Thursday, June 25, 2026

Coronavirus Lockdown: Musial Lead Role, Philippines Sport Safety, and More!

More news about how the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines is being handled by the public and the government. 

Rep. Leila de Lima has introduced a bill to give students a 20% "20 percent discount on mobile load and internet services."  This is because they need the internet to study. 

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/738853/solon-bats-for-20-percent-student-discount-on-mobile-load

House Senior Deputy Minority Leader and Mamamayang Liberal Party-list Rep. Leila de Lima on Wednesday introduced a measure seeking to grant Filipino students 20 percent discount on mobile load and internet services.

House Bill No. 9859, or the Student Discount Para Sa Load Act, seeks to institutionalize a 20 percent discount on mobile load, text, call and internet services for Filipino students enrolled in authorized elementary, secondary, technical-vocational, or higher education institutions, excluding postgraduate programs.

De Lima said the proposed measure would bridge the digital accessibility gap and address the emerging hindrance to quality education by lessening the financial burden on Filipino students, for whom internet access is now a basic educational necessity.

“In the Philippines, the deepening digital divide exacerbates deep-rooted injustices in the education sector that leave students from underprivileged families and communities behind as they struggle to keep up with various learning expenses not covered by existing public education, scholarship, and learning subsidy programs,” she said in a news release.

“Among these learning expenses is the access to mobile and internet services that allow students to make use of online tools, resources, and platforms to enhance their learning experience and school performance,” she added.

Under HB 9859, all telecommunication services shall be covered, including but not limited to prepaid mobile load for text, call, and data; postpaid mobile plans; and broadband and internet services used for educational purposes.

If enacted into law, the National Telecommunications Commission and the Department of Information and Communications Technology shall oversee the implementation of the measure, under which TELCOs shall submit quarterly reports on their compliance.

De Lima noted that even as most schools across the primary, secondary and tertiary levels have returned to the face-to-face class modality, the digital tools, resources and platforms used during the pandemic continue to play a vital role in the delivery of education.

“In today’s digital age, equal access to quality education is inextricably linked to digital connectivity or access to internet services. As the role of digital tools continues to expand, unequal access to technology serves as a barrier to quality education,” she said.

The pandemic changed how education is done in the Philippines and around the world really. Internet access is now a necessity and not a luxury when it comes to learning. 

OPM singer Miguel Escueta is celebrating his coffee business. They had a lot of trouble during the pandemic. 

https://www.pep.ph/lifestyle/lifestyle/192607/miguel-escueta-frank-dean-tips-a721-20260616

OPM singer and entrepreneur Miguel Escueta is celebrating a major milestone as his coffee brand, Frank & Dean, hits its seventh year.

Speaking during the press launch of his album Stand in the Fire held at Pandan Asian CafĂ© in Quezon City on May 26, 2026, Miguel expressed gratitude for the continued support the brand has received over the years.

According to Miguel, Frank & Dean started in 2019 and has since grown to six locations, mostly situated in corporate offices around Bonifacio Global City in Taguig.

"We've been open for seven years na kami,” Miguel said.

“And we're just so grateful for the people who come and have our coffee every day.”

From the beginning, Miguel revealed that a clear strategy helped shape the company’s direction—focusing on office-based locations and building partnerships within corporate spaces.

"I think what worked out for us is we, we decided to go the corporate route,” he shared, “and build our relationships in the companies that we're in.”

This decision led Frank & Dean to carve out a niche in what Miguel describes as “corporate coffee.”

He explained: “I think the biggest thing from a business standpoint is, number one, figuring out what, what your niche is.

"And for us, we've found that niche in corporate coffee.”

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He added that their stores are intentionally placed in office environments.

“When I say corporate coffee, we are located in office locations, whether exclusively inside offices or in the ground floor of office buildings.”

Despite reaching seven years, Miguel admitted that running a coffee business remains a daily challenge—especially in an industry where closures are common.

“It is challenging,” he said. “Di ba nakakalungkot when you see establishments close because so much goes into putting it out. Di ba?”

For Frank & Dean, consistency has been key to staying afloat.

“For us, it's always been about staying consistent with our product and always catering to our market the best way we can.

"And I think that's what's allowed us to continue.”

Still, he acknowledges that the work never really gets easier. “The challenges don't stop. It's there every day. So we just try our best.”

That same consistency extends to product quality—something Miguel considers non-negotiable.

“And then number two, focusing on the product, making sure it's consistent all the time.

“Because what we've learned is when people come to the shop, they already know what they want.”

“So our goal is to give it the same way every single time.”

Beyond products and location, Miguel emphasized the importance of community in their business model.

“And the third is, focusing on the customer,” he continued.

“And what we call it is we don't see them as customers but our regulars, which we call 'coffee-driven neighbors.'"

For him, it’s all about shifting perspective.

