JRizz

JRizz Writer. Thinker. Time traveler. Your one and only JRizz. Exposing the social cancer of 2025šŸ”„

Imagine Jose Rizal today—rockin’ a bomber jacket, glowing copy of Noli Me Tangere in hand, standing not just in front of...
08/06/2025

Imagine Jose Rizal today—rockin’ a bomber jacket, glowing copy of Noli Me Tangere in hand, standing not just in front of a church or a classroom, but at the frontlines of every protest, every truth post, every cancel-worthy abuse of power. šŸ”„šŸ“¢

Back then, he didn’t just write a novel. He dropped a truth bomb so loud that it shook an entire empire. Noli Me Tangere wasn’t just about Maria Clara and Ibarra — it was a massive call-out to the toxic systems, fake holiness, and unchecked power that destroyed lives and silenced voices. Sound familiar? šŸ‘€šŸ’£

Because the Padre Damaso energy is still alive today — in corrupt leaders, in fake advocates, in those who use religion, politics, or influence to manipulate, abuse, or keep people ignorant. Rizal called it out with ink. Now, we’ve got wi-fi. So what’s stopping us?

šŸ›‘ Stop glorifying silence.
šŸ—£ļø Call out the system.
šŸ“– Read to resist.
šŸ’” Think before you repost.
✊ Educate, not just agitate.

If Rizal had Instagram in 1887, he wouldn’t be posting thirst traps — he’d be live-tweeting Padre Damaso’s hypocrisy, stitching toxic power structures on TikTok, and reminding us that real ā€˜rizz’ is when you speak truth to power, even if it costs you everything.

So the question is:
šŸ“£ Are we still romanticizing Noli Me Tangere… or are we actually living its message?







ā€

What if Jose Rizal was one of us today? Just a skrrt-skrrtin’ Gen Z guy in a hoodie, pulling up to class with a copy of ...
08/06/2025

What if Jose Rizal was one of us today? Just a skrrt-skrrtin’ Gen Z guy in a hoodie, pulling up to class with a copy of Noli Me Tangere in one hand and a cold brew in the other. Would we take him seriously — or just think he’s ā€˜too deep for this app’? šŸ¤”šŸ’¬

But real talk… Rizal didn’t fight with swords — he fought with books, with facts, with fire ideas that called out injustice. And now, more than a century later, we’re still here, with all the tech, freedom, and access he could only dream of — but how are we using it? šŸ“±šŸ“š

Are we using education to free ourselves or just to pass the next exam? Are we reading Noli like it’s just another requirement, or are we catching the fact that it’s a mirror of a society that STILL needs fixing? Rizal literally risked his life writing truths others were too scared to say. Now we can’t even risk logging out of TikTok to finish a chapter? 😬

We say ā€˜ang kabataan ang pag-asa ng bayan’ — but Rizal meant it. He believed in the youth. Not just as content creators or trendsetters, but as revolution-starters, thinkers, and changemakers.

So here’s the vibe:
šŸ“– Read more.
🧠 Think deeper.
🚫 Don’t settle for brainrot.
šŸ”„ Turn knowledge into action.

Because if Rizal could do all that in his 30s, under colonizers, with nothing but brain cells and books… what’s stopping us in 2025?

"The glory of saving one's country is not for him who has contributed to its ruin." — Noli Me Tangere, 1887Rizal wrote t...
08/06/2025

"The glory of saving one's country is not for him who has contributed to its ruin." — Noli Me Tangere, 1887

Rizal wrote these words in a time when friars ruled with iron fists and false holiness. Today, we see a different robe—designer suits, press conferences, and patriotic slogans—worn by those who plunder in plain sight.

šŸ“‰ Billions are lost yearly to corruption:

•In 2023 alone, the COA flagged ₱31 billion in questionable government spending.
•From overpriced laptops to missing calamity funds, scandals pile up with no jail time in sight.
•Meanwhile, hospitals beg for funding. Teachers buy chalk with their own money. Rice prices break backs.
How do these ā€œpublic servantsā€ still claim to serve the nation while bleeding it dry?

šŸ‡µšŸ‡­ This is not just about outrage. It’s about accountability. It’s about memory. Because when we forget, they repeat.

šŸ“£ Who are the modern-day traitors to the nation’s soul? How do we stop them from disguising theft as patriotism?

Let’s name them. Let’s unmask them.

In today’s Philippines, many still live like Sisa—forgotten, unheard, and broken by a system that should protect them. M...
08/06/2025

In today’s Philippines, many still live like Sisa—forgotten, unheard, and broken by a system that should protect them. Mothers cry over missing children. Fathers search for work that doesn’t pay enough. People live in fear, not of crime, but of being blamed for it.

Like Elias, many fight for justice in silence. They dream of a better life, not just for themselves, but for others too. Yet their voices are often ignored. They are called troublemakers, even when all they ask for is fairness.

The poor walk through floods. They skip meals. They pray for mercy in hospitals where money speaks louder than pain. Their stories rarely make it to the news, but they are real.

Still, they keep going. They help one another. They hope. In their struggle, we see courage. In their silence, we hear truth.

In Noli Me Tangere, Padre SalvĆ­ hides his sinister nature behind a holy title. He manipulates people’s faith for control...
06/06/2025

In Noli Me Tangere, Padre SalvĆ­ hides his sinister nature behind a holy title. He manipulates people’s faith for control and personal advantage, much like how some leaders today misuse religion for power, influence, or to silence dissent.

