Such was the case on a humid March afternoon in Pasig.
There, beneath the sterile glare of fuel price signages and the steady hum of passing traffic, a group of protesters converged not merely to demonstrate, but to disrupt—to leave a mark, however symbolic, upon a system they believed had long rendered them invisible. Black clay struck the glass façade of a gasoline station. Posters bearing corporate assurances were smeared and defaced. Slogans—urgent, angry, unvarnished—cut through the air with a force that seemed disproportionate only to those who had not felt the slow accumulation of grievances that preceded it.
To the hurried passerby, it may have appeared as little more than another instance of unrest—an inconvenience to traffic, an eyesore against the polished surfaces of commerce.
To some, it was vandalism: an act of disorder that violated property and decorum, an expression of dissent that had strayed beyond the bounds of civility. To others, it was protest: a legitimate, if imperfect, assertion of grievance in a society where formal avenues of redress often feel distant, delayed, or insufficient.
But to the careful observer—one attuned not only to the act itself but to the conditions that gave rise to it—it was something more enduring, more consequential. It was a signal. A signal that beneath the outward stability of policy and market, the old tensions have not been resolved, only deferred. That the uneasy balance between market power and state responsibility, between corporate profit and public survival, has once again been disturbed. That what appears, on the surface, as an isolated act of defiance is in fact the visible expression of a broader and deepening strain.
For such incidents do not arise in a vacuum. They are the culmination of pressures long building—economic burdens quietly borne, frustrations gradually internalized, and a growing perception that the structures meant to mediate these tensions have become either inadequate or unresponsive.
And when such pressures reach a certain threshold, they do not dissipate quietly.
They surface—sometimes abruptly, sometimes imperfectly—but always with a message that extends far beyond the immediate act- and whar happened in Pasig that afternoon, the black mud did not merely stain glass. It marked the re-emergence of a question the nation has confronted before, and must now confront again:
Who, in times of crisis, is made to carry the weight—and who is allowed to stand apart from it?
"A Crisis Not of Our Making"
The Philippines has long occupied a vulnerable position in the architecture of the global economy—deeply integrated into its flows, yet largely excluded from its levers of control. Wars are waged elsewhere, in deserts and straits far removed from our shores. Markets react in distant financial centers, where decisions are rendered in the language of futures, benchmarks, and speculation. Policies are shaped by powers whose interests do not necessarily align with our own.
And yet, with quiet inevitability, their consequences arrive—precise, immediate, and unforgiving—at the local gasoline pump.
This is not a new condition. It is, in many ways, a recurring feature of national life. From the oil shocks of earlier decades to the present turbulence in the Middle East, the pattern remains unchanged: instability abroad translates into hardship at home.
Today, the renewed tensions involving the United States and Iran have once again unsettled global oil markets. Shipping routes grow uncertain. Risk premiums are priced in. Supply chains tighten not always because of actual scarcity, but because of anticipated disruption. In such an environment, speculation thrives—often amplifying the very volatility it claims to anticipate.
Prices, as a result, do not merely rise—they accelerate. And here at home, the numbers on fuel price boards begin their familiar ascent. What was once unthinkable gradually becomes normalized. Pump prices approach ₱80 per liter, and the once-distant threshold of ₱100 begins to enter the realm of serious expectation rather than alarmist prediction.
But for the Filipino public, these developments are not understood in terms of maritime chokepoints or geopolitical strategy. They are not abstractions to be debated in policy forums or academic circles.
They are felt.
They are felt in the tightening of daily budgets, in the recalibration of small expenses, in the quiet decisions to forego what was once affordable.
• The jeepney driver, who measures the day not in kilometers but in margins, calculating whether the boundary can still be met after fuel costs are deducted
• The commuter, whose fixed wage must now stretch further across rising fares, often at the expense of other necessities
• The farmer and fisherfolk, already operating within narrow margins, absorbing increases in production costs that threaten to erase what little income remains
In each of these cases, the burden is not theoretical. It is immediate, cumulative, and inescapable.
