Saturday, 4 July 2026

The Unfinished Balance Sheet of Independence: July 4, American Modernity, and the Continuing Quest for Filipino Self-Determination

The Unfinished Balance Sheet of Independence: 
July 4, American Modernity, and the Continuing Quest 
for Filipino Self-Determination


On this day, eighty years ago, the independence of the Philippines was formally restored and recognized before the nations of the world. A new Republic was proclaimed before a tired and ravaged nation still struggling to rise from the ruins of nearly half a decade of world war. In the light drizzle of that July day, the Filipino masses gathered in the streets of Manila to witness what official memory has long presented as the rebirth of hope: the lowering of one flag, the raising of another, and the solemn declaration that the Philippines had re-entered the world as a sovereign republic. 

That ceremony must be treated seriously. It was not an empty theatrical exercise. On July 4, 1946, the United States and the Philippines signed the Treaty of General Relations, whose accompanying protocol stated that the treaty was “for the purpose of recognizing the independence of the Republic of the Philippines.” The treaty entered into force on October 22, 1946, after the exchange of ratifications. In the language of international law, the colonial relationship had formally ended. The Philippines stood once again as a state among states. 

But independence is not exhausted by recognition. A republic may be acknowledged by foreign chancelleries and still lack the effective capacity to determine its own destiny. A flag may fly alone above the capital while economic policy, military arrangements, trade rules, and elite interests continue to limit the people’s choices. It is possible for a nation to possess the legal personality of a state while remaining dependent in the actual conduct of national life. 

This is the contradiction that July 4 requires us to confront. The Philippines received independence, but not on the terms imagined by the revolutionaries of 1896, the republicans of Malolos, the anti-colonial fighters who resisted occupation, or the generations of Filipinos who sustained the demand for liberty through petitions, missions, organization, exile, debate, and sacrifice. Independence had been a moral claim. It had been a people’s right. Yet American policy gradually transformed it into a managed transaction. 

The Filipino people had asked for freedom as a right. The United States returned it as a contract. 

That is the deeper historical injury. It was not merely that independence was delayed. It was that independence was de-idealized. What Filipinos had understood as the fulfillment of nationhood was converted into a timetable, a set of conditions, a package of trade concessions, a question of military access, and a series of legal instruments negotiated under conditions of unequal power. The ideal of national liberation was reduced to administrative language. The right of a people became the subject of bargaining. 

This does not mean July 4, 1946 was false in every sense. It means it was incomplete. It ended formal colonial sovereignty, but it did not end dependency. It restored the Republic, but under terms shaped by the former colonial power. It allowed the Filipino flag to fly alone, but the structure beneath that flag remained burdened by foreign privileges, domestic class power, and a political economy already tied to the requirements of the United States. 

To examine this problem is not to reject independence. It is to insist on its completion.

The Katipunan, the First Republic and the Prior Claim to Nationhood 

The First Philippine Republic had already established the Filipino claim to nationhood before American power imposed its own interpretation of events. The Malolos Republic was not a tribal disturbance, a provincial rebellion, or an accidental by-product of the Spanish-American War. It was a constitutional republic born from revolution. Its constitution declared that the political association of Filipinos constituted a nation and that sovereignty resided in the people. 

That point matters because the American narrative of tutelage began by refusing to recognize the full political meaning of what had already occurred. The Filipino nation did not begin in 1935 with the Commonwealth, nor in 1946 with American recognition. It had already announced itself in 1898 and 1899 through revolution, declaration, congress, constitution, army, diplomacy, and sacrifice. 

Nor was the Filipino republican imagination merely derivative of the United States. The Malolos Constitution belonged to a wider nineteenth-century world of constitutionalism. Its influences included Spanish, French, Belgian, and Latin American models; accounts of its drafting note that charters from Mexico, Brazil, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Belgium, and the French revolutionary tradition were studied. (Wikipedia) Filipino separatism did not look only across the Pacific to Washington. It looked to Cádiz, Paris, Mexico, Latin America, and the republican revolutions of the Atlantic world. 

This is crucial. The Filipino struggle for independence was not a request to be remade in America’s image. It was a demand to complete a historical movement already shaped by Spanish liberalism, anti-friar agitation, Latin American republicanism, French revolutionary language, local revolutionary experience, and the lived violence of colonial rule. It was not primitive nationalism awaiting American instruction. It was a political project already conversant with modernity. 

The Treaty of Paris of 1898 violently ignored that fact. Spain “ceded” the Philippine Islands to the United States for twenty million dollars, as if sovereignty over a people could be transferred between empires by contract. The Filipino people, who had declared independence, were treated as objects of settlement rather than subjects of self-determination. A nation that had fought to leave one empire was handed to another. 

This is where the first transaction occurred. The United States did not purchase Philippine consent. It purchased Spain’s claim. The Filipino people were not party to the sale, yet they were made subject to its consequences. What had been a revolution became, in imperial law, a transfer of title. 

Benevolent Assimilation and the American Claim to Modernity 

The United States justified its new position through the language of benevolence. President William McKinley’s December 21, 1898 order instructed American authorities to pursue “benevolent assimilation,” promising the “mild sway of justice and right” in place of arbitrary rule. (presidency.ucsb.edu) The rhetoric was careful. The United States would not present itself merely as conqueror. It would present itself as tutor, democratizer, administrator, and bearer of modern political forms. 

Here lies the second injury: American rule did not only conquer; it redefined the standard by which independence would be judged. The question became whether Filipino independence would be acceptable according to American assumptions of modernity. But why should independence and self-determination have to be American-style simply because America presented itself as modern? Why should a people formed by more than three centuries of Hispanic, Asian, Catholic, liberal, local, and revolutionary experience be told that their freedom required American certification? 

Imagine the historical insult. After more than three centuries under Spain, the Filipino people had produced their own separatist and republican imagination. Their political class had absorbed European liberalism, Latin American constitutional examples, anti-clerical critique, and the revolutionary logic of popular sovereignty. Yet when they asserted independence, the United States dismissed or subordinated those expressions, whether through strategic calculation, racial assumptions, or fear of an uncontrolled nonwhite republic outside imperial discipline. 

The question was not whether Filipinos understood modernity. The question was whether American power was willing to recognize a modernity not authored by itself. 

American colonial rule carried a racialized logic. Paul Kramer’s work on race and empire emphasizes that the Philippine-American conflict and American colonialism were deeply entangled with racial categories, military violence, and arguments about Filipino capacity for self-government. (Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus) This racial frame allowed the United States to present Filipino independence not as a right already exercised, but as a future achievement dependent on American tutelage. 

That is how the ideal was reduced. Independence was no longer the natural right of a people that had declared itself a nation. It became the reward for passing an imperial examination. The United States could then appear generous in promising independence while reserving to itself the authority to define readiness, stability, and civilization. 

The irony is severe. The Philippines had been claimed for centuries by Spain within an imperial order that often described overseas territories in the language of province, crown, church, and civilization. Then, after revolution, the country was transferred to another superpower that spoke not in the old idiom of friars and monarchy, but in the newer idiom of capitalist efficiency, public education, democratic phraseology, sanitation, infrastructure, and constitutional tutelage. The outer language changed. The structure remained recognizable: the Filipino people were still told that their political future had to be mediated by an outside power. 

The United States did not abolish the colonial status quo in one clean moral act. It repackaged that status quo in modern administrative form. 

From Revolutionary Right to Colonial Administration 

After President Emilio Aguinaldo was captured in 1901 and pledged allegiance to the United States, the First Republic effectively ceased to function as a central government. Yet resistance continued under commanders such as Miguel Malvar in Southern Luzon, Manuel Tinio in Northern Luzon, and Vicente Lukban in the Visayas. American authority eventually consolidated itself, but it did so over a people whose political demand had already been announced to the world. 

The Philippine-American War and the early American colonial state therefore introduced a major distortion: the transformation of Filipino independence from an existing republican claim into a future colonial promise. American civil government did not begin from the premise that Filipinos were already a people entitled to independence. It began from the premise that they were a people to be prepared for it. 

The Philippine Organic Act of 1902 institutionalized civil government under American sovereignty. It reorganized colonial administration and eventually allowed the creation of a legislature, but ultimate authority remained with the United States. Representation entered colonial governance, but sovereignty did not. 

This was the essential ambiguity of American tutelage. It introduced forms of participation while withholding the substance of sovereignty. It allowed Filipinos to debate, legislate, and administer, but within a framework where final authority still lay beyond the archipelago. In business terms, the Filipino political class was being trained to manage accounts it did not fully own. 

Such a system could educate politicians, but it also educated dependency. It taught that power came through petition, negotiation, approval, and compliance with standards set elsewhere. It encouraged a colonial elite to master the language of constitutionalism while leaving untouched the basic fact that the country’s destiny remained subject to a foreign legislature. 

The Conditional Promise of the Jones Law 

The Jones Law of 1916 is often remembered as a milestone because it contained the first formal American declaration that the Philippines would eventually become independent. That memory is not wrong, but it is incomplete. The law declared the purpose of the United States to recognize Philippine independence “as soon as a stable government” could be established. 

That phrase mattered. It gave the promise of independence a legal form, but it also placed the timing and judgment of Filipino nationhood in American hands. The Filipino people were not told that independence was theirs because they were a nation. They were told it would come when the colonial power decided that they had demonstrated sufficient stability. 

For Filipino leaders, the Jones Law became both an opening and a trap. It gave them language with which to press Washington, but that language also confined the debate. The issue became whether Filipinos had satisfied American conditions rather than whether the United States had any moral right to impose conditions at all. 

This was the beginning of the de-idealization of independence. The question shifted from “What does justice require?” to “What conditions must be met?” In that shift, the moral core of the struggle was weakened. The United States could present itself not as the power delaying freedom, but as the manager of an orderly transition. Independence became less a demand from below than a file moving through the machinery of empire. 

Independence Missions and the Politics of Petition 

Between 1919 and 1934, the Filipino campaign for independence took the form of repeated missions to Washington. These missions were necessary within the realities of colonial power. They kept the issue alive. They forced the United States to confront its own promises. They demonstrated that Filipino leaders were not content with indefinite tutelage. 

Yet there was a structural weakness in the politics of petition. To plead for independence before the legislature of the colonizing power was already to accept a humiliating procedural reality. The national right of the Filipino people had to pass through American committees, American electoral calculations, American agricultural interests, American racial anxieties, tariff politics, and military concerns. 

This is why American treatment of Philippine independence cannot be understood only as benevolent tutelage. It must also be understood as bargaining. The United States did not simply ask when Filipinos should be free. It asked what American interests had to be protected when Filipinos became free. 

The Hare-Hawes-Cutting Act and the Tydings-McDuffie Act emerged from this political economy. They were not pure instruments of liberation. They were compromise statutes shaped by both Filipino pressure and American interests. Tydings-McDuffie authorized a constitution, created the Commonwealth framework, set a transition period, and required approval mechanisms that kept the process under American supervision. 

Here again the contradiction appears. The Filipino people had already chosen independence. But American law converted that choice into a supervised sequence. A people’s demand became an American timetable. Sovereignty became a maturity date. 

Commonwealth: Training Ground or Holding Company? 

The Commonwealth inaugurated in 1935 under Manuel L. Quezon is often treated as the bridge between colony and republic. In one sense, that is correct. It created a Filipino chief executive, a Filipino legislature, and a Filipino judiciary under a constitution approved within the framework of Tydings-McDuffie. It gave Filipino leaders greater control over domestic administration. It also symbolized the nearness of full independence. 

But the Commonwealth was also a holding company for a nation not yet allowed to fully own itself. It was a state-in-waiting, operating under restrictions. Its external sovereignty remained limited. Its defense arrangements remained tied to the United States. Its constitutional and legal life remained shaped by the requirements of a transition statute passed by the American Congress. 

