Wednesday, 6 May 2026

The Culture We Claim, the Culture We Abandon

"The Culture We Claim, the Culture We Abandon"

A Filipino Essay on Malls, Museums,
Sociocultural Memory, and Convenient Nostalgia

By: Lualhati Madlangawa Guererro


Introduction: The Culture Filipinos Claim to Love

Filipinos like to imagine themselves as a naturally artistic people. The claim is not entirely false. The country sings, dances, decorates, performs, remembers, mourns, and celebrates with an almost instinctive theatricality. A family gathering can become a concert. A school program can become a spectacle. A fiesta can turn a street into a stage. A national victory abroad, whether in film, music, design, dance, or literature, can instantly become proof that the Filipino soul is creative, expressive, and gifted.

Yet this self-image becomes harder to defend when culture stops being entertaining and starts demanding responsibility. The Filipino public is often affectionate toward culture as performance, but indifferent toward culture as preservation. It celebrates artists after they have become famous, but rarely asks how many others disappeared because they had no support. It praises foreign cities for protecting old buildings, then shrugs when its own heritage is demolished. It says it loves history, but treats museums, archives, libraries, theaters, and heritage sites as optional luxuries. It mourns vanished places after the fact, but refuses to defend them while they are still alive.

This is the contradiction at the heart of the essay: Filipinos may not hate culture and the arts, but many have been trained to love them only when they are convenient. Culture is loved when it produces pride, tourism, content, nostalgia, or profit. It is loved when it is already famous, already foreign-approved, already packaged, already photogenic, or already dead. But when culture requires funding, patience, policy, maintenance, public education, or sacrifice, it is quickly dismissed as impractical. The old excuses appear almost automatically: “Private property naman yan” (“It is private property anyway”), “Wala naman tayong magagawa” (“There is nothing we can do anyway”), and “Sayang ang lupa” (“What a waste of land”).

At the same time, this failure cannot be explained by contempt alone. Many Filipinos are not anti-art in spirit; they are trapped in a society where survival has trained them to distrust anything that does not immediately feed the family. For the lower classes, art and culture are often treated as luxuries because food, rent, school fees, medicine, transportation, and job security come first. For the middle classes, culture is often acceptable only as a sideline, hobby, or route to fame. For the wealthy, even travel abroad can become less an encounter with civilization than an upgraded circuit of malls, hotels, restaurants, shopping streets, selfies, and pasabuy (shopping requests for items to bring back). The problem, then, is not merely poverty. It is a national habit of reducing culture either to survival’s enemy or consumption’s ornament.

This habit begins early. Children are told that culture matters, but too often they are taken to malls as field trips. They are taught that the outside world is something to be purchased, not studied, inherited, repaired, performed, or remembered. Museums become occasional school requirements. Libraries become afterthoughts. Theaters feel remote. Heritage sites are treated as backdrops. Public life is quietly replaced by retail space, and contemporary Filipinoness becomes organized around the escalator, the food court, the selfie spot, and the checkout counter.

This essay argues that the Filipino cultural problem is not a lack of talent, feeling, or memory. The country has those in abundance. The real problem is the absence of a serious culture of protection, access, and support. A people that claims to love culture must prove it before demolition, not after. It must fund art before artists become famous. It must build museums, libraries, theaters, archives, community spaces, and heritage systems that ordinary people can enter without feeling like intruders. It must stop treating nostalgia as a substitute for responsibility.

Because a nation that only mourns after destruction does not yet love culture in a serious way. It loves ruins. It loves the story of loss. It loves the child it once was, before it knew what was being erased. Until the country learns to protect culture while it is still alive, its nostalgia will remain what it has too often been: not memory, not preservation, not love, but an alibi.

Part I: The Convenient Love of Culture

The Performance of Cultural Love

There is a familiar claim Filipinos like to make about themselves: that they are a people of culture, feeling, music, memory, and art. It is a comforting claim because it sounds true on the surface. Filipinos sing at family gatherings, dance at fiestas, decorate churches, produce pageants, join school programs, flood social media with old photographs, and celebrate any artist who gains foreign recognition. The country knows how to perform affection for culture. It knows how to turn culture into ceremony, spectacle, tourism, branding, and patriotic applause.

But that affection often collapses the moment culture asks for protection, money, space, patience, inconvenience, or sacrifice. Then the national mood changes. Art becomes optional. Heritage becomes impractical. Preservation becomes obstruction. Artists are told to be realistic. Old buildings are dismissed as inefficient. Cultural work is praised in public but treated as a poor life choice in private. A supposedly artistic people suddenly becomes very managerial, very commercial, very resigned.

This is the contradiction at the center of Filipino cultural life. Filipinos do not necessarily hate culture and the arts in a simple or literal sense. The truth is more painful than that. Many Filipinos love culture when it flatters them, when it gives them national pride, when it produces prestige, when it becomes content, when it can be used for tourism, or when it has already been validated by foreigners. They love culture when it can be consumed without inconvenience. They love it when it comes finished, packaged, famous, profitable, sentimental, or safely dead.

What they often do not love is the difficult work of keeping culture alive.

This is why the question should not be phrased merely as, “Do Filipinos love culture?” That is too easy, because in some emotional sense, many do. The harder question is whether they love culture enough to protect it before it becomes convenient, famous, nostalgic, profitable, or marketable. A society proves its love not by how loudly it mourns what is gone, but by how seriously it defends what is still standing.

The Philippine state itself formally recognizes that culture is not decorative. Republic Act No. 10066, or the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009, declares that it is state policy to “protect, preserve, conserve and promote” the nation’s cultural heritage. The phrasing matters because it shows that heritage is not merely an optional sentimental preference. It is supposed to be a public responsibility. Cultural property, historic buildings, archives, monuments, traditions, and creative labor are not merely private luxuries. They are part of the patrimony of a people.

Yet the gap between law and mentality remains enormous. A country may have heritage statutes, museums, commissions, grants, and cultural agencies, but if the public instinct remains “Sayang ang lupa” (“What a waste of land”), “Private property naman yan” (“It is private property anyway”), and “Wala naman tayong magagawa” (“There is nothing we can do anyway”), then preservation becomes a legal language without a social body. It exists, but weakly. It can be invoked, but not always mobilized. It can be admired, but not always obeyed.

The issue is not simply that Filipinos lack laws. The issue is that many Filipinos lack a culture of defending culture. They will say they love old buildings, old songs, old streets, old photographs, old cinemas, and old hotels. But when those things need actual protection, the mood shifts from affection to resignation. The Filipino becomes practical, and practicality becomes the graveyard of memory.

In this sense, the Filipino affection for culture is often theatrical but not institutional. It is strong in performance and weak in policy. It is loud during ceremonies and quiet during budget hearings. It is passionate in nostalgia and passive in preservation. It is quick to clap for the artist onstage, but slow to ask whether the artist has health insurance, a grant, a rehearsal room, or a future.

That is why the convenient love of culture is so dangerous. It is not the same as hatred. Hatred would at least be honest. Convenient love is harder to confront because it speaks in affectionate language. It says “ang ganda” (“how beautiful”), “nakaka-proud” (“it makes one proud”), and “sayang naman” (“what a pity”), but often stops there. It offers admiration without obligation. It offers sadness without action. It offers pride without structure.
And culture cannot survive on admiration alone.

Culture as Luxury, Survival as Excuse

It would be too easy, and perhaps too cruel, to say simply that Filipinos hate culture and the arts. For many ordinary people, culture is not rejected because it is despised. It is set aside because it is treated as a luxury. The lower classes are often told, directly or indirectly, that the arts are for those who can afford uncertainty. Music, painting, theater, literature, design, film, dance, heritage work, museum work, research, and restoration are admired only if they lead to fame, income, or foreign recognition. Until then, they are hobbies. Worse, they are distractions.

The common mentality is brutally practical: if art cannot make money, it is a waste. If a course does not guarantee employment, it is irresponsible. If a building does not generate profit, it is wasted space. If a cultural program does not produce immediate returns, it is indulgence. In such a society, art is allowed to exist only after it has justified itself to the market. The artist must become famous before being respected. The writer must win abroad before being read at home. The performer must go viral before being taken seriously. The heritage site must attract tourists before it is worth saving.

This mentality does not come from nowhere. It comes from survival. Philippine Statistics Authority figures have shown the severe limits within which many Filipino families live. Average annual family income may be cited in national reports, but the lived meaning of those numbers is food, rent, schooling, medicine, transport, bills, debt, remittances, and fragile security. A household that is constantly calculating whether there is enough for tuition, hospital bills, or the next month’s expenses cannot be expected to treat art materials, theater tickets, museum memberships, books, or heritage advocacy as urgent needs.

This is where Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs becomes useful, not as a rigid law of human nature, but as a social metaphor. Maslow wrote that “human needs arrange themselves in hierarchies,” meaning that some needs often press harder when more basic conditions remain insecure (Maslow, 1943). The point is not that poor people cannot appreciate art; that would be false and insulting. The point is that a society structured around survival will constantly push the reflective, imaginative, and spiritual dimensions of life to the margins. The beautiful, the historical, the poetic, and the experimental are postponed because the urgent defeats the important.

The professor’s observation therefore rings painfully true: Filipinos are often so engrossed in survival that the needs of the soul come last in their minds. This does not mean Filipinos have no soul. It means the soul has been made to wait in line behind the grocery list, the tuition deadline, the traffic commute, the remittance obligation, the electricity bill, and the fear of illness. The soul is not absent; it is deferred.