“They are the hero of our story. We're not the heroes.

“They are the hero and we're just here trying to help them, achieve their goals through, through our coffee.”

Like many businesses, Frank & Dean faced its toughest test during the pandemic—a period that forced the team to rethink their operations.

“And I think the pandemic forced us to pivot to some extent,” Miguel shared.

This shift led to major developments within the brand, including sourcing and roasting their own beans.

“That's when we started sourcing and roasting our own coffee,” he said.

It was also during this time that they introduced new products.

“That's also when we built our signature products, like our Dream Latte, which is a bottled coffee.”

The product, born out of necessity, has since become a strong seller.

“That was born because of the pandemic, but it continues up to today to be one of our best-selling products.”

While he described the pandemic as “the toughest time,” Miguel said it also reframed how he approaches challenges in business.

“The challenges never end. The problems don't go away.”

Hence, he changed his mindset.

“We don't look at them as problems, but we look at them as opportunities to get better every day.”

“I think when you... when you're able to shift our mindset to that, it became easier for us to navigate issues when they come along.”

Seven years in, Frank & Dean continues to grow, with new locations opening within corporate hubs.

“Well, we just opened a new espresso bar... corporate espresso bar in the Mead Johnson headquarters in BGC,” Miguel shared. “So that's our sixth.”

Another branch is already in the works.

“And we're opening our seventh at the end of this month in a CrossFit gym called TLC in BGC.

“And hopefully we can open a couple of... couple more corporate espresso bars, uh, before the end of the year.”

As Miguel balances music and business, Frank & Dean’s steady growth reflects his focus on purpose, adaptability, and community—ingredients that have kept the brand thriving for seven years.

The pandemic forced them to adapt and the did. Now they are thriving. Another pandemic success story.

The stage show "Bongga Ka, 'Day!: The Annie Batungbakal Musical" is in production. 

https://www.philstar.com/lifestyle/2026/06/17/2535889/atasha-muhlach-bags-annie-batungbakal-musical-lead-role/amp/

After her twin Andres Muhlach took on the role originated by their father Aga in "Bagets" musical, it is Atasha Muhlach's turn to take on the lead role as the titular star in "Bongga Ka, 'Day!: The Annie Batungbakal Musical."

The production is based on the songs of the Manila Sound band Hotdog, which was supposed to be staged six years ago but was postponed due to the pandemic.

The '70s-Manila set musical will follow Atasha's Annie who sneaks into the glamorous disco scene to chase her dream of becoming a fashion designer and risks losing herself in the process.

Hotdog hits like "Manila," "Pers Lab," "Beh, Buti Nga," "Panaginip," "O, Lumapit Ka," "Ikaw ang Miss Universe ng Buhay Ko," and the titular track are expected to be featured.

Newport World Resorts, VIVA Communications, and The Philippine STAR are reuniting to produce after staging "Bagets the Musical" earlier this year at the Newport Performing Arts Theater.

"Bongga Ka, 'Day!: The Annie Batungbakal Musical" will run this September at the same venue where coincidentally Atasha made her theater debut in 2011 for "The Sound of Music" as Brigitta von Trapp.

That musical and several Jollibee commercials with her family were initially Atasha's only showbiz experience as she focused on graduating from college. 

She signed a contact with VIVA in 2023, which led to stints a hosting stint in "Eat Bulaga,"  and starring in the shows "Bad Genius," "Everyone Knows Every Juan," and "Da Pers Family" with her parents, Aga and Charlene, and twin Andres.

Atasha was also able to record and releases her first single "Pasuyo."

Atasha joins previously announced actors KD Estrada and alternating stars Sam Concepcion, Jeff Moses, and Anthony Rosaldo.

Jackie Lou Blanco and Ring Antonio will alternate the head of House of Pasion.

Annie's gay co-worker and best friend, Toots, will be played by Gerhard Krysstopher, while Air Paz-Pablico will play Annie's mom, Suzy.

Yani Lopez and Andrea Babierra will alternate as Annie's younger sister, Iste, while the street-smart balut vendor Amor will be played by Akie Cedilla. 

Completing the main cast are John Lapus and Dindo Divinagracia as they take turns playing Coco Banana's proprietor Tarurit and the Batungbakals' neighbor, Tito Tambay.

It was postponed due to the pandemic but is now about to show. 

Philippine sports is fragmented, with different institutions like schools, clubs, and leagues following separate and inconsistent rules. This creates gaps in accountability and protection, especially when athletes move between systems and no clear handover of safety information exists. The COVID-19 sports bubble briefly showed how a unified safety system with clear roles and protocols could work effectively.

https://politiko.com.ph/2026/06/20/everyones-responsibility-no-ones-job-the-fractured-state-of-philippine-sports-safety/roy-mabasa-reports/

If you map out who is supposed to keep an athlete safe in the Philippines, the picture is not a straight line. It is a scattered set of dots, each operating in its own orbit.

