Malacañang has announced that it did not include the 38th anniversary of the EDSA People Power Revolution in the list of special non-working days for 2024 as its observance has minimal socioeconomic impact.
This did not sit well with the Dilawan who have to call in sick to work that day, skip classes to attend a public commemoration historically attended by an ever-dwindling few for almost 40 years now.
Imagine the likes of Raissa Robles who would no longer be able to peddle their never-again lies about the Marcos Martial Law. Imagine how the non-declaration of a holiday will completely re-write Philippine history and distort facts on whom people have come to judge as either martyr or murderer.
But oh, wait, next year’s EDSA People Power anniversary falls on a Sunday. No work. No School. And the few souls who would brave the heat to raise their fists at the EDSA memorial can still do so. No traffic closures, no riot police deployment needed. Just the unimpeded right of expression for the ever-so-patriotic Filipino.
While offices and schools will be closed, the nearby Robinson’s Mall will be open for all to enjoy!
So let’s not make a mountain out of a mole hill, shall we?
Ah, the modern education system, where school classes are at the mercy of the elements, holidays, protests, and strikes! Remember the good old days when kids donned rain gear and rubber boots, their resilience unmatched by a drizzle or a bit of breezy weather? Alas, those days seem long gone, buried under an avalanche of hashtagged “walang pasok.”
One might wonder if these disruptions have any educational value, or if they’re simply a grand exercise in meteorological fortune-telling. Perhaps we need a new subject in the curriculum: “Weather Prediction 101.” Because heaven forbid students might have to learn amidst the hardship of a light shower or a minor flood!
And what about those pesky holidays, protests, and strikes? Shouldn’t we deduct the wasted classroom time from their annual schedule? Parents should demand a “class-suspension rebate” for each day their child stays home. After all, education is priceless, and the occasional raindrop should never stand in its way!
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