The Tydings-McDuffie Act made this dependence explicit. Until the final withdrawal of American sovereignty, amendments to the Commonwealth Constitution had to be submitted to the President of the United States for approval, and the American President could suspend the operation of Commonwealth laws, contracts, or executive orders under certain circumstances. The future republic was therefore being trained under a system in which Filipino institutions operated with visible autonomy but ultimate oversight remained external. 

The Commonwealth years sharpened the paradox of Filipino politics. The people saw more Filipino faces in office, more Filipino control over administration, and more symbols of impending nationhood. Yet the decisive question of sovereignty remained deferred. Independence had been promised, scheduled, and institutionalized, but it had not yet arrived. 

This arrangement had consequences for political culture. It trained leaders to think in terms of transition rather than transformation. It emphasized administrative capacity, electoral machinery, and legal continuity. These were not unimportant. But they were not the same as social emancipation. The old problems of land, poverty, elite domination, regional inequality, and dependence on foreign markets were not solved by the existence of the Commonwealth. 

A nation can be prepared for independence in two different ways. It can be prepared by building productive capacity, democratizing property, strengthening national industry, developing autonomous defense, and deepening popular participation. Or it can be prepared by producing a class of managers capable of operating inherited institutions without disturbing the economic order. The Commonwealth leaned heavily toward the second. 

War, Occupation, and the Ruins of 1946 

The Second World War shattered the scheduled path to independence. The Japanese invasion, the fall of Bataan and Corregidor, the suffering of civilians, the destruction of Manila, the collaboration and resistance controversies, and the violence of liberation all transformed the context in which independence would arrive. By 1946, the Philippines was not simply awaiting a constitutional date. It was a devastated country. 

This matters because the condition of the Philippines in 1946 shaped the bargaining power of the new Republic. A country emerging from war, hunger, ruined infrastructure, social unrest, and fiscal weakness could not negotiate with the same strength as a country standing on a broad industrial base with secure finances and a unified social order. The republic was born into need. 

American policy operated within that need. Reconstruction assistance, war damage payments, trade access, and financial arrangements became instruments through which the former colonial power could preserve influence. The transaction was not conducted between equal parties in equal condition. One side had emerged as a victorious global power. The other had been a battlefield. 

The ceremony of July 4 must be viewed against this material background. Independence arrived with drums, flags, speeches, and diplomatic recognition. But beneath the ceremonial surface stood a damaged economy and a political class under pressure to secure recovery. It was precisely in this moment that the meaning of independence could be narrowed. The urgent need for rehabilitation allowed freedom to be linked with concessions. 

July 4 and the Fine Print of Freedom 

The Treaty of General Relations recognized the independence of the Philippines and formally ended American sovereignty. Yet even this foundational treaty must be read with attention to its surrounding architecture. It did not exist alone. It was part of a wider settlement involving trade, property, bases, security, and future relations. 

The treaty itself carried forward obligations and property questions from the colonial period. It required the Republic of the Philippines to make adequate provision for certain bond obligations, allowed pending cases involving the government and people of the Philippines to remain subject to U.S. Supreme Court review for a period necessary to dispose of them, and stated that existing property rights of citizens and corporations of both countries would be respected. It also required the Philippines to assume continuing obligations under the Treaty of Paris of 1898 and the 1900 Treaty of Washington. 

This is where the business-page metaphor becomes unavoidable. The Republic opened with an impressive headline: independence restored. But the notes to the account told a more complicated story. The assets were visible: flag, presidency, diplomatic recognition, constitution, membership in the family of nations. The liabilities were less ceremonial but more enduring: unequal trade relations, foreign military rights, dependence on American markets, elite accommodation, and a postwar recovery tied to external approval. 

The Bell Trade Act made the transaction unmistakable. U.S. State Department records summarized the Philippine Trade Act of 1946 as providing eight years of free trade followed by twenty years of declining preferences, quotas on certain Philippine imports, and other trade rules. The same document stated that the Philippines was expected to amend its Constitution so American citizens and enterprises could engage in activities such as mining and public utilities that had been reserved for Philippine citizens. 

In ordinary commercial language, this was a transaction with heavy conditions. The Philippines needed rehabilitation. The United States offered economic arrangements, but not without preserving access and leverage. The newly independent country was asked to adjust its constitutional understanding of national patrimony in order to accommodate the privileges of the former sovereign. 

The issue was not merely technical. Control over natural resources and public utilities goes to the heart of sovereignty. A nation’s mines, forests, lands, power systems, transport networks, and strategic industries are not ordinary commodities. They are the material base of self-determination. To open them under pressure to the citizens and corporations of the former colonial power was to compromise the economic meaning of independence at the very moment of its proclamation. 

This is the proper meaning of de-idealization. Independence was not denied outright. It was recognized, celebrated, and solemnized. But it was simultaneously priced. Freedom was announced on the platform and qualified in the agreements. The people received the symbol; the former colonial power retained strategic and economic footholds. 

The Parity Question and the National Patrimony 

The parity issue deserves special attention because it revealed the difference between juridical independence and economic self-determination. The 1935 Constitution contained provisions intended to reserve control of natural resources and certain public utilities to Filipinos. These were not accidental clauses. They reflected a nationalist understanding that political freedom required an economic base. 

The Bell Trade framework challenged that principle. If Americans were to enjoy parity rights, the constitutional barrier protecting national patrimony had to be altered. Stephen Shalom’s study of Philippine acceptance of the Bell Trade Act described the parity clause as granting U.S. citizens and corporations equal rights with Filipinos in utilizing and owning natural resources and in operating public utilities. This was more than an amendment. It was a test of the new Republic’s ability to defend the economic meaning of sovereignty. 

Supporters of the arrangement could argue that the Philippines needed American markets, rehabilitation, and investment. That argument cannot be dismissed lightly. The country was in ruins. Government revenues were limited. Infrastructure had been damaged. Social unrest was rising. In such conditions, access to resources was not a theoretical concern. 

But the nationalist objection was equally practical. A country that pays for reconstruction by mortgaging its patrimony may rebuild roads and buildings while weakening the foundations of independent development. A republic that begins life by granting special economic privileges to its former colonizer does not begin from an equal position. It begins with an encumbrance. 

This is why the language of “granting” independence is misleading. The United States did not simply hand over freedom and withdraw. It recognized independence while arranging the postcolonial field in ways favorable to American interests. The formal empire ended, but its economic logic survived. 

Of Military Bases and Strategic Dependency 

The economic transaction was accompanied by a military one. In 1947, the Philippines and the United States signed the Military Bases Agreement. The agreement granted the United States the right to retain the use of bases in the Philippines and allowed the use of additional listed bases when required by military necessity. The agreement was to remain in force for ninety-nine years, subject to extension. 

This arrangement further qualified the meaning of sovereignty. A country may enter defense agreements as a sovereign act. There is nothing inherently illegitimate about alliances. But when military arrangements are negotiated immediately after colonial rule, under conditions of devastation and dependence, they cannot be treated as ordinary agreements between fully equal powers. 

The Philippines became independent, yet the strategic use of Philippine territory remained tied to American requirements. This produced a long-term pattern: the country was formally sovereign, but its geography was repeatedly interpreted through the needs of another power’s regional strategy. The archipelago’s location became an asset not only for Filipinos but for American planners. 

The Mutual Defense Treaty of 1951 later formalized the alliance framework. Its text stated that both parties would develop their individual and collective capacity to resist armed attack and would act to meet common dangers according to constitutional processes. Yet the broader relationship cannot be separated from the earlier bases agreement and the unequal conditions under which the Republic entered the postwar order. 

The danger in such a relationship is not simply that a foreign military may be present. The deeper danger is that the national imagination becomes accustomed to outsourced security. A people that depends on another power for defense may begin to lose the habit of strategic independence. Its leaders may speak of sovereignty while treating foreign approval as the invisible guarantee behind national policy. 

The American Style of Independence 

This brings the reader to the central question. Should independence and self-determination be American-style simply because America presents itself as modernity? 

The Philippine case exposes the arrogance behind that assumption. A people shaped by more than three centuries under Spain, by the Propaganda Movement, by anti-friar politics, by the Katipunan, by Malolos, by European constitutionalism, by Latin American examples, by local revolts, by peasant memory, and by the experience of war did not require the United States to teach it the desire for nationhood. Filipinos had already chosen independence before the Americans decided to manage it. 

American colonial rule did not introduce the Filipino people to politics. It replaced one vocabulary of imperial rule with another. The old Spanish order spoke in the language of crown, church, civilization, race, and loyalty. The American order spoke in the language of public education, sanitary reform, democratic tutelage, civil service, free trade, and efficiency. The vocabulary was newer, but the structure was familiar: the Filipino people were still judged from outside. 

This is why the American claim to benevolence must be handled with suspicion. Benevolence is not freedom. Efficiency is not sovereignty. Modern administration is not self-determination. Public schools, roads, elections, and courts may be real reforms, but if they are constructed inside a system that denies the people ultimate authority over their national future, they remain colonial instruments as much as public goods. 

The American colonial state therefore performed a double act. It modernized certain institutions while subordinating the nation. It trained leaders while disciplining their horizons. It used democratic phraseology while reserving sovereignty. It promised eventual liberty while redefining liberty as something to be earned through obedience to American standards. 

This was not liberation. It was the same status quo wrapped in capitalist efficiency and democratic language. 

The Pattern Persists 

The historical pattern did not end in 1946 or 1947. It changed forms. The postcolonial relationship evolved through trade agreements, military arrangements, development policy, loans, aid, security cooperation, and diplomatic alignment. The vocabulary changed from empire to partnership, from colonial administration to alliance, from tutelage to assistance. But the question remained: who determines the direction of the Philippine state? 

In the contemporary period, this question continues under new conditions. The Philippines has its own elected government, constitution, armed forces, and diplomatic service. It is not a colony. But sovereignty is not measured only by legal status. It is measured by capacity. 

When foreign troops rotate through Philippine facilities, when defense sites are expanded, when maritime tensions place the country within great-power rivalry, and when national security discourse becomes inseparable from American strategic language, Filipinos must ask whether policy is being made from the standpoint of Philippine self-determination or from the standpoint of alliance management. 

This is not an argument for isolation. The Philippines faces real security problems, including maritime coercion and territorial disputes. A serious nationalist position cannot pretend that geography is harmless or that the country can defend its interests by slogans. But neither can national security be reduced to dependence on a former colonial power. 

The country must resist two illusions at once. The first illusion is that alliance automatically equals sovereignty. The second illusion is that sovereignty requires diplomatic solitude. A mature republic must cooperate widely while preserving independent judgment. It must defend its territory without surrendering its strategic mind. 

The Economy as the Real Test of Independence 

If military policy tests the external meaning of sovereignty, the economy tests its internal meaning. A country cannot be fully self-determining if its people remain trapped in poverty, precarious labor, land insecurity, debt, and dependence on imported essentials. Freedom must be measured not only by diplomatic recognition but by the capacity of ordinary people to live with dignity. 

The poverty figures remain a warning. The Philippine Statistics Authority reported that in 2023, 15.5 percent of Filipinos, or about 17.54 million people, were poor, meaning their income was insufficient to meet basic food and non-food needs. Such figures are not merely welfare statistics. They are sovereignty indicators. A republic in which millions cannot meet basic needs has not completed the promise of independence. 

The export of labor is another measure. Overseas Filipino workers are praised as heroes, and their remittances help stabilize households and the national economy. But a development model that relies heavily on sending citizens abroad is also a confession of domestic insufficiency. A nation should not have to export its people in order to sustain consumption, educate children, build homes, and earn foreign exchange. 

The economic question is therefore not whether the Philippines has grown. It has. The question is whether growth has built national capability. Has it strengthened domestic industry? Has it reduced dependence on imported food and fuel? Has it secured farmers? Has it raised wages in a structural way? Has it built technology, manufacturing, and scientific capacity? Has it democratized opportunity outside metropolitan centers? Has it freed policy from the veto power of oligarchs and external creditors? 