This is also why art programs in Philippine universities have noticed the same pattern. They are not merely teaching technique, theory, and craft. They are also fighting an inherited suspicion. They are trying to persuade students, parents, communities, and institutions that art is not ornamental. They are trying to change the mentality that sees culture as decorative unless it can be monetized.

But survival cannot be the permanent excuse for cultural starvation. Explanation is not absolution. Poverty explains why art is neglected, but it does not justify building a country where only the rich can afford beauty and only the famous can afford to be artists. A serious society does not wait until everyone is wealthy before it builds libraries, museums, parks, theaters, archives, and cultural programs. It builds them precisely because life is hard. It understands that people need more than wages and roads. They need memory, imagination, silence, play, grief, criticism, and meaning.

The tragedy is that Filipino public life has often forced people to choose between the body and the soul. Then, after pushing the soul to the margins, it complains that citizens lack depth, taste, historical consciousness, and civic imagination. It is absurd to starve culture and then blame the public for being culturally malnourished.

The Family as the First Anti-Art Institution

The Filipino family also plays a major role in this problem. Many families are not anti-art in theory. They enjoy music, movies, singing, dancing, décor, festivals, television, pageants, and school performances. They will proudly tell relatives that a child can sing, draw, dance, act, write, or play an instrument. They will ask the child to perform at Christmas parties, birthdays, reunions, and school programs. They will clap, laugh, record the performance, and post it online.

But when the child says that art is not merely a talent but a possible life, the applause often stops.

The warning is familiar: “Walang pera diyan” (“There is no money there”). “Anong trabaho mo diyan?” (“What job will you get from that?”). “Maganda yan, pero sideline lang” (“That is nice, but only as a sideline”). “Mahirap ang buhay ng artista” (“The life of an artist is difficult”). These lines are not always said cruelly. Often, they are said out of fear. Parents know how fragile life can be. They know that one wrong career choice can damage the family’s hopes. They know that the Philippine economy punishes risk. They know that passion does not automatically pay rent.

But fear, repeated across generations, becomes ideology. It teaches children that art is acceptable only as performance, hobby, ornament, or achievement, but not as vocation. The child may sing at a family gathering, draw for school, dance for a program, write poems, or join theater. The family claps. But when the child says that this is a life, the family becomes anxious. The talent that was charming becomes dangerous. The gift that made relatives proud becomes a threat to stability.

This is why the Philippines can be a highly performative but weakly supportive culture. It has talent shows everywhere, but not enough cultural workers with security. It has singers in every barangay, but not enough music education. It has school performances, but not enough theater infrastructure. It has festivals, but not enough archives. It has “creative people,” but not enough creative labor protections. It has pride, but not enough policy.

The family’s anxiety is understandable. But understandable is not the same as harmless. When every household teaches the same lesson — that art is beautiful but unsafe, admirable but impractical, worthy but secondary — the result is national. A whole people learns to enjoy culture without building a culture of support.

The family becomes the first anti-art institution not because it hates beauty, but because it fears uncertainty. It narrows the child’s imagination in the name of protection. It confuses practicality with wisdom. It assumes that the responsible life is one that minimizes creative risk. And because Filipino family life is often structured around obligation, gratitude, and sacrifice, the aspiring artist is made to feel selfish for wanting a life that does not immediately reassure everyone else.

This is the quiet cruelty of the Filipino cultural condition. The country tells children to perform, but not to become artists. It asks them to decorate life, but not to question it. It wants talent as entertainment, not as vocation. It wants the child to sing at the party, but not to build a life around music. It wants creativity as proof of charm, not as a demand for institutions.

The University as a Battleground of Mentalities

This is why art programs in Philippine universities matter. They are not merely training painters, actors, writers, designers, filmmakers, musicians, scholars, or curators. They are fighting an entire social common sense. They are trying to prove that art is not a decorative break from serious life, but one of the ways serious life becomes visible.

A university art program teaches more than technique. It teaches patience, interpretation, discipline, criticism, historical awareness, material intelligence, and the ability to see form. These are civic capacities. A person who learns how to read an image may also learn how to read propaganda. A person who learns how to interpret performance may also learn how power stages itself. A person who studies architecture may learn how inequality becomes spatial. A person who studies literature may learn how language hides violence. A person who studies film may learn how memory is edited.

That is why the arts are not luxuries in the shallow sense. They are forms of perception. They teach people how to notice.

And perhaps that is why they are neglected. A society obsessed with survival and consumption does not always want people to notice too much. It wants them working, buying, adapting, obeying, scrolling, and moving on. Art slows things down. It asks why. It remembers. It refuses the official version. It makes grief visible. It makes ugliness intolerable. It makes silence speak.

This is also why public support for the arts should not be framed as charity. It is not about helping sensitive people pursue hobbies. It is about equipping a society to think, remember, imagine, and criticize. A country without strong cultural institutions becomes easier to flatten. It becomes vulnerable to propaganda, nostalgia, consumerism, and amnesia.

The university, then, becomes a battleground of mentalities. On one side is the inherited suspicion that art is impractical unless it becomes fame or income. On the other side is the insistence that art is a form of knowledge. This battle is not always dramatic. It happens in advising sessions, family dinners, thesis defenses, awkward enrollment choices, scholarship applications, and the quiet shame of students who feel they must justify why they are studying something “unprofitable.”

The art professor does not merely teach craft. The professor must often defend the existence of the craft itself. The student does not merely learn how to make. The student must also learn how to survive the constant question: “Ano ang trabaho mo diyan?” (“What job will you get from that?”)

This is exhausting. But it is also necessary. If the family teaches fear and the market teaches usefulness, then the university must defend the soul’s right to exist as more than an economic unit. It must insist that the nation cannot be built only by engineers, accountants, lawyers, managers, and developers. It also needs historians, writers, artists, musicians, archivists, designers, performers, critics, translators, curators, and cultural workers.

Without them, the country may still function. But it will not remember itself well.

Part II: The Training of the Consumer-Citizen

The Field Trip to the Mall

The problem begins early. Children learn what a society considers culturally important not only through textbooks, but through where adults take them. A field trip is never just a field trip. It is a lesson in civic imagination. It tells the child what counts as knowledge, what counts as aspiration, what counts as the world beyond the classroom.

And in too many cases, where do Filipino children go? The mall. Factories are understandable. A factory tour can teach children about production, labor, technology, food systems, manufacturing, logistics, and the material life of the economy. A visit to a newspaper office, farm, science center, historical site, museum, theater, government office, ecological park, old district, or restoration site can widen a child’s understanding of society. These trips can show that the world is made by workers, artists, engineers, farmers, writers, public servants, performers, architects, and communities. But the mall? There is something painfully revealing about the mall as a field-trip destination. It tells children that public life is consumption. It teaches them that the outside world is not primarily a place of memory, labor, citizenship, nature, craft, or art, but a place of retail. It makes commerce feel like culture because, in contemporary Filipino life, the mall has already swallowed so many functions that should have belonged elsewhere. It is the air-conditioned plaza, the weekend park, the promenade, the food court, the chapel substitute, the family outing, the teenage hangout, the dating venue, the evacuation space, the concert stage, and the poor man’s civic center — except always under private management, always organized around buying.

So much for contemporary Filipinoness: childhood socialization through escalators, food courts, branded displays, and the logic of the sale.

The issue is not that malls are evil. In the Philippine climate and urban condition, they have become practical refuges from heat, danger, traffic, and the failure of public space. Families go there because they are clean, guarded, convenient, and predictable. Schools may choose them because they are easy to organize, easier to supervise, and safer than many public sites. But that only deepens the indictment. If the safest, easiest, most familiar “public” destination for children is a private commercial complex, then the country has admitted something bleak about its civic imagination.

A child taken repeatedly to malls learns a quiet lesson: the good place is the place where one consumes. The clean place is the place owned by a corporation. The organized place is the place where guards enforce behavior. The beautiful place is the place designed to make people buy. The shared place is not a plaza, library, museum, park, theater, archive, or heritage street. The shared place is retail space.

This is why the mall field trip is more than a harmless joke. It is a symptom. It shows how deeply Filipino public life has been outsourced to commerce. It shows how weak the cultural alternatives have become. It shows how a country that claims to love heritage and the arts can raise children whose first experience of “going out into society” is not the museum, not the old city, not the national library, not the theater, not the workshop, not the farm, not the science lab, but the mall.

And later, people wonder why adults treat foreign countries the same way. They wonder why travel becomes shopping, eating, selfies, and pasabuy (shopping requests for items to bring back). They wonder why museums abroad become fillers and local heritage becomes disposable. But the habit has already been taught. If childhood field trips train the eye to see the mall as the natural center of life, then adulthood simply internationalizes the same instinct. Seoul becomes a bigger mall. Tokyo becomes a better mall. Singapore becomes a cleaner mall. Hong Kong becomes a denser mall. The foreign city is not encountered as civilization, but as upgraded consumption.

This is where cultural education must become serious. Children should not only be told that culture matters. They should be brought to places where culture lives. They should enter museums not as bored visitors dragged through glass cases, but as young citizens learning how memory is stored. They should see theaters, rehearsal rooms, print shops, archives, radio stations, farms, old churches, mosques, ancestral houses, libraries, historical districts, artist studios, weaving communities, boatyards, restoration sites, and working factories. They should learn that society is not merely purchased. It is made, remembered, repaired, performed, argued over, and inherited.

