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Thursday, March 26, 2026

Scribbles of discontent: Graffiti and banyulatin as works of literature


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The law often dismisses graffiti as “destruction,” “anarchy,” or even as mere “dirt.” But new research from the Ateneo de Manila University’s Filipino Department reveals what laws may not: that graffiti can be seen as works of literature emerging from unequal access to space and speech. Indeed, vandalism and bathroom graffiti—banyulatin in Filipino—beg us to ask why someone felt compelled to write them in the first place.


When speech is pushed out of public life, it finds refuge in the margins: spray-paint scrawls sinking into walls and corners, words etched into bathroom stalls. Graffiti settles into spaces where the authority’s gaze is less sharp. Although public spaces are often imagined as open and neutral, in truth, they are sites of contestation: places where power decides whose voices may linger and whose must fade quietly into the cracks.


Faculty researcher Harvey James G. Castillo listens closely to these voices. His work reveals that graffiti and banyulatin are far from mindless acts of vandalism; instead, they are honest attempts to be heard when power silences dissent. These suppressed forms of writing ask us to read beyond policy and see literature as an instrument where repression and expression meet. 


Drawing on Filipino literature, Castillo shows how graffiti is shaped by risk anchored in spatial struggle. Anger, humor, political critique, and despair surface in these markings because official forums often cannot accommodate them. Public walls, then, become grounds for voices excluded from dominant narratives of progress and civility.


These spatial politics show how power governs not just what is said, but where it appears. As Castillo posits, some spaces become permissible only when the state controls the message it once condemned, even as other spaces become criminalized. In this front-and-back politics of space, names of the wealthy are displayed in plain view, while informal markings of the marginalized are pushed to the back and hidden parts of infrastructure. Literature often highlights bathrooms as semi-private spaces where authority loosens, and anonymity frees people to speak more openly. Here, banyulatin becomes conversations of collective tensions and anxieties.


Exposing how legal approaches to graffiti fall short, Castillo turns to Philippine literature as a site of liberation. While laws may seek to punish and paint over graffiti, literature restores context—situating these writings within specific historical moments, including dictatorship, class struggle, and social surveillance. In this light, graffiti is not simply an offense, but a kind of testimony. It transforms into voices that persist and echo long after walls have been repainted countless times.


When one reads these walls through the lens of literature, following the stories that fill their cracks and corners, one uncovers narratives of hope, defiance, and a refusal to be erased from the social fabric. In spaces where survival and resistance take root, these writings continue to matter: today, as questions of voice and belonging intensify, graffiti remains a vital intervention in public discourse.


What was once dismissed as noise becomes something to be read, interpreted, and remembered.


Harvey James G. Castillo published “Tinig-Karakter sa mga Pader: Graffiti, Bandalismo, at mga Banyulatin sa Piling Panitikang Filipino” in Humanities Diliman: A Journal on Philippine Humanities in December 2025.

The Brink of Darkness: Inside EO 110 and the Battle for the Philippines’ Energy Future


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MANILA, Philippines — In a move that signals a nation bracing for a storm, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. has signed Executive Order No. 110, officially plunging the Philippines into a State of National Energy Emergency.


This isn't just a bureaucratic shift; it is a high-stakes mobilization. With the Middle East teetering on the edge of a wider conflict and the "jugular" of global oil—the Strait of Hormuz—under threat, the Philippines is moving to protect its 110 million citizens from a potential total blackout of the economy.


The Catalyst: A World on Fire

The "Whereas" clauses of EO 110 read like a geopolitical thriller. The document cites "recent hostilities" involving the United States, Israel, and Iran. For a country like the Philippines—a net importer of petroleum—this isn't just news; it’s an existential threat.


The logic is simple and terrifying:


Global Volatility: Conflict drives oil prices to the moon.


Supply Chain Paralysis: If the Strait of Hormuz closes, the oil stops flowing.


Domestic Fragility: Without fuel, the lights go out, the food stops moving, and the wheels of industry grind to a halt.


The Shield: Introducing "Project UPLIFT"

To combat this looming shadow, the President has authorized the Unified Package for Livelihoods, Industry, Food, and Transport (UPLIFT).


This isn't just a committee; it’s a "War Room" for the economy. Led by the President himself and flanked by every major cabinet secretary from Energy to Social Welfare, the UPLIFT Committee has been granted sweeping powers to ensure that even if the world markets fail, the Filipino people do not.


The UPLIFT Mandate:

Total Market Control: Monitoring the movement of every drop of fuel and every grain of rice to prevent hoarding and "profiteering."


The Power of the Purse: The DOE and PNOC are now authorized to bypass standard hurdles to procure fuel, with the power to make advance payments of up to 15% of contract amounts to secure the nation’s supply.


Infrastructure Lockdown: Ensuring that hospitals, public transport, and water utilities remain operational at all costs.


The Strategy: Survival and Transformation

EO 110 is a two-pronged blade. While it fights the immediate crisis, it also forces a radical transformation of how the country uses power.