Independence is not self-determination if the economy remains organized around dependency. The country may have malls, casinos, business districts, remittance inflows, call centers, and rising consumption, but these cannot substitute for a productive national base. A service economy without industrial depth remains vulnerable. A consumer economy without sufficient production remains dependent. A remittance economy without domestic opportunity remains incomplete. 

The proper business opinion question is direct: what is the return on independence if the national economy cannot secure the material freedom of the people? 

Local Elites and the Internal Colony 

No serious anti-imperialist analysis can end with foreign power alone. The United States shaped the postcolonial order, but Filipino elites helped administer and benefit from it. The local ruling classes were not passive objects of American policy. They were active participants in the management of dependency. 

This is why the phrase “puppet” is sometimes too simple. It captures subservience, but not the full mechanism. The local elite is not merely commanded from outside. It often shares interests with outside power. Landlords, importers, concessionaires, brokers, contractors, political dynasties, and monopoly groups may find dependency profitable. They may prefer a weak national economy if weakness allows them to dominate protected sectors. They may prefer foreign alignment if it secures aid, legitimacy, weapons, and diplomatic cover. They may speak the language of patriotism while treating the nation as a portfolio. 

This internal dimension explains why formal independence did not produce social transformation. The postwar Republic inherited not only American influence but also a domestic order built on land inequality, patronage, regional bosses, and elite control of the state. The result was a republic whose institutions were national in form but often oligarchic in practice. 

The Filipino masses therefore faced a double problem. From outside came the pressure of imperial power. From inside came the domination of local classes whose interests were tied to the preservation of the old order. To oppose one while ignoring the other is to misunderstand the structure of dependency. 

This is also why self-determination must be social, not merely diplomatic. A foreign policy independent of Washington but controlled by domestic oligarchs would still not be genuine freedom. An economy free from formal colonial rule but dominated by a narrow local class would still deny the majority the substance of nationhood. National liberation and social justice are not separate ledgers. They are two sides of the same account. 

Independence as Balance Sheet 

To write of independence in a business-page idiom is not to reduce nationhood to commerce. It is to insist on accountability. Anniversaries often produce sentimental speeches, but nations must also audit themselves. What was received? What was surrendered? What was promised? What remains unpaid? 

On the asset side of July 4, 1946 were real gains. The Philippines gained international personality, control over its formal institutions, the end of direct American sovereignty, and the symbolic restoration of the Republic. These were historic achievements. To deny them would be irresponsible. 

On the liability side were equally real burdens. Economic concessions limited national patrimony. Military agreements embedded strategic dependence. Reconstruction needs weakened bargaining power. Local elites preserved social inequality. The postwar order kept the country tied to American markets, American security assumptions, and American approval. 

The net position was therefore mixed. The Philippines became independent, but not fully self-determining. It had sovereignty, but constrained sovereignty. It had a republic, but one already encumbered. It had a flag, but the economic and military clauses beneath the flag told another story. 

This balance-sheet approach avoids two errors. The first error is official romanticism, which treats July 4 as pure fulfillment. The second error is crude dismissal, which treats it as meaningless. The truth is more demanding. July 4 was a real transfer of formal sovereignty and also a compromised settlement. It was a victory and a limitation. It was an ending and a beginning. It closed the colonial office but left open the deeper struggle over power. 

De-Idealization as Imperial Method 

The American de-idealization of Philippine independence was not accidental. It was an imperial method. The United States did not simply suppress the Filipino demand forever; that would have been costly and increasingly indefensible. Instead, it absorbed the demand, translated it into legal procedure, attached conditions, and preserved core interests through treaty, trade, and military arrangements. 

This was more sophisticated than open denial. It allowed Washington to present itself as generous, democratic, and faithful to its promises while ensuring that the postcolonial order remained favorable to American power. It transformed independence from a revolutionary principle into a negotiated settlement managed by the former colonizer. 

The method had several stages. 
  • First, the Filipino right was reframed as Filipino readiness. Instead of asking whether Filipinos were entitled to be free, American policy asked whether they had established a stable government. That shifted moral authority from the colonized people to the colonizing power. 
  • Second, independence was placed on a timetable. This made the process appear orderly and benevolent, but it also allowed the United States to determine the pace and conditions of transition. 
  • Third, economic concessions were attached to postwar recovery. The devastated Republic needed rehabilitation, and that need became leverage. 
  • Fourth, military access was preserved after formal sovereignty. The United States gave up direct rule but retained strategic position. 
  • Fifth, local elites were integrated into the settlement. The new Republic was governed by Filipinos, but by Filipinos whose class interests often aligned with continuity rather than transformation. 
This is how an empire can retreat without disappearing. It can lower its flag while preserving its privileges. It can recognize a republic while shaping its options. It can end colonial administration while maintaining dependency. 

The Continuing Quest for Self-Determination 

Self-determination is often treated as a question settled by independence. Once a state is recognized, the assumption goes, the people have achieved their right to self-determination. But this is a narrow view. Formal independence is only the beginning of self-determination. The harder question is whether the people possess the real capacity to direct their national life. 

For the Philippines, that capacity remains contested. It is contested when foreign military arrangements are made without sufficient democratic scrutiny. It is contested when economic policy favors import dependence and elite consumption over national production. It is contested when land reform remains incomplete. It is contested when labor migration becomes a permanent safety valve. It is contested when public utilities, natural resources, and strategic industries become objects of rent-seeking rather than national planning. It is contested when elected officials treat sovereignty as rhetoric while governing through patronage and external dependence. 

The pursuit of true independence therefore requires more than anniversary speeches. It requires a program of national reconstruction in the deepest sense. The country must build productive capacity, secure food systems, strengthen domestic industry, invest in science and technology, democratize land and credit, protect labor, and discipline monopolies. It must develop a foreign policy that is neither servile nor reckless. It must cooperate with many countries while refusing automatic obedience to any. 

This is not isolationism. It is adult nationhood. A self-determining Philippines can trade with the United States, China, Japan, ASEAN, Europe, and the wider world. It can cooperate militarily where interests align. It can accept investment under rules that protect national development. It can borrow, lend, export, import, and negotiate. But it must do so as a republic conscious of its own interest, not as a client state awaiting instruction. 

The test is simple: does a policy increase the Filipino people’s capacity to decide their future, or does it reduce that capacity? If it increases that capacity, it belongs to the work of independence. If it reduces that capacity, it belongs to the unfinished past. 

Remembering the Heroes Without Empty Ritual 

To pay tribute to the heroes and martyrs of the Filipino people is not merely to place wreaths at monuments. It is to understand what they struggled against and what they struggled for. They fought not only for a change of flags, but for the right of the people to become masters of their country. 

Their memory has often been domesticated. Revolutionaries are turned into statues. Anti-colonial thinkers are made safe for textbooks. Martyrs are praised in speeches by officials who would have opposed them in life. The sharp edges of their struggle are polished down until only patriotic ornament remains. 

This is another form of de-idealization. Just as independence was converted into transaction, revolutionary memory is converted into ceremony. The state praises heroes while avoiding the implications of their demands. It honors sacrifice while refusing transformation. 

A serious republic must do better. It must remember that the struggle for independence involved peasants, workers, soldiers, women, intellectuals, students, clergy, exiles, and ordinary people who risked everything against superior power. It must remember that liberty was not bestowed from above. It was demanded from below. 

The same standard applies today. A government cannot invoke the heroes while surrendering policy to foreign pressure and domestic greed. A political class cannot praise the martyrs while tolerating poverty, corruption, dynastic rule, and the selling of national patrimony. To honor the dead is to continue the unfinished work of the living. 

Against performative Patriotism and reckless Practicalism 

The debate over independence often suffers from two false positions. One is performative patriotism: emotional, ceremonial, flag-waving, but unwilling to confront the economic and military structures that weaken sovereignty. The other is hollow practicality: cynical, technocratic, dismissive of nationalism, and always ready to explain why the country must accept dependence as the price of survival. 

Both are inadequate. Performative patriotism speaks loudly of sovereignty but does not build the material basis of sovereignty. It treats the flag as substitute for industry, the anthem as substitute for food security, and speeches as substitute for social justice. It is content with symbols. Reckless practicality is worse in some respects because it mistakes subservience for realism. It says the country is too small, too poor, too weak, too divided, or too exposed to act independently. It teaches the people to lower their expectations. It converts dependency into common sense. 

But there is nothing practical about permanent dependency. There is nothing realistic about a development model that exports workers, imports essentials, neglects farmers, underbuilds industry, and places strategic choices under the shadow of foreign power. True realism begins by recognizing power, but it does not end by surrendering to it. 

A serious nationalism must be practical without being servile and principled without being theatrical. It must ask hard questions about budgets, production, defense, trade, technology, wages, land, and institutions. It must understand that sovereignty is not a mood. It is capacity organized through policy. 

Completing What July 4 Could Not Complete 

July 4, 1946 should therefore be remembered neither with blind celebration nor with total contempt. It was a real event in the legal history of the Republic. It marked the end of formal American sovereignty and the restoration of the Philippines as an independent state. But it also revealed the limits of a decolonization process managed by the colonizer. 

The United States de-idealized Philippine independence by transforming it from a people’s moral right into a negotiated transaction. It attached conditions to freedom, arranged postcolonial privileges, preserved strategic access, and dealt with a local elite willing to accommodate those terms. In doing so, it gave the Philippines a republic burdened by dependency from birth. 

The deeper insult was ideological as well as material. America presented itself as modernity, then judged Filipino freedom according to American standards. It took a nation shaped by Spanish, European, Latin American, Asian, and local revolutionary experience and treated it as a pupil. It replaced the old colonial vocabulary with the smoother phrases of democracy, efficiency, and benevolent administration. But self-determination cannot be authentic if it must first be approved by the power that denies it. 

The task today is not to repeat the ceremonies of independence but to recover its ideal content. Independence must again mean the right and capacity of the Filipino people to determine their economic direction, social order, diplomatic posture, and national future. It must mean control over patrimony, dignity for labor, justice for farmers, productive industry, food security, technological capacity, and foreign relations based on national interest. 

The flag was raised in 1946. But the raising of the flag did not complete the work of nationhood. It only marked a stage in the longer struggle. 

Eighty years later, the unfinished question remains: will the Philippines remain a republic of formal sovereignty but practical dependence, or will it become a nation capable of self-determination in substance? 

The answer cannot be supplied by treaties already signed, speeches already delivered, or ceremonies already performed. It must be built in policy, production, social justice, and national will. 

Independence without self-determination is a paper proclamation. But independence completed through self-determination becomes something more durable than ceremony. It becomes nationhood. 

And that is the task still before the Filipino people. 

*** 

Agreement between the Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America Concerning Military Bases. (1947). United Nations Treaty Series. (United Nations Treaty Collection) 

Avalon Project. (n.d.). Treaty of Peace Between the United States and Spain; December 10, 1898. Yale Law School. (Avalon Project) 

Avalon Project. (n.d.). Mutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of the Philippines; August 30, 1951. Yale Law School. (Avalon Project) 

Kramer, P. A. (2006). Race-making and colonial violence in the U.S. empire: The Philippine-American War as race war. The Asia-Pacific Journal. (Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus) 

Malolos Constitution / Political Constitution of 1899. The constitution’s nationalist provisions declared the Philippine Republic free and independent and located sovereignty in the people. (Supreme Court E-Library) 

McKinley, W. (1898, December 21). Executive order on benevolent assimilation. The American Presidency Project. (presidency.ucsb.edu) 

Philippine Autonomy Act / Jones Law. (1916). LawPhil Project. (Lawphil) 

Philippine Independence Act / Tydings-McDuffie Act. (1934). U.S. Statutes at Large. (GovTrack US) 

Shalom, S. R. (1980). Philippine acceptance of the Bell Trade Act of 1946: A study of manipulatory democracy. Pacific Historical Review, 49(3), 499–517. (JSTOR) 

Treaty of General Relations Between the Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America. (1946). Supreme Court E-Library / United Nations Treaty Collection. (Supreme Court E-Library) 

U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian. (1946). Foreign Relations of the United States, 1946, The Far East, Volume VIII. Documents on Philippine independence and the Philippine Trade Act. (Office of the Historian) 

Wednesday, 1 July 2026

When Questioning Their Intent Is Different from Denying the Right to Dissent

When Questioning Their Intent Is Different from Denying the Right to Dissent 

Ro: On the recene White Ribbon March, 
the INC Mobilization in support of Rodante Marcoleta, the Marcos-Duterte rift, 
and the People’s Struggle Against Selective Accountability 


The right to dissent is not the property of one church, one party, one faction, or one camp. It belongs to the people. It belongs to workers delayed on the road, students marching with placards, church people praying in public squares, farmers demanding land and relief, professionals calling for clean government, and ordinary citizens who refuse to be treated as spectators in the quarrels of the powerful. No state that calls itself democratic may deny the right to assemble, speak, pray, protest, criticize, and demand redress. 