Until then, the mall field trip will remain a perfect metaphor for the Filipino cultural condition: a society claiming to love culture while teaching its children that the world begins at the entrance, rises by escalator, pauses at the food court, and ends at the checkout counter.

Museums, Access, and the Failure of Cultural Habit

Museums are a useful test of this cultural problem. UNESCO’s 2015 Recommendation concerning museums describes museums as institutions with educational, cultural, and social functions. It frames museums not merely as repositories, but as institutions tied to access, diversity, learning, and public life. That standard matters because it rejects the idea that museums are only warehouses of old objects or elite leisure destinations. They are supposed to be civic spaces.

The Philippines has made some progress on this front. The National Museum of the Philippines reported more than 3.8 million visitors across the country in 2024, its highest institutional total so far. That figure matters because it complicates the easy claim that Filipinos never go to museums. Some do, and in large numbers when museums are accessible, visible, free or affordable, and made part of school, family, and civic life.

But visitor numbers alone do not solve the deeper problem. A museum can attract people and still struggle to build a museum-going culture. People may visit once because admission is free, because school requires it, because the building is beautiful, because it is trending online, or because the galleries are air-conditioned and photogenic. That is not nothing. It is a beginning. But a museum-going culture requires repetition, interpretation, reading, debate, public programming, family habit, and a sense that such spaces belong to ordinary citizens.

The question is not merely whether Filipinos can be made to enter museums. They can. The question is whether museums are integrated into the moral imagination of citizenship. Are they treated as places where people learn to interpret power, grief, beauty, conflict, labor, environment, and identity? Or are they treated as field-trip requirements and photo backdrops?

This is where social class again becomes visible. The rich can inherit museum habits through travel, private schooling, books, and parental exposure. The middle class can acquire them if institutions are welcoming and affordable. The poor often encounter museums only through school excursions, if at all. If the museum feels like a foreign space, a silent space, an elite space, or a space where one fears doing something wrong, then the promise of public culture remains incomplete.

The same problem appears in theaters, libraries, archives, galleries, heritage walks, film screenings, poetry readings, and local cultural centers. The country needs cultural spaces that ordinary people can enter without feeling like intruders. Public art must not be reduced to beautification projects. Museums must not feel like mausoleums or elite field-trip destinations. Heritage must not be limited to postcard districts and wedding backdrops. Art education must not be reduced to poster-making contests, school dances, and token appreciation weeks. Cultural participation must be made ordinary, not exceptional.

Museums are especially important because they teach slowness. They ask the visitor to look, read, compare, remember, and stand before things that cannot be consumed quickly. In a society increasingly trained by malls, feeds, and short-form content, that slowness is almost radical. The museum tells the visitor that not everything exists to be bought. Not everything exists to be immediately useful. Some things exist because they carry memory, labor, trauma, beauty, and inheritance.

But the museum must also meet the public halfway. It cannot remain cold, silent, intimidating, or Manila-centric. It must speak to children, workers, families, regional communities, and people who have never been taught how to behave in such spaces. It must provide guides, programs, translations, public lectures, workshops, and reasons to return. It must become a living civic institution, not merely a building with objects.
Only then can museum-going become habit rather than occasion.

The Mall as the National Cultural Form

The mall is not merely a building type in the Philippines. It is a national cultural form. It is the place where the failures of public life are reorganized into a private commercial experience. It offers cleanliness where the street is chaotic. It offers air-conditioning where the city is hot. It offers guards where public safety is uncertain. It offers bathrooms where public facilities fail. It offers food, entertainment, worship, errands, dating, concerts, playgrounds, and promenades. It offers the illusion of a complete city, except one owned and curated by private capital.

This is why Filipinos love the mall. It succeeds where the state often fails. But precisely because it succeeds, it also trains the public imagination. It teaches that the good life is indoors, guarded, air-conditioned, branded, and purchasable. It teaches that comfort comes through consumption. It teaches that social life is best experienced as retail. It teaches that the cleanest and safest common spaces are not truly public. They are privately managed zones where citizenship is converted into customer behavior.

The mall offers community without politics. It offers gathering without civic ownership. It offers leisure without memory. It offers spectacle without reflection. It offers culture as event, décor, exhibit, launch, concert, sale, or seasonal installation. It can host art, but usually as atmosphere. It can display culture, but often as branding. It can give families a place to go, but it cannot replace a public sphere.

The danger is not that Filipinos go to malls. The danger is that the mall becomes the default answer to every failure: the failed park, the failed plaza, the failed library, the failed museum, the failed sidewalk, the failed public toilet, the failed transport hub, the failed civic center, the failed safe street. The mall becomes a remedy, then a habit, then a worldview.

Eventually, the citizen becomes a customer even in his own imagination. This has consequences for culture. If one’s primary experience of public space is commercial, then cultural value becomes difficult to imagine outside market value. A building is valuable if it can generate rent. An event is valuable if it can draw foot traffic. Art is valuable if it can attract sponsors. Heritage is valuable if it can support tourism. Music is valuable if it can sell tickets. Literature is valuable if it can win prizes or become content. Everything must justify itself in the language of market performance.

This is why contemporary Filipinoness often feels flattened. It is full of feeling, but the feeling is routed through consumption. The family outing becomes the mall. The field trip becomes the mall. The foreign vacation becomes the mall abroad. The museum becomes a photo stop. The heritage building becomes a development problem. The artist becomes valuable after monetization. The past becomes content after demolition. The mall is not the only cause of this condition. But it is one of its clearest symbols.

The Foreign City as Mall, Hotel, and Backdrop

This same logic follows Filipinos abroad. The foreign city becomes a cleaner, richer, better-organized version of the consumption spaces already familiar at home. The hotel becomes shelter from local exhaustion. The mall becomes proof of arrival. The restaurant becomes the memory. The shopping street becomes the itinerary. The museum becomes the optional stop, useful when it is famous enough to be posted.

There is nothing inherently shameful about enjoying comfort abroad. A people overworked by traffic, low wages, insecure employment, and family pressure will naturally seek rest. The problem is when travel never grows beyond respite. The problem is when the traveler sees another country only as a package of purchasable experiences. The problem is when the Filipino abroad admires the beauty of Seoul, Tokyo, Paris, Singapore, or Hong Kong without asking how those places built, regulated, funded, preserved, interpreted, and fought over their public spaces.

Even wealthier and more educated Filipinos are not automatically serious museum-goers, cultural tourists, or patrons of the arts when they travel abroad. They may have the money, the passports, the visas, the time, and the education, but their itineraries often reveal a different set of priorities. Shopping and eating take the larger share of the budget. Museums, galleries, historical districts, libraries, theaters, and old civic sites become secondary stops, if they appear at all. Culture becomes a filler between meals, shopping runs, hotel stays, and photo opportunities.

Their idea of “abroad” is often deeply materialist. It is less a journey into another civilization than an upgraded mall, resort, hotel, and backdrop. A foreign city is treated as a consumer playground: somewhere to buy, eat, pose, and temporarily feel successful. The museum is not always entered as a place of encounter, study, or humility. It is visited because it is famous, because it is on a list, because it proves one has been there, because it provides content. The old palace, temple, cathedral, archive, or gallery becomes scenery for social media, while the rest of the trip is organized around outlets, cafés, pasalubong (gifts brought home from a trip), luxury streets, cosmetics, sneakers, branded goods, and selfies.

Korea offers a useful example. Many Filipinos travel there with excitement, but much of that excitement is organized around pasabuy (shopping requests for items to bring back), cosmetics, shopping districts, cafés, K-pop-related consumption, drama locations, fashion trends, and social-media aesthetics. Korean culture is consumed, but often as merchandise and mood rather than as history, language, literature, architecture, trauma, statecraft, memory, or social transformation. Seoul becomes a place to buy and pose. The trip becomes a layover from Philippine exhaustion, a respite from local stress, a short fantasy of cleanliness, order, and aesthetic abundance.

This again is understandable, but it is also revealing. For many Filipinos, travel abroad is not exploration in the older cultural sense. It is recovery. It is escape. It is consumption after deprivation. It is proof of arrival. It is the right to relax after years of work. The tourist does not go abroad to be changed by another civilization. He goes abroad to rest, shop, eat, take photographs, and confirm that he has briefly entered a better-looking version of life.

That is why even the educated Filipino tourist can reproduce the same shallow cultural logic he criticizes at home. Abroad, he praises heritage because it is convenient, curated, clean, safe, and already integrated into tourism infrastructure. At home, heritage is messy, underfunded, hot, inconvenient, politically entangled, poorly maintained, and often surrounded by poverty. Abroad, culture is a pleasant itinerary item. At home, culture becomes a problem.

The Filipino traveler then comes home saying “Ang ganda doon” (“It is beautiful there”), but often without a serious account of why it is beautiful. Is it beautiful because the sidewalks work? Because public transport works? Because heritage sites are maintained? Because cultural industries are funded? Because museums are treated as civic spaces? Because schools and families built habits of public discipline? Because citizens learned to demand public beauty? These questions rarely survive the pasalubong (gifts brought home from a trip) list.

This is not an indictment of every traveler. There are Filipinos who do serious cultural travel, who visit museums, read before trips, seek local history, attend performances, walk neighborhoods, and engage places with humility. But the dominant travel imagination, especially in social media, often turns abroad into a materialist dream: a giant mall, resort, hotel, restaurant strip, and selfie backdrop.

