In a stunning display of wit and strategic evasion, President Bongbong Marcos has mastered the art of dodging accusations with the finesse of a seasoned tightrope walker.
When confronted with allegations by former President Rodrigo Duterte of Marcos’ drug use, the President’s ingenious “It’s the fentanyl” retort left reporters in a state of bewilderment.
Clearly, we’ve underestimated the medicinal powers of this painkiller – apparently, it not only numbs physical agony but also acts as a convenient excuse for any political discomfort.
Refusing to categorically deny the allegations, Marcos reached new heights of political acrobatics, declaring that he wouldn’t even dignify such queries with a response.
Bravo, Mr. President! This masterclass in rhetorical jujitsu has left reporters pondering the consequences of their probing inquiries. It seems the taste of their own medicine is a bitter pill to swallow.
In the grand theater of politics, President Marcos has proven that sometimes, the most effective defense is a well-timed quip and a dash of selective amnesia.
In the grand tradition of counting grains of sand with a magnifying glass, our current scientific method for estimating crowd sizes at marches, demonstrations, and open-air rallies resembles a game of pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey played in a blackout. News media, agencies, and online keyboard warriors treat us to a dazzling display of numerical acrobatics, each vying for the gold medal in creative estimation. It’s like a circus where the lion tamer is also the tightrope walker and the clown moonlights as the trapeze artist.
Take the Bagong Pilipinas Kickoff Rally at Rizal Park, for example. How many attendees were there? It’s a question that sparks more debates than a reality TV show finale. The United States, in its infinite wisdom, entrusts the National Parks Service with the sacred duty of crowd counting, a model the Philippines desperately needs. Because nothing says accuracy like determining the population of a gathering with the same precision used to measure the circumference of a squirrel’s acorn stash. Let’s upgrade from the guesswork carnival to a scientific symphony – after all, if we can send a rover to Mars, we can surely count the heads in a crowd.
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