1. Relief for the Masses

The Department of Transportation (DOTr) has been ordered to unleash "Libreng Sakay" (Free Rides) and fuel subsidies. There is even talk of suspending toll fees and aviation charges to keep the cost of living from exploding. Meanwhile, the DSWD is fast-tracking "Assistance to Individuals in Crisis Situations" (AICS) for the hardest-hit workers—farmers, fisherfolk, and repatriated OFWs.


2. A Forced Green Revolution?

In a surprising twist, the emergency order is being used as a catalyst for a cleaner future. The committee is tasked with accelerating the transition to Electric Vehicles (EVs) and renewable energy in agriculture. It seems the government’s plan to survive the oil crisis is to stop needing oil altogether.


3. Government Austerity

The state is leading by example. Memorandum Circular No. 114 mandates "stricter energy conservation" in all government offices. If you see a dark government building at night, it’s not because they’re closed—it’s because they’re in the trenches of the energy war.


The Bottom Line: A One-Year Countdown

The declaration is set for an initial one-year duration. It is a window of time for the Philippines to decouple itself from the chaos of the Middle East and fortify its own shores.


The private sector and local government units (LGUs) are being "strongly urged" to fall in line—implementing flexible work arrangements and enforcing fair pricing. In the eyes of EO 110, there is no room for bystanders.


As of March 24, 2026, the Philippines is no longer just observing global history; it is fighting to ensure it isn’t a victim of it.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Silent Toll: How Carbon Emissions are Redrawing the Global Map of Survival


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For decades, the true cost of a single ton of carbon dioxide has been a ghost in the machine of global economics—a haunting presence we knew existed but could never quite measure. Now, a groundbreaking study from the Climate Impact Lab, published in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, has finally put a price on the ultimate consequence: human life.


The findings are stark. Every ton of CO2

  we pump into the atmosphere today carries a "mortality tag" of $36.60. It is a ledger written in temperature extremes, and as the mercury rises, the world is being split into those who can afford to adapt and those who will pay with their lives.


The U-Shaped Death Curve

At the heart of the research is a universal biological truth: humans have a "sweet spot" for survival. By analyzing 399 million death records across 41 countries, researchers uncovered a distinct U-shaped relationship between temperature and mortality.


The Cold Sting: When temperatures drop below -4°C (25°F), mortality rates climb as the cold strains cardiovascular systems.


The Heat Surge: When temperatures soar above 35°C (95°F), the impact is even more lethal. A single extreme heat day increases the global mortality rate by 4 deaths per million people.


A Tale of Two Cities: Wealth as a Shield

The study reveals a disturbing "adaptation gap." Climate change isn't just a weather phenomenon; it’s an inequality multiplier. The ability to survive an extreme day depends less on the thermometer and more on the bank account.


Factor

High-Income Regions (e.g., Oslo, Norway)

Low-Income Regions (e.g., Accra, Ghana)


Primary Impact

Economic: Massive spending on HVAC and infrastructure.

Biological: Sharp spikes in actual death rates.


Projected 2100 Outcome

-25.2 deaths per 100,000 (Net lives saved due to fewer cold days).

+106.7 deaths per 100,000 (Net lives lost due to extreme heat).


Adaptation Cost

High (Rich countries spend 3x more to protect citizens).

Low (Lack of resources to invest in cooling).

In wealthy cities like Houston, heat is a nuisance managed by air conditioning. In Delhi, that same heat is a predator. The researchers found that failing to account for this adaptation—the "Houston Effect"—would lead us to overestimate global deaths, but it also highlights a grim reality: the poor are dying so the planet can stay "cheap" for the rest.


The Macro Picture: 2100 and the "New" Leading Cause of Death

If we stay on our current high-emissions path, the results are catastrophic. By the end of the century, the death toll from climate-driven temperature changes will reach 73 deaths per 100,000 people.


To put that in perspective, that is on par with the current global death rate for all infectious diseases combined—HIV, Malaria, and Tuberculosis included.


"We are essentially creating a new global pandemic, one ton of carbon at a time."


The Silver Lining: The Power of Mitigation

The report isn't just a eulogy; it's a call to action. The data shows that policy choices made today have a mathematical, life-saving impact.


High Emissions Scenario: CO2

  damages are valued at $36.6 per ton.


Moderate Emissions Scenario: If we stabilize emissions by 2050, that cost drops to $17.1 per ton.


By shifting to a moderate path, we don't just "help the environment"—we cut the projected mortality costs of warming by a staggering 84%.


The Bottom Line

For years, skeptics argued that climate models were too theoretical. This study changes the game by using hard empirical data from 24,378 distinct regions. It tells us that while the wealthy might spend their way into a safer, albeit more expensive, future, the world's most vulnerable are standing on the front lines of a thermal war they didn't start.


We now know the price of our emissions. The question is: are we willing to pay it?

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