The result is a paradox. Filipinos envy the cultural infrastructure of other countries while approaching those countries primarily as consumers. They admire preservation abroad but resist inconvenience at home. They praise the old city elsewhere but accept demolition here. They call foreign museums beautiful but rarely demand better local ones. They treat culture abroad as a pleasant amenity and culture at home as a burden.

This is the internationalization of the mall field trip. The child taken to the mall becomes the adult who sees the foreign city as a bigger mall. The lesson has merely scaled up.

Part III: The Culture We Mourn After We Destroy It

The Building Only Becomes Beautiful After It Dies

The consumer training of Filipino life becomes most visible in the way people respond to demolition, neglect, and cultural loss. Many Filipinos admire countries that preserve old streets, train stations, theaters, hotels, museums, civic buildings, and historic districts. They travel abroad and praise the discipline of preservation. They return home saying, “Buti pa sa ibang bansa, they preserve their art” (“Other countries are better; they preserve their art”). Yet when a building at home is threatened, the same people become suddenly practical. They say it is private property. They say nothing can be done. They say development must continue. They say at least something useful will replace it. They say the land is too valuable to be wasted on memory.

The old Mandarin Oriental Manila exposed this mentality. It was not merely an old hotel. It was part of Makati’s urban memory, part of the city’s commercial and social landscape, part of a generation’s experience of what metropolitan Manila once imagined itself to be. GMA News reported in 2014 that Ayala Land’s Makati redevelopment project included the possible demolition of the Mandarin Oriental and InterContinental Manila, and that the Heritage Conservation Society had raised concern because the hotels were among the finest works of National Artist for Architecture Leandro Locsin. Architect Dominic Galicia’s question was direct: “must we destroy his best work?” (GMA News Online, 2014).

That question should have disturbed more people than it did. It should have triggered a serious public conversation about modern heritage, adaptive reuse, corporate stewardship, urban memory, and whether National Artist-designed buildings deserve a stronger presumption of protection. Instead, for many, the demolition registered as another real estate event, another opportunity for redevelopment, another future commercial site. Some were even pleased. The old building was not seen as part of a shared civic inheritance. It was seen as a site that could finally be made productive again.

And when someone objected, the answer was almost automatic: “Private property naman yan” (“It is private property anyway”). This phrase has become one of the great escape hatches of Filipino cultural neglect. It is not entirely wrong, but it is often used to end the conversation before it begins. It turns a public question into a private technicality. It treats heritage as if it exists only at the pleasure of ownership. It forgets that buildings, streets, and cultural spaces can belong legally to one entity while still belonging emotionally, historically, and symbolically to a wider public.

Another favorite phrase is “Wala naman tayong magagawa” (“There is nothing we can do anyway”). That phrase is even more revealing because it disguises surrender as wisdom. It allows people to lament without acting, to feel sad without taking responsibility, to speak as though history were erased by weather rather than by policy, profit, neglect, and public indifference. It is the language of people who want the emotional benefits of mourning without the civic burden of resistance.

This is why Filipino nostalgia can feel so hollow. Many people only become sentimental once the object of memory is gone. They miss old Manila after it has been mutilated. They miss old cinemas after they have closed. They miss old hotels after they have been demolished. They miss old neighborhoods after they have been turned into parking lots, condominiums, malls, and anonymous glass boxes. While these places are still standing, they are treated as inconvenient. Once they disappear, they become beautiful.

This is not love. It is post-demolition sentimentality. The Filipino public often behaves as if buildings become culturally valuable only after they are lost. The act of disappearance sanctifies them. Their absence gives them romance. Their demolition gives people permission to mourn without requiring them to organize. The lost building becomes a symbol of a gentler past, but the living building had been treated as a nuisance. That is not heritage consciousness. That is grief as performance.

A serious society does not preserve everything. That would be sentimental nonsense. Cities must evolve. Property rights matter. Economic pressure is real. Population growth is real. Not every building can become a museum. Not every old hotel can be saved. Not every cinema can remain open. But a serious society develops criteria. It debates. It documents. It adapts. It negotiates. It compensates. It legislates. It decides that some things cannot be casually erased because they carry more than commercial value.

The Philippines too often skips that process. It moves from neglect to demolition to nostalgia. First, a site is ignored. Then it is declared impractical. Then it is demolished. Then people post old photographs and mourn. The cycle repeats because mourning has become easier than preservation. Nostalgia becomes a substitute for policy. Regret becomes a national pastime.

When Nostalgia as the Desire for Innocence

More than that, much of what passes for nostalgia is not nostalgia at all. It is the desire for innocence. When people say “Noong bata pa ako” (“When I was still a child”), they are often not expressing a serious relationship with history. They are trying to recover the feeling of being young inside a world they did not yet understand. They do not necessarily want the past in its full complexity. They want the childhood version of the past: the smell of old houses, the sound of the radio, the school uniform, the Sunday outing, the old mall, the hotel lobby, the street before traffic became unbearable, the world before adult responsibility arrived.

But innocence is not memory. Innocence is selective by nature. It remembers the atmosphere but not the structure. It remembers comfort but not power. It remembers the old classroom but not the humiliation. It remembers the family table but not the fear. It remembers discipline as order, but forgets how often that discipline was corporal, cruel, and authoritarian. It remembers a supposedly simpler time, but not the children who were slapped, shamed, hit, silenced, or taught that obedience mattered more than thought.

This is especially important because many Filipinos who mourn the past also romanticize the very forms of authority that made that past painful. They remember being corporally disciplined as part of a lost moral order. They recall teachers, parents, priests, and elders who “knew how to discipline children.” But what is often being mourned is not culture. It is a time when hierarchy felt natural because they were still too young to question it. It is not history they miss, but the protected position of childhood, the time before they had to admit that the adults were not always wise, the institutions were not always just, and the old world was not necessarily better simply because it was familiar.

That is why the “Noong bata pa ako" mood can become politically and culturally dangerous. It reduces history to personal comfort. It mistakes innocence for virtue. It turns the past into a soft-focus refuge from the present. It makes people long not for preservation, but for the feeling of not being accountable. They do not want change, but they also do not truly want history. They want the past without its victims, the old order without its violence, the architecture without the inequality around it, the school without the ruler, the home without the slap, the city without the people pushed aside.

Real cultural preservation cannot be built on that kind of innocence. To preserve culture is not to pretend the past was pure. It is to admit that the past was real. It means saying that a building may be beautiful while also belonging to a history of class exclusion. It means recognizing that an old school may have produced fond memories while also normalizing fear. It means admitting that a glamorous hotel may have been part of civic memory while also representing a city that was not equally open to everyone. It means refusing both crude demolition and shallow romanticization.

A mature society preserves not because the past was perfect, but because the past mattered.

This distinction matters. The nostalgic Filipino often wants a past that has been laundered of pain. He wants the music, but not the censorship. The discipline, but not the violence. The clean streets, but not the social exclusion. The old school, but not the terror of public humiliation. The family closeness, but not the authoritarian household. The heritage building, but not the class structure that made it possible. The childhood innocence, but not the adult responsibility.

This is why the cultural debate often feels unserious. People say they love the old city, but what they really love is the feeling of being young in it. They say they miss the old ways, but what they really miss is the period before change made demands on them. They say they miss culture, but they often mean atmosphere. They say they miss heritage, but they often mean décor. They say they miss history, but they often mean innocence. And innocence cannot preserve anything. It can only sigh.

Contemporary Filipinoness and the Flattened Soul

So much for contemporary Filipinoness: the mall field trip, the pasabuy (shopping requests for items to bring back) itinerary, the demolished hotel, the nostalgic Facebook post, the museum selfie, the artist congratulated only after foreign success, the family warning against art school, the heritage building defended only after the fence goes up, the old city mourned only after it becomes a parking lot.

This is not a flattering portrait. But it is recognizable. The contemporary Filipino does not necessarily lack feeling. In fact, he may have too much feeling, but not enough structure. He feels nostalgia, but not responsibility. He feels pride, but not obligation. He feels envy abroad, but not discipline at home. He feels affection for artists, but not solidarity with cultural labor. He feels sadness over demolition, but not urgency before demolition. He feels love for culture, but often only when culture does not inconvenience him.

That is the central problem: Filipino cultural love is too often convenient. It is convenient when it produces pride. Convenient when it brings tourists. Convenient when it wins awards. Convenient when it creates content. Convenient when it becomes a backdrop. Convenient when it can be consumed in a mall. Convenient when it can be turned into a festival. Convenient when it is safely in the past. Convenient when it does not ask anyone to pay, organize, protect, maintain, study, or sacrifice.

But real culture is inconvenient. It needs archives that must be maintained even when nobody is watching. It needs museums that must be funded even when visitor numbers fluctuate. It needs buildings that may not be maximally profitable. It needs artists who may not become famous. It needs libraries that do not generate mall rent. It needs theaters that cannot survive on exposure. It needs teachers who can bring students somewhere other than retail complexes. It needs planners who understand that cities are not merely engines of land value. It needs citizens who can say no.

A people that cannot say no to demolition, no to flattening, no to cultural starvation, no to the mall as destiny, and no to nostalgia as alibi will keep losing itself politely.

The flattened soul is not soulless. It is overstimulated and undernourished. It can sing but not preserve. It can pose but not study. It can mourn but not organize. It can admire foreign beauty but not ask how beauty is protected. It can celebrate artists but not support artistic ecosystems. It can remember childhood but not confront history.

