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Ron Jabal

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The Weight Of An Oath: Before The Senate Judges Sara Duterte, It Must Honor Its Impeachment Oath

The oath exists because there are moments when senators must become more than politicians; they must become guardians of constitutional judgment.

When A Name Becomes A Brand

Alex Eala’s journey reminds brands and leaders that trust is not announced, but earned through every decision, performance, and promise kept.

The Crowd Is Not Always Right

The size of a rally cannot prove the truth or righteousness of any cause.

Beyond The Crisis: What Ateneo Must Become

The measure of Ateneo’s recovery will be whether people see not only answers, but evidence that the institution has truly changed.

The Cost Of Waiting To Care

The true measure of institutional character is whether its values guide action before circumstances become convenient, clear, or legally comfortable.

The Burden Of Being Ateneo

This tragedy has become a test of whether Ateneo can translate Jesuit ideals into meaningful action during a painful public reckoning.

The Jesuit Test: When Grief Is Not Enough

The hardest test for any institution after tragedy is whether it can move beyond sorrow and submit itself to honest accountability.

Waiting For Judas

For ordinary Filipinos, the concern is whether political survival games will distract leaders from solving everyday national problems.

The Impeachment Court Or The Pressure Court?

The moment challenges the Philippines to protect accountability from becoming political siege, where institutions are trusted only by the side they favor.

When The Senate Became A Sanctuary

The Senate may frame its actions as institutional defense, but the public may remember something simpler: power closing ranks around power.

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