Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Corruption has gotten so out of control in the Philippines that lawmakers are now debating whether executing politicians is the answer.
A bill filed in early 2025 by Zamboanga Representative Khymer Adan Olaso would impose the death penalty — by firing squad — on any public official convicted of corruption, plunder, or misuse of public funds. Under House Bill 11211, the measure would apply across the entire government: from the President all the way down to local village officials, and including members of the military and police. Nobody in power would be exempt.
The bill isn't a free-for-all. Every conviction would require review and affirmation by the Philippine Supreme Court, and all legal appeals must be fully exhausted before any sentence is carried out. But once those boxes are checked — it's the firing squad.
The Philippines abolished the death penalty in 2006 after years of controversy, and with the country's strong Catholic influence, any move to reinstate it remains politically explosive. Supporters argue that no existing punishment has done anything to stop corruption. Critics warn that death sentences could easily be weaponized against political opponents.
The bill is currently in committee. Whether it advances may come down to a simple question: is public anger at corrupt officials stronger than the country's moral opposition to capital punishment?

 

The uncomfortable question is not whether such events happened. It is how they were made morally possible by institutions that claimed exclusive access to divine truth.
By Religion: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
WHEN BELIEF BECOMES PROCEDURE
The European witch trials were not random outbreaks of hysteria alone. They were sustained through legal manuals, theological justification, and civic cooperation. Works like the Malleus Maleficarum (1487) explicitly framed witch-hunting as a duty of Christian governance, merging superstition with judicial procedure (Kors & Peters, 1972).
Here is the structural issue: when belief becomes law, disagreement becomes crime. Once disagreement becomes crime, punishment becomes virtue.
A system does not need evil people to produce atrocities. It only needs permission structures that redefine cruelty as obedience.
THE MORAL AUTHORITY PROBLEM
Religious institutions in Europe often positioned themselves as arbiters of salvation while simultaneously authorizing coercion against perceived spiritual threats. The contradiction is not subtle. It is institutionalized.
When a priest blesses a sentence of death while holding a symbol of forgiveness, the cognitive dissonance is not in the victim. It is in the framework that allows moral purity and violence to occupy the same moral vocabulary without collapse.
Michel Foucault’s analyses of power suggest that institutions do not merely enforce rules; they produce “truth regimes” that define what counts as real, normal, or heretical (Foucault, 1977). Under such regimes, burning someone alive can be reinterpreted not as brutality but as purification.
The question writes itself:
If salvation requires participation in violence, what exactly is being saved?
HYSTERIA, GENDER, AND CONTROL
Historical records show that accusations of witchcraft disproportionately targeted women, especially those outside traditional power structures: widows, healers, the poor, and the socially isolated (Levack, 2013).
This is not accidental. Control systems often seek predictable targets. Marginalized individuals are easier to frame as threats when explanatory frameworks already define them as spiritually vulnerable or morally suspect.
The “witch” was less a person than a category—an administrative label for fear, misfortune, and social tension.
So another question emerges:
When a society labels vulnerability as evil, what kind of society is it building?
CROWD MORALITY AND THE COMFORT OF PARTICIPATION
The surrounding crowd in such scenes is often treated as background. That is a mistake. Collective participation—whether active or passive—matters as much as the authority that authorizes it.
Social psychology has long shown how group settings can normalize extreme behavior through conformity pressures and diffusion of responsibility (Milgram, 1963). The presence of a shared moral narrative reduces individual resistance.
People do not always ask, “Is this right?” They ask, “Is this permitted?”
And permission, once granted by authority, is often experienced as moral relief.
THE IRONY OF SALVATION
The most striking irony embedded in the described scene is linguistic: salvation is invoked in proximity to execution.
Salvation, in theological terms, implies rescue from ultimate harm. Yet here, harm is administered in its name. This produces a moral inversion where destruction is reframed as protection, and suffering is justified as necessity.
It is worth asking:
If salvation requires burning dissent, is it salvation—or control wearing sacred language?
MODERN ECHOES WITHOUT THE TORCHES
It would be convenient to treat these events as sealed history. That comfort is fragile. Modern societies rarely burn people at stakes for heresy, but mechanisms of moral exclusion persist in different forms: institutional punishment, ideological purity tests, and the social destruction of dissenters.
The tools change. The logic often remains.
FINAL QUESTION
If a belief system requires unquestionable authority to define who deserves compassion and who deserves punishment, does it reduce harm—or simply standardize it?
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REFERENCES (APA STYLE)
Foucault, M. (1977). Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison. Pantheon Books.
Kors, A. C., & Peters, E. (1972). Witchcraft in Europe, 400–1700: A documentary history. University of Pennsylvania Press.
Levack, B. P. (2013). The witch-hunt in early modern Europe (4th ed.). Routledge.
Milgram, S. (1963). Behavioral study of obedience. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 67(4), 371–378.

 

Top Ten Zionist Lies
Know them when you see them.

"To justify the military campaign in Gaza—which leading human rights organizations and top genocide scholars widely characterize as a genocide—advocates for Israel often rely on a specific set of talking points.

