If the world was like, super perfect, like, totally utopian, then maybe your "due process" thingy would be, like, effective and could probably solve the war on drugs issue, right? But hellooo, we don't live in that kind of world—like, so far from it—and honestly, I'm thinking it's never gonna happen. Not that we should totally give up on hoping, but we have to be, like, realistic, especially when it comes to power, you know?
Think about the inherent flaws of the people implementing this due process (except for the human rights activists, obvi). It's so evident how their shortcomings contributed to why there even is a war on drugs, 'cause, like, our system has been failing for so long, duh.
The media, oh my gosh, they really played a huge role in making the drug war super polarized, plus, those social justice warriors who are so feeling moral high ground. They made it seem like it was a total genocide, like so many innocent lives were lost. But in reality, we all know it was, like, a mix of corrupt cops, drug lords, pushers, and sadly, some innocent people got caught in the middle, sayang.
It's kinda ironic, noh, that these human rights activists, even the ICC, are so vocal about justice for EJK victims, but they're kinda silent on the abortion issue, which, arguably, has taken more innocent lives than the war on drugs, diba?
The reaction naman of DDS supporters to DU30's arrest, it wasn't a rejection of "due process" in itself. For us, it was a reaction to what we saw as a politically motivated action and, like, an infringement on our national sovereignty.
I do agree naman that the War on Drugs should have been done with more transparency and accountability. And I believe that those who were innocently killed deserve justice, for sure. If DU30 is found guilty in the war on drugs thing, I can accept that—provided the proceedings are within our own, like, sovereign territory.
It's just so nakakalungkot that our nation has basically become a narco-state. If there's no drastic action, more innocent lives will inevitably be lost, for sure talaga.
Think about the inherent flaws of the people implementing this due process (except for the human rights activists, obvi). It's so evident how their shortcomings contributed to why there even is a war on drugs, 'cause, like, our system has been failing for so long, duh.
The media, oh my gosh, they really played a huge role in making the drug war super polarized, plus, those social justice warriors who are so feeling moral high ground. They made it seem like it was a total genocide, like so many innocent lives were lost. But in reality, we all know it was, like, a mix of corrupt cops, drug lords, pushers, and sadly, some innocent people got caught in the middle, sayang.
It's kinda ironic, noh, that these human rights activists, even the ICC, are so vocal about justice for EJK victims, but they're kinda silent on the abortion issue, which, arguably, has taken more innocent lives than the war on drugs, diba?
The reaction naman of DDS supporters to DU30's arrest, it wasn't a rejection of "due process" in itself. For us, it was a reaction to what we saw as a politically motivated action and, like, an infringement on our national sovereignty.
I do agree naman that the War on Drugs should have been done with more transparency and accountability. And I believe that those who were innocently killed deserve justice, for sure. If DU30 is found guilty in the war on drugs thing, I can accept that—provided the proceedings are within our own, like, sovereign territory.
It's just so nakakalungkot that our nation has basically become a narco-state. If there's no drastic action, more innocent lives will inevitably be lost, for sure talaga.