloodline in Taguig. Senator Migz Zubiri asked for a caucus.

-The Reaction: Alan Peter didn't offer a logical rebuttal; he offered a "P*tangina." He slammed his phone. He had to be physically restrained by his own sister.

-The Satire: If he gets that violent over a few barangays in Taguig, imagine his reaction when the Articles of Impeachment for Sara Duterte—his "Queen"—arrive at his desk. He won't just slam a phone; he’ll throw a laptop like his idol, or a TV perhaps, or better still, a teleprompter for an added impact.

To convict Sara, you need 16 votes. To acquit, you only need 9. Alan Peter is sitting on a "Duterte Bloc" of 13.

-The Strategy: Cayetano says the Senate will convene "forthwith."

-The Reality: In Alan-Speak, "forthwith" means "as soon as I figure out a legally unfounded motion to send this back to the House."

He did it in June 2025 as Minority Leader. Now that he has the gavel, he’s not just a "player" in the game; he’s the guy who owns the stadium and can turn the lights off whenever the other team starts winning.

Another thing .... Alan Peter tells us he believes in the "sanctity of life" and "due process."

-The Track Record: This is the same man who went on Al Jazeera in 2017 to tell the world that every single person killed in the drug war was a criminal. He was the "International Spokesperson for EJKs."

-The Satire: He’s like a vegan who spent ten years running a steakhouse and now wants to lead the Animal Rights committee. His "constitutional fidelity" is a costume he wears whenever there’s an ICC warrant in the room.

Is the Senate safe in the hands of a man who breaks deals, screams profanities at colleagues, and owes his position to a fugitive Senator?

If the "Window to the Soul" of the Senate is Alan Peter Cayetano, then the Senate currently looks like a house with the blinds drawn, the doors bolted from the inside, and a "No Trespassing" sign written in Greek.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Bato de la Rosa on The Rescue Mission


Well... it is official now... the Senate of the Philippines has transitioned from a legislative hall to a high-stakes fraternity house.

If you were wondering why Senator Bato dela Rosa suddenly appeared like a ghost in a Barong after a six-month "leave of absence," it wasn't because he suddenly missed the thrill of debating due process, accountability, and urban zoning laws.

As Senator Kiko Pangilinan and the rest of the world can see, Bato didn't return to the Senate to work; he returned to act as the hero of the Great Senate Coup of 2026.

Let’s be honest: the sudden urge to replace Tito Sotto with Alan Peter Cayetano wasn't about "legislative efficiency." It was a Rescue Mission.

-The Logic: If Tito Sotto stays at the helm, he might actually follow the rules. He might actually allow the law to function.

And for people like Bato—who is currently being scouted by the ICC for the much "European Tour" he didn't sign up for—following the law is a very dangerous hobby.

-The Satire: To avoid being "pulled into the kangkungan" (the swamp of legal defeat), the boys needed a Senate President who speaks the language of "Sanctuary" and "Biblical Protection."

They needed a maneuver. They needed a coup. Because in this Senate, the goal isn't to pass laws; it’s to pass the "Get Out of Jail Free" card to their buddies.

Then we have Robin Padilla, the Senate’s resident leading man, who seems to think that being a Senator is just a long-running action movie where he’s the loyal sidekick to the Duterte Dynasty.

-The Face-Off: Robin, we see your buddies"galawan" (the moves). You can’t "Bad Boy" your way out of the fact that this wasn't a change of leadership; it was a security upgrade.

-The Buddy-Buddy System: The Senate has become a club where "Political Neutrality" means "I’ll ignore your warrants if you ignore mine."

It’s a support group for the legally challenged. If Bato is in trouble, Robin is there with a quote.

If Sara is in trouble, the whole group shows up to pray. It’s touching, really—if you ignore the part where the country is paying for it.

The ultimate goal of this Senate shake-up (the infamous coup) is as clear as a Davao sunrise: Save Queen Sara.

-The Game Plan: Now that the Senate is controlled by the "Besties," the impeachment process is about to become a game of Bureaucratic Basketball.

-The Play: The "Messenger of the Son of God" and his Senate teammates are going to dribble that impeachment ball, pass it around, fake a move, call a timeout, and maybe even hide the ball under their shirts. Their goal isn't a verdict; it’s Time. They have to waste TIME.

-The Clock: They want to keep the ball in play until 2028. They are hoping that if they talk long enough, quote enough Bible verses, and hide in enough Senate "sanctuaries," the Filipino people will eventually get bored and wander off to watch a different show.

Senator Kiko and the critics are pointing at the facts, but Robin and the "Buddy-Buddy" League are sticking to the script.

-Kiko: "This is a pre-planned coup to protect the corrupt!"

-Robin: "Sunugin man ninyo ako... I am loyal!" (Even if you burn me, I am loyal!)

It’s hard to have a debate when one side is using the Constitution and the other side is using Movie Dialogue.

The Senate has been successfully "maneuvered." Bato has his sanctuary, Cayetano has his gavel (and his Bible), and Robin has his angas and his unresearched monologues masquerading as the truth.

