When nepo babies flaunt, 1

PAYDAY rain lashes the streets, traffic stalls, and floodwater creeps into tricycles. A nurse in slippers clutches her lunchbox, her phone flashing a reel: a vlogger with a Chanel bag, a private jet, a “quick Paris run.”

My daughter, a health professional who spends her days with families bargaining over hospital bills, saw that post over lunch and felt sick. I did too. The gap is not just taste—it is a system that lets public money build private spectacle while taxpayers still wade through floods. That is why the rage over “nepo babies”—the children of the powerful flaunting wealth online—burns so hot.

It is not envy, but justice at stake. Malacañang itself flagged a “disturbing” pattern: 15 contractors cornered one in five flood-control projects worth ₱100 billion between 2022 and 2025. Newsrooms exposed ghost projects. Citizens compared receipts with reels. The dissonance was glaring: apartment tours and private planes versus families pushing tricycles through brown water.

Public outrage needs a face, and nepo influencers became lightning rods—mocked as “Disney princesses” or “Scholar ng Bayan Pro Max.” One flaunted a Fendi jacket in Paris, another posed with a luxury car from her father, and another boasted of a ₱700k dinner bill while nearby towns mopped sludge.

These posts weren’t crimes, but they broke trust. Republic Act 6713 reminds officials and their families to live modestly. The real insult isn’t poverty—it’s the loss of proportion. Flaunting luxury while projects vanish betrays those who paid for them.

That contrast has not escaped Congress. Kabataan party-list’s Rep. Renee Louise Co recently called it “painful,” noting how dynasties’ children live in comfort while ordinary youth struggle in underfunded universities and overcrowded classrooms.

“If the children of politicians inherit power, why do the children of farmers and workers inherit poverty and the education crisis?” she asked.

Her words ring true: privilege gets diplomas abroad, while true scholars of the nation squeeze into cramped rooms, brave floods, and study under leaking roofs.

Her warning is visible on campuses themselves—Mindanao State University’s IDS Mega Building used while unfinished, UP Cebu’s College of Science built in installments, leaving students crammed into temporary rooms.

These aren’t just lapses; they are broken promises. Education, which should be the great equalizer, has become a great divider. Ivy League sendoffs for nepo babies; jeepney fare struggles for public school kids.

The hypocrisy sharpened when former Pasig mayoral candidate and contractor Sarah Discaya admitted in a Senate hearing that her family owns 28 luxury cars—“my kids use them all the time,” she said—despite PCIJ reports that her firms cornered billions in flood-control contracts.

Legitimate or not, the optics are brutal: four children with fleets of cars—80, by Sen. Jinggoy Estrada’s reckoning—while millions of students can’t even afford a jeepney ride to class. (To be continued)/PN

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