For fuel is not merely a commodity among others. It is a foundational input—embedded in transportation, agriculture, industry, and the distribution of goods. When its price rises, it does not remain confined to the pump. It radiates outward, quietly but persistently, affecting the cost of food, the price of services, and the overall structure of daily life.
Thus, what begins as a geopolitical disturbance becomes, in time, a domestic strain.
This is the tyranny of distance—not merely geographic, but structural.
A condition in which crises not of one’s making must still be endured. A condition in which decisions taken elsewhere impose obligations here. A condition in which the ordinary citizen—far removed from the centers of power—becomes the final bearer of costs generated beyond his reach. It is precisely this recurring, normalized, and insufficiently addressed condition that transforms external shocks into internal discontent.
For while distance may explain the origin of the crisis, it does not diminish its weight.
The System Under Scrutiny
It is within this atmosphere of rising prices and deepening frustration that protests have begun to spread across the capital—from Pasig to Quezon City to Manila—carried not by a single organization but by a loose convergence of sectors who feel the weight of the crisis most acutely. Transport groups, urban poor alliances, student formations, and labor-oriented organizations have all taken to the streets, staging demonstrations at gasoline stations, corporate offices, and major intersections.
The scene has been repeated in several parts of Metro Manila in recent days. In Pasig, activists targeted the headquarters of one of the country’s largest oil firms, hurling black clay at posters and fuel price displays to dramatize what they described as corporate profiteering during a global crisis. In Quezon City, student groups gathered near gasoline stations in Philcoa and Anonas, conducting noise barrages beside illuminated price boards that seemed to rise week after week. Along Taft Avenue in Manila, university students joined the demonstrations, linking the issue of fuel prices to broader questions of economic inequality and government accountability.
Transport organizations, including those representing jeepney drivers and operators, have warned that the situation is reaching a breaking point. For drivers who already operate on narrow margins, each round of price increases erodes the day’s earnings. Even modest fare adjustments—such as a one-peso increase in the minimum fare—barely compensate for the rising cost of fuel, leaving many drivers struggling to meet daily boundary payments while still bringing home enough to sustain their families.
Behind these protests lies a critique that extends beyond the immediate price hikes. It is not merely the increase that is being challenged, but the system that allows such increases to move swiftly and repeatedly through the economy with little effective restraint.
At the center of that system is the Oil Deregulation Law, enacted decades ago with the intention of liberalizing the petroleum industry. The law removed government control over fuel pricing, allowing oil companies to adjust retail prices in accordance with movements in the international crude oil market.
In theory, deregulation was meant to encourage competition, efficiency, and transparency. By allowing multiple players to operate freely, it was believed that market forces would prevent monopolistic behavior while ensuring that supply remained stable.
In practice, critics argue, the system has evolved into something far less balanced.
Under the present framework, oil firms can adjust pump prices weekly—or even more frequently—reflecting fluctuations in global crude prices, exchange rates, and shipping costs. When global prices rise, these adjustments are transmitted quickly and directly to consumers. But when global prices fall, many motorists and transport operators complain that the reductions appear slower, smaller, or less visible.
Activist groups have seized upon this dynamic, arguing that the current policy environment effectively allows companies to pass on risk while preserving profit. Their argument is simple: the market may explain why prices move, but it does not necessarily justify how the burdens of those movements are distributed.
Government officials, for their part, have defended the existing framework. The Department of Energy has repeatedly emphasized that local fuel prices are tied to international benchmarks and that excessive intervention could disrupt supply or discourage investment in the sector. The agency has instead focused on mitigation measures—fuel discounts for public utility vehicles, targeted subsidies for farmers and fisherfolk, and coordination with oil firms to extend promotional relief.
Yet these responses have not quieted the criticism.
For many Filipinos, the gap between explanation and experience remains wide. Market logic may clarify why prices rise, but it does little to soften the immediate impact on households already stretched thin by inflation, stagnant wages, and rising transportation costs.
This tension lies at the heart of the present unrest.