The only thing missing from the Senate right now is the People’s Interest (the apathy, the indifference, and the lack of emotion), aba eh pera na ninyo ang ninanakaw wala ka paring reaction? I hate to say this pero 8080 nga pala tayo?

What I learned today is: If you want to avoid a warrant, don't hire a lawyer—just get elected to the Senate and make sure your best friend is the one holding the gavel.

The Cayetano Canonization


Some netizens have said that May 11, 2026, is the day of infamy.

They sought to emphasize the historic nature of the events that transpired, implicitly urging the Filipino people never to forget the historic grab of power and to memorialize its date.

The term "day of infamy" has become widely used by the media to refer to any moment of supreme disgrace or evil.

Some say May 11 is a one-day festival of political decay: The Holy Coup d'Etat, the Senate Sleepover, the Senate Stairway Sprint, and the Senate Sanctuary ... all contributing to make this day unforgettable and noteworthy.

We can even celebrate it next year and make it a red-letter day... all it takes is just one enterprising senator to make it an official holiday.

May 11, as I recall, the weather is hot, but the political maneuvering is absolutely scorching.

In a single 24-hour cycle, our legislative system has transformed into a cross between a Vatican prayer meeting, a high-stakes heist movie, and a slapstick comedy routine.

If you ever wondered what a "political crisis" looks like when it puts on a Barong Tagalog and grabs a Bible, yesterday was your front-row seat.

1. The Cayetano "Canonization"
The day began with a classic Senate switcheroo. Out goes Tito Sotto, and in comes Alan Peter Cayetano, a man who can pivot from political strategy to a Sunday sermon faster than you can say "Confidential Funds."

-The Tactic: Cayetano spent the afternoon quoting Scripture with such intensity you’d think the Senate was being renovated into a cathedral. He invoked the name of the Almighty so often that the heavens probably started checking for a "Cease and Desist" order.

-The Satire: It’s a bold move to use the Bible as a shield for Sara Duterte. Usually, "thou shalt not steal" is a pretty big part of the book, but Alan Peter seems to have a "Special Vice Presidential Edition" where that chapter is labeled "Confidential."

No matter how many prayers he offers, the Filipino people have developed a high tolerance for budol (scams).

You can’t wash away a 53-0 House vote with holy water and a smile. Or the plenary vote of 257 by incensing it with Holy Smoke or a wave of the hand.

2. The "Bato" Brand of Cardio
Next up was the guest of honor, Senator Bato dela Rosa, who hasn't been seen in the Senate for six months but suddenly reappeared with the agility of a track star.

-The Circus: We witnessed the "Tokhang Architect" playing a high-stakes game of Tagu-Taguan (Hide and Seek) with the NBI and Sonny Trillanes.

Watching Bato sprint through the halls was a masterpiece of "Bureaucratic Athletics."

He isn't running for the people; he’s running from the International Criminal Court.

-The Irony: He is the man who told the world, "If you have nothing to hide, don't run," is currently treating the Senate stairs like a treadmill at a CrossFit gym.

He needs the numbers to block Sara’s impeachment, and he needs the Senate sanctuary to keep himself from an ICC cell.

It’s a "Buy One, Get One Free" deal on political survival.

3. The "Berdugo" Reunion
While Bato is busy making noise, the names of the "old guard"—the Lito Patays, the Parlades, and the Sinases—are echoing in the halls again.

-The Reality: These aren't public servants; they’re the "Executioner’s Club." The system is currently working overtime to protect the very people who treated the Bill of Rights like a piece of S---.

-The Demand: The people want Due Process, not a Senate Circus. They want justice for the victims of Tokhang, not a Bible-thumping Senate President acting as a human shield for a Davao dynasty.

4. Dynasty vs. Democracy
Yesterday proved that our political system is currently on life support, and the doctors are all crocodiles.

We are stuck in a loop of dynasties, bureaucrats, and "capitalist cronies" who treat the Constitution like a menu they can order from.

-The Plot: The Senate is currently the "Protector of the Dishonest and Immoral," a luxury gated community where you can hide from an arrest warrant as long as you have the right "Besties" in the plenary.

It is kind of eerie and awkward that while the Dirty Dozen give comfort and solace to Bato, the former majority turned minority are sitting quietly behind the ruckus of Bato's booming voice, probably disgusted with the way the new majority showed their brotherly love.

I can almost hear them and the people in the gallery yell: Stop The Show!

The curtains need to close on this performance. The Filipino people didn't pay for tickets to a comedy show; they paid for a government.

Impeach Sara Duterte: Because "Confidential" is not a legal defense.

Jail Bato Dela Rosa: Because a Senate seat is not a "Get Out of Jail Free" card from the ICC.

Stop the Circus: Because the lions are hungry, the clowns are in charge, and the audience is ready to burn the tent down.

When a politician starts quoting the Bible to justify blocking an investigation, it’s time to check your wallet.

And when a General starts running up the stairs to avoid the law, it’s time to realize that the "Renaissance" was actually just a very long, very dark hallway.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Satire: Netizens Compilation of Ironies In the Serving of Warrant of Arrest to Bato

 


May 11, 2026 - This is so far the most hectic day in Philippine politics by far.