The result is a culture of feeling without infrastructure. A nation of performers without enough stages. A people of nostalgia without enough archives. A society of consumers without enough citizens. A country that loves culture in the abstract but often abandons it in the concrete.

Part IV: Beyond Applause and Alibi

The Filipino Artist as National Pride Afterthought

There is another hypocrisy at work. Filipinos love claiming artists after success, especially when success comes from abroad. A filmmaker wins an award, a singer gets international attention, a designer is praised, a dancer joins a major company, a writer is published, and suddenly the nation speaks as though it had always supported them. But the path before recognition is usually lonely, underfunded, insecure, and full of family warnings.

This is why Filipino pride in artists can sound suspiciously like appropriation. The country wants the glory of talent without paying the cost of formation. It wants the flag moment, the viral clip, the congratulatory post, the press release, the airport welcome, the “Pinoy pride” headline. But it often does not want the boring middle: scholarships, rehearsal spaces, grants, criticism, archives, regional programs, independent cinemas, artist housing, small theaters, public libraries, translation funds, and long-term cultural policy.

The same thing happens with heritage. A site becomes valuable once foreigners notice it. A tradition becomes respectable once UNESCO recognizes it. A building becomes beloved once architects abroad praise it. A craft becomes fashionable once luxury brands borrow from it. This produces a humiliating dependency on external validation. The Filipino often waits for foreigners to say something is valuable before he believes it.

That is not love of culture. That is insecurity wearing a barong- so much for an Imeldific legacy that culture and art became meant for applause the crowd, a monetizable investment than to inspire generations.

A serious cultural society does not wait for foreign applause before valuing its own. It studies, documents, teaches, funds, debates, and preserves because it understands that culture is not merely a trophy. It is how a people remembers itself. It is how a society argues with its past. It is how a nation develops taste, discipline, empathy, imagination, and continuity.

The Philippines has no shortage of talent. It has no shortage of memory. It has no shortage of stories, songs, rituals, crafts, buildings, languages, landscapes, and wounds. What it lacks is the sustained public machinery that allows these things to survive without begging for relevance every fiscal year.

The Filipino artist is often handed a cruel bargain: become famous, go abroad, sell out, give up, or starve quietly. This is why the issue cannot be reduced to individual taste. It is structural. A serious country does not merely congratulate artists after they win. It builds the conditions that allow them to develop before anyone applauds. It understands that cultural labor is labor. It funds the ecosystem, not just the celebrity. It makes room for failure, experimentation, apprenticeship, and obscurity, because no meaningful artistic culture can exist if only the already famous are allowed to survive.

“Pinoy pride” is not enough. Pride after victory can be beautiful, but it is also cheap if it was not preceded by support. The question is not whether Filipinos should celebrate successful artists. They should. The question is whether the country is willing to support artists before success makes them safe to claim.

Culture Cannot Survive on Applause Alone

This is where government enters the argument. The state cannot create genius by decree, but it can create conditions. It can fund public libraries that are not dead rooms. It can support community theaters, local museums, municipal archives, regional art centers, restoration programs, artist grants, translation projects, film labs, publishing support, music venues, heritage surveys, and cultural education. It can also support field trips that do not default to commercial spaces merely because cultural and civic spaces are inaccessible, unsafe, underfunded, or administratively inconvenient.

The country cannot keep complaining that children lack cultural awareness while introducing them to society through malls. Cultural education requires infrastructure, transportation, institutional partnerships, trained guides, teachers who are not overburdened, and public sites that are actually prepared to receive students. Otherwise, the mall will continue to win by default — not because it is culturally superior, but because it is organized, funded, air-conditioned, secure, and available.

A serious state does not merely congratulate artists after they win international awards. It builds the conditions that allow children to encounter art before they learn to dismiss it. It ensures that museums, libraries, theaters, heritage sites, science centers, archives, farms, factories, and studios are not exotic destinations, but ordinary parts of education. It treats culture not as decoration for national day ceremonies, but as public infrastructure.

This is already implied by Philippine law. RA 10066 does not merely talk about objects. It creates a national framework for heritage conservation and directs state institutions toward protection and promotion. The law’s existence proves that the question is not whether culture matters. The Philippine legal framework already says it does. The issue is whether the state, local governments, private owners, schools, families, and citizens are willing to behave as though it does.

Without accessible spaces, culture becomes stratified. The rich inherit taste because they can afford exposure. They can travel, collect, study, fail, experiment, and recover. The middle class may participate if art does not threaten employability. The poor are told to be practical because one wrong decision can endanger the whole family. As a result, culture becomes something people admire from a distance. It becomes something associated with privilege, not citizenship.

A nation that treats culture as a luxury will eventually produce citizens who think memory itself is a luxury. They will accept demolition because preservation seems expensive. They will accept ugly cities because beauty seems impractical. They will accept the disappearance of local theaters, libraries, and public spaces because these do not look urgent compared with roads, malls, and jobs. But this is a false choice. People need roads and hospitals, yes. They need food, work, and housing. But they also need memory, beauty, imagination, criticism, silence, play, ritual, grief, and meaning. These are not rewards for economic success. They are part of being human.

The tragedy is that Filipino public life has often forced people to choose between the body and the soul. Then, after pushing the soul to the margins, it complains that citizens lack depth, taste, historical consciousness, and civic imagination. It is absurd to starve culture and then blame the public for being culturally malnourished.

This is why cultural neglect cannot be excused forever by survival. Survival explains the problem, but it cannot be the permanent alibi. At some point, a country must decide that the soul also needs infrastructure. It cannot wait until everyone is rich, every road is fixed, every family is secure, and every stomach is full, because that perfect moment will never arrive. If culture is always postponed until after development, then development will produce only bigger malls, taller condominiums, wider roads, and emptier citizens.

Culture cannot survive on applause alone. It needs budgets, laws, spaces, teachers, workers, archivists, curators, conservators, critics, librarians, publishers, translators, technicians, and audiences. It needs maintenance. It needs repetition. It needs ordinary access. It needs people who are willing to defend it before it becomes fashionable.

What a Serious Cultural Society Would Do?

A serious cultural society would stop treating preservation as a sentimental afterthought. It would inventory heritage before developers arrive. It would identify important buildings, districts, archives, traditions, and cultural landscapes early, not when demolition permits are already being discussed. It would make adaptive reuse a normal part of development rather than a rare exception. It would teach developers that old buildings are not automatically obstacles to profit, and teach citizens that preservation is not the same as freezing a city in time.

A serious cultural society would give local governments real cultural responsibilities and real cultural budgets. Municipalities and cities should know what they have: old houses, theaters, bridges, schools, markets, churches, mosques, cemeteries, industrial sites, plazas, libraries, oral histories, festivals, crafts, foodways, songs, and endangered languages. Cultural mapping should not be a decorative project for reports. It should shape zoning, tourism, education, disaster planning, and local identity.

A serious cultural society would make museums, libraries, theaters, archives, science centers, farms, factories, and studios routine educational destinations. Field trips should not default to malls because malls are convenient. Schools should have partnerships with cultural institutions. Teachers should have guides and materials. Students should be taught how to look, ask, listen, compare, and remember. The goal should not be merely to drag children through exhibits, but to train them to see society as something made, inherited, and repairable.

A serious cultural society would support artists before they become famous. Grants should not only go to the already connected. Regional artists should not have to move to Manila to be visible. Young writers, filmmakers, musicians, dancers, actors, designers, translators, and researchers should have pathways for training, production, publication, performance, and exchange. Artistic labor should be treated as labor, not as a miracle performed by passion and poverty.

A serious cultural society would strengthen public libraries. Libraries should not be dusty storage rooms or symbolic offices. They should be civic spaces: places for reading, study, lectures, workshops, children’s programs, local history, digital access, and community life. A functioning library system may sound less glamorous than a festival, but it may be more important for cultural democracy.

A serious cultural society would make cultural tourism deeper than selfies. Heritage sites should not be treated merely as backdrops for pre-nup shoots, social-media posts, or weekend cafés. They should be interpreted. Their histories should be told honestly, including the uncomfortable parts. Guides should be trained. Local communities should benefit. Visitors should leave with more than photographs.

A serious cultural society would also ask families to change. Parents do not have to romanticize poverty or pretend that artistic life is easy. But they can stop treating art as respectable only after success is guaranteed. They can recognize that not every meaningful life follows the safest professional script. They can support children not by lying about hardship, but by helping them build discipline, networks, skills, and resilience.

Most of all, a serious cultural society would stop confusing culture with decoration. Culture is not merely what appears during festivals, tourism campaigns, school programs, and national celebrations. It is the infrastructure of memory. It is the discipline of attention. It is the way a people learns to see itself without needing foreign applause.

Conclusion: Toward a Less Convenient Love

So perhaps the original unhinged take is not entirely wrong, but it must be deepened. Filipinos do not simply hate culture and the arts. Many have been trained by poverty, precarity, bad governance, weak cultural policy, family pressure, and market logic to treat them as luxuries. Many have learned to distrust anything that does not immediately feed the family. Many have inherited a nostalgia that is less about history than innocence. Many have been taught to admire culture only after it becomes famous, profitable, foreign-approved, or safely vanished. And even among those with wealth and education, culture is too often reduced to lifestyle: something consumed, displayed, photographed, and folded into personal branding.