Defenders of deregulation insist that markets must be allowed to function—that price signals are necessary for supply stability, and that heavy-handed intervention risks unintended consequences. But to those standing in line at gasoline stations, calculating the cost of the next commute or the next delivery, such arguments feel increasingly detached from reality.
For while markets may dictate prices, they do not dictate fairness. And when fairness becomes the central question, economics alone is rarely enough to resolve it.
A Rebuke from the Margins
Amid the organized statements, policy debates, and carefully worded press releases, it is often a single, unvarnished voice that captures the spirit of a moment more completely than any formal analysis.
Such a voice emerged from the margins of the protests—raw, unfiltered, and unapologetic—cutting through the layered discourse with a clarity that was at once uncomfortable and difficult to dismiss: “That’s exactly it. Most protesters don’t even own cars. You, who have vehicles that consume more fuel, are among those most affected. The activists are fighting for your interests, yet you defend the gas companies. Indios!”
The language is abrasive, even incendiary. It is not crafted for persuasion in polite circles, nor softened for broad acceptability. It is meant to provoke—to unsettle—to compel reflection.
And it does so by exposing a contradiction that has quietly taken root in public discourse: That those who are objectively burdened by rising fuel costs—motorists, small business owners, even middle-income households—often find themselves defending the very structures that intensify that burden.
This is not merely irony. It is a form of misrecognition. For in times of economic strain, alignment is not always determined by material interest, but by perception—by what one believes to be inevitable, acceptable, or beyond question. In such cases, critique is dismissed as disruption, and calls for intervention are viewed with suspicion, even when they aim to alleviate shared hardship.
The same voice continues, shifting from provocation to a more grounded appeal: “Even those without vehicles must fight for the livelihood of drivers who will earn nothing, even with a one-peso increase in minimum fare. Commuters who are already stretching their budgets will spend even more. And all of us are affected by rising prices of goods because of higher fuel costs. Basic economics!”
Here, the argument moves beyond rhetoric and into the domain of lived reality.
For the assumption that fuel prices concern only those who own vehicles is not merely incomplete—it is fundamentally flawed.
Fuel is not a discrete expense confined to motorists. It is a structural cost embedded in nearly every aspect of economic life.
• The driver, whose daily earnings are eroded as fuel costs rise faster than fares can reasonably adjust
• The commuter, who bears the cumulative effect of incremental fare increases, often without a corresponding rise in income
• The small vendor, whose supply costs increase as transport becomes more expensive
• The household, whose food and basic goods quietly rise in price as higher fuel costs ripple through distribution chains
In this sense, fuel functions less as a commodity and more as a multiplier—its price movements amplified across sectors, affecting even those who never stand at a gasoline pump.
To overlook this is to misunderstand the nature of the crisis itself. The activist’s invocation of “basic economics” is thus not merely rhetorical flourish. It is a reminder that the interconnectedness of costs, often discussed in abstract terms, manifests concretely in the everyday decisions of ordinary citizens.
Whether one owns a vehicle or not becomes, in this framework, a secondary concern.
For the effects of rising fuel prices do not respect such distinctions.
And so, beneath the harshness of the initial rebuke lies a deeper appeal—one that speaks not only to anger, but to awareness.
That the crisis is shared, even if unevenly experienced.
That the burdens it creates are interconnected, even if differently felt.
And that indifference, or misdirected allegiance, serves only to reinforce the very conditions that give rise to protest in the first place.
Here lies a truth too often overlooked, yet increasingly difficult to ignore: Fuel is not a private expense. It is a public condition—one that permeates transportation, food, production, and ultimately, survival itself.
The Burden of Deregulation
At the center of the present debate stands the Oil Deregulation Law—a policy conceived in an era that placed great faith in liberalization, competition, and the corrective discipline of the market. It was, at the time, a forward-looking reform: an attempt to move away from rigid state controls toward a system believed to be more efficient, responsive, and aligned with global realities.
Yet policies, like institutions, are ultimately tested not in times of stability, but in moments of strain.