Schools have one set of rules. Clubs have another. National sports associations may have none at all. Professional leagues fall under different regulators. Local government units that own sports venues may have their own requirements, or none whatsoever.

Coaches and athlete support personnel, standing in the middle of all this, are often left to fill the gaps with instinct and goodwill.

No single person or body holds the whole picture. That is the problem.

When the deaths of Ateneo student-athletes Rene Baterbonia and Divine Adili forced the country to confront safety failures, the immediate instinct was to search for a point of failure. What rule was broken? Who was in charge? What protocol was missed?

These are fair questions, and they deserve answers. But if we stop there, we miss the larger truth. Our system is not broken at one point. It was never built as a system in the first place.

I have spent years moving across the different layers of Philippine sport. I have served as a national officer of a wrestling association, worked for the Games and Amusements Board, managed training venues for the First Summer Youth Olympic Games, organized several professional fighting leagues, and helped develop the return-to-play protocols that brought professional sports back during the pandemic. I have seen the view from every level. What strikes me is not how different these institutions are, but how disconnected they remain.

Each part of the system operates according to its own logic. Schools prioritize academic calendars and enrollment targets. Clubs function on tight budgets and volunteer energy. National federations are often underresourced and politically fragile. Professional leagues answer to commercial pressures. Regulators have limited reach.

The Philippine Olympic Committee’s Safe Sport Commission is a step in the right direction, but its mandate largely covers athletes under the Philippine Sports Commission and national sports associations. That leaves the vast landscape of school sports, community clubs, and private leagues outside its direct scope.

The result is a patchwork system in which responsibility is passed around like a ball nobody wants to hold. Athletes move through these spaces every day, yet no single standard follows them.

This fragmentation has consequences. When a school team travels to a competition, who is accountable for what happens off campus? When a young athlete moves from a collegiate program to a national team camp, does anyone transfer their medical history or risk profile? When a coach or support staff member works across multiple environments, which set of safety rules applies?

The honest answer is that nobody knows because nobody has designed the handover points. We treat each setting as an island, and athletes are left to navigate the gaps on their own.

The COVID-19 pandemic briefly forced a different approach. I saw it firsthand. The professional sports bubble was not merely a set of health protocols. It was an attempt to create a unified environment in which every person knew their role, every risk was mapped, and every line of accountability was clearly drawn. It worked because the crisis left no room for the usual fragmentation.

But the lesson was never extended. Once the urgency passed, we retreated to our separate corners.

What the Philippine sports industry needs now is not another set of guidelines. It needs a connective spine. It needs a national framework that links every level of sport, from school programs to professional leagues, through a consistent set of safety standards, reporting mechanisms, and accountability structures.

This does not mean centralizing everything into a single bureaucracy. It means agreeing on minimum standards that every institution must meet and creating clear bridges so that safety information and responsibility do not disappear at the boundary between one domain and the next.

Other countries have done this. They have established national sports safety authorities, independent of federations and government departments, with the power to set standards, investigate complaints, and impose sanctions. They have created a single point of reference that athletes, coaches, and parents can turn to, regardless of the sport they play or the level at which they compete.

The Philippines has nothing equivalent.

We have individual initiatives, passionate advocates, and reactive crisis management. We do not have a system.

We have the knowledge. We have people who have worked at every level and understand the gaps because they have lived inside them. What we lack is the political will to connect the dots and the determination to reject the notion that fragmentation is simply the natural state of things.

It is not natural. It is a choice, renewed every time we decide that someone else’s domain is not our problem.

The families of Rene and Divine did not lose their children because of a single broken rule. They lost them within a system that lacked a coherent safety architecture. That is a harder truth to confront because it cannot be fixed through a single investigation or a single dismissal. It requires rebuilding the way we think about safety in sport from the ground up.

Every athlete who steps onto a court, a field, or a mat tomorrow deserves to move through a system where safety is continuous, not confined to one setting. A system where the dots are finally connected.

That is the reform we have not yet attempted. And it is the only one that will endure.

However, that approach was not sustained, and there remains a need for a permanent, connected national framework for athlete safety across all levels of sport.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Philippine Company Tosses Sacks Of Trash Into The River

In the Philippines litter is a huge problem. This includes illegal dumping. In Iloilo City a company was recently revealed to have been dumping huge sacks of garbage into the Jaro River. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1277583

A business firm operating a beverage depot in this highly urbanized city is facing the risk of losing its permit to operate while facing cases for violation of environmental laws for dumping expired commodities into the Jaro River.

General Services Office head Neil Ravena said they met the owner of the establishment for a technical conference on Thursday and found some inconsistencies in his statement.