But the right to dissent is not a command that the people must close their eyes. To defend the right of the Iglesia ni Cristo to gather is not to surrender the right to question the purpose of that gathering. To recognize religious freedom is not to accept religious pressure as political innocence. To uphold peaceful assembly is not to pretend that every assembly serves the people. The issue, therefore, is not whether INC members may rally. They may. The issue is whether a mass mobilization at the People Power Monument, organized in support of Senator Rodante Marcoleta while he faces serious allegations, serves democratic accountability or shields political power from it. 

The central question remains simple: why should any public official need tens of thousands of people to defend him against a legal investigation? In a constitutional democracy, accountability is not measured by the size of one’s following, by the discipline of one’s bloc, or by the ability of one’s supporters to occupy a historic site. It is measured by evidence, due process, and the independence of institutions. Marcoleta has faced possible plunder proceedings over alleged undeclared campaign contributions worth around ₱75 million, and Ombudsman Jesus Crispin Remulla has said his office would proceed with the filing of charges despite the rally. “Nothing has changed. We will file,” Remulla said, according to GMA News. 

The Iglesia ni Cristo has the right to question the case. It has the right to say the prosecution is selective. It has the right to insist that the law must not be bent. But when a powerful religious organization mobilizes at EDSA in defense of one of its own, while speaking the language of transparency, accountability, justice, and peace, the people must ask what those words are doing. Are they opening the road toward universal accountability, or are they being used to build a protective wall around one adherent? 

The rally cannot be separated from the larger crisis of the ruling order. Partido Lakas ng Masa has correctly situated the mobilization within the intensifying clash between the Marcos and Duterte factions. This is no longer a mere dispute within government. It is a crisis of dynasties, trapos, contractors, police institutions, religious blocs, and political machines struggling for power, influence, and control of the state. The immediate issue may be Marcoleta’s looming legal peril, but the background is broader: the collapse of the Marcos-Duterte alliance, the impeachment struggle surrounding Vice President Sara Duterte, the flood-control corruption scandal, and the attempt of rival factions to weaponize accountability against one another. 

The people must not be deceived. Marcos and Duterte forces both speak of corruption when it serves their side. Each camp points to the theft of the other. Each presents itself as the cleaner force when attacking the rival faction. But both are products of the same rotten order. Both are tied to dynastic rule, bureaucratic manipulation, patronage, elite bargaining, and the conversion of public office into private machinery. When two stones collide, it is the people caught between them who are crushed. 

Bayan’s critique exposes the same contradiction from another angle. The demand to hold all corrupt officials accountable is legitimate, but INC refuses to apply the principle consistently when the subject is Marcoleta. Bayan said INC’s condemnation of selective justice “smacks of hypocrisy,” arguing that the rally’s motive was to preempt Marcoleta’s looming arrest. It also accused INC of distorting the clamor for justice by invoking it to negotiate concessions from the Marcos Jr. administration while its own political agenda remained hidden behind secrecy and transactional politics. 

The civic groups behind the Trillion Peso Marches made the same point with precision. Their statement opposed the INC-led gathering in support of Marcoleta while expressly recognizing the freedoms of expression, religion, and peaceful assembly. Their concern was not EDSA as a venue or protest as a right, but the use of collective political and institutional power to place individuals beyond accountability. Tindig Pilipinas likewise criticized the rally held in support of Marcoleta, who faces an impending plunder case, warning against the use of democratic symbols to protect public officials from legal scrutiny. 

This is the line that must be held: peaceful assembly is a right, but organized pressure upon institutions is a political act subject to judgment. EDSA is not merely asphalt. The People Power Monument is not a neutral backdrop for any faction seeking leverage. It is a national symbol of resistance to dictatorship, impunity, abuse of power, and the rule of fear. It must not be converted into a shield for any person facing credible allegations. Its memory belongs to the Filipino people, not to a dynasty, church, party, faction, or senator. 

Bishop Jose Colin Bagaforo’s warning carries moral weight because it defends assembly while insisting on public responsibility. He affirmed that citizens have the right to express views, seek redress, and hold institutions accountable, but he also reminded organizers that freedom must be balanced with concern for fellow Filipinos. The bishops’ commission warned that calls for transparency and accountability should not come at the expense of ordinary people, especially when gridlock burdens daily wage earners, students, and emergency services. 

This is not a plea for silence. It is a democratic ethic. The people on the road are also the people. The worker whose wage is cut because of delay is also the people. The student trapped in traffic is also the people. The patient waiting for emergency passage is also the people. A movement cannot claim to uplift the nation while treating nonparticipants as disposable burdens. Protest may disrupt, but disruption must be justified by a public purpose larger than the defense of a powerful political ally. 

The facts of disruption cannot be dismissed as a minor inconvenience. Reports said the INC rally began as a sudden action that clogged EDSA, brought heavy traffic, and later prompted adjustments by authorities and local government. Inquirer reported that the crowd was placed by police at 14,100, including 13,500 gathered along White Plains, while Philstar reported the rally entered its second day amid Marcoleta’s looming plunder case. These are not merely administrative details. They show that a religious-political mobilization imposed costs on the wider public. 

The defenders of the rally will answer that selective justice is injustice. This is true. But a true sentence can be used crookedly. If “selective justice is injustice” means that all corrupt officials must be investigated and charged, then it is a democratic principle. If it means that Marcoleta should not be touched until everyone else is charged first, then it becomes a shield. The cure for selective justice is not selective exemption. The cure is universal accountability. 

This is where the INC position becomes weak. It says accountability, but its immediate mobilization surrounds Marcoleta. It says transparency, but the political bargain behind bloc pressure remains unclear. It says democracy, but the action places pressure on institutions before the legal process can unfold. It says peace, but the result is disruption for workers and commuters. It says justice, but the emotional message is that the legal pursuit of one adherent is persecution. 

The flood-control scandal is the material basis of this crisis. It is not a literary metaphor. It is concrete, water, ghost projects, budget insertions, contractors, and stolen public money. AP reported Senate testimony that flood-control projects were allegedly made substandard to allow large kickbacks to legislators and officials. TIME reported that mass protests in September 2025 called for “radical change” amid anger over flood-control corruption, unfinished projects, rigged contracts, and lavish elite displays. Reuters later reported that the scandal and energy crisis contributed to a lowered Philippine growth forecast in 2026. 

The White Ribbon March, Black Friday protests, and other anti-corruption mobilizations pointed toward this broader structure. The White Ribbon Movement was formed by interreligious leaders and led an anti-corruption rally at the EDSA People Power Monument, while the continuing protests were directed at corruption and institutional accountability rather than the defense of one accused official. The difference is decisive. A movement that says “investigate without discrimination” widens the struggle. A movement that says “protect our man” narrows it. 

The Marcos-Duterte conflict now threatens to swallow the anti-corruption struggle. One camp exposes the other, not because it has become pure, but because it seeks advantage. One faction points to ghost projects, another points to confidential funds, another to campaign contributions, another to impeachment. Each camp discovers accountability when accountability wounds the rival. The people must not be turned into the cheering section of either side. They must demand investigation of both camps, both dynastic networks, both sets of allies, and all contractors and officials tied to the theft of public funds. 

PLM is correct to warn that religious organizations must not allow their moral authority to be used by factions of the ruling class. There is nothing wrong with churches, mosques, religious organizations, and faith communities entering public life. There is nothing wrong with mobilizing believers for justice. But the proper role of religious institutions is to stand with the people in the struggle for social justice, human rights, decent livelihood, and genuine democracy. It is not to shield politicians, bless dynasties, or convert legal accountability into religious grievance. 

The religious question is therefore not whether faith has a place in politics. Faith has always shaped public life. The question is whether religious power serves the people or serves faction. When religious institutions defend the poor, shelter the persecuted, oppose dictatorship, and demand justice for all, they become public conscience. When they bless dynasties, mobilize for allies, and turn prosecution into persecution when one of their own is touched, they become instruments of bloc power. 

The anti-corruption movement must also guard against elite liberal capture. It must not be reduced to polite outrage, moral symbolism, or one-day marches that leave the structure intact. It must demand independent investigation, public access to procurement records, scrutiny of campaign finance, disclosure of beneficial ownership, freezing and recovery of stolen assets, prosecution across party lines, and protection for whistleblowers. It must investigate confidential funds, unprogrammed appropriations, budget insertions, contractor monopolies, and the role of political endorsements in state capture. Without this, accountability becomes performance. 

Yet after all this is said, one must ask the harder question: is disciplined sobriety enough? Is it enough to call on the people to remain calm while corruption remains organized, while dynasties remain armed with money and machinery, while prices rise, wages stagnate, land remains concentrated, and the old state continues to ask the poor for patience? It is correct to defend lawful protest, disciplined organization, and the widest possible democratic unity. It is correct to warn against adventurism, provocation, and reckless actions that isolate the people from their own cause. But it is also dishonest to speak only of order when the system itself is disorder. The people are told to be sober while the corrupt steal soberly, legislate soberly, hide assets soberly, hire lawyers soberly, and negotiate immunity soberly. The ruling class demands calm from below while practicing plunder from above. 

This is why the unrest that erupted during the Manila anti-corruption protests must be understood politically, not merely criminally. The broader September 2025 anti-corruption demonstrations were largely peaceful, but AP reported violent clashes near the presidential palace involving a smaller group that threw rocks and firebombs, vandalized property, and were dispersed with tear gas; police reported arrests and injured officers, while it was unclear whether those involved were connected to the larger peaceful rallies. (AP News) The state will call this lawlessness. The cautious will call it provocation. The comfortable will call it mob behavior. But a serious movement must ask why such restlessness appears at all. It does not fall from the sky. It grows from accumulated humiliation: floods that drown the poor while flood-control money disappears, wages that cannot carry a family through the month, land that remains in the hands of landlords, prices that rise faster than work, and officials who ask for patience while displaying impunity. 

The point is not to romanticize riots. A riot is not yet a revolution. Fire without organization can burn the people themselves. Rage without program can be diverted by police agents, factional operators, lumpen adventurists, or ruling-class provocateurs. The people’s movement must not surrender itself to actions that give the state an excuse for repression while leaving the structure of corruption intact. But neither should the movement speak as though legality, by itself, is enough. Lawful behavior in an unlawful social order can become a cage if it is separated from mass power, sustained pressure, workplace organization, peasant struggle, and the refusal to let institutions bury the truth. 

The anti-corruption protests already showed that the people are not satisfied with ceremonial outrage. TIME reported that demonstrators called for “radical change” amid mass anger over alleged flood-control corruption, unfinished projects, rigged contracts, and elite displays of wealth. Reuters reported that the corruption scandal helped push down the 2026 growth forecast while inflation and an energy crisis sharpened economic pressure. Reuters separately reported that electricity prices have soared, with Filipino households spending around 12 percent of income on power in a country with little subsidy support compared with neighbors. In such conditions, to preach calm without demanding structural rupture is to preach submission. 