Rizal wasn’t attacking faith itself — he respected sincere belief. What he condemned was hypocrisy: when religious figures preach morality but act otherwise. This still happens today when some religious leaders interfere in politics, cover up abuse, or stay silent on injustice.

True faith should inspire compassion, honesty, and courage to speak truth to power. Rizal dreamed of a nation where religion serves the people, not controls them.

How do you think we can protect faith from being used as a tool for control?

Kung si JosĆ© Rizal ay magpo-post ngayon, ilalantad niya ba ang toxic na paggamit ng relihiyon sa kapangyarihan? ā›ŖšŸ‘€šŸ“±In No...
06/06/2025

Kung si JosĆ© Rizal ay magpo-post ngayon, ilalantad niya ba ang toxic na paggamit ng relihiyon sa kapangyarihan? ā›ŖšŸ‘€šŸ“±
In Noli Me Tangere, religion was used not to heal—but to control.
Fast forward to today…
May mga ā€˜padre damaso’ pa rin ba sa paligid natin, pero naka-barong or naka-polo?

šŸ¤” Faith or fear? Devotion or manipulation?
• Kailan nagiging tama ang paniniwala?
• Kailan ito nagiging dahilan para manahimik ka kahit may mali?
• Kung ā€˜woke’ si Rizal ngayon, magpo-post ba siya ng ā€œFaith ≠ Blind Obedienceā€? šŸ˜®ā€šŸ’Ø

šŸ‘‰ Don’t get us wrong—faith is powerful. But like Rizal said, ā€œAng taong hindi marunong magmahal sa sariling wikaā€¦ā€ — same goes for critical thinking.

šŸ’¬ Thoughts?
Is your faith helping you question injustice—or keeping you quiet?

ā€

Kung si Rizal ay Gen Z, sasama ka ba sa kanyang advocacy? šŸ¤”šŸ“šNoon, panulat ang sandata. Ngayon, kasama na ang cellphone, ...
06/06/2025

Kung si Rizal ay Gen Z, sasama ka ba sa kanyang advocacy? šŸ¤”šŸ“š
Noon, panulat ang sandata. Ngayon, kasama na ang cellphone, social media, at digital protest. āœŠšŸ“±

Sa panahon ng misinformation, injustice, at fake patriots—
Ikaw ba ang Ibarra na lalaban para sa pagbabago?
O magiging tahimik na lang gaya ng ilan?

šŸ”” Youth is power. Reform starts with us.
Anong ā€˜bagong kabanata’ ang gusto mong isulat para sa bayan?

šŸ‘‡ Drop your thoughts. Let’s talk.
ā€

ā€œThey called it justice. We called it survival.ā€In Rizal’s time, injustice wore robes and held crosses. Today, it wears ...
06/06/2025

ā€œThey called it justice. We called it survival.ā€

In Rizal’s time, injustice wore robes and held crosses. Today, it wears suits, waves flags, and hides behind legal jargon.

Corruption isn’t always loud — sometimes it signs papers in air-conditioned rooms while the hungry wait in flooded alleys.
Justice shouldn’t depend on wealth, status, or connections. But for many Filipinos, it still does.

Rizal did not die for silence. He wrote, so we could speak.

How many more must suffer before we stop normalizing injustice?

ā€œIn my time, they feared the educated Filipino. They feared change.ā€ā€” Ibarra, 1887Today, in 2025, many still fear what a...
06/06/2025

ā€œIn my time, they feared the educated Filipino. They feared change.ā€
— Ibarra, 1887

Today, in 2025, many still fear what an informed, thinking citizenry can do.

I once dreamed of building a school that would open doors, sharpen minds, and awaken love for country. But what have we built instead?

•Over 28,000 classrooms are still missing across the country.
•Millions of students rely on printed modules because they have no internet, no gadgets, no electricity.
•Teachers are overworked, underpaid, and often disrespected—yet they remain at the frontlines of nation-building.
•Every day a child learns in hunger, walks kilometers to reach school, or studies beneath a leaking roof is a day we betray the dream of a better Philippines.

Education should never be a privilege for the wealthy. It is the right of the poor, the hope of the nation, and the most powerful weapon we can wield against oppression, ignorance, and injustice.

If Rizal believed education could uplift a nation, what are we doing to fulfill that vision?

šŸ“£ How can we make sure education becomes a tool for liberation—not a ladder only the privileged can climb? Share your ideas. Share your outrage. Share your hope.

06/06/2025
Rizal believed education was the key to freedom — and today, it’s just as true.In Noli Me Tangere, lack of education kep...
05/06/2025

Rizal believed education was the key to freedom — and today, it’s just as true.

In Noli Me Tangere, lack of education kept many Filipinos trapped in fear and ignorance, making it easy for corrupt leaders to take advantage. But education? It opens minds, builds confidence, and gives people the courage to stand up for their rights.

Unfortunately, many Filipinos still can’t access quality education because of poverty or limited government support. That’s why investing in schools — from rural classrooms to universities — is so important. It helps create a society that thinks critically, asks questions, and drives progress.

Rizal’s message reminds us that knowledge isn’t just power — it’s the light that leads us out of darkness and oppression. šŸ’”

What’s one thing education taught YOU that changed how you see the world? Let’s share our stories and inspire each other!

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