Blog Invitation

Blog Invitation

Register -Become a Follower

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Robin Padilla's Enterpretation of Force Majeure



The Senate Majority’s multi-media campaign to legalize the "Zoom-from-an-Undisclosed-Couch" amendment has officially entered its cinematic action-hero phase.

Leading the charge is the Chairman of the Committee on Constitutional Amendments himself, Senator Robinhood Padilla, and since posting, Padilla's statements have earned more than 74,000 likes and 13,000 comments, according to Phil Star.

It is alarming to note that with such a large number of netizens who might believe his words as the gospel truth, any blogger worth their salt should join a free-for-all discussion.

Since the senator has decided to look at the strict, ancient legal concept of force majeure (an act of God or unavoidable catastrophe), from the looks of it ... he is also rewriting it like a high-budget movie script.

According to Professor Padilla, a senator shouldn't just be allowed to vote from an iPad if a meteor strikes the Senate roof.

No, he argues that the rules must be loosened because of hypothetical wars abroad, potential tensions between China and Taiwan, localized terrorism, and future rainy days.

Basically, if the universe feels even slightly chaotic, the Senate Majority wants a digital hall pass.

In actual Philippine jurisprudence, force majeure is a very serious, highly restrictive legal defense.

The Supreme Court has ruled time and again that for something to qualify as an inevitable apocalyptic tragedy or cataclysm, it must be completely impossible for senators to drive their cars and perform their duties normally.

Let's do a quick physical inventory of Pasay City right now, where the Senate building is:

Bombs falling on Manila: 0

Martial Law declared: No

Senate Plenary doors locked due to global war: Absolutely not

Sessions are underway, air conditioners are humming, and senators are sprinting to elevators to hold press conferences and do lifestyle vlogs.

Yet, Robin’s imagination has expanded the legal definition so wide that it has lost all structural integrity.

The most hilarious part of Robin’s passionate defense is that he didn't actually help his allies—he completely exposed them.

While Senator Rodante Marcoleta was trying to pass the rule change with a sophisticated, highly boring lecture on digital transformation, Robin walked up to the microphone, dropped the legal jargon, and essentially screamed the quiet part out loud.

By listing every wild, hypothetical scenario under the sun to justify remote voting, he made it painfully obvious to the entire country that the Majority is in an absolute state of panic.

[ THE NETIZEN DECODER RING ]

* What Robin said: "We need Zoom because of global geopolitics and weather disturbances!"

* What the public heard: "We need Zoom because the ICC is currently looking for Bato dela Rosa and the Ombudsman is printing plunder files!"

Filipinos are not blind. The sudden, desperate urge to loosen remote voting rules isn't driven by a sudden fear of a Taiwan Strait conflict—it's driven by the very real, material reality that Senator Bato has gone into hiding anew.

It’s political self-preservation disguised as national security panic.

Robin’s online manifestos didn't just fail a basic legal scrutiny test; they insulted the collective intelligence of the nation.

The Philippine Senate was built for physical presence, rugged face-to-face debate, and institutional accountability.

It was not built to operate like a corporate work-from-home setup where lawmakers can hide behind a blurred camera background while rewriting constitutional protocols to shield their friends from a warrant.

By equating a standard criminal investigation with a national emergency, Robin tried to turn a basic legal crisis into an existential action movie where the Majority plays the victim.

The absolute mic-drop moment of this entire circus didn't come from the minority bloc—it came from a fellow member of Robin's own majority coalition, who perfectly summarized the collective exhaustion of the chamber:

"Eto ang mahirap kasi kung wala tayong legal background dito."

(This is the hard part when we don't have a legal background here.)

When your own political allies are publicly sighing on live television because your legal interpretations are causing structural damage to the party, it might be time to put down the Constitutional Amendment gavel, step away from the Zoom settings, and realize that "When you don't know the meaning of a Latin word... do not act like you know-it-all ... or pretend you are a walking encyclopedia."

Si idol kasi sugod ng sugod ... at walang kinatakutan... walang preno.

He is like a moth—burned multiple times, yet he keeps going back to the fire."

He loves attention ... so he keeps returning to a destructive or risky situation of offering opinions despite repeatedly getting hurt or embarrassed.

No comments:

Post a Comment

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

Chiz Escudero: The Return Of The Comeback ... Are We Memory Impaired?

  In the grand, never-ending circus of Philippine politics, we are witnessing a trick so audacious it would make a Vegas magician weep. The ...

Popular Posts