9 December 2025. It’s International Anti-Corruption Day, a day for sober reflection. But for many Filipinos, it’s just another stark reminder of our perennial problem: the insatiable greed that festers at the heart of our government.
We see the headlines. We hear the testimonies. We know the score. Yet, a collective fatigue seems to set in, a dangerous, tempting wave of apathy that whispers, “Wala na tayong magagawa. Ganyan talaga. It’s the system.” That’s a lie.
That surrender is exactly what the corrupt are counting on. Our rage, your anger, our shared indignation are not just justified — they are the last line of defense for our republic. We must not, for the sake of our very survival, let this fire go out.
Real cost of indifference
This isn’t about abstract legal battles or complex accounting; this is visceral. This is about what you lose every single day.
It steals your future: When billions are pocketed through ghost projects and inflated contracts — like the endless, substandard flood control anomalies we’ve seen — that money isn’t just gone. It was meant for a hospital bed for your sick parent, a classroom for your child, or a stable job that keeps your family here instead of forcing you to work abroad. Corruption is a direct driver of our poverty and brain drain. It is a crime against the next generation.
It kills: Think about the typhoons that ravage our archipelago. When flood control dikes are poorly constructed or entirely nonexistent because the funds were skimmed, that missing infrastructure turns a natural disaster into a man-made tragedy. Every life lost in a preventable flood is a casualty of graft. It’s blood money.
It undermines justice: The sheer impunity of the “big fish” — those who are charged with plunder, yet manage to evade jail time, return to politics, and receive preferential treatment — sends a corrosive message. It tells the ordinary citizen that the law is not blind; it is an obstacle merely for the poor and weak. When you see a corrupt official walking free and flaunting their ill-gotten wealth, the loss of trust in the judicial system is a wound that never truly heals.
Call out the silent killers: Apathy and silence
When the next scandal erupts, you will hear two things: the deafening spin from the accused, and the creeping, dangerous silence from the rest of us.
This indifference is a form of complicity. When we shrug our shoulders and move on, we are effectively issuing a license to steal to every politician. We normalize the idea that politics is just a means for personal enrichment. Our constant exposure to corruption has induced a form of mass trauma, leading us to believe that resistance is futile.
No. We must look at our neighbors who continue to protest, who demand that the stolen money be returned, and who refuse to accept the revolving door of political accountability. They prove that the fight is far from over.
Your call to action: Be the unwavering wall
On this International Anti-Corruption Day, your vow should be simple: I will not forget.
Demand Accountability, Not Acquittals: Don’t just follow the headlines; follow the court dates. Pressure your representatives to support bills that promote budget transparency and freedom of information.
Reject the corrupt, regardless of name: When election time comes, remember the names. Do not be swayed by convenience, charisma, or empty promises. If they are implicated in graft, they are an enemy of the nation. Vote out impunity.
Speak the truth: Refuse to let political trolls and gaslighting narratives rewrite history. Use your voice, online or offline, to counter the lie of acceptance. Your outrage is valid; your memory is a weapon.
Your anger is a righteous force. Hold on to it. Nurture it. Let it fuel your resolve to demand the governance we truly deserve. The day we stop being angry is the day the thieves win forever.
And we, the Filipino people, are not ready to concede defeat.