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"Kulang ang dinalang babae ng bugaw". Can you imagine your parents still worship a corrupt political family with this type of behavior and this level of moral compass.


The Vice President Defined Her Brother's Behavior, Caught on Security Camera as 'Planted Evidence' and 'Political Harassment'. Welcome to the World of Entitled Political Clans.

When a corrupt political dynasty is treated almost like a crime family or drug cartel—and people are encouraged to *worship* them—the danger isn’t just “bad leadership.” It reshapes the whole moral and political landscape.


Worship Over Accountability: What “Worship” Does

 

Worship isn’t just support; it’s:

 

- Treating the family as “above criticism”

- Seeing loyalty as “more important than truth or justice”

- Accepting or excusing their “violence and corruption” as “necessary”  

 

Once that mindset takes over, normal democratic checks—laws, courts, media, elections, public opinion—start to lose their power. The dynasty becomes something like a “state-approved cartel” wrapped in flags and slogans.

 

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Normalization of Violence and Intimidation

 

When a dynasty behaves like drug lords and is still worshipped:

 

- Violence becomes “just how things are done. Assassinations, disappearances, or brutal crackdowns get framed as “protecting stability.”

- People begin to “self-censor out of fear. Journalists, activists, academics, even ordinary citizens stay silent to avoid trouble.

- Kids grow up learning that “brutality is strength” and empathy is weakness.  

 

The line between politics and organized crime blurs. Once that line is gone, recovering a culture of peaceful disagreement is extremely hard.


 

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Collapse of Independent Institutions

 

A worshipped dynasty wants everything under its control:

 

- Media gets captured or bullied; propaganda replaces journalism.  

- Civil service becomes a network of loyalists instead of professionals.  

- Schools and culture get politicized—history is rewritten to glorify the dynasty.

 

The danger here is long-term: even if the dynasty eventually falls, institutions are hollowed out, and rebuilding trust in them takes ages.

 

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Dynastic Entrenchment and Lack of Renewal

 

When a family is treated like it has a natural right to rule:

 

- Politics becomes hereditary, not merit-based.  

- Fresh ideas and new leaders are shut out or crushed.  

- Even internal reform from within their own camp is seen as betrayal.

 

That’s dangerous because societies change, but an entrenched dynasty rarely does. The mismatch between a rigid power structure and a changing society often leads to deeper crises later: unrest, coups, or violent transitions.

 

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 International Isolation and Long-Term Damage

 

If a dynasty behaves like drug lords with a flag:

 

- Other countries and institutions may sanction, isolate, or distrust the state.  

- Investment drops; talented citizens emigrate.  

- The country gains a reputation for **corruption and danger** that is hard to shake.

 

Citizens pay the price: fewer opportunities, weaker economy, travel difficulties—even if they never supported the dynasty.

 

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 Why “Worship” is More Dangerous than Simple Support

 

Criticizable support is normal in politics. The real danger begins when support turns into worship:

 

- No red lines. Anything is excused.  

- No accountability. Criticism is seen as betrayal.  

- No peaceful exit. The dynasty must stay, “or chaos will come.”

 

That’s exactly the psychology you see around powerful criminal bosses: fear, loyalty, and myth-making. When that pattern fuses with the machinery of the state, you get a system that can be more durable and damaging than a cartel, because it has legal authority and symbols of legitimacy.

Erosion of the Rule of Law

 

When a violent, corrupt dynasty is idolized:

 

- Laws stop being universal. Ordinary people are punished; the dynasty and its allies are untouchable.

- Police and security forces can be weaponized. Instead of protecting the public, they protect the family and harass its enemies.

- Judges and prosecutors are pressured or bought. You get “justice” only if it suits the dynasty’s interests.

 

Over time, citizens learn: laws are just tools of the powerful. That lesson doesn’t disappear easily—it poisons trust for generations.

 

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Deep Corruption and Theft of the Future

 

A corrupt dynasty doesn’t just steal money; it steals possibilities:

 

- “Public funds are looted” through fake projects, shady contracts, and favoritism.  

- “Basic services rot”-health, education, infrastructure—because money is siphoned off.  

- “Talented people leave” or are sidelined because loyalty beats competence.

 

When people worship that dynasty, they “justify” all this:

  

“They’re strong leaders; others would steal too; at least we know them; the country needs a firm hand…”

 

That moral cover lets them extract wealth for years, even decades, while ordinary people stay stuck.

 

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 Psychological Capture of Supporters

 

For individuals, worshipping such a dynasty can be destructive:

 

- Cognitive dissonance: Supporters see evidence of corruption or violence, but to protect their identity they dismiss it as lies, foreign plots, or exaggerations.

- Moral inversion: Acts that would clearly be wrong from anyone else become “necessary,” “patriotic,” or “misunderstood” when done by the dynasty.

- Us-vs-them extremism: Critics are seen not just as opponents, but as traitors, enemies, or subhumans.

 

This psychological capture can push people to defend the indefensible—and even participate in harassment or violence they’d never imagine committing otherwise.

 

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Social Division and Scapegoating

 

To maintain worship, a violent corrupt dynasty often needs enemies:

 

- They blame certain groups (regions, minorities, political rivals, “elites,” “foreign agents”) for all problems.  

- They reward loyal communities and punish others, deepening resentment.

 

Over time:

 

- Neighbor turns against neighbor.  

- Families split over political loyalty.  

- Violence between groups becomes easier to ignite.

 

What started as “political loyalty” becomes a kind of social fracture line that can last long after the dynasty is gone.


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