When a politician says something wild, right on schedule, half are outraged while the other half nod in grim approval; some start making memes about it.
So, when the Vice President, already knee-deep in impeachment drama, recently declared, “I truly want a trial because I want a bloodbath,” the reaction was predictably polarized. Critics gasped, “See? Violent!” while supporters rolled their eyes and muttered, “Oh, please, it’s a metaphor.”
In Philippine politics, where threats of “war,” “annihilation,” and “crushing the opposition” are as common as traffic jams on EDSA, why are we suddenly pretending this one phrase is a smoking gun?
Historically, politicians facing persecution have used dramatic language to rally supporters and highlight the intensity of their struggle. Why should the Vice President’s words be judged differently?
Vice President Sara Duterte’s remark was not blurted out of nowhere. She’s been under constant political assault, with opponents filing case after case against her. They have been sharpening knives, and headlines have been screaming scandal after scandal.
When you’re backed into a corner like that, strong words come out. We’ve all been there — frustrated, fighting back. That “bloodbath” line? It sounds less like a murder plot and more like a fighter declaring, “I’m not going down without a fight.” It was a fighter pushing back against what she sees as unjust persecution.
We all know this isn’t about violent language, but about who’s saying it. Politicians throw around violent metaphors all the time—”destroy the opposition,” “fight to the death,” “bury them alive.” When their side does it? It’s passion. When the other side does it? It’s terror, tyranny, or even craziness.
Let’s call this what it is: a political game. By twisting her words into some “dangerous threat,” they’re just trying to make her look unstable and unfit for leadership. Funny how they never seem to care when their own side says way worse stuff.
Politics has always been a theater. Threats, boasts, and doomsday prophecies are part of the script. If we started prosecuting every politician for hyperbole, Congress would be empty.
The real issue isn’t her choice of words — it is whether this impeachment is legitimate or just a political hit job. But focusing on “bloodbath” distracts from that. It’s easier to scream that the VP is violent than to actually debate whether the charges hold water.
This controversy was never really about what she said. It’s about how easily words get weaponized; how easily people twist words to create fake villains. If we let this become normal, who’s next? Today her, tomorrow — who knows?”
It’s the oldest trick in the political warfare 101 book: First, make the target an outcast, then paint them as monsters, and finally, take them down.
So, before we all lose our minds over a single word, let’s ask: Who benefits from this faux outrage? And at what cost to democracy?
In politics, sometimes a “bloodbath” just means “I’m pissed.” We shouldn’t take political hyperbole at face value. And if we start taking every political rant literally, we’re the ones who’ll need therapy.
The real bloodbath here is democracy itself.