Thursday, February 26, 2026

The International Criminal Court operates on real legal thresholds, evidence, standards, and judicial scrutiny

Here’s a summary of the confirmation hearing yesterday for those who didn’t watch it.
The proceedings at the International Criminal Court were not a trial, but they were serious and consequential. This stage is about one central question: is there enough evidence to send Rodrigo Duterte to a full trial for crimes against humanity?
The judges are not deciding guilt.
They are deciding whether prosecutors have shown “substantial grounds to believe” that crimes were committed and that Duterte bears criminal responsibility.
The prosecution presented a structured and disciplined case.
Their theory was clear: the killings associated with the drug war were not random excesses by rogue officers, but part of a widespread and systematic attack against civilians.
They described Duterte as “pivotal” and central to the policy environment that allegedly enabled and encouraged the violence.
The argument focused on patterns of operations, public pronouncements, institutional behavior, and the concept of command responsibility.
This was framed as a matter of structure and authority, not just rhetoric.
Victims’ representatives reinforced that argument with emotional force. Families spoke of years of fear and failed domestic accountability. For many, the ICC represents the only realistic venue left to examine what happened.
There was visible disappointment that Duterte chose not to attend in person. Symbolically, it underscored the distance between the accused and those who claim they were harmed.
The defense, led by Nicholas Kaufman, took a sharply political tone. Kaufman characterized the case as politically motivated and accused the prosecution of cherry-picking Duterte’s “bombastic” rhetoric.
He argued that strong language does not equal criminal intent.
However, the defense did NOT present witnesses, documentary counter-evidence, or an alternative factual narrative at this stage. Instead, it focused largely on attacking the prosecution’s framing and motives.
That is legally permissible.
But strategically, it is notable.
When prosecutors are presenting structured claims supported by documentation and patterns, responding primarily with claims of political bias risks sounding more like a press conference than a courtroom rebuttal. Confirmation hearings require judges to assess evidence, not campaign narratives.
And this is where the tone of the defense became particularly striking.
Portions of Kaufman’s opening statement appeared less focused on dismantling the prosecution’s evidentiary claims and more aligned with broader political messaging.
Observers could not ignore how some arguments seemed tailored for domestic consumption, particularly within the Philippine political landscape, rather than strictly for the ICC bench.
The closing impression was unmistakable.
Nicholas Kaufman did not sound like a lawyer singularly focused on dismantling the prosecution’s evidence before the International Criminal Court.
He sounded like someone delivering a political speech for a domestic audience. Instead of aggressively attacking the factual backbone of the case against Rodrigo Duterte, he leaned heavily into claims of political persecution and rhetorical framing.
Huwag na tayong mag-plastikan...
He is reportedly being paid staggering legal fees (150,000,000) pesos per month to defend Duterte in one of the most serious international criminal proceedings possible.
Many even joked that he is becoming the highest paid DDS blogger.
This is not a political rally...
This is not a press briefing..
This is the ICC.
The judges care about evidence, command responsibility, patterns of killings, and documentary records, not campaign messaging.
Yet large portions of his opening statement felt less like a legal strategy to block confirmation of charges and more like narrative rehabilitation for Sara Duterte and the broader Duterte political brand heading into 2028.
It sounded calibrated for political optics, not judicial persuasion.
That is a dangerous miscalculation.
ICC judges are not voters or easily swayed by logically fallacies.
They are not swayed by emotional rhetoric about politics.
They assess whether the prosecution has met a legal threshold.
If your response to structured allegations is mainly “this is political,” without presenting hard counter-evidence, it does not neutralize the case, it simply sidesteps it.
Bluntly put: it looked less like a courtroom defense and more like a campaign stage.
And when your client is facing potential crimes against humanity charges, turning your opening into a political shield instead of a surgical legal rebuttal raises serious questions about priorities.
Now the Chamber deliberates.
If the charges are confirmed, the case moves to full trial, where political messaging will matter far less than evidence under oath.
And I think. Highly likely the case will proceed to trial
However, If they are not, it will reshape the accountability landscape entirely.
However, if the charges are not confirmed, it will fundamentally reshape the accountability landscape—not just for this case, but for future efforts to pursue international justice.
But one thing was crystal clear yesterday: the International Criminal Court operates on real legal thresholds, evidence, standards, and judicial scrutiny, not on DDS troll narratives or online propaganda metrics.
- JLB

Receiving “Good” Things

February 26, 2026
Thursday of the First Week of Lent
Readings for Today

Andrei Mironov, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Video

Jesus said to his disciples: “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks, finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.” Matthew 7:7–8

Will God grant us whatever we ask for? Though one might conclude this from today’s Gospel, Jesus qualifies His statement by adding, “...how much more will your heavenly Father give good things to those who ask him.” In other words, God always gives “good” things to those who sincerely ask. The key question is: What qualifies as good?

If we desire something—such as a new car—and perceive it as good, will God grant us that wish simply because we ask in faith? Only if God also sees that gift as good for us. He promises to meet our most basic material needs and provide for all our spiritual needs, but He might not see specific requests as beneficial. For instance, what if driving an old car is better for your soul in fostering simplicity or detachment? God may prompt us to forego that desire for a new car in exchange for something better. God always offers us what is truly good, but this good is defined by His perfect wisdom, not by our immediate wants.