The conference was joined by the Business Process Licensing Office, City Environment and Natural Resources Office, representatives from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the barangay captains of Banuyao and Ticud, where the expired commodities were recovered.

“This is with regard to the disposal of expired commodities to the Jaro River. This is to verify reports and also for the respondent to explain why they are disposing their expired commodities in the Jaro River,” Ravena said in an interview.

The expired commodities were placed inside sacks and dumped into the Jaro River. These were recovered sometime in the second week of this month during the ongoing cleanup activities.

“The reason why we were able to trace him was because of the identical sacks left at his depot,” he said.

The firm owner, according to Ravena, explained that they are trying to repackage the expired drinks for return to the distributor of the bottling company.

These were reportedly placed outside their depot, but were picked up by trisikad (pedicab) and tricycle drivers and disposed without the knowledge of the firm owner.

Ravena said they were able to recover only portions of the 67 sacks that were disposed at the river.

The owner also admitted that they still have 500 sacks left, which they are attempting to return to the bottling company.

Cases for violation of Republic Act 9003, or the Solid Waste Management Act, and the Clean Water Act are expected to be filed next week once the minutes of the technical conference are available.

He will also recommend to Mayor Raisa Trenas the revocation of the establishment’s permit to operate.

This company was banking on nobody actually cleaning the river! But their hopes were dashed when the local government decided to do clean up activities and found these intact sacks which led them to the company. 

Only portions of 67 sacks were recovered while the company says they have 500 sacks waiting to be dumped! Well, waiting to be returned to a bottling company. They say the sacks were picked up without their knowledge but how true is that? If it turns out this company knowingly and willingly dumped those sacks into the river they should face the full force of the law. 

Of course this is the Philippines so it's likely not going to happen!

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Insurgency: Couple Shot Dead

The AFP has released another update and the number of Reds neutralized this year. Last time it was 654 between January 1st and May 21st. This time the number is only slightly different. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1277415

The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) said a total of 709 New People's Army (NPA) communist insurgents and their allies were neutralized from Jan. 1 to June 11 this year.

"Neutralized" is a military term which refers to the surrender, capture or killing of enemy troops.

In an interview with reporters late Tuesday afternoon, AFP spokesperson Col. Francel Margareth Padilla said this can be broken down into 621 surrendered, 31 arrested and 57 killed in various military operations nationwide.

In the same period, Padilla said 503 assorted firearms were either captured or surrendered along with 122 anti-personnel mines.

Also captured in the same period were 30 NPA encampments, she added.

"Beyond the numbers, the real measure of success is that more and more communities are living in peace and in safe conditions. This is also reflected on the larger numbers of surrenders as opposed to those results in operations," the AFP spokesperson said.

Last year, the military said that its units have neutralized 2,018 NPA members and its supporters.

Of the 2,018 communist insurgents and followers neutralized, 1,798 have surrendered, 93 arrested and 127 killed in various military operations nationwide.

"A total of 1,134 firearms and 531 anti-personnel mines were either seized or surrendered (during this period)," the AFP said.

It also added that a total of 149 NPA encampments were also captured from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 of last year.

As ever, without breaking down the numbers into supporters and actually rebels this number means nothing. 709 is closer to the last estimated number of remaining rebels, 780, but it's not clear how many actual rebels are left. And how are there more supporters than there are actual rebels? These numbers make no sense. 

The Calabarzon region was declared insurgency-free on June 12th. 

https://mb.com.ph/2026/06/13/calabarzon-declared-insurgency-free-on-independence-day

The Armed Forces of the Philippines and Department of the Interior and Local Government on Friday, June 12, declared the Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon) region insurgency free, the first in the country this year.

The Stable Internal Peace and Security (SIPS) Status was awarded during the SIPS Seal Awarding and Declaration Ceremony at the Quezon Convention Center here in the presence of DILG Secretary Jonvic Remulla, local government officials, and high-ranking military officers in the region.

The declaration was built on a series of provincial milestones achieved over the years.

Cavite became the first province in the region to be declared under SIPS in 2018 and was subsequently revalidated in 2024

Laguna followed in 2019 and was revalidated in 2026, while Batangas attained its declaration in 2021. Quezon achieved its SIPS declaration in 2023, followed by Rizal in 2024.

Calabarzon became the first region in the country to attain a SIPS status. It is one of the country’s major centers of industry, tourism, agriculture, and commerce, where peace continues to create opportunities for growth, investment, and development.

The declaration served as a recognition of the gains achieved and a reminder that sustaining peace requires continued vigilance, strong partnerships, and shared responsibility.

Of course they could have made this declaration any day of the week over the past few years but they waited until independence day for optics. 

The NTF-ELCAC says this region, also known as Southern Tagalog, has rejected the ideals of the NPA.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1277418

A ranking official of the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) said on Wednesday that the declaration placing Southern Tagalog (also known as Calabarzon) under "Stable Internal Peace and Security" (SIPS) is a clear sign that the people in the region have rejected the ideals of the communist insurgents.

