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Recto’s Stand for Truth vs Leviste’s Web of Manufactured Lies

  • Gabriela Silang, Receipts Don't Lie
  • Opinion, Receipts Don't Lie
  • May 5, 2026
  • No Comments

In today’s political climate, not all attacks are meant to prove a point. Some are meant to overwhelm.

They rely on repetition, not evidence. Volume, not verification. Their function is not to inform but to distract, pulling attention away from governance and into a cycle of defense where allegations move faster than facts. In that environment, truth does not lose because it is disproven. It loses because it is buried.

This is the terrain Executive Secretary Ralph Recto is pushing back against. *His statement did not mention Rep. Leandro Leviste by full name, but it came as Leviste’s recent allegations against him continued to draw public attention.*

Recto’s statement is not merely a personal defense. It is a refusal to normalize a kind of politics that rewards noise over substance and accusation over accountability. It points to a deeper shift in public discourse, where misinformation spreads with speed, character attacks replace argument, and digital platforms amplify claims long before they are tested.

That shift comes at a cost.

Public officials are increasingly forced to spend time managing narratives instead of delivering results. Governance becomes reactive. Attention fragments. Substance competes with spectacle, and too often, spectacle wins.

What Recto appears to be confronting is not legitimate criticism, which remains essential in any functioning democracy. It is something more corrosive: the use of noise as a political instrument. Claims are introduced not necessarily to be proven, but to be repeated. Over time, repetition itself begins to stand in for truth.

That is where the line has to be drawn.

When volume replaces evidence, accountability becomes distorted. When perception moves faster than verification, trust erodes. And when every claim is treated as equally credible, the public loses the ability to distinguish what matters from what is manufactured.

This is why Recto’s insistence on measurable outcomes matters. Roads built. Schools constructed. Programs delivered. These are not mere talking points. They are verifiable indicators of governance.

In a landscape saturated with narrative, evidence becomes a form of discipline. It anchors the conversation in something that can be checked, weighed, and judged on its merits.

There is also a broader context that cannot be ignored. Coordinated disinformation and digital manipulation are no longer fringe concerns. They are embedded in how public opinion is shaped. The lines between fact and fabrication are increasingly blurred, not by accident, but by design.

Recto’s warning against distractions framed as controversy is, at its core, a warning about this environment. Not every issue elevated into public view is meant to clarify. Some are meant to confuse.

And confusion is not neutral. It weakens institutions. It dilutes accountability. It creates space where responsibility can be avoided rather than enforced.

At the same time, his position underscores a standard that should not be negotiable. Public service must be grounded in integrity. Decisions cannot be shaped by pressure, inducement, or convenience, but by what is lawful and defensible.

That standard is not idealistic. It is functional. Without it, governance becomes vulnerable to exactly the kind of distortions he is calling out.

Ultimately, this goes beyond Recto and Leviste. It speaks to the conditions under which democracy operates. Systems do not weaken only when corruption takes hold. They weaken when confusion becomes routine, when the public can no longer easily tell what is real from what is constructed.

When that happens, accountability does not disappear. It becomes ineffective.

Insisting on clarity in that environment is not a matter of style. It is a matter of stability.

The country faces real challenges that require sustained focus, including economic pressures, infrastructure gaps, and the daily realities faced by Filipinos who expect results, not rhetoric. Addressing these demands discipline in both governance and discourse.

Recto’s position is ultimately a simple one: claims must be tested against evidence, performance must outweigh narrative, and public discourse must be anchored in truth, not driven by noise.

That is not a high standard.

It is the minimum required to keep the system working.

And in the current climate, it is one worth defending, firmly and without apology.

Strip away the noise, and the divide is clear: one side answers with outcomes, the other with amplification.

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