I was scrolling through X the way you do when you’re half-working and half-avoiding work. Then I saw it. A post by Atty. Jesus Falcis saying my name showed up, of all places, in a Grok-generated list of the Top 10 influential political bloggers in the Philippines.
I blinked. Twice.
Not because I think I don’t belong in political conversations, but because I haven’t been writing about good governance on blogwatch.tv as much as I used to. These days, my brain is often parked elsewhere. Family logistics, deadlines, the Agnep Heritage coffee farm. And still, there it was. My name. In a category I thought I am behind.
So of course I did what any mildly amused, slightly suspicious writer would do.
I asked Grok: Why am I on that list?
The short answer it gave me was this: ”due to longevity, historical significance, quality/depth, and spectrum balance—criteria that prioritize enduring contributions to civic engagement over raw 2025 viral metrics. She edges out purely emerging vloggers by representing the foundational independent voice in Philippine political blogging. In a landscape shifted toward high-engagement partisan content, her influence is more institutional and educational than mass-mobilizing, justifying inclusion among pioneers like Tordesillas and Robles while acknowledging lower current reach compared to top-ranked viral commentators.“
I laughed at “institutional and educational.” Not because it’s wrong, but because it sounded like the polite version of this. You’re not loud, but you left receipts.
And yes, I felt seen. A little.
But I also felt something else. An old itch I haven’t scratched in a while.
That itch is good governance.



