And it is precisely in such moments that the assumptions underpinning deregulation are brought into question.
The activist critique, sharpened by frustration and stripped of deference, captures this challenge with disarming directness: “There is also the Oil Deregulation Law that allows oil companies to dictate prices. Even if the price of crude oil rises in the world market, retail prices could have limits. Yes, this would reduce the profits of oil companies. So what? Will you defend them? Are you their heirs? What is the reduction in their billions compared to the reduction in our meager wages?”
Behind the rhetorical edge lies a substantive concern: that a system designed to promote efficiency may, in times of volatility, permit outcomes that are economically rational yet socially burdensome.
For deregulation, by its nature, prioritizes price transmission. When global crude prices rise, retail prices follow—swiftly, and with minimal intervention. The mechanism functions as intended.
But what it does not inherently provide is a buffer.
And in the absence of such a buffer, the full weight of global fluctuations is borne directly by consumers.
Stripped of rhetoric, the question becomes both simple and difficult: Should profit remain insulated even as public hardship deepens?
Or does the state bear responsibility to intervene when market outcomes become socially untenable?
It is here that the dilemma of governance becomes most apparent. The state finds itself in a position that borders, at times, on contradiction—if not quiet confusion. It must reassure the public that it is attentive to their plight, while at the same time signaling to markets that it remains predictable, restrained, and compliant with established economic frameworks.
Thus, the government walks a narrow and uncertain path.
It invokes global volatility—correctly—as the primary driver of price increases. It rolls out subsidies—₱5,000 for farmers, ₱3,000 for fisherfolk—in an effort to cushion the most vulnerable sectors. It coordinates with oil companies to extend discounts and promotional relief to drivers and transport operators.
These measures are neither trivial nor insincere. They represent an attempt to mitigate the immediate effects of rising prices without disrupting the broader structure of the industry.
Yet in the eyes of many, they remain insufficient.
For they do not alter the underlying mechanics of the system. They do not address the speed with which prices rise, nor the absence of effective ceilings during periods of extreme volatility. They do not recalibrate the balance between corporate profitability and public welfare.
They soften the blow—but they do not prevent it.
Thus emerges the central tension of governance in such times:
• To respect the discipline of markets, with all the efficiency and predictability that entails
• Or to assert the primacy of public protection, even at the risk of distortion or reduced investor confidence
To choose one entirely is to risk imbalance.
To subordinate one to the other is to invite consequence.
Yet to hesitate—to attempt to appease both without decisively addressing either—is to risk something more profound:
Irrelevance in the face of a crisis that demands clarity, not calibration.
The Return of the Streets—and the Paradox of Alignment
Across Metro Manila, the streets have once again become a forum of expression. As said earlier, Mass organizations have taken to major thoroughfares and gasoline stations—staging coordinated actions marked by noise barrages, placards raised beside fuel price boards, and programs that echo both urgency and conviction. In Philcoa, along Taft Avenue, and in other urban centers, their presence has converged with that of transport groups preparing for a nationwide strike—drivers, operators, and workers whose livelihoods are directly threatened by the relentless rise in fuel costs.
Yet what distinguishes these demonstrations is not merely their scale, but their scope.
For the voices gathered in these protests do not speak only of fuel. They speak of convergence.
They speak of a crisis that is at once geopolitical and domestic, economic and environmental:
• A war in distant regions that reverberates in local markets • An economic structure that amplifies inequality rather than mitigates it
• A climate reality that underscores the fragility of energy dependence
• A system of governance perceived to be hesitant in the face of mounting pressure
This is not mere agitation. It is articulation.
A generation, shaped by overlapping crises, is beginning to grasp that the price of oil is inseparable from the price of living—that the global and the local are bound together not by abstraction, but by consequence. What happens in distant straits and capitals finds its way, inevitably, into the daily arithmetic of survival.
And yet, alongside this awakening, there persists a paradox that is no less striking. For even as protests grow, resistance to them remains pronounced—often from those who stand to benefit most from the very reforms being demanded.
