E. Ravago > E.'s Quotes

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  • #1
    E. Ravago
    “Smart shaming affects society at large by advertising mediocrity, villainizing the intelligent, and idolizing the foolish.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #2
    E. Ravago
    “The strategy is simple: keep audiences laughing, keep them crying, and they will never pause to think.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #3
    E. Ravago
    “Entertainment becomes a tool of distraction rather than reflection... where emotional stimulation replaces intellectual engagement.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #4
    E. Ravago
    “Many hesitate to even start an open discussion that could awaken the people, knowing they must be prepared to face online trolls who constantly post counterarguments against what is right. They must also confront the mediocrity of public discourse, where individuals who have been conditioned to justify what is not right argue blindly for their political idols.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #5
    E. Ravago
    “What they produce is not culture but a population allergic to logic, addicted to drama, and proud of their own mental stagnation. In the end, society becomes a palette for illusions, painted with exaggerated emotions that conceal the erosion of reason.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #6
    E. Ravago
    “Producers increasingly insert overblown, hyper-emotional scenes even when the underlying conflict could be portrayed with calm or rational dialogue. The intent is not to model constructive problem-solving but to spike ratings through sudden bursts of emotional arousal. This strategy centers on eliciting raw, immediate reactions from the viewer with shows such as characters screaming, weeping dramatic waterfalls, or staging sudden betrayals.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #7
    E. Ravago
    “In every election cycle in the Philippines, citizens wrestle with cognitive dissonance, that inner conflict when actions contradict beliefs, as they accept a few hundred pesos or a sack of rice in exchange for their vote while knowing deep down that this trade-off undermines their future. The discomfort is eased by convincing themselves that survival today matters more than governance tomorrow, a reasoning that feels practical in a society where poverty is widespread and daily needs are urgent.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #8
    E. Ravago
    “Those who seek to move forward will find themselves delayed, confronted by signs that declare “road under construction” or “construction in progress.” Yet, these warnings do not mark progress for all. They serve as signals that the path has been cleared only for the movement of a selected few, while the majority remain stalled at the barriers of a system built to serve private gain.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #9
    E. Ravago
    “We’ve been trained to laugh at everything and think about nothing. Comedy has become our cultural anesthetic.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #10
    E. Ravago
    “Isumbong mo kay Tulfo and BITAG feed our hunger for instant justice, but they are only band-aid solutions. They soothe the symptom but never heal the broken system.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #11
    E. Ravago
    “The result is a narrowing of cultural imagination, where audiences are trained to expect entertainment that entertains but does not provoke, distracts but does not enlighten.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #12
    E. Ravago
    “As we read the Bible, we should not begin with a decision to believe or to disbelieve. We should begins with a decision to suspend the question altogether for the duration of the analysis.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #13
    E. Ravago
    “This suspension of belief and disbelief is our primary guard against bias. Any reader who enters the text with a fixed theological or anti-theological commitment has already added something to the words or subtracted something from them.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #14
    E. Ravago
    “Our goal is not to convert anyone to belief or to unbelief. It is not to defend the Bible or to attack it. It is to trace the internal shape of a closed communication system with as much precision as we can achieve.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #15
    E. Ravago
    “The dynamic, where a foundational reality for one era becomes an unthinkable fiction for another, is not merely a historical curiosity. We can see the exact same structure of belief and denial play out by projecting it into a hypothetical future. Now, if there will come a time when in-vitro fertilization becomes the only way for humans to reproduce, let us say, not that I am wishing for this to happen, that sexual intercourse has been considered unhealthy to the point that history and technology erase the method or render it obsolete, then future humans could see that sexual method for reproduction as fictional. They might even deny it, no matter how absurd that denial may sound to us right now. For them, since they are from a time that generations over generations have passed and in-vitro is the new normal, reading a historical record may seem fictional to them as it can no longer be proven. Testing the sexual method for reproducing offspring would be immoral to them as the life of the offspring will be at risk (let’s say they have justified it to be too unhygienic or if at their time, there exist a virus that could be passed on if humans tried having sex) and they have made so many arguments to justify how safe in-vitro is.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #16
    E. Ravago
    “There are words from the ancient writings that cannot be translated with exactly the same connotation the author intended. Yet, when an accurate translation is possible, in which there is an exact word in the target language that accurately represents the original source, we must not deliberately misrepresent it, fabricate narratives that are not there, or clash with observable themes that were clearly maintained by the author and are consistently observable in their writings.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #17
    E. Ravago
    “The claim that the Bible commands us to respect all religious beliefs equally and to never call any belief false is itself a belief that cannot be found within the biblical text. The Bible does not teach that truth is relative or that every path leads to the same destination. It draws lines. It distinguishes righteousness from lawlessness and light from darkness.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #18
    E. Ravago
    “Communication occurs when a sender transmits a message to a receiver. The absence of any one element means communication has not taken place. If a sender sends a message to no receiver, or if a receiver waits for a message that never comes, the chain is broken before it begins. A sender, a receiver, and a message are the minimum requirements.”
    E. Ravago, The 10th Commandment