"Peace works. Development works. Democracy works," NTF-ELCAC Executive Director Undersecretary Ernesto Torres Jr. said in a statement.

He also called the SIPS declaration for Southern Tagalog on June 12 a historic rejection of Communist Party of the Philippines - New People's Army - National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF) violence by one of the insurgents' biggest former strongholds.

Torres also emphasized that communities prosper not through violence and armed struggle, but through unity, cooperation, and shared aspirations.

"The story of Southern Tagalog proves that no insurgency is stronger than a united people determined to build a better future for their children," he said.

Likewise, the NTF-ELCAC executive said this SIPS declaration marks not only a major security milestone but, more importantly, a victory earned by the people of Southern Tagalog after decades of conflict, intimidation, and underdevelopment.

"This is a moment that Southern Tagalog should celebrate with pride. For more than five decades, the CPP-NPA-NDF sought to establish deep roots in the region. Today, the people of Southern Tagalog have delivered their verdict. They have rejected violence, rejected armed struggle, and chosen peace, development, and democracy," he added.

Southern Tagalog's SIPS declaration comes amid a growing wave of peace gains across the country. Since 2018, a total of 58 provinces have attained SIPS status.

The provinces of Kalinga, Apayao, Southern Leyte, Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, and Surigao del Sur have likewise achieved the milestone. Some regions, such as Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, and Western Visayas, have been declared insurgency-free and placed under SIPS, while Caraga is expected to make its own regional declaration on June 18.

Torres said these developments demonstrate the steady weakening of communist insurgency nationwide and the growing success of the government's whole-of-nation approach to peace and development.

The NTF-ELCAC executive described the SIPS declaration for Southern Tagalog as unique, noting that the provinces of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon were regarded by communist leaders as critical to their revolutionary ambitions, as the region's mountains, agricultural communities, urban centers, and educational institutions became targets of recruitment, organization, and armed operations.

"The declaration of SIPS is not merely the absence of armed conflict. It is the restoration of normal life. It means communities can focus on development instead of security threats. It means children can dream bigger. It means local governments can concentrate on building roads, schools, health facilities, livelihoods, and economic opportunities,” he said.

This achievement, he added, belongs first and foremost to the people of Southern Tagalog.

"We celebrate the barangays that stood firm against intimidation. We celebrate the families who protected their children from recruitment and chose hope over hatred. We celebrate former rebels who embraced reconciliation and proved that peace is always possible," he said.

Likewise, Torres said the NTF-ELCAC celebrates local leaders who brought government services to communities long neglected by conflict, along with teachers, religious leaders, civil society partners, peace advocates, soldiers, police officers, and public servants who dedicated years of their lives to protecting communities and advancing development.

"But above all, we celebrate the ordinary people of Southern Tagalog. Their courage, resilience, and unwavering faith in a better future accomplished what decades of violence never could. They proved that peace is stronger than fear, hope is stronger than extremism, and unity is stronger than division," he said.

See that? It's not about the absence of armed conflict. It's about "restoration of normal life," i.e good governance. 

Caraga has also been given a SIPS status or Stable Internal Peace and Security.

The entire Caraga Region was formally declared under a state of Stable Internal Peace and Security (SIPS) on Thursday, marking the culmination of decades of efforts to end insurgency in the area.

The declaration was made at a gathering of governors, mayors, government line agencies, the private sector, and former combatants of the New People's Army (NPA) in Butuan City.

Top government officials, including Undersecretary Angelito De Leon of the Department of National Defense; Undersecretary Ernesto Torres Jr., Executive Director of the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict; and Undersecretary Jonathan Ferdinand Miano of the Office of the Presidential Adviser on Peace, Reconciliation and Unity, were present.

"For decades, many parts of our region bore the burdens of insurgency, instability, and underdevelopment, with communities living with uncertainty, opportunities were limited, investments hesitated, and progress slowed down," Butuan City Mayor Lawrence Lemuel Fortun said.

The declaration of SIPS, he added, is the collective accomplishment of the entire region, including the steadfast efforts of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), the Philippine National Police, government agencies, local government units, and community support.

The declaration came after all provinces and Butuan City were declared insurgency-free, following the collapse of the North Eastern Mindanao Regional Committee of the NPA.

Agusan del Norte was declared insurgency-free on June 5; Agusan del Sur, Surigao del Sur, and Butuan City on June 15; Dinagat Islands on Dec. 12, 2014; and Surigao del Norte on March 15, 2024.

Lt. Gen. Adonis Ariel Orio, commander of the Eastern Mindanao Command, represented the AFP Chief of Staff, Gen. Romeo Brawner.

