Skip to main content

Posts

Featured

The Thousand at the Crossing: A Philosophical Essay on People Power, Corruption, and the Bet on Change in Pasig

The Thousand at the Crossing: A Philosophical Essay on People Power, Corruption, and the Bet on Change in Pasig Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ June 30, 2026   In the sticky heat of Pasig’s Crossing — that messy crossroads where the slow-moving Pasig River meets Manila’s endless traffic and frustration — one bold statement captures centuries of thinking about power and politics: > “Give me a thousand volunteers at Crossing, Pasig — a thousand volunteers with US support and I guarantee you before the end of the day, there will be changes. Expect it to reach a million tomorrow, and they won’t leave until the corrupt are kicked out.” This is not just typical political talk. It is a deep claim about hidden power (*potentia*) versus official power (*potestas*), and the ordinary people’s untapped strength against a rotten, stuck government. It mixes ideas from thinkers like Machiavelli (the power of bold action) and Hannah Arendt (real politics happening when people show up together in public...

Latest Posts

The Thousand at the Crossing: A Philosophical Exegesis on Spontaneous Sovereignty, Corrupt Entropy, and the Pasig Gambit

Fractured Mandalas: Patronage, Precarity, and the Ironic Alchemy of Philippine Artistic Liberation in the Shadow of Gallery Collapse