While the House of Representatives was busy with a Yes or No vote to impeach Inday Sara ... the Senate of the Philippines became a host to the shooting of The Spiral Staircase - Pinoy edition.

We witnessed the most thrilling episode of this action-packed movie, and the gripping chase scene on the stairs will make ABS-CBN's "Blood and Duty" blush with envy (particularly Richard Gutierrez and Gerald Anderson) for not including this segment in their sequence.

It featured a world-class sprint on the stairs. We commend Bato that, despite his age, he outdid the NBI agents.

Some netizens joked that in his 6-month sabbatical ... he was on a high-intensity plyometric exercise regime where he ran up a flight of stairs to build explosive leg power, speed, and cardiovascular endurance.

And from the looks of it ... it showed. To cut my intro short, here is the compilation of ironies the netizens observed on the May 11 Senate adventures.

Irony 1. Trillanes: The Ultimate "Plus One."

The most delicious irony of the day was the presence of Sonny Trillanes during the serving of the ICC warrant.

-The Backstory: Bato once told Trillanes on national TV: "If they arrest me, you better be there to accompany them!"

-The Satire: Sonny Trillanes is apparently the only person in the Philippines who takes Bato’s dares literally.

He showed up like a polite RSVP to a party no one wanted to host.

He wasn't just there for the warrant; he was there for the customer service.

"You asked for a companion, Senator. I’m here. Do you need me to hold your bag while you run up the stairs?"

It turns out, Bato is great at giving challenges, but not so great at the "Terms and Conditions" that come with them.

Irony 2. The Senate Sanctuary
Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano has declared the Senate a sanctuary for Bato.

-The Irony: When Sonny Trillanes and Leila de Lima were facing arrest, the Senate doors were essentially a "Push to Enter" for the police.

But for Bato? Suddenly, the Senate floor is thoroughly guarded and shielded. It has a high level of safety, with effective measures in place to keep Bato safe from harm or threats.

-The Question: What is so special about Bato? Is it the shiny head? The "Renaissance" vibe?

Or is it just that Cayetano’s version of "protection" depends entirely on whose name is on the warrant?

Irony 3. The Great Staircase Chase
Seeing Bato dela Rosa—the former "Top Cop"—sprinting up the stairs to outrun the NBI is a cinematic masterpiece.

-The Satire: After years of being the one ordering the chase, Bato has finally discovered the cardio-intensive joy of being the chased.

It’s a full-circle moment. He used to say, "If you have nothing to hide, don't run."

Apparently, that rule only applies if you aren't wearing a tailored Barong and trying to reach the "Sanctuary" on the second floor.

Irony 4. The "I’m Just Here to Work" Defense
Bato has been absent for six months—presumably hiding in a very secure basement—only to reappear exactly when the Senate needed a vote to oust Tito Sotto.

-The Exchange:

-Reporter: "Why are you here today?"

-Bato"I am a Senator of the Republic! If I don't show up, you look for me. If I show up, you ask why!"

-The Translation: "I haven't done my job in half a year, but I’ve decided to start working again at the exact moment it helps me get protection and helps my friends take over the building. It’s called multitasking!"

Irony 5. The "Renaissance" of Delusion

Bato remarked that this is the "worst government" and that he thinks Duterte’s time was the "Renaissance of Philippine politics."

-The History Lesson: If the Duterte era was the "Renaissance," then Michelangelo must have traded his paintbrush for a "Tokhang" list.

It’s a bold choice of words. Usually, the Renaissance is known for art and enlightenment; Bato’s version seems to involve a lot more "Confidential Funds" and international warrants.

Irony 6. The "Surprise" Coup (Sponsored by the Cayetano Family)

Netizens aren't buying that the Senate coup d etat wasn't planned. It was the most predictable "surprise" takeover in parliamentary history.

The putsch and the seizure of power were a bloodless regime change in my memory bank.

-The Evidence: Bato shows up out of nowhere after 6 months of hiatus. Alan Peter Cayetano’s wife was there. His sister is there. If it was not planned ... what else is there to say? It’s a family reunion with a side of adrenaline-paced hot pursuit starring Bato!

-The Atmosphere: There were Bible verses, there was prayer, and there was enough "plastic-ity" to fill a recycling center. It was a requiem mass for a very unholy power grab.

Irony 7. Protecting the "Queen"

In the end, this wasn't about "Inter-Parliamentary Courtesy" or the law.

It was about Inday Sara's Senate Besties. Cayetano’s protection of Bato is a "thank you" note written in the blood of judicial independence.

They aren't serving the people; they are serving the "Queen," ensuring that her most loyal knight doesn't have to face an international court while there are still Senate seats to be rearranged.

One thing I learned today is that if you want to avoid an arrest warrant, make sure you have a Senate President who owes you a favor and a pair of running shoes that work well on marble stairs.

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

New Defnitions: Escaping Means He Choose To Leave and Forthwith Means Maybe Next Year

We are now living in a world where English words are being butchered, spin-doctored, and manipulated to suit one's narrative and caprici...

Popular Posts