"The declaration is proof of how far the Caraga Region has come, from years of conflict and uncertainty to a future of stability and opportunities," Brawner said in his message, as delivered by Orio.

Aljon Intano, president of the United Caraganon for Peace and Development Federation, Inc. (UCPDFI), expressed hope for former rebels with the SIPS declaration.

"The former rebels in the Caraga Region are thankful for being part of the declaration of SIPS in the whole region," Intano said, representing the former rebels.

He added that the declaration will allow hundreds of former rebels still staying in military camps for security reasons to reunite with their families and communities and live peacefully.

A Peace Marker was unveiled during the activity, led by Torres and De Leon and witnessed by government and local chief executives.

Participants also signed a pledge of commitment for peace, committing to build a just society where every individual has equal opportunities and protection under the law, and to continue counterinsurgency initiatives in pursuit of permanent peace and development

While this comes "following the collapse of the North Eastern Mindanao Regional Committee of the NPA" there is no doubt the AFP will continue to monitor the region to ensure there is no resurgence of the NPA.

The Cordillera Administrative Region has also been declared insurgency-free.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/06/19/cordillera-region-declared-insurgency-free

The Cordillera Administrative Region, composed of the provinces of Abra, Apayao, Benguet, Ifugao, Kalinga, and Mountain Province, as well as the cities of Baguio and Tabuk, was declared insurgency free and under a Stable Internal Peace and Security status during the Regional Peace and Order Council second-quarter full council meeting in Baguio City on Thursday.

RPOC Chairperson and Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong presided over the meeting where Resolution No. 3, Series of 2026, containing the declaration was adopted.

The resolution was introduced by Col. Darrel Bañez, deputy commander of the 503rd Infantry Brigade, and acting brigade commander Col. Davice Christopher Mercado.

A SIPS is declared when authorities determine that insurgent groups no longer possess the capability to conduct sustained armed operations in a particular area.

The resolution cited years of coordinated security operations, peace-building initiatives, and close collaboration among the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), the Philippine National Police (PNP), local government units, and communities across the Cordillera as key factors behind the achievement.

Police Regional Office-Cordillera Director Police Brig. Gen. Ericson Dilag and 5th Infantry Division commander Major Gen. Gulliver Siñeres are expected to sign the resolution together with Magalong before it is sent to the National Peace and Order Council chaired by President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.

The military and police said the resolution follows similar assessments and declarations previously issued on the provincial and city levels after authorities reported the dismantling of local insurgent structures and the absence of significant rebel-related activities.

With the declaration, security agencies are expected to transition from counterinsurgency operations to sustaining peace through law enforcement, governance, and development programs.

Now the government will "transition from counterinsurgency operations to sustaining peace." Did they forget that good governance through the whole-of-nation approach IS counterinsurgency?

These declarations notwithstanding the NPA remains a deadly threat.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/06/15/couple-shot-dead-at-home-in-guihulngan-city

Unidentified armed men killed a couple in their house in Barangay Trinidad, Guihulngan City, Negros Oriental on Friday, June 12.

Police Capt. Stephen Polinar, Negros Oriental police spokesperson, identified the victims as Efren, 32, and his wife Jean, 27.

Initial information revealed that Jean was an alleged victim of sexual abuse while her husband was allegedly a notorious robber in the area. Police said these are subject to verification.

Due to a security threat, police coordinated with the Army before proceeding to the barangay.

The New People’s Army (NPA) claimed responsibility and tagged the victims as military assets.

Communist rebels also claimed another shooting incident on Friday in Barangay Budlasan, Canlaon City, Negros Oriental. The victim was identified as Anthony of Moises Padilla, Negros Occidental.

Police are conducting follow-up investigations.

Well, at least one of these persons was an accused robber so maybe it was not the NPA? How can the AFP even verify the NPA's statement? What proof is there they were military assets? Surely the AFP won't tell the public that.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Red Horse Spill Turns River Red

1,944 bottles of beer on the truck, 1,944 bottles of beer. You don't have a closed trailer and you drive recklessly, no bottles of beer on the truck! 

https://mb.com.ph/2026/06/17/sorsogon-city-river-briefly-turns-red-due-to-1944-spilled-bottles-of-beer

The Buhatan River in Barangay Buhatan, Sorsogon City briefly turned red after thousands of bottles of beer spilled from a delivery truck on Tuesday night, June 16.

Reports said around 1,944 cases of Red Horse beer were scattered on the road after the truck's cargo slipped and fell. It was caught on closed-circuit television camera.

The accident caused a significant traffic buildup in the area. During the cleanup operation, beer flowed into the nearby Buhatan River, turning the river red.

Authorities immediately conducted clearing operations to remove the debris and restore normal traffic flow. No injuries were reported over the incident.

The incident drew attention due to its impact on the Buhatan River, one of the well-known tourist attractions in Sorsogon City.