But none of this absolves the country. Explanation is not absolution. Survival explains why art is neglected, but it does not justify building a society where only the rich can afford beauty and only the famous can afford to be artists. Private property explains ownership, but it does not erase public memory. Development explains change, but it does not excuse cultural amnesia. Travel explains escape, but it does not automatically create cultural seriousness. Nostalgia explains grief, but it does not replace responsibility.

A country that loves culture must prove it before demolition, not after. It must protect what is still standing. It must fund what is still struggling. It must open doors for those told that art is not for them. It must make cultural life accessible to the lower classes, not merely available to the already privileged. It must give aspiring artists a chance to develop without requiring them to become miracles. It must teach people that heritage is not dead weight and art is not a luxury item for the comfortable.

This requires more than sentiment. It requires cultural policy with budgets. It requires local governments that inventory heritage before developers arrive. It requires adaptive reuse instead of automatic demolition. It requires schools that teach art as thought, not decoration. It requires museums that feel alive and public. It requires grants that do not only reward the already connected. It requires libraries that function as civic spaces. It requires urban planning that sees memory as infrastructure. It requires families to stop treating the arts as a respectable path only after success is guaranteed.

It also requires a different kind of travel imagination. Filipinos can still shop, eat, rest, and take photographs abroad. But they should also learn to ask why the places they admire work. They should ask who funded the museum, who restored the palace, who protected the street, who maintained the archive, who made the train station beautiful, who taught citizens to respect public space, who made culture accessible to ordinary people. Without those questions, travel remains consumption. With those questions, travel can become education.

Filipinos cannot keep saying “Buti pa sa ibang bansa, they preserve their art” (“Other countries are better; they preserve their art”) while treating their own cultural inheritance as disposable. They cannot keep admiring old cities abroad while shrugging at demolitions at home. They cannot keep treating foreign countries as malls with monuments attached, then complain that their own country has no cultural depth. They cannot keep confusing memory with nostalgia, nostalgia with innocence, consumption with curiosity, and travel with understanding.

The truth is brutal: a people that only mourns after demolition does not yet love culture in a serious way. It loves ruins. It loves the story of loss. It loves the romance of something already dead. It loves the child it once was, the child who did not yet know what was being erased around him. And when it goes abroad, it often loves the mall, the hotel, the resort, the pasabuy (shopping requests for items to bring back) list, the selfie spot, and the temporary feeling of escape more than the civilization it claims to admire.

Until the country learns to protect culture while it is still alive, fund art before it becomes famous, take children somewhere other than malls, and approach the world with curiosity deeper than consumption, its nostalgia will remain what it has too often been: not love, not memory, not preservation, but an alibi.

***

References

GMA News Online. (2014). Fate of Locsin-designed hotels in Makati redevelopment project a concern.

Lawphil. (2010). Republic Act No. 10066: National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009.

Maslow, A. H. (1943). A theory of human motivation. Psychological Review.

National Museum of the Philippines. (2024). FY 2024 Annual Report.

Philippine Statistics Authority. (2024). Average annual family income in 2023 is estimated at PhP 353.23 thousand.

Philstar.com. (2025). Philippines travel boom mirrors Asia-Pacific surge.

Reuters. (2024). Philippines poverty rate at 15.5% in 2023, statistics agency says.

UNESCO. (2015). Recommendation concerning the protection and promotion of museums and collections, their diversity and their role in society.

Visa. (2024). Holiday escapes: How Filipinos travel, shop, and pay during the season.

From Exposé to Entrapment: The Vlogger War Turns Inward

From Exposé to Entrapment: The Vlogger War Turns Inward

or: "All after Franco Mabanta, Free Speech Absolutists, 
and the 300 Million-Peso Extortion Scandal guised as 'Truth seeking'"

There are scandals that shake a republic, and there are scandals that merely reveal the cheap carpentry behind its stage. The arrest of Franco Mabanta, founder of Peanut Gallery Media Network (PGMN), belongs to that strange Filipino category where the legal matter is serious, the political implications are combustible, and the public spectacle is almost farcical. It involves the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), an alleged multimillion-peso extortion scheme, a former Speaker of the House, a supposedly damaging exposé, and an online political class that suddenly discovered the vocabulary of civil liberties after years of using ridicule, menace, and factional loyalty as its regular currency. 

The NBI says Mabanta and several others were arrested in connection with an alleged robbery-extortion plot targeting Leyte Rep. and former House Speaker Martin Romualdez. The accusation, in essence, is that damaging online content would supposedly be withheld in exchange for money. Mabanta denies it. PGMN calls it a setup. The state says there was a criminal scheme. The accused say there was an exposé. Their critics say that free speech does not normally arrive in tranches, through intermediaries, with the scent of a suitcase in the room. 

That alone would have been enough to produce a major political and legal story. But Philippine politics rarely permits a case to remain merely a case. It must become a clan matter, a factional test, a digital cockfight, a loyalty inventory. Almost immediately, the question shifted from what happened to whose man Mabanta was. Was he really a Marcos operator? Was he a Duterte propagandist? Was he formerly useful to one side and now inconvenient to another? Was he a rogue influencer, a discarded asset, a political casualty, or simply another loud man in the online republic who flew too close to power and discovered that power has no permanent friends? 

That is why the public response became so revealing. Critics seemed to eat popcorn as Duterte-aligned vloggers and Marcos-aligned defenders began trading claims over Mabanta’s political parentage. Some "Diehard Duterte Supporters" (DDS) voices insisted he was more closely associated with the Marcos camp than with Rodrigo Duterte. Malacañang answered by pointing to images of Mabanta with the Dutertes and Harry Roque. In the space of a few news cycles, the man was not merely accused; he was reassigned, disowned, photographed, reclassified, and thrown across factional lines like a leaking package nobody wanted to sign for. 

There is something deeply "altercurrent" about the whole affair, not in technology but in atmosphere. One can almost see the old Manila scene: political operators in hotel lobbies, cigarette smoke in corners, tape recorders, newspaper men with sources in every camp, fixers speaking in half-sentences, and a public that knows enough to distrust everyone but not enough to prove anything. Today the cassette tape has become a 90-minute video, the gossip column has become a viral post, the radio tirade has become a livestream, and the old political handler now calls himself a content strategist. The medium has changed. The underlying commerce of leverage has not. 

The Case Beneath the Noise 

The legal accusation must not be trivialized, because extortion is not a minor matter and an entrapment operation is not a casual inconvenience. If the NBI can prove that Mabanta and others demanded money in exchange for withholding damaging material, then the case is not about press freedom in the romantic sense. It is about alleged criminal conduct. It is about whether information was being used to inform the public or to extract payment from a powerful target. That distinction is not academic. It is the line between journalism and leverage. 

At the same time, the state does not become trustworthy simply by announcing an arrest. The Philippine state has its own long history of selective prosecution, politically timed operations, coercive law enforcement, and press-release theater. Entrapment cases require scrutiny. Evidence must be tested in court. The credibility of intermediaries matters. The chain of events matters. The timing matters. Mabanta, whatever one thinks of him, is entitled to due process and the presumption of innocence. But presumption of innocence is not the same thing as automatic martyrdom. It does not require the public to accept that every criminal allegation against a media personality is an attack on democracy. 

PGMN’s own public posture complicates the matter further. The group claimed that it had prepared a devastating 90-minute exposé on Romualdez and that the arrest was an attempt to prevent its release. That is a serious claim, and if the material contains hard evidence of corruption, then the public has a legitimate interest in seeing its substance. But that claim also invites a difficult question: if the episode was truly a matter of public interest, why did it become entangled in allegations of demands, intermediaries, tranches, hotels, and money? If the public was the intended beneficiary, why does the story now smell like a private negotiation gone radioactive? 

This is the moral fog at the heart of the case. It is entirely possible to believe that Romualdez deserves scrutiny, that the NBI must prove its claims, that Mabanta deserves due process, and that PGMN’s free-speech defense is still too convenient by half. The public should not be forced into the stupid choice between treating Mabanta as a constitutional martyr or treating Romualdez as cleansed by victimhood. A bad messenger does not purify the subject of the message. A powerful complainant does not automatically become innocent of every accusation merely because someone allegedly tried to extort him. 

Free Speech With a Suitcase 

Atty. Jesus Falcis captured the critics’ mood with a line that cut through the constitutional fog: free speech is free as in gratis; it is not “free speech kung may maleta.” The reason the line struck is that it exposed the weakest part of the defense. Free speech is indispensable. It protects criticism, dissent, satire, investigation, insult, and unpopular opinion. It shields citizens from the arrogance of power. But free speech is not a magical solvent that dissolves all allegations of criminality. It does not transform an alleged demand for money into an editorial decision. It does not convert a suitcase into a newsroom. 

This is where the rhetoric of “press freedom” becomes suspiciously elastic. When online personalities are attacking enemies, they often present themselves as warriors, patriots, truth-tellers, and movement figures. When they are criticized, they become independent commentators. When they are sued or arrested, they suddenly become journalists. The costume changes depending on the danger. What remains constant is the desire to enjoy the privileges of the press without always accepting the disciplines of the press: verification, transparency, correction, ethical handling of evidence, and accountability to the public rather than to a faction. 

Caloy Conde’s harsh question — “Freedom of the press? Kailan ka naging press?” — lands because it addresses that very ambiguity. Of course journalism today is not limited to newspapers and television networks. Independent digital media can do real journalism, and sometimes it does it better than legacy institutions. But journalism is not merely holding a microphone and attacking a politician. It is not a thumbnail, an audience, and a righteous tone. It is a discipline. The claim to press freedom becomes morally thinner when the supposed journalism appears to have been mixed with the logic of threat, access, faction, and private advantage. 