The Filipino people cannot be asked to remain forever in the posture preferred by the ruling class: peaceful enough to be photographed, angry enough to be quoted, but not organized enough to threaten power. They cannot be told to embody the patience associated with Martin Luther King Jr. while being warned against the militancy associated with Malcolm X, as though history permits the oppressed to choose only one emotional register. Even King’s nonviolence was not passive; it was disciplined confrontation against unjust order. Even Malcolm’s militancy did not arise from abstraction; it arose from the lived fury of a people denied dignity. The rulers always prefer a harmless King and a caricatured Malcolm. They praise restraint when restraint protects property, and condemn anger when anger exposes the violence already built into poverty. 

This is why the anti-corruption struggle cannot be separated from agrarian injustice, low wages, high living costs, unemployment, housing insecurity, and the wider crisis of national sovereignty. Farmers’ groups continue to insist that agrarian reform remains unfinished decades after CARP, while reports in June 2026 quoted farmers saying the promises of land reform must finally be completed. A people drowning in floodwater cannot be told that corruption is merely a legal issue. A worker whose wage is devoured by transport, rice, electricity, rent, and debt cannot be told that accountability begins and ends with court filings. A peasant without land cannot be told to wait for institutional reform while landlords, local dynasties, and armed power remain intact. The scandal of ghost flood-control projects is not only a scandal of procurement. It is a scandal of class rule. 

Nor can the internal crisis be separated from the tug of war between the two great imperial powers pressing upon the archipelago. China continues to assert maritime claims in the South China Sea, including patrols near Scarborough Shoal, while Manila rejects those claims as unlawful. At the same time, the United States and its allies continue to expand military exercises with the Philippines; Reuters reported that Balikatan 2026 involved more than 17,000 troops and included the United States, the Philippines, and allies such as Australia, Canada, France, New Zealand, and Japan. China is not a liberator, and the United States is not a savior. The people must reject becoming pawns in the contest of two powers: one pressing from the sea, the other returning through bases, drills, arms, and strategic dependency. National sovereignty cannot be built by choosing one master against another. 

Thus the question of action becomes unavoidable. If legal protest is ignored, if investigations are delayed, if corrupt officials bargain among themselves, if courts move only when factions shift, if the poor are told to wait while the powerful negotiate, then the people will search for forms of pressure beyond polite appeal. The duty of a serious movement is not to scold the people for anger, but to organize that anger into disciplined, democratic, mass power. Sobriety is useful only when it sharpens struggle. Sobriety that becomes passivity is surrender. Militancy is necessary only when it serves the people. Militancy that becomes blind destruction is waste. 

The answer, therefore, is not to worship legality nor to worship unrest. The answer is to build a movement capable of going beyond the narrow parameters set by the ruling class without abandoning the people to chaos. Such a movement must defend the right to protest, confront police repression, reject factional manipulation, expose every corrupt bloc, and connect anti-corruption demands to wages, land, prices, housing, healthcare, sovereignty, and democratic control over public wealth. It must be strong enough to say that riots are a symptom of social decay, but organized people’s power is the cure. It must be clear enough to say that Marcos and Duterte factions both belong to the old order, that religious blocs must not shield their own, and that neither Washington nor Beijing can solve the misery created by domestic plunder. 

The papers of the twentieth century often wrote in stark terms because they understood that politics is not only about declared principles. It is about class position, institutional power, and the social force behind slogans. “Democracy” can mean the rule of the people or elections among oligarchs. “Peace” can mean social harmony or silence under repression. “Accountability” can mean justice for all or revenge against enemies. “Transparency” can mean opening the state or exposing only the rival faction. The task of political writing is to strip the slogan and ask: whose interest does it serve? 

By that test, the INC rally remains suspect. Its members had the right to gather. Its criticism of selective justice may contain valid points. Its concern over corruption is not automatically false. But its immediate function was to defend Marcoleta. Its timing was tied to his legal peril. Its moral language was used to question the legitimacy of an investigation before the courts could determine the facts. Its mass pressure risked projecting the message that institutional accountability can be contested by organizational capacity. 

The Trillion Peso Marches statement was therefore correct to call on Filipinos to reject attempts to transform democratic symbols into instruments for protecting those who should instead be subject to the law. That is the decisive formulation. The symbols of democracy belong to the people, not to any individual, dynasty, religious organization, or partisan coalition. EDSA belongs to the memory of popular resistance against impunity. It should not become a refuge for any politician seeking shelter under the weight of organized support. 

The same statement also reiterated the need for a thorough, impartial, and independent investigation of all individuals implicated in alleged corruption, including flood-control anomalies and other cases, regardless of political affiliation. This is the universal principle that must guide the struggle. Marcos camp, Duterte camp, opposition, religious ally, business patron, contractor, legislator, local executive, cabinet official — none should matter as identity. Evidence should matter. Public trust should matter. The stolen money should matter. The people should matter. 

That is also the point at which PLM, Bayan, the Trillion Peso Marches coalition, and Bishop Bagaforo’s pastoral warning converge despite differences in tone and ideology. PLM speaks of ruling-class factions and the need for an independent movement. Bayan warns against sectarian interests hijacking accountability. The Trillion Peso Marches coalition defends assembly while rejecting the use of institutional power to place officials beyond accountability. Bagaforo defends democratic expression while reminding organizers not to harm the public. Together, these interventions form a democratic front against two dangers: state repression on one side, and factional capture of dissent on the other. 

This is the proper line: defend the right, question the intent. Defend the assembly, criticize its function. Defend INC members from repression, but reject the use of INC power to shield Marcoleta. Defend due process, but reject immunity. Defend EDSA as a public space, but reject its appropriation by any faction. Defend accountability, but insist that it apply to all. 

The people must also remain alert to the possibility that the Marcos-Duterte conflict may produce attempts at destabilization, withdrawal of support, or elite rearrangement without democratic transformation. PLM warned that Marcos’s fear may not only be the number of people on EDSA, but the possibility that mass mobilization could create conditions for withdrawal of support by the AFP, PNP, and other institutions. Such a scenario would not automatically serve the people. A mere transfer of power from one faction to another would not dismantle corruption. It would simply rearrange the chairs of the same ruling order. 

Therefore, the people must not allow their anger to be drafted into elite maneuvers. The proper target is not only one palace occupant but the system of dynasties, contractors, confidential funds, unprogrammed appropriations, campaign finance secrecy, and religious-political bargaining. The proper demand is not merely “Marcos resign” or “Sara takeover.” The proper demand is: investigate all, prosecute all, recover all stolen funds, dismantle dynastic protection, open public records, and build institutions answerable to the people rather than to families, parties, churches, or contractors. 

In this sense, the question of Marcoleta is not isolated. He is a test case for whether accountability can pass through the walls of religious and political protection. If the law is weak, expose its weakness. If the evidence is insufficient, let the case fail. If the prosecution is selective, widen the investigation. But if a public official can avoid scrutiny because a religious organization can fill EDSA, then the republic is weakened. The message to every powerful actor will be clear: build a bloc, command a crowd, claim persecution, and bend accountability into negotiation. 

The people must refuse that lesson. They must insist that no person is above the law, no institution above criticism, no church above public accountability, no dynasty above investigation, and no faction above the people. They must reclaim dissent as a weapon of the masses, not a shield of the powerful. They must reclaim EDSA as a symbol of democratic accountability, not a stage for selective immunity. 

Questioning the intent of the INC rally is therefore not an attack on dissent. It is an act of democratic defense. It protects the meaning of dissent from being emptied by factional use. It protects the anti-corruption struggle from being captured by rival camps. It protects religious freedom from being confused with religious impunity. It protects EDSA from becoming a monument not to people power, but to organized pressure. 

The final lesson is clear. In this crisis, every faction will speak the language of the people. Marcos will speak of order and accountability. Duterte forces will speak of betrayal and restoration. INC will speak of transparency and selective justice. Contractors will speak through lawyers. The palace will speak through procedure. Senators will speak through investigations. But the people must ask the decisive question: does this line make all power answer, or does it protect one camp from answering? 

If it widens accountability, it belongs to the people. If it narrows accountability around one adherent, it belongs to faction. If it names both Marcos and Duterte, it begins to strike the system. If it protects Marcoleta while speaking of corruption, it remains trapped in the system. If it calls churches to stand with workers, the poor, and victims of theft, it has democratic content. If it turns religious authority into a shield for an accused politician, it is moral power misused. 

Only then does accountability cease to be a slogan. Only then does EDSA remain the property of the people. Only then does dissent become a weapon of the masses rather than a shield of the powerful. 

*** 

Associated Press. (2025, September). Philippine flood-control projects made substandard to allow huge kickbacks, Senate inquiry told. (AP News)

Bagaforo, J. C. (2026, July 1). Statement on public assemblies, quoted in LiCAS News Philippines. (LiCAS News)

Bayan. (2026, July 1). Statement on the INC surprise protest, reported by Balita. (Balita)

GMA News. (2026, July). Ombudsman: Plunder charges vs Marcoleta to proceed despite EDSA rally. (AP News)

Inquirer.net. (2026, July 1). Tindig Pilipinas hits INC rally backing Marcoleta. (Inquirer.net)

Partido Lakas ng Masa. (2026, July 1). Pahayag ng Partido Lakas ng Masa sa nagaganap na INC rally sa People Power Monument. (Philippine Socialist Movement)

Reuters. (2026, April 20). Philippines, US and allies start military exercises testing “real-world” readiness. (Reuters)

Reuters. (2026, April 30). China holds naval, air patrols near Scarborough Shoal as Philippines, US stage drills. (Reuters)

Reuters. (2026, June 22). Philippines cuts 2026 growth forecast, citing graft scandal and energy crisis. (Reuters)

Reuters. (2026, June 28). Philippines leads the world in rush to solar as power prices soar. (Reuters)

TIME. (2025, September 21). Filipinos call for “radical change” in mass protests over flood money corruption. (Time) 

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Power Dressed as Righteousness: A Note on the recent Rallies, Selective Accountability, and the False Martyrdom of Bloc Politics

Power Dressed as Righteousness: A Note on the recent Rallies,
Selective Accountability, and the False Martyrdom of Bloc Politics

By Morteza Farhadi


There are moments when a political movement must be judged not by the beauty of its words, but by the direction in which those words are pointed. “Transparency,” “accountability,” “justice,” and “peace” are noble words. No republic can live without them. No people can remain free if corruption is allowed to become ordinary, if public money is treated as private inheritance, if contractors and politicians can steal from flood-control funds while the poor wade through water, if prosecutors move only against enemies, and if courts are feared only by those without blocs, lawyers, dynasties, churches, or money. Yet noble words can be turned into a curtain. They can be used not to expose power, but to protect it. They can be made to sound like the voice of the oppressed while serving as the shield of an adherent facing serious charges.

This is the central problem with the Iglesia ni Cristo rally in support of Senator Rodante Marcoleta. Originally meant to follow the earlier marches demanding for accountability and against corruption, at first glance it sounds "just" that these people also trying to express the same sentiment as those in white shirts or ribbons the earlier day, but, to think that the following protest has a particular motive, then it was not wrong for citizens to demand fair process. It was not wrong to ask whether the Ombudsman’s action was selective. It was not wrong to question whether the legal theory behind a possible plunder case over election-related donations is sound. But the political meaning of the rally cannot be separated from its object. It was not simply an abstract demand for clean government. It was a mass religious-political action in defense of a named man, an INC adherent and political ally, who was facing serious allegations. When a movement says “accountability” while organizing around the defense of one of its own, the public has the right to ask whether accountability has become protection.