What, then, does God perceive as good? Above all, He is the ultimate Good. God is Goodness itself, and there is nothing greater we can ask for than the gift of Himself. If we ask Him to fill our hearts with His grace, uniting Himself with our souls, He will never fail to do so. Moreover, God’s will is perfect in every way. If we seek His will, He will reveal it to us. The door He wants to open is the one that leads us to grace, mercy, and the fulfillment of His will. It will always be opened when we knock on this door with a heart seeking His divine plan.

One of the most common human struggles is to discern the difference between our will and God’s. In our fallen state, we are confused about what is truly good. As a result, when we perceive something as good—such as material success, comfort, or recognition—our desires often become fixated on that false good. Once this attachment forms, letting go and trusting God's will can be challenging.

The remedy is detachment—precisely, detachment from our disordered desires. Our passions and desires can be unruly, leading us to pursue things not aligned with God’s plan. Detachment begins with allowing God’s truth to purify our minds and reorder our desires. As divine wisdom takes root, we begin to desire what God desires and become free from selfish ambitions. This interior transformation enables us to ask, seek, and knock for the things that lead to holiness.

Reflect today on Jesus’ call to ask, seek, and knock. Do so abundantly—but not for superficial wants or fleeting pleasures. Instead, ask for God Himself and His holy will to be made manifest in your life. Pray that He fills you with His grace, purifies your thoughts, and aligns your desires with His perfect plan. When you do, your Heavenly Father will bestow upon you every good thing beyond anything you could ask for.

God of perfect Goodness, Your ways are infinitely wise and holy. You desire only the true good for Your children. Please purify my mind and heart so I may desire nothing but You and Your will. Free me from selfish attachments and misguided desires, and pour forth Your abundant grace into my life. Jesus, I trust in You.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

The Greatest Miracle

February 25, 2026
Wednesday of the First Week of Lent
Readings for Today

Jonah by Lawrence OP, license CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.

Video

While still more people gathered in the crowd, Jesus said to them, “This generation is an evil generation; it seeks a sign, but no sign will be given it, except the sign of Jonah.” Luke 11:29

Today’s Gospel takes place during the midpoint of Jesus’ public ministry. By this time, He had healed the sick, cast out demons, raised the dead, preached many powerful sermons, and changed many hearts. Despite that, many in the crowds did not believe in Him and demanded more signs.

Additionally, the Pharisees were becoming increasingly hostile toward our Lord. In Luke’s Gospel, they confront and criticize Jesus several times before this passage. In today’s Gospel, Jesus addresses His rebuke to these Pharisees and the unbelieving crowds.

If Jesus’ generation was “an evil generation,” what would He say about our own? In many ways, we are becoming a global culture. While there are countless faithful followers of Christ worldwide, evil seems to be more pervasive today, perhaps more noticeable due to the ease of worldwide communication.

Though Jesus delivered His sermons to specific people in His time, His words transcend time and are meant for every generation. When He says, “This generation is an evil generation…,” we must understand that He is also speaking to us today.

When Jesus says His generation “seeks a sign,” He points out a common human temptation. Many approach the Gospel skeptically, demanding irrefutable proof that they should change their lives, believe in the Good News, and abandon sin. In today’s world, some even glorify sin, treating virtue as outdated or foolish. This distorted outlook leads many to disregard the most important sign of all—Jesus’ Death and Resurrection.

Yet Jesus is clear: “…no sign will be given it, except the sign of Jonah.” Jonah’s three days in the belly of the fish prefigured Jesus’ three days in the tomb. In other words, Jesus’ Death and Resurrection is the one and only sign given to us. This is striking because so many fail to pay attention to this ultimate sign of salvation. In the end, we can only change ourselves and hope that our conversion becomes a witness to others.

Do you believe in this sign? Do you believe that Jesus’ Life, Death, and Resurrection is the sole path to salvation? Most likely, you do. But how deep is that belief?

Though Jesus performed many miracles during His earthly ministry, He did so as a response to the faith already present in those around Him. Today, the same is true. Physical miracles mean little compared to the saving Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Christ. They are merely reflections of the greatest miracle—eternal salvation. If you truly want to witness a miracle, turn to this supreme gift of grace and mercy. Believe with all your heart, and you will witness the transformation of your soul, which is the greatest miracle of all.

Reflect today on Jesus’ rebuke of the evil surrounding us, which demands proof but refuses to see the one sign that truly matters. The only proof Jesus offers is the grace that transforms us. When we discover and embrace this grace, we will know, believe, and be changed. Open your heart to the miracle of conversion that God desires to bestow upon you, and become a witness of Christ’s greatest miracle for others to see.

My miraculous Lord, though many in every age seek superficial signs, You offer the one true miracle that brings salvation—Your Life, Death, and Resurrection. Please help me to believe with unwavering faith, and protect me from the evil of this generation. Transform my heart so that I may be the fruit of the miracle You wish to give to the world. Jesus, I trust in You.