Human rights groups and international law experts largely reject these arguments as false, misleading, or legally invalid. [1
, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
The most common false or misleading arguments used by proponents to justify the war, and the primary counterarguments made by human rights advocates, include:
1. "The IDF only targets Hamas, not civilians."
  • The Claim: Proponents argue that Israel uses precise, surgical strikes and that high civilian casualties are solely the fault of Hamas’s military tactics.
  • The Rebuttal: Human rights groups point out the indiscriminate nature of the bombing, which has reduced vast swaths of civilian infrastructure, including homes, universities, and hospitals, to rubble. The UN and legal scholars argue that the sheer scale of civilian casualties and structural devastation proves that the IDF routinely fails to distinguish between combatants and non-combatants. [1, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]
2. "Hamas uses Palestinians as 'human shields' for all civilian deaths."
  • The Claim: This is one of the most frequently used arguments to shift 100% of the moral and legal blame onto Hamas for operating in densely populated areas.
  • The Rebuttal: The International Court of Justice (ICJ) and organizations like Amnesty International state that even if an armed group uses human shields, this does not absolve the attacking state of its obligations under international humanitarian law. Deeming entire neighborhoods legitimate military targets because of the presence of militants violates the principle of proportionality and distinction. [1, 7, 10, 13]
3. "There is no genocide in Gaza; the civilian deaths are just the tragic reality of urban warfare."
  • The Claim: Advocates maintain that the term "genocide" is a politicized slur used to delegitimize Israel, arguing that the civilian casualties are unavoidable "collateral damage" in a just war.
  • The Rebuttal: Genocide scholars and human rights bodies like B'Tselem emphasize that genocide is defined by specific intent to destroy a group. Experts argue that the explicit, dehumanizing rhetoric used by Israeli officials, combined with the restriction of life-saving necessities, crosses the threshold into genocidal intent. [1, 2, 5, 9, 14, 15]
4. "Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, so the territory cannot be considered occupied."
  • The Claim: Defenders of Israel argue that they removed all settlers and troops in 2005, meaning they are not responsible for what happens in Gaza.
  • The Rebuttal: The United Nations, the
    International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

    , and legal scholars widely recognize Gaza as occupied territory. Because Israel controls Gaza's airspace, territorial waters, land borders, population registry, and the flow of goods, it retains the legal responsibilities of an occupying power.
5. "Israel is doing everything it can to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza."
  • The Claim: Proponents often assert that Israel is facilitating the entry of food and medical supplies, but blame Hamas for looting or failing to distribute the aid.
  • The Rebuttal: Relief agencies, the UN, and international courts have repeatedly documented that Israeli inspection mechanisms, bureaucratic hurdles, and military restrictions severely hamper aid delivery. Human rights groups have documented that essential items (such as food, water, and fuel) have been weaponized, contributing to the severe famine and collapse of the healthcare system in Gaza. [1, 2, 16, 17, 18]
6. "Israel issues evacuation warnings, so it cannot be accused of forcible transfer or ethnic cleansing."
  • The Claim: Advocates argue that the IDF's practice of dropping leaflets or sending messages to evacuate specific zones shows a commitment to protecting civilian life.
  • The Rebuttal: The
    United Nations

    and human rights organizations argue that evacuation orders without guarantees of safety, return, or adequate humanitarian provisions amount to forced displacement. With a vast majority of the population internally displaced and nowhere safe to go, rights groups consider these forced transfers to be violations of international law.
7. "Accusing Israel of genocide is inherently antisemitic."
  • The Claim: This argument posits that because the genocide accusation is historically tied to the Jewish state—and because the Holocaust is widely viewed as a uniquely unparalleled event—criticizing Israel's actions as genocidal is motivated by anti-Jewish prejudice.
  • The Rebuttal: Leading genocide scholars and anti-occupation Jewish activists argue that conflating the actions of the Israeli state with Jewish identity is a logical fallacy. The International Association of Genocide Scholars and experts argue that recognizing and preventing genocide when it is occurring is a universal moral imperative, irrespective of the perpetrators' identity. [2, 3, 4, 7, 9, 19, 20]
8. "The casualty numbers provided by the Gaza Health Ministry are inflated because they are run by Hamas."
  • The Claim: Defenders often attempt to discredit the severity of the crisis by claiming the death toll is propaganda.
  • The Rebuttal: Major international organizations, international news media, the UN, and the
    World Health Organization (WHO)

    rely on the Gaza Health Ministry's figures. Past conflicts have shown that the Ministry's casualty figures are generally accurate and closely align with subsequent UN and academic investigations.
9. "Most of the dead are militants."
  • The Claim: Some commentators assert that a vast majority of the tens of thousands of Palestinians killed were actively fighting with Hamas.
  • The Rebuttal: The UN, human rights monitors, and medical workers report that women and children consistently make up the majority of verified fatalities. The argument that most of the casualties are combatants is contradicted by the extensive destruction of residential areas and demographic data from hospitals. [5, 9, 11]
10. "If Hamas surrenders, the war would end instantly."
  • The Claim: Proponents argue that the ultimate responsibility for the destruction lies with Hamas, and that Israel is merely fighting a defensive war required to ensure its security.
  • The Rebuttal: While Hamas’s role is central, human rights groups argue this does not give Israel carte blanche to destroy an entire population. International law requires that all military operations comply with the principles of distinction, precaution, and proportionality, regardless of the enemy's actions or ideology. [1, 7, 13, 15, 19, 23]
AI responses may include mistakes.