That does not mean the state gets to decide who is a journalist. That would be dangerous. But the public is allowed to evaluate whether a person claiming journalism has acted like a journalist. It is allowed to ask whether information was gathered to inform citizens or to create bargaining power. It is allowed to ask whether the alleged exposé was prepared for daylight or for leverage. These are not anti-free-speech questions. They are the questions that preserve free speech from being cheapened by those who invoke it only when cornered. 

This Was Never Really About Free Speech 

The cleaner formulation — free speech versus censorship — is too civics-class for what is happening. This is not merely a dispute about speech. It is about information war, cognitive war, narrative war. It is about who gets to shape suspicion before evidence arrives, who gets to define the villain before the court record forms, who gets to turn public anger into a weapon, and who gets to make the crowd feel that it already knows the truth before anyone has proven anything. 

The Mabanta affair belongs to the same political universe that explains why Rodrigo Duterte won, why Ferdinand Marcos Jr. won despite the comparative coherence and institutional seriousness of Leni Robredo’s platform, and why memetic warfare became more effective than polite policy discourse. The central battlefield was never simply “speech.” It was attention. It was emotion. It was contempt. It was humiliation. It was repetition. It was the conversion of resentment into identity, and identity into political force. 

The liberal reformist mistake was to assume that better policy would defeat better narrative. The institutional mistake was to assume that fact-checking could neutralize a politics built on belonging, grievance, and mockery. The elite mistake was to believe that competence, once documented, would naturally prevail over mood. But the internet had already changed persuasion. People were no longer merely weighing arguments. They were joining emotional camps. They were not only asking who had the better platform; they were asking who made them feel powerful, avenged, entertained, or seen. 

That is why some of the old pages that got “zucc’d” for dankness and edginess were, in a perverse way, more honest about their own ugliness. They were vulgar, salty, malicious, and often reckless, but they were not pretending to be a Rotary Club panel on civic virtue. They knew they were swimming in the sewer. They did not always pretend that the sewer was a university seminar. The more bourgeois political influencer, by contrast, often wants both the thrill of the attack and the dignity of the columnist. He wants the swagger of the troll, the reach of propaganda, the intimacy of patronage, and the moral protection of journalism. 

That is the class performance underneath much of Philippine online politics. The dank memer says he is there to offend. The political vlogger says he is there to save the republic while doing much of the same low work under cleaner lighting. The anonymous edgelord posts from the gutter. The influencer builds a studio over the gutter and calls it public service. 

Do Not Cry Innocence; Own the War 

If the actors in this ecosystem were speaking with brutal honesty, they would not make innocence or free-speech absolutism their first public refuge. They would understand that such defenses sound too delicate for the battlefield they helped create. They entered politics not as monks of liberal principle but as combatants of attention. They built audiences by sharpening distrust, humiliating enemies, collapsing complexity into tribal slogans, and teaching followers to treat politics not as deliberation but as war by other means. 

If this is information war, then they should admit it is information war. If this is cognitive war, then they should stop pretending it is merely a seminar on civil liberties. They should be remorseless in explaining what they think they were doing: whether the claim was true, half-true, strategically true, emotionally true, or an interpretation of “truth” designed to survive long enough to damage an enemy. That is the rotten grammar of modern political combat. Truth is no longer always presented as proof. It is often presented as plausibility sharpened into a weapon. 

This does not make the practice admirable. It makes it recognizable. The combatants are not merely fighting over facts. They are fighting over the public nervous system. They are fighting over instinct before evidence, disgust before documentation, and loyalty before law. They are fighting to decide what the crowd feels before the court decides what the record shows. Every camp fires its own artillery: memes, leaks, exposés, livestreams, photographs, slogans, press briefings, insinuations, selective outrage, and that most convenient shell of all — the cry of persecution. 

But even this should not be exaggerated into grandeur. The Philippine influencer wars are vicious and corrosive, but they are not the most extreme expression of propaganda in modern memory. They are not Andrew Tate’s global theater of grievance and hypermasculine manipulation. They are not Anders Breivik’s manifesto culture, where online radicalization curdled into mass murder. They are not the genocidal incitement of Hutu Power radio during the Rwanda crisis, where speech became a preparatory instrument for slaughter. They are not even the late Jun Pala’s frightening collapse of commentary, paramilitary politics, and open willingness to endorse killing into one local persona. 

Compared with those darker examples, the local spectacle often looks like provincial melodrama with better cameras. Its noise is real, its damage is real, and its manipulations matter, but much of it still carries the texture of show business and patronage: factional tantrums, brand management, access politics, personal vendetta, and men mistaking microphone proximity for historical force. That is precisely why the free-speech defense feels so thin. The ecosystem was built for combat, but when combat produces legal consequences, its soldiers want to be mistaken for neutral correspondents. 

The public should not be insulted by the pretense that this world was built for the gentle exchange of ideas. It was built to wound reputations before institutions could respond. It was built to make followers feel that they were not merely watching politics but participating in a righteous war. Once that is admitted, the question changes. It is no longer whether one has the right to speak. Of course one does. The question becomes what one was doing with speech: informing the public, manipulating the public, threatening an enemy, protecting a patron, selling a narrative, or bargaining with damage. 

That is the question the ecosystem does not want asked, because in cognitive war, the loudest soldier always wants to be mistaken for a journalist when captured. 

The Jay Sonza Shadow 

The case also brings to mind the older specimens of Philippine partisan media, and among them Jay Sonza is impossible to ignore. Sonza, a Duterte supporter and former broadcaster, belongs to a previous generation of political-media combatants: less platform-native, less manicured by influencer culture, but in some ways more revealing. He came from the older world of broadcast personality, hard commentary, rumor, access, and factional combat. He reminds us that the vloggers did not invent the toxic mixture of media, politics, and personal aggression. They inherited it. 

The irony is hard to miss: Sonza was freed on bail that same day as Mabanta now cries innocence. That contrast is not a legal verdict on either man. Bail is not absolution, and arrest is not conviction. But as a political image, it is useful. It shows that these figures exist in a rough field where law, publicity, factional usefulness, and public sympathy intersect. They are not merely speakers in a clean democratic forum. They are actors in a political-media economy where influence can become protection one moment and liability the next. 

Sonza also punctures the fantasy that today’s influencer class represents a radical new era. Before thumbnails, there were radio booths. Before livestream outrage, there were studio tirades. Before engagement metrics, there were ratings. Before “zucc’d” pages and meme wars, there were broadcasters who understood that anger keeps an audience loyal. The new men did not invent the mud. They only learned how to monetize it through platforms that reward speed, spectacle, and emotional intensity. 

The difference is that the older combatants often knew they were in the mud. The newer ones often want to fight in the mud and emerge smelling like press freedom. That contradiction is what makes the present spectacle so easy to mock. 

The Great Disowning 

The most revealing part of the Mabanta affair is the speed of political distancing. Critics watched as DDS vloggers and Marcos supporters began tossing Mabanta back and forth like a package with a ticking sound. Some Duterte-aligned voices insisted that Mabanta was more properly understood as a Marcos social media figure, connected to BBM’s online buildup after 2016 rather than to Rodrigo Duterte’s political machinery. Others suggested that his knowledge of the Marcos circle might become relevant if he chose to use it in relation to the Romualdez case. 

Ahmed Paglinawan, among the DDS-aligned writers commenting on the issue, framed the matter as something other than a Duterte purge. Mabanta, in that telling, was not hit for old loyalties but for flying too close to the current First Family’s sun. The formulation is interesting because it does not deny the logic of patronage; it merely relocates the patronage. It treats Mabanta as a casualty of factional heat, a figure whose danger lies not only in what he allegedly did but in what he may know, whom he may have served, and which internal conflict he may have stumbled into. 

Malacañang responded in kind. Palace press officer Claire Castro said Mabanta was not a friend of President Marcos and instead pointed to photographs showing him with Rodrigo Duterte, Sara Duterte, and Harry Roque. Politically, it was clever. It returned the unwanted package to the Duterte side. It answered disowning with disowning. But it also dragged the Palace into the same childish evidentiary style as the vlogger wars: the politics of photo albums, proximity, smiles, captions, and old posts. 

This is Philippine politics in miniature. No ideology, only proximity. No accountability, only photographic warfare. A person’s political identity is reconstructed through selfie archaeology: who stood beside whom, who smiled too warmly, who appeared in which room, who posted which caption, who deleted what afterward, who was useful enough to be photographed then and inconvenient enough to be denied now. In a healthier political culture, such things would be marginal. In ours, they become evidence of belonging. 

The disowning is instructive because the influencer class lives by proximity. It monetizes the suggestion of access. It hints at insider knowledge. It performs intimacy with power. It tells followers, explicitly or implicitly, that it knows what is really happening behind the curtain. But when scandal comes, that same proximity becomes radioactive. The credential becomes a stain. The old photograph becomes a problem. The former ally becomes someone else’s operative. 

Suddenly, everyone says: "not ours." However, Greco Belgica, a fellow Duterte supporter, offered a separate, sympathetic, and telling reaction. He expressed amazement at how much media attention Mabanta’s arrest was receiving. Why, he asked, was Franco getting this kind of coverage when he was neither a public official nor a billionaire? Even if one believed he owned one of the country’s best social media outlets, Belgica argued that the intensity of attention did not make sense unless there was some coordinated government plan for a special purpose. 

