J’enrage.
Encore un enfant assassiné par Israël à Gaza.
Il revenait de l’école, dans le camp de Jabalia, il portait son cartable.
Honte aux salopards qui ont fait ça .
Honte à la France, qui les a laissé faire.
رغم منع الاحتلال تصوير قطاع غزة من الجو لإخفاء الحقيقة عن العالم
إحدى القنوات الأجنبية استطاعت توثيق حجم الدمار في قطاع غزة
مدينة كاملة تحولت إلى رماد.. محرقة
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE Philippine College of Physicians AND HEALTH SECRETARY Ted Herbosa
Growing up as the son of Dr. Tony Leachon, my view of the medical profession was shaped entirely by his eyes. For as long as I can remember, I saw my father’s immense passion, dedication, and deep-seated pride in the Philippine College of Physicians (PCP). To him, the PCP was not just an organization; it was a sanctuary of integrity, excellence, and the highest standards of the medical community. I was raised to look up to the institution just as he did.
I remember, too, the genuine excitement my father felt during the dark days of the COVID-19 task force, when he looked forward to collaborating with Secretary Ted Herbosa.
When Secretary Herbosa later tapped him to serve as his special adviser at the Department of Health, my father was filled with an even greater joy to serve alongside someone he truly respected.
Between then and now, a great deal has happened, and relationships have grown complex—but there was a time, vivid in my memory, when my father genuinely looked up to you, Secretary Ted.
It is because of this lifelong respect that the events of the past few days have been so deeply painful to witness.
Internal medical association ethics disputes and disciplinary actions are, by long-standing tradition, handled strictly behind closed doors. This confidentiality exists for a vital reason: to protect the organization’s own integrity and to shield a physician’s professional standing from irreparable harm while internal legal remedies are being exhausted.
Therefore, the public airing of a 26-page internal Board of Regents decision is highly unusual, alarming, and profoundly unjust.
By allowing or enabling this decision to be thrust into the mainstream media before my father could fully exhaust his right to appeal, the PCP has violated its own confidentiality protocols. This is no longer a standard regulatory procedure; it has effectively become a trial by publicity. It is difficult not to see this deliberate leak as a coordinated smear campaign designed to dismantle his public credibility and destroy his reputation before he was even given a fair opportunity to legally defend himself.
As a son, it breaks my heart to see a man who has poured his life into public health advocacy be subjected to this kind of public humiliation by the very institutions he loved and served.
Justice cannot breathe in an environment of weaponized leaks. I appeal to the leadership of the PCP: in the interest of absolute fairness, professional decency, and the due process you guarantee to all your members, hold this suspension in abeyance pending a full, impartial review of new manifestations.
Do not let an institution built on healing be used to break one of its own.
Let the truth be settled through fair, quiet, and proper legal channels—not through the court of public destruction.
With my utmost respect,
Former Provincial Boardmember, 1st District of Oriental Mindoro & Loving Son,
Mikan Leachon.
PS: This is my first , only and last post regarding this topic.
🇵🇭 Pilipinas nating mahal.
#WeStandWithDocTony
GMA News Bilyonaryo The Manila Times Daily Tribune Board Member Mikan Leachon Page
Mikan Leachon
🌿 The Patient’s Voice Is the Ultimate Stakeholder 🌿
In healthcare, awards and titles fade, but a patient’s testimonial endures. At Manila Doctors Hospital, I was reminded once again that the truest measure of a physician’s worth is not found in plaques or positions, but in the gratitude of those whose lives we touch.
A patient’s words of thanks are more powerful than any recognition. They affirm that care is not only about treatment, but about compassion, presence, and integrity.
The internet is open for anyone to examine credibility and conduct. But in the end, it is the patient who decides if we have lived up to our calling.
✨ This is a great moment for truth and justice.
✨ This is why we serve.
✨ This is why we fight for health as a right, not a privilege.
#PatientTestimonial #TruthAndJustice #ManilaDoctorsHospital #HealthcareIntegrity
Unbowed in the Storm
Dear fellow Filipinos,
I am facing the greatest battle of my life—defending the Filipino people. There are threats to my life, my career, and even my PRC license. These threats have been relayed to me through persons, and I take them seriously.
If anything happens to me, let it be clear: politicians are the primary suspects.
I will fight for all of you. If I should lose this fight at the Philippine College of Physicians, then my clinical practice would be jeopardized. It is a difficult decision, but I will take the challenge, hoping that God and truth will be on my side.
I am not asking for help—only prayers.
At 65, I can say I have lived a good life. But I will not stop.
The Philippine College of Physicians has been used to silence me, and complicity is a crime.
God bless our country.
1/2
The PHILIPPINES: Soon a FAILED-STATE?
Corruption destroys money, institutions, and infrastructure.
But its most devastating casualty is the mind of a people.
A nation does not fall the moment its treasury is looted.
It falls the moment its citizens begin to adapt to being looted.
The slow death is psychological.
THE FIRST WOUND: LEARNING TO LOWER EXPECTATIONS
Decades of bribery, fake audits, ghost projects, political dynasties, and theatrical elections teach Filipinos a quiet lesson:
“Don’t expect too much.”
And so the Filipino mind bends.
We lower our standards until a functioning government office feels like a miracle.
We clap for politicians who merely show up.
We celebrate roads that took decades to finish.
