Who do you call when the police murders? Who do you call when the murderers rule? Who do you call for justice and protection in a den of power-hungry fools?
Remember the woman who sold her body at a checkpoint just to make the bend? Remember the war veteran who was shot twice unarmed, even with a mind unable to comprehend?
Remember the young boy who went outside, only to get killed by four officers, for a crime no one really knew Remember the countless “casualties”, unfortunate "accidents" which never really made it through?
Some as young as six Some as young as two Some elderly, some misguided delinquents while some, well, they never do
Dictators and human rights violators “too old”or “too frail” to be punished While Jeepney drivers aged 70 and more take the whole brunt of the "fair" mallet
As thousands pushed into already cramped prison cells are unable to eat more than once a day While those rich enough to buy the law can still throw mañanitas and “meetings” every single day
Yet these blue shirted and barong-laden fools sometimes come together in TV to bumble about civil service with mouths still smelling of beer and of yesterday’s lechon kawali
Because remember, compassion is only for those who can sit in a palace-worthy chair Justice is only for the dead or for those whose pockets are already filled with blood of the bare
And now who's suffering for the lies? Who’s already taking the blame? Who will listen to the cries of the forgotten When our voices are no longer ours to claim?
As their guns point to our heads with the smiles of “para sa'yo itong serbisyo” Take off your blindfolds, your change is never coming Only hell is here, in disguise of a fiasco
A poem about the blatant corruption in the Philippines, Aking Inang Bayan.