The INC’s own statement made this tension visible. In its June 30, 2026 statement, delivered by spokesperson Edwil Zabala, the church said it was not opposed to law enforcement but opposed the “distortion or bending of the law,” especially when allegedly done to cover corruption. It said the church supported Marcoleta’s advocacy and called for “transparency, accountability, justice, and peace.” Most revealingly, it said that even if Marcoleta were imprisoned, INC would not stop demanding justice for Filipinos whose money had been stolen; it also declared that “selective justice is an injustice.” The statement therefore bound one man’s legal fate to the suffering of the nation and turned a possible case against a senator into a public drama of wounded justice. 

This is where rhetoric begins to darken. A man may expose corruption and still be answerable to the law. A senator may lead an investigation and still face his own charges. A political figure may be useful to a cause and still be subject to evidence. The error of political religion is to imagine that usefulness purifies a man from scrutiny. If Marcoleta is innocent, let the court acquit him. If the plunder theory is weak, let the court reject it. If the prosecution is politically timed, let the defense expose that timing. But a rally should not be used to make the legal process feel illegitimate before the evidence is heard.

The state’s response, as reported, was cautious. Police officials said they recognized the constitutional right to peaceful assembly, while PNP chief Gen. Jose Melencio Nartatez Jr. placed units on full alert and ordered personnel to exercise maximum tolerance, remain impartial, uphold human rights, and perform professionally. Daily Tribune reported that 5,936 police and security personnel were deployed to key sites such as the EDSA Shrine, Mendiola, Liwasang Bonifacio, Ayala Bridge, the U.S. Embassy, and the Senate. That was the language of a state trying not to create martyrs. It recognized that a careless dispersal could turn an already charged political event into a persecution narrative. Yet that same caution showed the power of the mobilization. A religious organization had filled strategic public space, and the state was forced to treat it not as a routine rally but as a major political-security event.

That scale matters because mass is a form of speech, but it is also a form of pressure. A crowd along EDSA does not merely express opinion. It occupies space, disrupts movement, absorbs police attention, and sends a message to institutions. Philippine Star reported that thousands of INC members gathered at the People Power Monument in an unannounced rally supporting Marcoleta, that major EDSA routes were closed, and that MMDA Chairman Don Artes said there had been no advisory or coordination from the group. Artes appealed to protesters to respect workers, especially daily wage earners whose pay could be deducted if they arrived late. 

Here lies one of the oldest tricks of political power: make the public pay for the drama of the powerful, then call the payment democracy. A daily wage worker delayed on EDSA did not draft the plunder complaint. A nurse on the way to duty did not sit in the Ombudsman’s office. A student trapped in traffic did not decide whether campaign donations can become the basis of a plunder case. Yet the ordinary public was made to absorb the first cost of a senator’s defense. A movement that claims to speak for the people must be judged by how it treats those people who are not part of its mobilization.

“Selective Justice Is Injustice” — A True Sentence Used Crookedly

The phrase “selective justice is injustice” deserves careful treatment because it is true. Selective justice is injustice. If prosecutors move against enemies but spare allies, law becomes factional. If the state uses criminal cases only when a politician becomes inconvenient, law becomes a weapon. No serious observer should pretend Philippine institutions are immune from this danger. The country has long known the pattern of cases filed, delayed, revived, or buried depending on political weather. Therefore, a public demand against selective justice is legitimate in principle.

But a true sentence can be used falsely. If “selective justice is injustice” means that all implicated officials must be investigated and prosecuted, then it is a democratic demand. If it means one’s own adherent should not be touched until every other guilty person is charged first, then it becomes a doctrine of delay and exemption. If it widens accountability, it is justice. If it blocks accountability, it is protection. In that distinction lies the moral problem of the INC rally.

The corrupt order always survives through comparison. Every accused man points to a bigger thief. Every faction says the other faction stole more. Every politician says the case against him is political. Every patron says he is being targeted because he exposed someone else. If this logic is allowed to stop prosecution, no one powerful will ever answer. The proper response to selective justice is not selective immunity. It is wider justice: charge this man if evidence supports it, charge others too, and expose any prosecutorial favoritism. Do not stop one case merely because ten other cases remain.

This is precisely where the INC rally becomes vulnerable. Its public language sounded universal, but its immediate function was particular. It did not arise because a broad national commission had named all contractors and officials. It did not arise simply to demand the return of stolen flood-control funds. It arose because Marcoleta, an INC adherent, was facing a looming serious case. Daily Tribune reported that INC members staged a surprise rally over Marcoleta’s looming arrest and what church leaders described as selective justice around the flood-control scandal investigation. The same report said the Ombudsman had announced that plunder charges were set to be filed against Marcoleta over alleged failure to declare ₱75 million in unused campaign contributions. 

The INC statement tried to solve the contradiction by portraying Marcoleta as the one exposing corruption. In that framing, defending him becomes equivalent to defending accountability. If he is jailed, the exposé is silenced. If the case proceeds, the investigation is buried. If the Ombudsman acts, the state is not enforcing law but bending it. This is a clever argument, but it is also dangerous. Any politician can say the same. Every accused official can claim the case against him was designed to stop his exposé. Sometimes that claim may be true, but truth must be proven, not dramatized by crowd power.

The proper demand should have been simple: let the Ombudsman file if there is evidence, let the Sandiganbayan hear the case, let Marcoleta answer, let the defense challenge the theory, let the court decide, and let all other corrupt actors be charged too. If the case is weak, let it fail. If it is abusive, expose it. If it is strong, no crowd should stop it. If the Ombudsman is selective, widen accountability rather than blocking accountability.

The Bayan Critique and the Problem of Sectarian Hostage-Taking

Bayan’s critique of the INC surprise protest strikes directly at this contradiction between universal accountability and sectarian protection. In the statement supplied for this essay and publicly circulated, Bayan argued that INC’s demand to hold all corrupt officials accountable is legitimate, but that the organization refuses to apply the same standard to Marcoleta, who faces graft and plunder allegations over an election-related offense. Bayan said INC’s condemnation of selective justice “smacks of hypocrisy” because, in its view, the immediate motive of the protest is to preempt Marcoleta’s looming arrest. Bayan also accused INC of distorting the clamor for justice by invoking it to negotiate concessions from the Marcos Jr. administration while calling for transparency despite an agenda allegedly shrouded in secrecy and transactional politics. 

In this reading, Bayan’s statement matters because it names the masked function of the rally. It does not deny that accountability is needed. It does not deny that corruption must be punished. Rather, it says the INC protest risks hijacking the anti-corruption demand by narrowing it around one adherent. Bayan’s position is not that Marcoleta must be denied due process. Its sharper point is that due process should not be transformed into sectarian immunity. If INC demands accountability for all corrupt officials, then the demand must pass through Marcoleta’s door as well. If the church demands transparency from the state, then its own political bargaining cannot remain hidden behind bloc discipline. If it condemns selective justice, then it must not practice selective outrage.

Bayan also linked the INC leadership to a longer history of siding with powerful dynasties, including the Marcoses and the Marcos-Duterte UniTeam. This is not a marginal point. In 2022, the Philippine News Agency reported that INC officially endorsed Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Sara Duterte, describing INC as an influential organization with about 2.5 million members worldwide. That endorsement does not permanently forbid INC from criticizing corruption. No political organization should be imprisoned forever by its past. But if a bloc helped legitimate the ruling settlement that later produced crisis, then it cannot speak as if it stood above that settlement from the beginning. Political correction is possible; political amnesia is not.

This history makes the church’s later posture vulnerable to the charge of pretension. It supported the Marcos-Duterte electoral architecture, then later participated in anti-corruption mobilizations as that architecture fractured into hostile blocs. If it now demands accountability most loudly when useful to the defense of one adherent, its moral voice appears less prophetic than transactional. A church cannot bless the chariot and then denounce only the wheel that runs over its own foot. It cannot help legitimate a coalition, watch that coalition produce scandal, and then declare itself the pure tribune of justice without accounting for its own role in the political order.

Bayan’s final call is therefore the more republican one: the struggle for genuine accountability and justice should not be held hostage to parochial or sectarian interests. This is not only an anti-INC line; it is a democratic principle. A republic cannot allow any organized bloc, whether religious, dynastic, military, corporate, or partisan, to turn justice into bargaining power. The people must not be forced to choose between Marcos corruption and Duterte corruption, between one dynasty and another, between one religious patron and another political machine. The public demand must be wider: hold both blocs accountable, charge all plunderers, open the books, return the money, and let no adherent be sacred before the law.

An example of a Continuing Past: Bureaucrat Capitalism,
the recent Flood-Control Corruption and the Unsalvagable State Machinery

The INC rally cannot be understood apart from the larger flood-control corruption scandal, because that scandal gave the rally its moral vocabulary. The country had already been convulsed by accusations that public funds for flood-control projects were diverted, wasted, stolen, or buried under layers of contractor privilege. Reuters reported that an alliance of business and civic organizations demanded an independent investigation into what it described as “excessive corruption” in government infrastructure projects. The call followed President Marcos Jr.’s disclosure of audit findings showing that, out of ₱545 billion in flood-control spending since 2022, thousands of projects were allegedly substandard, poorly documented, or nonexistent, while only 15 of more than 2,000 accredited contractors cornered 20 percent of the budget.

Reuters later reported that more than 200,000 protesters turned out for the second day of an anti-graft rally in November 2025, part of a broader wave of demonstrations since August demanding accountability for suspected corruption in flood-control projects. The same report said the scandal had implicated officials and lawmakers, damaged public confidence, and led authorities to freeze more than ₱6 billion in assets linked to those implicated. This was no ordinary procurement issue. It was a national wound, made more bitter by floods that repeatedly punish the poor while public funds vanish into ghost projects, identical-cost contracts, substandard works, and networks of favored contractors.

This is one of the attributes of the country's “continuing past.” Philippine corruption is not merely a list of separate scandals. It is an enduring arrangement among dynasties, contractors, legislators, bureaucrats, police networks, religious blocs, media patrons, campaign financiers, and fixers. It is the old order learning new words. It calls patronage “public service,” dynastic succession “continuity,” pork “development,” political revenge “accountability,” and impunity “due process.” It can even call bloc pressure “democracy” when convenient.

A truly radical demand for accountability would attack that whole machinery. It would demand campaign finance transparency, contractor disclosure, beneficial ownership records, lifestyle checks, procurement audits, and accountability across factional lines. It would scrutinize not only Marcos allies or Duterte allies but the entire system through which both houses, both coalitions, and both patronage networks profited. It would also ask how religious blocs influence elections, what politicians receive from bloc support, and what religious organizations expect in return for political endorsements.

By that measure, the INC rally was not radical enough. It was radical in scale but not in principle. It was radical in discipline but not in self-critique. It was radical in pressure but not in accountability. It did not break the continuing past. It acted within it. It used the language of accountability while defending someone who had become part of the political machinery around which factional conflict was being fought.

The flood-control scandal demanded a movement larger than Marcos, larger than Duterte, larger than one senator, larger than one religious bloc. It demanded a reckoning with a state in which public works can become private wealth and where anti-corruption itself can be weaponized by rival factions. Time reported that September 21, 2025 protests invoked EDSA’s symbolism and martial law’s anniversary, while protesters demanded prison for those guilty of stealing flood-control funds. The same report quoted President Marcos Jr.’s own SONA admission that such projects invite rackets, kickbacks, and “for the boys” arrangements. 

The irony is severe. Marcos spoke of corruption, anti-Marcos protesters spoke of corruption, Duterte-aligned figures spoke of corruption, INC spoke of corruption, and civil society spoke of corruption. Everyone learned the language. The question is who allowed that language to pass through their own door.

The White Ribbon, Black Shirts, and Black Friday Contrast

The contrast with the White Ribbon March is important because it shows what an accountability call sounds like when it is broader than the protection of one adherent. Philippine Star reported that the White Ribbon March was organized by Catholic, Muslim, evangelical, and Protestant leaders, with Bishop Efraim Tendero saying the rally aimed to unite Filipinos against corruption. Tendero said the Ombudsman should investigate with “no discrimination,” and that the impeachment trial and Senate Blue Ribbon investigation should continue fairly. Bayan’s Raymond Palatino said the march reflected public clamor to hold corrupt officials and their cohorts accountable, including those involved in the flood-control scandal. 

