“Noong mga batang reporter tayo, ang mga sundalo panay ang kudeta. Ngayon, panay Facebook kuda.” (When we were young reporters, soldiers mounted various coup attempts. Nowadays, they rant on Facebook.)
That was my comment, punctuated with an LOL emoji, in a small chat group I have with old friends as news about the sacking of an Army colonel broke on Friday, January 9.
Not that I’m advocating for a coup instead of kuda. But it bears noting that leaders in the defense-military establishment have looked away for far too long from the social media habits of their soldiers-turned-content creators — habits that have rewired their brains, reshaped their behaviors, reduced their perspective on war to sheer propaganda, and diminished the profession.
The past week saw two Facebooking officers — one on active duty, the other long retired — getting punished for what essentially have been the persona they acquired through the many likes and shares that they’ve harvested on social media.
The irony is, the defense-military leadership had unleashed a weapon on social media that is now ranged against it. Under Duterte, it encouraged, coddled, and protected active-duty officers and soldiers who peddled lies, red-tagged harassed activists and journalists, and engaged in political punditry on Facebook and YouTube.
Commanders embraced social media as an effective propaganda weapon in their never-ending wars and especially in light of China’s sophisticated info warfare — without rigor in its implementation nor care for its consequence. On Facebook, soldiers shed off their uniforms and acted like any other user: posting selfies and groupies, sharing boodle-fight meals and travels, making psywar pages, and then, eventually, putting up multiple fake accounts that targeted Duterte critics. On YouTube, they created their own channels.
They got infected with the algorithmic virus that boosted their reputation, made them fall in love with themselves and their kuda, and took time away from the core habits — AND restrictions — of soldiery.
In today’s age of cognitive warfare, content creation is a tactic that any respected armed institution must deploy. But deployed in a vacuum, without institutional oversight, and unaided by a coherent strategy, such a tactic turns soldiers into vain, clout chasing content creators. General Brawner needs to fix this — assuming he knows it needs fixing.
Here are some of Rappler’s bests that you shouldn’t miss:
Val Villanueva takes apart the political and business context behind the rise and big-ticket transactions of Batangas Representative Leandro Leviste. Ombudsman Boying Remulla said the young congressman is being probed for “selling” his solar energy franchise to Manny V. Pangilinan.
Dwight de Leon looks into the so-called files of the late public works undersecretary Cathy Cabral, who played a critical role in the government’s huge infra projects.
Raymund Narag tackles the James Deakin controversy — and how the Land Transportation Office bureaucracy dealt with it.
Igor Blazevic, a democracy activist, questions the recent visit of Philippine Foreign Secretary Maria Theresa Lazaro to Myanmar.
Cebu landfill landslide exposes ‘broken waste management,’ groups say
The collapse of a landfill in Cebu City that has killed four people reflects government lapses in waste management, according to environmentalists.
Bakit may nakatira pa rin sa Mayon danger zone?
Mayon continues to be restive, yet the thousands who live within the danger zone have not been brought to a permanent relocation site.
Davao’s P530M confidential funds still top Metro Manila cities’ total in 2024
While the amount is massive, the audit commission said the city complied with auditing rules.
[In This Economy] Debunking misleading claims about the 2026 budget
A budget that’s cleaner than the previous ones? Don’t take the politicians’ word for it.
Google, AI firm settle lawsuit over teen’s suicide linked to chatbot
The lawsuit was filed by a mother from Florida who alleged that a chatbot led to the suicide of her 14-year-old son.
– Rappler.com
Rappler’s Best is a weekly newsletter of our top picks delivered straight to your inbox every Monday. Visit rappler.com/newsletters to subscribe.
The views expressed by the writer are his/her own and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of Rappler.