  • #19
    E. Ravago
    “The action of the physical body is the embodiment of what has been formed inside. If the internal speech articulates a reason, the body is expected to move in accordance with that reason, making the body the servant and the internal source the master.”
    E. Ravago, The 10th Commandment

  • #20
    E. Ravago
    “Genesis 1:1, “In-beginning Elohim formed the heavens and the earth,” establishes the two necessary components of any cognitive process. The heavens are the container for abstract thought, categories, and mental representations. The earth is the container for raw, unprocessed sensory input. The verse does not describe the origin of physical matter. It describes the formation of these two cognitive containers. Without the heavens, there is no place to hold the recreated images the mind generates. Without the earth, there is no source of the sensory information that feeds those images. The narrative places both at the very beginning because neither can be ordered without the other already in place.”
    E. Ravago, The 10th Commandment

  • #21
    E. Ravago
    “That same mayor, after his viral performances, will publicly declare he will not run for president. This push creates a vacuum and a perceived loss. His network, however, continues to flood feeds with his staged heroism and with amplified voices from the public desperately calling for him to lead. After a carefully timed period, the pull begins. He reverses his decision, now framed not as personal ambition but as a humble surrender to the people's will. He presents his candidacy as a response to our collective cry. This complete act of political gaslighting... makes the public believe they authored a candidacy that was meticulously manufactured from the start.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #22
    E. Ravago
    “The slow work of fact checking is easy to ignore when a strong and emotional story is just one click away.”
    E. Ravago, Bansang Pinipilas

  • #23
    E. Ravago
    “Truth is a claim’s accurate correspondence to a portion of reality, whether that portion is an external fact or an internal experience. This simple definition carries a set of consequences that shape every exchange in which someone asserts something and someone else must decide whether to accept it.”
    E. Ravago, Refusing the Narrative

  • #24
    E. Ravago
    “What begins as a minor internal wobble becomes a cascade of relational failures. The chain is not broken until the individual stops looking to the partner for completion and starts building a self that can stand alone.”
    E. Ravago, The Art of War for the Relationship

  • #25
    E. Ravago
    “A truthful claim is not the whole picture. Someone who describes what they saw from one position may give an account that clashes with another person's account, even though both are accurate.”
    E. Ravago, Refusing the Narrative

  • #26
    E. Ravago
    “There is no instruction in Scripture that authorizes anyone outside that appointed structure to collect tithes on behalf of God. Just as it would be presumptuous and dangerously misguided to mimic Noah’s ark or Abraham’s sacrifice, it is equally wrong to act as if one has the divine right to collect tithes today when no such mandate has been given. If the instruction is not directed to us, then we should not be the ones doing it.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #27
    E. Ravago
    “A belief that the text never teaches is an addition to what is written. A disbelief that rejects what the text actually states is a subtraction from what is written. Both moves violate the single operating rule of the closed system which is to preserve the word exactly as given, adding nothing and taking nothing away.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #28
    E. Ravago
    “A belief that is lawless cannot be honored as if it were righteous, and a belief that is dark cannot be respected as if it were light. To honor or respect every belief equally is impossible because if among that everyone, one belief is wrong, then honoring it as equal to the truth would itself be a violation of the command to abhor evil, to cling to good, to have no partnership with lawlessness, and to touch nothing unclean.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims

  • #29
    E. Ravago
    “There are believers and nonbelievers that claim that God loves everyone unconditionally without requiring change, that He will never punish anyone eternally, that He overrides His justice, and that everyone will be saved eventually. Nonbelievers use this idea to have a strawman figure that they could easily argue, a god who tolerates everything and judges nothing, a god who poses no threat to their self-referential standard. On the other hand, believers who follow their unbiblical preachers also claim this because they have been taught that love cannot include judgment, that patience means permanent acceptance, and that the narrow gate is not actually narrow.”
    E. Ravago, 10 Commandments: Opposing Unbiblical Claims



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