That posture is not beyond criticism, but its moral direction is broader. It points toward institutions and wider corruption structures, rather than making one accused ally the center of public righteousness. It says the Ombudsman must act without discrimination. It says proceedings must continue fairly. It says the Senate and Congress must not bury inquiries. That is different from saying one senator must be protected because his prosecution would stop an exposé.

The black-shirt actions sharpen the contrast further. In Davao, elderly women wore black shirts carrying messages such as “Stop flooding us with corruption” and “Marcos-Duterte panagutin.” When asked why the shirt named both Marcos and Duterte, one participant answered that they were “the same,” while another explained that corruption had happened under both administrations and ordinary people suffered the consequences. This small action carried a moral clarity that a massive rally can lack. It did not make one politician sacred. It did not ask for exemption. It named the system.

Black Friday protests likewise carried an anti-systemic register. GMA News reported that progressive groups and students held protest actions dubbed the “Black Friday Protest” as they continued calling for action against corruption in government. These actions may be militant and imperfect, but their moral object is not the protection of one adherent. Their demand is that the corrupt answer as a class, across factions, rather than that one favored figure be treated as indispensable to truth.

The September 2025 mass protests also demonstrate the breadth of public anger that preceded INC’s later posturing. Time reported that Filipinos massed on EDSA and elsewhere against alleged flood-control corruption, with September 21 carrying symbolic weight because it marked the anniversary of Ferdinand Marcos Sr.’s martial law declaration. This matters because the flood-control scandal did not belong to one faction’s propaganda. It touched the memory of dictatorship, the anger over dynasties, the resentment toward contractor wealth, and the lived experience of floods in poor communities.

This is why the White Ribbon, black-shirt, and Black Friday protests provide a better measure of public conscience. Their strongest slogans pointed outward and structurally: investigate without discrimination, Marcos-Duterte panagutin, hold all corrupt accountable, return stolen money, jail the guilty. These slogans did not revolve around saving one man. They did not require treating a defendant as a sacred vessel. They did not turn prosecution into persecution before trial.

The INC rally used similar words but bent them toward a narrower object. It said transparency, accountability, justice, and peace, but the immediate occasion was Marcoleta’s legal vulnerability. It said selective justice is injustice, but its most urgent political energy was the defense of its own. That is the difference between public conscience and bloc protection.

The November Rally and the Shift from Universal to Particular

The June 2026 rally also must be read against INC’s earlier anti-corruption mobilizations. In November 2025, INC presented itself as part of the demand for transparency and better democracy amid the flood-control scandal. Publicly, the rhetoric was broad: accountability, transparency, justice, peace. Reports and public descriptions framed the event as an anti-corruption mobilization, and Marcoleta himself appeared as a figure connected to that anti-corruption posture. 

The shift in June 2026 is therefore revealing. When the language of accountability was pointed outward, INC could present itself as a moral actor demanding that corrupt officials answer. But when Marcoleta himself faced a case, the same vocabulary was redeployed defensively. The universal became particular. The call for justice became a shield. The movement against corruption became a protest against the prosecution of an adherent.

This does not mean ordinary INC members were insincere in either event. Many may genuinely hate corruption. Many may believe Marcoleta is being targeted. Many may sincerely want stolen public funds returned. But sincerity does not settle political function. A crowd can be sincere and still be used. A slogan can be true and still be deployed selectively. A protest can be peaceful and still exert coercive pressure. The question is not merely whether participants believed the words. The question is what the words did in that moment.

In this case, the words protected power. They did not simply expose corruption; they recoded a legal proceeding as persecution. They did not merely defend due process; they suggested that the process itself was part of a cover-up. They did not merely say the accused deserves fairness; they made him appear necessary to the nation’s fight against theft.

This is the anatomy of pretension. Pretension is not always pure lying. Often it is the use of true words in a crooked direction. There is corruption. True. There is selective justice. Often true. The Ombudsman must be scrutinized. True. Marcoleta deserves due process. True. The people deserve stolen funds returned. True. But from these truths, the rally moved toward a more doubtful implication: that proceeding against Marcoleta was already a distortion of justice and perhaps even persecution. That leap is where the political mask appears.

Of Persecution, Endurance, and the Birth of False Martyrdom

The language of persecution and endurance is especially dangerous because it belongs to sacred memory. Every religious community has stories of suffering. Christianity has martyrs. Islam has exile, struggle, and sacrifice. Judaism has exile and survival. Secular movements have prisoners, martyrs, and fallen comrades. Such memories can create courage and moral seriousness. But they can also intoxicate a community. Once a group believes it is persecuted, criticism becomes attack, investigation becomes oppression, prosecution becomes conspiracy, and legal procedure becomes a weapon. The member is no longer simply a citizen. He becomes part of a wounded body under trial.

This is the passage from civic accountability to sacred protection. The ordinary democratic demand would be: charge all corrupt officials, including Marcoleta if evidence warrants, and acquit him if the evidence fails. The rally’s moral pressure instead moved toward the claim that Marcoleta must be protected because he is the investigator, the exposer, the man whose prosecution would kill the truth. This is not yet a formal doctrine of martyrdom, but it prepares the emotional ground for martyrdom. If he is charged, he is persecuted. If he is detained, he is silenced. If the court proceeds, the system is bent. If critics object to the rally, they misunderstand the suffering of the righteous.

Philippine Star reported that Zabala confirmed the rallies supported Marcoleta and said, in Filipino, that jailing him would prevent him from continuing to expose alleged plunder. Daily Tribune reported that Marcoleta said his arrest would derail the flood-control investigation and bury it in oblivion. These statements show the transformation: Marcoleta is no longer only a defendant; he is framed as the bearer of the exposé. His possible detention becomes not merely a legal event but a national danger. That is how false martyrdom is prepared.

A true martyr suffers for truth without using truth as a shield against scrutiny. A false martyr is manufactured when a powerful network transforms legal accountability into persecution. The distinction is essential. A person may be unfairly prosecuted; history is full of such cases. But unfairness must be shown by evidence, not assumed because the accused belongs to a disciplined religious bloc. If the mere fact of prosecution becomes proof of persecution, then accountability becomes impossible.

This is why the INC rally’s emotional architecture matters. Its words of accountability belonged to civic discourse, but its deeper emotional force came from persecution and endurance. It was not simply saying, “Let the case be fair.” It was saying, “Our man is being attacked because he exposes corruption.” It was not merely asking for transparency. It was framing the law’s movement toward a favored adherent as an attack on truth.

Why the Movement Appears Qutbian in Character?

Sayyid Qutb is useful here not as an example, but also as a warning. He was one of the leading Islamist ideological thinkers of the twentieth century, and the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy summarizes his mature Islamist position as one in which all aspects of society should be conducted according to Shari‘a, the law of God as derived from the Qur’an and the Prophet’s practice. In his book "Milestones", Qutb’s radical structure is the division between a corrupt jahili order and a righteous movement that refuses to accept that order’s legitimacy. One version of the text describes the movement as using preaching and persuasion to reform ideas, and “physical power and Jihad” to abolish the authorities of the jahili system. 

The INC rally, however, was not Qutbism. It was not Islamic to begin with nor did not call for armed struggle. It did not call the Philippine republic jahili. It did not demand the abolition of the Constitution. To say that would be false. But it looked unconsciously Qutbian in character because it reproduced, in softened Philippine form, the structure of sacred struggle: a corrupted order, a righteous community, a threatened representative, a language of endurance, and suspicion toward institutions when they move against the movement’s figure.

The Qutbian echo is structural, not doctrinal. In Qutb’s world, the jahili order is morally illegitimate because it rejects divine sovereignty. In the INC protest’s political mood, the legal order becomes morally suspect because it touches the one presented as exposing corruption. In Qutb, the vanguard confronts a system that blocks divine truth. In the INC rally’s emotional logic, the bloc confronts a state that supposedly bends law to silence an exposer. The theology is different. The danger lies in the same habit of mind: the movement’s moral certainty begins to outrank public process.

This is why “Qutbian” must be used carefully but not abandoned. It does not mean Islamic-like. It does not mean violent. It does not mean the INC has adopted Islamic doctrine. It means a political character marked by sacred grievance, collective discipline, moral absolutism, persecution language, and distrust of ordinary institutions when those institutions threaten the movement’s chosen figure. A movement does not need to quote Qutb to resemble his structure. It only needs to transform politics into sacred struggle, law into enemy action, and group loyalty into moral truth.

The public language of the rally was democratic, but the deeper mood was siege. It spoke of accountability, but it moved as if the accused was already morally vindicated. It spoke of justice, but it pre-judged legal action as distortion. It spoke of transparency, but it left its own pressure machinery opaque. It spoke of peace, but peace was accompanied by a mass pressure action that forced the public to adjust around it.

Why the Spokesmen Tries to Sound Khomeinian in Tone

The comparison to Imam Ruhollah Khomeini operates differently. In "Islamic Government", Khomeini wrote that Islamic government is a “government of law,” but that in such a government “sovereignty belongs to God alone and law is His decree and command.” He argued that the divine command has absolute authority over individuals and government. The point is not that INC teaches Khomeini’s doctrine of guardianship of the jurist. It does not. The point is that religious-political movements can speak in the language of law while relocating legitimacy toward sacred certainty.

When an INC spokesman says the movement is not against law enforcement but against the bending of law, the sentence can be civic and reasonable. But when that sentence is spoken by a disciplined religious bloc defending one of its own, it begins to sound unconsciously Khomeinian in tone: law is respected, but the movement reserves for itself the higher moral authority to declare when law has become injustice. The issue is not the formal doctrine but the posture. Public law becomes acceptable only when it aligns with the movement’s moral reading.

This is not formal theocracy. It is not theocracy by constitution. It is not clerics occupying state office. It is something softer and therefore easier to excuse: theocracy by pressure, or sacred politics by mobilization. It occurs when a religious organization does not need to rule the state directly because it can pressure the state from outside, discipline its members, signal to politicians, and transform legal accountability into persecution whenever the law reaches one of its own. Such pressure does not abolish the courtroom, but it tries to surround it with moral force.

A Revolutionary paper in Tehran during the time of the Revolution would understand the power of crowds. It would know that people can break fear. It would know that corrupt orders often present themselves as legal and modern while stealing from the people. But an honest revolutionary paper would also know that sacred movements can become new machines of obedience. A movement that denounces tyranny can build a new authority around its own certainty. A party that speaks of justice can become the gatekeeper of truth. A religious leadership that speaks of law can sanctify political pressure.

This is the ironic lesson of revolution: the language of justice is never enough. It must be tested against power. The question is not whether a movement says “law.” The question is whether it submits its own people to law. The question is not whether it says “accountability.” The question is whether accountability reaches its own adherents. The question is not whether it says “peace.” The question is whether its method respects those outside its ranks.

Of "Bloc Democracy" and the Problem of Organized Obedience

Bloc democracy is a contradiction if it reduces citizens to disciplined instruments. Democracy requires citizens who deliberate, dissent, judge, and change their minds. Bloc politics prefers bodies that move together, vote together, and defend together. Democracy requires open persuasion. Bloc politics often operates through internal authority. Democracy requires accountability for all. Bloc politics protects the bargaining power of the group.

This does not mean every INC member lacks agency. That would be unfair. Members are citizens with conscience, and many may sincerely believe the protest was justified. But the structure matters. When a religious institution mobilizes as an institution, the act is not merely individual citizenship. It becomes collective discipline. The public has the right to ask who decided the action, who coordinated transportation, who set the message, who chose the location, who bore the cost, who negotiated with officials, who benefited politically, and what the boundaries are between worship, political lobbying, and coercive mobilization.

