Thursday, January 22, 2026

The Criminologist
Let Us Stop Being StupidCorruption Is A Crime, Not Politics

CORRUPTION IS A criminal issue, not a political one.

The testimonies piling up on how politicians, bureaucrats, and businessmen conspire to raid the coffers tell us this is not mere incompetence or mismanagement. It is organized crime. It is theft in broad daylight, sanctioned not by law but by collusion. 

Politicians earmark the loot, bureaucrats arrange the grand heist, businessmen lend their names and fake receipts, banks clear the release, auditors pocket their cuts, and revenue officials collect their shares. Everybody gets a slice. Like the Mafia, it has its rules, its roles, its code. Who should be given. Who should be spared. Who should shut up.

And like all criminals, they eventually become careless. They get drunk on their impunity. They flaunt their mansions, their cars, their jewelry, their outlandish lifestyles. They no longer bother with delicadeza. They do not care that people drown in floods because of substandard projects, or that families bury their dead because of corruption in infrastructure. For them, the only measure is the next deal, the next cut, the next chance to make more money. It is not governance. It is banditry.

And yet, partisans keep pretending it is political. Duterte’s loyalists harp on the corruption of the Marcos Jr. government. Marcos loyalists harp on the corruption of Duterte’s people. The spectacle plays out in Senate hearings, where questions are asked not to unearth truth but to corner enemies and shield allies. Corruption is made to look like it existed only under the other camp.

That is stupid.

‘And like all criminals, they eventually become careless. They get drunk on their impunity. They flaunt their mansions, their cars, their jewelry, their outlandish lifestyles. They no longer bother with delicadeza.’

NOT PRO-FILIPINO

Corruption is not partisan. It is not red versus green, DDS versus BBM. It is not about left, right, or center. It has only one color: the color of corruption. And it bleeds the Filipino people dry.

All corrupt officials, bureaucrats, and businessmen must be unmasked, investigated, prosecuted, convicted, and jailed. No one spared—whether they wear the cloak of Marcos or Duterte or anyone else. They are not pro-Filipino. They are anti-Filipino. They are thieves.

So stop politicizing it. The more we divide it into camps, the more the corrupt win. The more we turn it into spectacle, the less chance we have of cleaning the Augean stables. The fight against corruption cannot be selective. It must be total.

RUN LIKE A CARTEL

Let us begin with the Department of Public Works and Highways, where flood control projects have long been nothing but flood-causing corruption. But do not stop there. There are entire agencies that run like cartels, each with its own padrino, each with its own racket. Expose them all.

If we fail to do this, corruption will not just remain our politics. It will remain our culture, our curse, and our crime.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Because Looking 20 Lbs...

SO YOU JUMPED on the Ozempic train. The weight...

The January Blues: When...

JANUARY IS MARKETED as a reset. Clean slate. New planner....

The Hidden Link Between...

YOU SURVIVED CHICKENPOX as a child. Tiny red dots. Oatmeal...

Walking Pneumonia: The Cold...

IF YOU'VE BEEN coughing for weeks, sounding like a...

Bacteria Made Me Do...

YOU THINK YOUR brain’s in charge? Cute. Like really...

Newsletter

Related

AWOL Bato, Guilty!

FROM NOVEMBER 11, 2025 until today, the Hague-based International Criminal Court...

PSE Should Act Fast 

AFTER WE EXPOSED another grand scheme involving a presidential kin,...

Desecration Of Scenic Sites Continues

OUR COUNTRY HAS an abundance of cretin and mindless...

Translacion: Faith And Safety

THE FILIPINO FAITHFUL’S devotion to Jesus the Nazarene, the Black...

Stewardship Through Mangrove Reforestation

THE TREE-PLANTING FEVER is not happening only on flat lands, uplands, and...

More from Author

Raymund Narag
Raymund Narag
Condensed version of the Facebook post of Dr. Raymund Narag, an associate professor at the Southern Illinois University in the US, with his permission. Dr. Narag completed his graduate studies on Criminal Justice at the Michigan State University and had a teaching stint at the University of the Philippines-Diliman and at the Michigan State University. He has been conducting continuous studies on the subject in the Philippines.