We treat honesty like sainthood.
When a nation lowers its expectations, corruption no longer needs to hide.
It thrives in broad daylight.
A people who stop expecting better
will stop demanding better.
And a nation that stops demanding better
is already halfway to collapse.
THE SECOND WOUND: CONFUSING SURVIVAL WITH VIRTUE
Filipinos are endlessly praised for resilience.
But resilience has a dark twin: tolerance.
We learn diskarte.
We learn pasuway.
We learn backdoor channels, pakiusap, padrino, kilala-ko, lagay.
We convince ourselves that bending rules is “creative.”
That cheating the system is “just how you survive.”
That following the law is a luxury for the naive.
We turn coping mechanisms into character traits.
We begin mistaking brokenness for cleverness.
This is how corruption wins psychologically:
not by forcing dishonesty on the people,
but by making dishonesty feel normal.
THE THIRD WOUND: GLORIFYING THE VERY PEOPLE WHO ROB US
In countries with healthy political psychology, corrupt leaders are exiled, shamed, imprisoned, or erased from memory.
In the Philippines,
they get sequels.
A dynasty dies; its sibling resurrects.
A thief retires; his son campaigns.
A dictator falls; his heirs return as influencers.
And the people cheer.
Or shrug.
Or say, “Wala naman magbabago.”
This is not stupidity.
This is trauma.
When a population is repeatedly betrayed, abandoned, or punished for speaking out, the mind learns a protective mechanism:
we stop believing powerful people can ever be accountable.
So we vote based on entertainment.
We choose leaders who amuse us.
We cling to strongmen because they look decisive.
We excuse plunderers because “lahat naman sila magnanakaw.”
Psychologically, this is surrender wearing the mask of cynicism.
THE FOURTH WOUND: INTERNALIZED HELPLESSNESS
The most frightening consequence of normalized corruption is learned helplessness—
a condition where the citizen believes nothing they do will matter.
Why file a complaint if no one will read it?
Why expose a scandal if the whistleblower will be destroyed?
Why vote carefully if the dynasties always win?
Hopelessness becomes a national reflex.
The people stop resisting not because they agree…
but because they believe they are powerless.
A nation collapses the moment its citizens outsource their own future to fate.
THE FIFTH WOUND: MORAL EXHAUSTION
Corruption creates a moral climate where people are forced to choose between:
• being honest and getting left behind
• being dishonest and getting ahead
This psychological tension erodes the spirit.
Good people burn out.
Hardworking people give up.
Brave people get tired.
Dreamers leave the country.
The talented disappear abroad.
The nation slowly loses its best minds
and is left with those who have adapted
to mediocrity, manipulation, and survival-level thinking.
A country does not die because its enemies are strong.
A country dies because its good people become too tired to fight.
THE SIXTH WOUND: THE NORMALIZATION OF DECAY
When generations grow up seeing corruption as tradition,
the brain begins to adjust reality around it.
We stop imagining clean governance.
We stop imagining honest institutions.
We stop imagining a Philippines that works.
BREAKING:
Israel is now dropping bombs on residential buildings in Beirut, Lebanon’s capital city.
Not military bases.
Not battlefields.
Apartment blocks full of civilians.
There has never been a war in history where 80% of the country has been destroyed, 100% of the population displaced, and 50% of the deaths children.
Call it what it is: GENOCIDE.
Calm Amid Orchestrated Trials
The Philippine College of Physicians has imposed a six‑month suspension upon me, citing defamation. Yet what saddens me most is not the penalty itself, but the lack of due process. No hearing, no chance to defend myself, and no opportunity to file a motion for reconsideration or appeal before June 15. Instead, a 26‑page report was orchestrated and disseminated to media outlets, damaging not only my reputation but also the dignity of my family.
I will take this calmly. I cannot be intimidated. Moral courage is not about shouting back at injustice, but about standing firm with humility and faith. I trust in God as I face these consequences and challenges, knowing that truth will prevail in time.
This is not only about me. It is about protecting the rights of other members of the Philippine College of Physicians who may one day disagree with public health policies or refuse to entertain politicians. If dissent is punished without fairness, then the independence of our profession is at risk.
I remain steadfast. I will endure this trial with respect, humility, and faith, believing that justice will be determined not by orchestrated attacks, but by evidence, due process, and the truth.
Tony Leachon
@loren_legarda For those invoking Avelino vs Cuenco SC decision are misplaced. It's based on the old constitution of 1935. The present senate is operating under the 1987 constitution that specifically stipulates a quorum and number of majourity senators.
Bakit walang collective outrage ng sambayanang Pilipino sa mismanagement, abuse of power and plunder ng current administration?
Because mainstream media is not accurately reporting the situation, is not asking the right questions, and is actually enabling and amplifying the narrative.
Because the oligarchs who control media are in bed with powers-that-be.
What the minority cited was any change in the rules would have to be referred first to the committee on rules in the case of remote voting.
So why is it now that Zubiri is presenting a resolution changing the rules as to who should preside over the impeachment trial?
Technically it is still Cayetano because he's still the senate president. It can't be Gatchalian since he's the pro-tempore.
The minority is now circumventing their own stand on the rules just because it's convenient for them?
Such hypocrisy. The pot calling the kettle black.
Only the Yellowidiots will take this at face value.
They aren't Yellowidiots for nothing.