The river is home to the popular Buhatan River Cruise, a community-based ecotourism destination that offers visitors scenic river tours and firefly watching through mangrove forests and coastal communities.

The ecotourism project traces its roots to 2014 and is considered one of the legacies of the late environmental advocate and former Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Gina Lopez.

Lopez spearheaded the livelihood initiative while serving as chairperson of the ABS-CBN Foundation, helping transform the area into a sustainable tourism site that benefits local residents.

Authorities have yet to release an assessment on the environmental impact of the incident on the river ecosystem. Investigation into the cause of the incident is ongoing.

Investigation into the cause of the incident is ongoing???  I'll tell you the exact problem. This truck, like practically ALL beer and soda trucks did not have a closed trailer. Thankfully the incident was caught on CCTV so you can see exactly what happened. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9xa5yZM6IT8

Just look at that!  Why is this allowed? Why are trucks allowed to drive with trailers with open sides!? Multiple crates, empty or filled, of beer or soda, are being held in place by string!!! That is not safe and the fact that the LTFRB allows this to happen is unconsionable. It' s another oversight that makes Philippine Roads unsafe. It's amazing these kind of spills do not happen more often.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

The God Culture: What Is Salvation According To Paul?

Timothy Jay Schwab who is The God Culture has another Foundations lesson for his flock. Having defined salvation as law keeping per John 15 he now asks: What is salvation according to Paul? Spoiler alert: it's keeping the law per Romans 11.


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FOUNDATIONS | WEEK 20 

đź“– What Is Salvation According to Paul? 

Is Paul’s definition of salvation different from Messiah’s? 

No. It aligns. 

In Epistle to the Romans 11, Paul describes salvation using the image of a tree just as Yahusha used the vine and branches in John 15: 

  • Natural branches (those originally in covenant-not a bloodline)

  • Wild branches (Gentiles grafted into the same covenant relationship)

Some natural branches were broken off because of unbelief.
Gentiles were grafted in by faith. 

But then comes the warning: 

If you do not continue… you also will be cut off.

When a church espouses a doctrine contrary to the Savior and Paul, that doctrine proves to be one manufactured by man. Test it. 

Salvation Is Not Static

Paul makes something clear: 

  • Being grafted in is not the end

  • Continuing in faith matters 

Those who were cut off:

  • can be grafted in again through belief 

This is consistent with: 

  • repentance

  • restoration

  • covenant renewal 

One People, One Covenant 

Paul does not describe two separate systems.

He describes: 

  • one tree

  • one root

  • one covenant people 

Gentiles are not treated as separate, but as those brought into what already exists.

This reflects a consistent principle seen throughout Scripture:

one standard for those within the covenant community 

Paul writes: 

"...that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in. And so all Israel shall be saved: as it is written, There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer, and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: For this is my covenant unto them, when I shall take away their sins."

Romans 11:25-27 KJV 

The Gentiles come into their fullness being grafted into the olive tree–The Kingdom. This is not an age of the church (a word not even found in the Hebrew Bible), which such dispensation quickly fails any valid test as all 7 characteristics are active in all ages. As the Gentiles are grafted into YahsarEl (Israel very poorly rendered–The People of Covenant), ALL YasharEl (those in covenant) shall be saved. That includes Gentiles and has since the Exodus according to Moses and even in Abraham's days where all of his household including Gentiles were saved, and before there was ever an Israel.

Alignment with Messiah 

This mirrors Messiah’s teaching in Gospel of John 15: 

  • Abide → remain

  • Do not abide → removed

  • Bear fruit → continue

The pattern is the same:

  • relationship

  • continuation

  • evidence through fruit 

The Role of Belief 

Paul identifies the key factor:

  • Unbelief → separation

  • Faith → connection

And importantly:

  • both can change 

This reflects real choice—real response. We were created with Free Will and that principle cannot be overruled by any church doctrine. 

Final Thought

Salvation, as Paul describes it, is not disconnected from Messiah’s teaching.

It is: 

  • entering into relationship

  • continuing in that relationship

  • remaining in the covenant 

The call is not only to begin—but to continue.

Yah Bless.

Note: We are well aware, and used to teach, the string of fragments used out of context in order to redefine salvation against the Biblical language itself. One must ask why Yahusha's, the Savior's Words, are hardly even included in this extremely poor exegesis. He provided a chapter especially defining salvation himself. When Paul provides chapters on the topic as well, why is it we are given single verses when context should matter? We don't placate such ignorance here. Now, before one begins the "what about this fragment out of context," we challenge everyone to read the passage first. Otherwise, we do respond strongly to comments made in ignorance when the text is right there for one to read. We teach and we do not tolerate control lines planted to stop your growth. Those attempting such debate rooted in ignorance to agitate will be muted here. Our channel, our rules.