This is the suspicion machine in its pure form. When an event receives too much attention, the attention itself becomes evidence of orchestration. Sometimes that instinct is not entirely wrong. Governments do use spectacle. They do amplify arrests when useful. They do manage press briefings, leak selectively, frame events, and flood the public sphere with images that support their preferred narrative. In a country where state power, dynastic politics, and media choreography often overlap, suspicion is not automatically paranoia. Sometimes it is civic hygiene. 

But suspicion can also become a substitute for analysis. A social media personality accused of extorting a former House Speaker for hundreds of millions of pesos would naturally attract attention. Add Romualdez, alleged flood-control anomalies, PGMN, Marcos-Duterte tension, DDS disowning, Palace counter-photographs, and the prospect of a suppressed exposé, and the coverage is not mysterious. The case has all the ingredients of a Philippine political-media firestorm. Not every spectacle requires a hidden conductor. Sometimes the circus plays itself. 

Belgica’s stronger point came when he challenged PGMN to release the alleged video. If the group is truly committed to free speech absolutism, he argued, then it should not be holding back information from the public. The NBI should file its evidence in court, Mabanta should be given his day to defend himself, and the public should see what video allegedly triggered the mess. “Ilabas na yan” is not merely a taunt. It is the logical test of PGMN’s own posture. 

If the 90-minute exposé contains hard evidence of corruption, then its public-interest value does not disappear because Mabanta was arrested. If anything, the claim that it was being suppressed makes publication more urgent, provided sources are protected and legal risks are properly handled. If the content is real, supported, and important, it should not remain hostage to one man’s legal predicament. If it is weak, speculative, or defamatory, then the free-speech martyrdom begins to look less like principle and more like branding. 

The 4chan Comparison and the Provincial Edgelord 

There is one humiliation the local influencer class rarely wants to face: much of it is not as dangerous, original, or sophisticated as it imagines itself to be. Compared with the raw memetic trenches of 4chan, figures like Mabanta and his orbit are not exactly pioneers of digital chaos. That is not a compliment to 4chan, which produced some of the ugliest cultures of modern online life: cruelty disguised as humor, irony curdled into extremism, harassment campaigns, nihilistic trolling, racist and misogynistic subcultures, conspiracy aesthetics, and swarm behavior capable of warping public discourse. 

But the comparison matters because it reveals the provincial character of much Philippine political edginess. The local political vlogger is often not an avant-garde troll or a dark architect of internet warfare. He is old patronage politics with a microphone. He is AM radio with thumbnails. He is tabloid instinct with livestream lighting. He is the familiar bark of the political operator, now wearing the cheap perfume of “new media.” 

The anonymous edgelord hides behind chaos and says nothing matters. The Filipino political influencer hides behind patriotism and insists everything he does is for the nation. Both can be destructive, but the second is more irritating because he demands moral applause. He wants to wound like a troll, influence like a propagandist, negotiate like an operator, and be defended like a journalist. His edginess is therefore not pure. It is domesticated by ambition, access, class aspiration, and the desire to remain acceptable to patrons. 

This is why the Mabanta affair feels so revealing. It exposes the smallness beneath the swagger. The loud men of new media — the crusaders, the “fearless” hosts, the patriotic ranters, the anti-corruption warriors, the defenders of “truth” — suddenly become careful about labels, affiliations, legal categories, and old photographs. The posture of danger gives way to the paperwork of self-preservation. 

The old internet troll at least knew he was a troll. The Philippine influencer insists he is a patriot. In a country that still confuses performance with public service, that is often the more dangerous costume. 

The Influencer as Political Mercenary 

The Mabanta case forces a broader reckoning with the political influencer as a type. For years, influencers have operated in a deliberately useful gray zone. They are not exactly journalists, not exactly campaign staff, not exactly entertainers, not exactly lobbyists, and not always openly propagandists, though many function that way. They move between commentary, consultancy, access, attack work, monetized outrage, and factional messaging. Some are paid formally. Some are rewarded informally. Some are ideologues. Some are freelancers of resentment. Some believe in causes. Some believe in relevance. 

The ambiguity is not accidental. It is the business model. To followers, they are independent voices. To politicians, they are useful amplifiers. To critics, they are attack dogs. To advertisers and donors, they are traffic. To themselves, they are truth warriors. To the law, when trouble comes, they become journalists. Each audience receives the version it is most likely to accept. 

This is why the public should become less naive about “new media.” It is not automatically more authentic than legacy media. It is not automatically cleaner because it is not printed on broadsheet paper. It is not automatically braver because it uses street language. It is not automatically nationalist because it shouts “bayan.” It is not automatically independent because it insults mainstream journalists. Many influencers are simply freelance instruments of power, and their independence lasts only until the next alignment. 

This does not mean all online commentators are corrupt. Some do serious work. Some expose stories traditional media miss. Some document abuses with courage. Some explain issues with clarity. But the ecosystem as a whole is polluted by operators who discovered that anger is profitable and loyalty can be rented. The Mabanta affair should make audiences ask harder questions: Who funds these platforms? Who benefits from their attacks? What do they publish, and what do they hold back? Do they correct errors? Do they disclose conflicts? Do they separate evidence from rumor? Do they behave like journalists before the subpoena arrives, or only after? 

Romualdez Is Not Redeemed by Being the Target 

A necessary caution remains: nothing about Mabanta’s arrest automatically absolves Martin Romualdez of public scrutiny. The fact that someone allegedly tried to extort a powerful politician does not mean the politician is innocent of every allegation raised against him. A bad messenger does not purify the subject of the message. A criminal allegation against the carrier does not erase the possibility that some of the carried material may still matter. 

If there are legitimate questions about flood-control projects, corruption, congressional allocations, or abuses connected to the House, those questions must be investigated. The public should resist any attempt to use the extortion case as a shield against inquiry. Romualdez does not become clean simply because Mabanta may be compromised. The NBI case, if proven, may establish that a crime was committed against him. It does not by itself establish that every criticism of him is false. 

This is where the Palace, the NBI, and Romualdez’s camp must be careful. They may win a legal argument and still lose the public one if the arrest appears to function as a broom sweeping away the underlying corruption questions. Filipinos know that political cases can be both true and useful. They know that one faction can expose another faction’s wrongdoing for selfish reasons. They know that a case can have evidence and timing. They know that law and political advantage can walk together. 

The adult position is therefore harder but necessary. Mabanta deserves due process. The NBI must prove its case. PGMN must substantiate its claims. Romualdez must remain open to scrutiny. The alleged exposé, if real and evidence-based, should not disappear. The public should refuse the propaganda choice between Mabanta the martyr and Romualdez the purified victim. Both are too simple. Both are too convenient. 

Free Speech Is Not a Franchise 

Free speech is too important to be left to people who use it only as a defense strategy. The right to speak protects the weak against the powerful. It protects dissenters, whistleblowers, journalists, artists, workers, students, comedians, activists, and ordinary citizens who criticize government. In a country where power often hides behind dynasties, police language, and legal intimidation, free speech is one of the few weapons citizens possess. 

That is precisely why it must not be cheapened. When every legal problem becomes “an attack on free speech,” the phrase loses force. When every content creator becomes “press” only after arrest, real journalists become easier to dismiss. When every accusation is answered with “persecution,” actual persecution becomes harder to recognize. When the rhetoric of liberty is used to blur allegations of extortion, the public becomes cynical about liberty itself. 

This is how democratic language decays. Words like freedom, justice, accountability, patriotism, truth, and press rights still carry moral electricity. Political influencers know this, so they wrap themselves in these words when the weather turns dangerous. But free speech is not a franchise. It is not a brand shield. It is not a get-out-of-jail card. It does not mean freedom from investigation, contradiction, consequence, or ridicule. 

And yes, critics are allowed to laugh. They are allowed to “eat popcorn” when personalities who built careers on ridicule suddenly demand solemnity. They are allowed to notice when partisan flamethrowers become civil libertarians at the exact moment the law touches them. Mockery is not a legal verdict. It is social memory. 

Conclusion: Daylight, Not Drama 

There is a simple way to cut through much of the fog, though it may not be easy for any of the factions involved. Let the NBI prove its case in court. Let Mabanta defend himself with the full protection of due process. Let PGMN publish what it can substantiate, with proper protection for sources and proper accountability for claims. Let Romualdez answer legitimate corruption questions. Let the Palace stop relying on scrapbook politics. Let the vloggers stop pretending that factional convenience is principle. 

The most radical demand here is not theatrical. It is evidentiary. Free speech does not need a suitcase. Journalism does not need a patron. Accountability does not need a faction. Truth does not need a thumbnail. It needs evidence, daylight, and the discipline to survive scrutiny. 

Until then, the popcorn will continue to pass from hand to hand. The DDS vloggers will disown. The Marcos defenders will deflect. The Palace will flash photographs. The critics will laugh. The accused will invoke liberty. The lawyers will prepare. The influencers will livestream. The public will watch. 

And beneath all the neon, noise, and digital smoke, one question will remain: Was this journalism, or was this leverage? 

The answer will not come from memes, loyalty charts, factional nicknames, or men who mistake edginess for bravery. It will come, if it comes at all, from proof. Until then, the great popcorn war of the vloggers tells us less about Franco Mabanta alone than about the republic that made men like him possible: a republic where old fixers learned to livestream, old propagandists learned to say “free speech,” and the old politics of proximity discovered that every scandal could become content.