Why is it that individuals, themselves burdened by rising costs, defend the structures that perpetuate those costs?
The answers are neither simple nor entirely comfortable.
There is, first, a belief in the inevitability of market outcomes—the notion that price movements are natural, unavoidable, and therefore beyond meaningful challenge.
There is, second, a distrust of dissent—an inclination to view protest not as participation in democratic life, but as disruption of order.
And there is, perhaps most subtly, an aspiration to align with power—to identify, however indirectly, with the logic and language of those who command economic influence, even when one does not share in its benefits.
In such conditions, perception becomes misaligned with interest.
Critique is mistaken for disorder. Solidarity is dismissed as inconvenience. And the possibility of collective response is weakened by individual hesitation.
Thus, the return of the streets reveals not only the presence of unrest, but the complexity of public consciousness itself.
For a society in motion is not always a society in agreement.
It is a society negotiating, in real time, the meaning of its own condition—torn between endurance and assertion, between acceptance and challenge, between the familiar logic of the market and the emerging demand for something more just.
And in that negotiation lies the true significance of the moment.
The Limits of Endurance—and a Nation at the Crossroads
Fuel prices do not remain confined to the pump. They move—quietly at first, then pervasively—through the arteries of the economy.
They surface in transportation fares, where each increase, however incremental, compounds the daily burden of the commuter. They appear in food prices, as the cost of moving goods from field to market rises in step with fuel. They embed themselves in every transaction that defines ordinary life, altering the arithmetic of survival in ways both visible and unseen.
In this sense, fuel is not merely a commodity. It is a force multiplier. And when its price rises, its effects do not dissipate—they accumulate.
Government interventions, such as targeted subsidies and discount programs, provide necessary relief. They offer temporary reprieve to sectors most immediately affected. Yet they cannot fully arrest the cascade. They do not reach every household. They do not neutralize the secondary effects that ripple through the broader economy.
Thus, the burden builds—quietly at first, absorbed through small adjustments and personal sacrifice. Then visibly, as budgets tighten and trade-offs become unavoidable. And finally, audibly, as frustration finds expression in protest, in collective action, in the return of voices to the streets.
For while Filipinos have long been defined by resilience, resilience is not inexhaustible. It has thresholds. And when those thresholds are approached, endurance gives way—not to collapse, but to insistence.
It is at this point that the nation now stands.
As another round of fuel price increases takes effect, and as transport groups prepare for a nationwide strike, the Philippines finds itself at a familiar yet consequential juncture—a crossroads shaped by competing truths that can no longer be easily reconciled.
There is the reality that global markets impose constraints on national action, limiting the range of immediate responses available to any government.
There is the equally compelling reality that governments remain accountable to their people, particularly when external shocks translate into domestic hardship.
There is the understanding that corporations operate within the bounds of legality, yet are not exempt from scrutiny when their actions intersect with public welfare.
And there is the enduring fact that citizens, when pressed beyond a certain point, will seek recourse beyond formal channels—through protest, through collective pressure, through the assertion of presence in public space.
These truths coexist, but they do not align neatly.
And it is precisely in such moments of tension that leadership is most severely tested.
For leadership, in times of stability, may rest comfortably on explanation—on the articulation of constraints, on the management of expectations. But in times such as these, explanation alone is insufficient.
What is required is action—measured, deliberate, and credible—action that does not merely acknowledge the burden, but redistributes it in a manner that restores a sense of balance.
For at a crossroads, hesitation is itself a decision. And the longer the path remains undefined, the more likely it is that others—the streets, the sectors, the silent majority—will begin to define it themselves.
The Final Question
The black clay in Pasig has dried. The vandalised tarpaulins may be replaced afterwards. And slogans may fade. The price boards will continue to change.
But the question remains, persistent and unresolved: In a crisis not of its own making, how shall a nation distribute its burdens—and why do so many choose to defend those who carry the least of them?
For in the end, the price of oil is not merely counted in pesos per liter—
—but in the clarity, or confusion, with which a people understands its own condition.
