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Christmas in the Philippines has always been an act of collective defiance — an annual reaffirmation that joy can still be carved out of hardship and hope can survive even when governance fails to protect the very people it promises to serve.
In the soft glow of lanterns, the warmth of families gathering despite rising prices and shrinking opportunities, one finds the stubborn resilience of a nation that refuses to wither.
This year, the country stands at a sharper, more perilous intersection. Natural disasters grow more intense, man-made calamities become more brazen, and the political and economic winds seem to blow stronger against those who already have the least in life. Christmas cannot erase this reality; it can only illuminate it.
Across the archipelago, families rebuilding from storms face a more devastating tempest — one stirred not by nature but by the corrupted hands of those tasked to lead. Billions earmarked for flood control vanish into the pockets of fixers and fattened networks of patronage.
Public funds meant for hospitals, classrooms, agriculture, and transport are siphoned into the private vaults of politicians who treat the national budget like their personal piggybank. Inflation may have eased on paper, but the lived experience of Filipinos tells a harsher story: wages that no longer reach mid-month, electricity and water bills that creep upward, and a job market weakened by governance scandals that scare off the very investors the economy desperately needs. In this environment, the poor are pushed not just to the margins — but over them.
And yet, even amid this bleak landscape, something else is stirring beneath the surface. Disillusionment is ripening into discernment. Communities battered by disasters recognize that climate vulnerability is inseparable from corruption vulnerability. Citizens see that every undelivered evacuation center, every overpriced government project, and every crony-directed contract widen the gap between survival and catastrophe.
The unwelcome gift that 2025 has placed under every Filipino’s tree is clarity: the country can neither afford leaders who profit from their people’s pain nor can it continue excusing a political culture that rewards impunity and dynastic power over merit and accountability. (Tracing the money, exposing the network: A year of Rappler investigations)
The year ahead will test whether this clarity blooms into courage. Next year is not just another election cycle — it is a referendum on what kind of nation we are willing to become.
Will we allow the same families who treat public office as inheritance to continue dictating our fate? Will we keep tolerating officials who enrich themselves while children in evacuation centers sleep on cold floors? Will we continue applauding “strongmen” who speak of order while sowing fear, or pretend not to see how corruption robs the poor long before any typhoon does? Or will we finally insist on leaders who understand that public service is a sacrifice, not a franchise — leaders who build institutions strong enough to withstand storms, not schemes strong enough to withstand audits?
Christmas invites us not only to tenderness, but also to truth. The truth is that the Philippines stands at a hinge moment. Our democratic fragility is showing. Our economic trajectory is uncertain. Our patience, stretched thin by injustice, is wearing through. But the same season also reminds us that transformation — of individuals, of societies, of nations — begins quietly, in the flicker of conviction, in the resolve of ordinary people who demand better because they know they deserve better.
As fireworks crackle and choir voices rise this Yuletide, may we carry a different kind of prayer into the new year: that we find the collective courage to break the cycles that have broken us for generations; that we reject leaders who steal from us; that we uplift those who have been ignored; that we remember governance is not a spectacle of power but a sacred trust. And may all of us insist — finally, firmly — on a Philippines where calamities do not become opportunities for corruption but catalysts for reform.
This Christmas, the nation stands wounded but awake. And there is no greater gift we can give one another than the unwavering commitment to build a country where hope is not merely felt during the holidays, but lived every single day of the year.
Merry Christmas, everyone! – Rappler.com
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