Transparency must begin at home. If a group demands that the state show its books, it must also be willing to explain how it wields its power. If it demands accountability from officials, it must accept accountability for its public actions. If it demands democracy, it must show that its members act as citizens rather than merely as a bloc under command. Otherwise democracy becomes a mask for organized obedience.

The Philippine sociopolitical system has long understood the usefulness of religious blocs. Politicians court them not only for votes but for legitimacy. A church endorsement can make a candidate appear moral. A religious crowd can make a political cause appear righteous. A pulpit can give a faction the aura of conscience. People even saw the idea of bloc politics as a form of promoting discipline the way that group presents itself as orderly. That is why religious power in politics must be scrutinized as carefully as that of military power, business power, dynastic power, or media power.

The issue, therefore, is not religion in politics. Religion can enrich public life. It can feed the poor, shelter dissenters, oppose dictatorship, defend communities, and discipline greed. The issue is impunitarian religion: religious language used to shield power from accountability if not a form of misunderstood power wrapped in the verse of faith. Religion that demands justice for all is public conscience. Religion that shields its own is patronage. Religion that humbles rulers is prophetic. Religion that sanctifies bloc power is dangerous.

Democracy Is More Than Assembly

Democracy is not only the right to assemble. It is also equal process. It is not only the right to speak. It is also the discipline to let institutions hear evidence. It is not only filling EDSA. It is also respecting those who did not join one’s cause. A rally can be democratic in form and coercive in effect. It can invoke constitutional rights while pressuring constitutional institutions. It can speak of justice while making daily life unjust for those trapped outside its cause.

This does not mean all disruptive protest is wrong. Anti-dictatorship movements disrupt. Labor strikes disrupt. Anti-corruption mobilizations disrupt. Student walkouts disrupt. But disruption must be morally proportionate and politically honest. A protest against dictatorship may need to seize the street because ordinary institutions have collapsed. A protest against stolen public funds may disrupt routine because the public has been robbed. A labor strike may disrupt business because workers have no other leverage. But when a protest is triggered by the possible prosecution of a powerful political ally who still has legal remedies, the moral justification becomes less obvious.

The INC rally’s disruption was therefore not morally neutral. It was not simply inconvenience in the service of broad public accountability. It was inconvenience in the service of a pressure campaign around Marcoleta. Philippine Star reported that MMDA officials closed major routes and noted no prior coordination, while Artes appealed to protesters to respect the rights of workers trying to reach their jobs. That appeal should not be treated as mere administrative complaint. It is a democratic claim. Nonparticipants have rights too.

A republic must protect peaceful assembly, but it must not confuse crowd size with moral legitimacy. People Power is not merely bodies on EDSA. It is bodies on EDSA animated by a public cause larger than factional protection. When bodies are mobilized to shield a political adherent from legal exposure, the moral status of the crowd becomes ambiguous. The crowd may be sincere, but sincerity does not answer the question of function.

The Marcos-Duterte System and the Church’s Place Within It

The most devastating critique of INC’s posture is that it speaks against a system it helped legitimate. INC’s 2022 endorsement of Marcos and Duterte was a public act of political force, not a private theological opinion. PNA reported that INC officially endorsed Marcos Jr. and Sara Duterte during the 2022 campaign. Inquirer likewise reported the endorsement of the Marcos-Duterte tandem. 

This matters because the current crisis cannot be separated from the Marcos-Duterte settlement. The flood-control scandal, confidential funds controversies, impeachment fights, Senate realignments, Ombudsman cases, and mass protests are not disconnected episodes. They are symptoms of a political system in which factions share power until the sharing collapses, then accuse one another of theft. Those who helped legitimate the coalition must reckon with what the coalition produced.

This does not mean INC members cannot change their minds. They can. It does not mean the church can never criticize those it once supported. It can. Political repentance is possible. Institutional correction is possible. But correction requires honesty. A group that helped power must admit its role in power. A bloc that endorsed the winners must reckon with what those winners did.

Without that reckoning, the demand for accountability sounds performative. It says: hold them accountable, but forget how we helped them rise. It says: condemn corruption, but do not examine our political endorsements. It says: expose the system, but not the religious bloc’s role inside the system.

That is why the anti-corruption language becomes pretentious. It pretends to stand above faction when it has participated in faction. It pretends to speak for the nation when it is defending an adherent. It pretends to demand a radical break while protecting one of the instruments through which bloc politics survives.

The Radicalism That Was Needed, and the Radicalism That Appeared

The Philippines needs radical accountability. It needs accountability radical enough to pass through every political house, every contractor network, every dynasty, every budget office, every Senate committee, every local government, every donor network, every campaign ledger, and every religious endorsement. It needs accountability that asks who stole, who looked away, who benefited, who funded whom, who inserted what, who approved which project, who covered up, who coordinated, and who now pretends innocence.

But the radicalism displayed by the INC rally was not radical accountability. It was radical mobilization. It was radical pressure. It was radical discipline. It was not radical self-critique. It did not attack the system deeply enough because to do so would require asking uncomfortable questions about INC’s own political role. It would require asking why the church supported dynastic candidates. It would require asking why its anti-corruption line became most emotionally intense when one of its adherents faced legal peril. It would require asking why its rhetoric was louder against selective justice in Marcoleta’s case than against the wider corruption issues hounding multiple blocs.

A radical accountability movement would not make Marcoleta indispensable. It would not say or imply that imprisoning him would stop the truth. It would not convert one senator into the hinge of national justice. True radicalism does not protect the hero from scrutiny. It destroys the need for heroes by building institutions strong enough to continue without them.

If the investigation dies because one senator is detained, then the investigation was already too weak. If truth depends on one politician, then truth has already been captured by faction. If accountability depends on a church-backed adherent, then accountability has already been subordinated to bloc power.

The radical demand should be this: charge every guilty official, including those close to Marcos; charge every guilty official, including those close to Duterte; charge every guilty official, including those endorsed or defended by religious blocs; freeze stolen assets; blacklist corrupt contractors; expose campaign finance; prosecute plunder; return the money; and protect whistleblowers without making them immune from scrutiny.

The Danger of Sacred Impunity

Sacred impunity is more dangerous than ordinary impunity. Ordinary impunity says: I am powerful, so I cannot be touched. Sacred impunity says: I am righteous, so touching me is persecution. Ordinary impunity bribes. Sacred impunity mobilizes. Ordinary impunity hides. Sacred impunity preaches. Ordinary impunity fears exposure. Sacred impunity converts exposure into martyrdom.

The INC rally risked sacralizing impunity. It did not explicitly say Marcoleta was above the law. But it framed legal action against him as part of a larger distortion of justice. It did not openly demand that the court stop. But it moved bodies into the street before the court could decide. It did not openly say he must be exempt. But it made his prosecution feel like an attack on the struggle.

This is precisely how sacred impunity functions. It rarely announces itself as exemption. It announces itself as justice. It rarely says “protect power.” It says “defend truth.” It rarely says “obey the bloc.” It says “stand with the persecuted.” It rarely says “pressure the state.” It says “exercise democratic rights.” Each statement may contain truth, but the total function may still be coercive.

The republic must therefore be vigilant. When the powerful say justice, ask: for whom? When the bloc says accountability, ask: including yours? When the spokesman says peace, ask: why the pressure? When the movement says persecution, ask: or prosecution? When the crowd says democracy, ask: where is the court?

The Court, Not the "Crowd" (for now)

One would say that the court is imperfect. That the Ombudsman can be selective. That the Judges can be pressured. And Prosecutors can be timid. Legal proceedings can be slow and expensive. And no revolutionary should romanticize the Philippine legal system. But what is the alternative? A court of crowds? A tribunal of churches? A republic of blockades? A legal order where every organized group surrounds its accused and declares prosecution persecution?

If that becomes the rule, no one powerful will ever answer. A dynasty will fill the capitol. A church will fill EDSA. A business bloc will threaten capital. A police faction will leak files. A military clique will whisper intervention. A media network will manufacture outrage. Each will say justice. Each will protect its own. That is not democracy. That is factional siege.

For now the Sandiganbayan exists for a reason. The Ombudsman exists for a reason. Rules of evidence exist for a reason. Defense pleadings exist for a reason. Appeals exist for a reason. These institutions are imperfect, but they remain the alternative to mob adjudication. If they are corrupt, reform them. If they are selective, expose the selectivity. If they are slow, demand speed. But do not replace them with the moral pressure of a religious bloc.

The proper demand is not “do not touch Marcoleta.” The proper demand is: file the case properly, disclose the basis, respect due process, proceed against everyone implicated, and let the court decide. If the case is weak, let it fail. If it is strong, let it proceed. If the Ombudsman is selective, expose him. If the prosecution is abusive, defeat it in court- for no crowd should be large enough to make a senator untouchable.

What Their Members Themselves Must Ask?

The hardest audience for this critique is not INC leadership but also its ordinary members. They are citizens. They are workers, students, parents, professionals, vendors, drivers, teachers, and believers. Many may have joined the rally sincerely. Many may believe they were defending fairness. Many may hate corruption. Many may see Marcoleta as a man who exposed thieves. Therefore, the criticism must not treat them as mindless. It must speak to them as citizens.

The question they must ask is not whether Marcoleta deserves due process. He does. The question is whether due process means protection from prosecution. The question is not whether the Ombudsman may be selective. It may be. The question is whether selectivity should stop a case against an adherent or widen cases against everyone. The question is not whether the church may speak. It may. The question is whether the church should make legal accountability feel like persecution whenever it reaches one of its own.

Bayan’s appeal to INC members, as supplied in the text to be inserted, is therefore crucial: reject both sides and condemn public officials who steal with impunity, even those who share one’s religious beliefs. That line is not merely partisan. It is republican. A citizen must be able to say: even if he is ours, let him answer. Even if we like him, let evidence decide. Even if he exposed others, let him be scrutinized too. Even if the case is political, let the defense prove it under law.

That is the moral test of citizenship against bloc obedience. A church member can remain faithful while refusing to sanctify a politician. A believer can defend due process without turning an accused ally into a martyr. A citizen can oppose selective justice without practicing selective outrage.

Ending the Pretension

The strongest version of the INC argument would sound like this: the Ombudsman may be selective; the case may be politically timed; Marcoleta has the right to defend himself; campaign-donation law must be properly interpreted; all corrupt actors in flood-control scandals must be charged; and no politician, including Marcoleta, should be above evidence and trial. That argument is legitimate. It belongs in public debate.

The weaker and more dangerous version sounds like this: Marcoleta is ours; he is exposing corruption; therefore charging him is persecution; therefore we will mobilize until authorities feel our force. That argument is not accountability. It is protection.

The White Ribbon March, the black-shirt actions, and the Black Friday protests offer a sharper standard. They may differ in ideology and method, but at their strongest they named the system: investigate without discrimination, "Marcos-Duterte panagutin", stop flooding us with corruption, hold all corrupt accountable. Those words aimed at that one attribute of a continuing, corrupted past. They did not revolve around one adherent’s defense.

The INC rally borrowed similar language but bent it toward a narrower purpose. That is why it sounded pretentious. It used the vocabulary of those who marched against the system while defending someone who operated inside the system. It sounded Qutb-like in its persecution narrative and Khomeinian in its moral-legal certainty, yet it did not admit the sacred pressure beneath its civic language.

The republic must draw the line clearly. Faith may speak. Citizens may gather. Churches may criticize government. Religious members may defend their own. But no religious organization should be allowed to turn public roads into leverage, legal cases into persecution narratives, and defendants into sacred symbols.

The real demand should be simple: let the Ombudsman file, let the Sandiganbayan hear, let the defense answer, let evidence decide- and if he is guilty, convict him. If others are guilty, charge them too. If the Ombudsman is selective, expose him. If the prosecution is abusive, defeat it in court.

Anything less is not accountability. It is their fanaticism in the street trying to overrule the courtroom if not ruining the demand of those who truly express. It is sacred grievance pretending to be democracy. It is the old politics wearing the mask of justice.

***

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