It's incredible that he ends this lesson with a warning against teaching in out of context fragments when that is exactly what he has done with Romans 11. How about Romans 3-6 which discus salvation in detail? Here is a taste from Romans 4.

Romans 4:1 What shall we say then that Abraham our father, as pertaining to the flesh, hath found?

2 For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God.

3 For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness.

4 Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt.

5 But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.

The chapter goes on to discuss imputed righteousness which is what justifies us. The righteousness of Christ is given to us and we are declared to be righteous through faith. The law plays no role in our salvation  or in our being righteous. And that is no fragment, that is the teaching of Romans. 

As for Tim's remarks about free will, he should read Romans 9 where it explicitly says God saves whoever He will.

Romans 9:13 As it is written, Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated.

14 What shall we say then? Is there unrighteousness with God? God forbid.

15 For he saith to Moses, I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion.

16 So then it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy.

17 For the scripture saith unto Pharaoh, Even for this same purpose have I raised thee up, that I might shew my power in thee, and that my name might be declared throughout all the earth.

18 Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth.

19 Thou wilt say then unto me, Why doth he yet find fault? For who hath resisted his will?

20 Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?

21 Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour?

But let's hear what noted theologian Father Tim Crilly has to say about the matter.


Ah, Philippine Fails, me lad... puts the teacup down with a heavy sigh and leans forward
I’ve read Tim’s Week 20 Foundations lesson on “What Is Salvation According to Paul?” and by now the pattern is so consistent it’s almost tedious.What Tim is teaching here
  • Salvation is not a one-time decision or prayer.
  • It is entering into relationship (being grafted into the olive tree / abiding in the vine).
  • It requires continuation — if you don’t continue in faith and obedience, you can be cut off.
  • He uses Romans 11 (grafting) and John 15 (vine and branches) to emphasize fruit, relationship, and the danger of being removed.
  • He pushes back against “easy believism” and shallow doctrines that say salvation can’t be lost.
On the surface, some of this sounds reasonable. The Bible does warn against false assurance and calls us to persevere. But look closer and the same old God Culture theology is driving the bus.The Problems
  1. Christ is named but not central

    Jesus appears as the vine, but the emphasis is on our continuing performance (abiding, bearing fruit, not being cut off). The finished work of the cross, justification by faith, and the once-for-all nature of salvation get pushed to the side — again.
  2. “Relationship” = ongoing law-keeping

    In Tim’s system, “continuing in relationship” always means keeping the commandments (Torah/Sabbath/feasts). So salvation becomes: “Are you abiding well enough? Are you producing enough fruit (obedience) to stay grafted in?” This creates fear and uncertainty rather than resting in Christ.
  3. Selective use of Romans

    You’re right to note this — he jumps to Romans 11 while largely skipping Romans 3–6, where Paul lays out justification by faith apart from works of the law, our union with Christ in His death and resurrection, and freedom from the law’s condemnation. Romans 11 is about God’s faithfulness to Israel and the grafting of Gentiles, not a manual on how to stay saved by performance.

  4. The camel is fully inside the tent

    This is the natural conclusion of the entire Foundations series:
    • Repentance = turn to the law
    • Faith = obedience
    • Grace = power to obey
    • Fulfillment = confirming the law
    • Truth = the law
    • Salvation = entering and continuing in law-keeping relationship or risk being cut off
This is not the gospel of grace. This is works-based perseverance with better Bible verses.The Real Biblical TeachingYes, salvation involves relationship and perseverance. But the New Testament grounds our security in Christ’s work, not our ongoing performance:
  • “There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1).
  • We are kept by the power of God through faith (1 Peter 1:5).
  • “I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand” (John 10:28).
True faith does produce fruit and perseverance, but our assurance rests in Christ’s finished work and God’s faithfulness, not in how well we’re performing this week.
Tim’s version leaves people constantly checking their fruit and wondering if they’ve been cut off yet. That’s not rest. That’s bondage.
Father Ted’s plain verdict:
This is still another gospel — law dressed up as “relationship.”

It sounds serious and biblical, but it quietly shifts the foundation from Christ’s finished work to our continuing obedience. That’s exactly what Paul fought against in Galatians.

The real gospel says: Come to Christ, rest in His finished work, and the Holy Spirit will produce fruit in you.

Tim’s version says: Get grafted in, then work hard to stay grafted in by keeping the law, or risk being cut off.

Down with this sort of thing, lad.

Very careful now.

The gospel offers real rest and assurance in Christ. Tim’s system offers endless self-examination under the weight of the law.
...Right, I’m off to thank the Lord for the security we have in Him. 

Go on, go on, go on — have a cuppa. You keep seeing the pattern. Tim’s “Foundations” are leading people into uncertainty and performance. The real foundation is Christ and Him crucified. The gospel is far better and far more secure than what he’s building. Keep holding fast to it.