๐๐ซ๐จ๐ง๐๐ฌ, ๐๐๐๐ญ๐ก๐ฌ, ๐๐ง๐ ๐๐๐ฅ๐ฎ๐ฌ๐ข๐จ๐ง: ๐๐๐ญ๐ซ๐ข๐๐ข๐ ๐๐ฏ๐๐ง๐ ๐๐ฅ๐ข๐ฌ๐ญ๐โ๐ฌ ๐๐ข๐๐ ๐๐ก๐๐๐ค ๐ ๐๐ข๐ฅ
Another woke hypocrite clutching pearls at Duterte, while being honored by a man that bombed seven countries
Filipino writer Patricia Evangelista practically glowed with self-righteousness when she tweeted, 'So honored that @BarackObama found my book #SomePeopleNeedKilling worthy of his list of the best of 2023. Humbled to be in the company of these astounding authors and works. Thank you so much.'
Oh, Patricia, humbled? Honored? Sweetheart, drop the pageant smile and step into the lightโyour haloโs flickering, and itโs got a body count.
Letโs start with your literary sugar daddy, Barack Obama. This is the man who signed off on 542 drone strikes across non-Western nations, turning 3,797 peopleโ324 of them civilians, by the politest talliesโinto pink mist for his Nobel Peace Prize scrapbook. Then thereโs Libya, where his 2011 NATO bombing spree left an estimated 10,000 to 30,000 dead, transforming a country into a hellscape of militias and mass graves. *Some people need killing*, you say? Obama clearly RSVPโd โyesโ to that partyโand youโre over here pinning his corsage like a giddy prom date.
But wait, it gets richer. Patriciaโs not just Obamaโs fangirlโsheโs been brandishing her New York Times op-ed like a moral machete, slicing through the air with pious calls for due process. Due process!
Oh, babe, the ironyโs so thick it could clog a warhead. That same New York Times spent 2002 and 2003 as the Bush administrationโs loudest cheerleader, pumping out propaganda for the Iraq invasionโa war that killed anywhere from 151,000 to over a million Iraqis, most without so much as a whisper of a trial. No warrants, no judges, just bombs and blood, courtesy of the paper that now prints your sanctimonious ink. Youโre out here waving their byline like itโs a badge of honor, but itโs a dog-eared ticket to a war crime, and the hypocrisyโs screaming louder than a Baghdad airstrike.
So letโs rewind to your smug little jab at Duterte supporters: 'Whatโs your definition of human?' Honey, please. Youโre perched atop a crumbling moral high horse, clutching Obamaโs book list in one hand and a New York Times op-ed in the other, while the ghosts of Libya, Iraq, and every drone-blasted village claw at the reins. Youโre not humbledโyouโre basking, basking in the glow of a legacy soaked in civilian blood and editorial complicity. That horse youโre riding? Itโs a hollowed-out carcass, buckling under the weight of your contradictions, and itโs time to dismount. Your book mightโve charmed Obama and the Times, but this groveling, selective-righteousness act? Itโs a masterclass in delusion, flunking the vibe check harder than a missile strike on a schoolyard. Step off the stage, Patriciaโthe spotlightโs exposing more than your prose.
Thank you for this article. Even here in the USA people are already questioning the legitimacy of mainstream media, whether they are telling the truth or mind conditioning the mere outcome they want. We are the silent majority which liberal thinkers undermine.
those that have been against FPRRD war on drugs have not been a witnessed to a 6 months old baby girl raped by drug addicts, by a grandmother, sisters, girls 10 to 14 years old raped and killed, where many families do not allow their to venture at night fearing they could be victimized by these drug addicts. This all changes when Duterte became president. The saying that it was now the criminals who were afraid of civilians become the norm. But now, it seems that the criminals and addicts are again lording the streets and the civilians are again afraid just like the pre-Duterte era. So much are being spoken in favor of the criminals who were "supposed victims of drug wars" but almost nothing is said for their innocent victims, the fear that they have instilled in the communities, I wonder what kind of society we have where the criminals seems to be glorified at the expense of their victims.