Tell me which scope you want and provide the source or confirm what "71698" is, and I’ll produce the full report.
It sounds like you're referring to a satirical or critical commentary on a very real issue in Philippine society: the tendency to bypass proper systems (government, legal, bureaucratic) by simply calling a powerful "Ninong" (godfather) who can make payments or problems disappear.
The phrase "Isang Tawag Lang Kay Ninong Pag Bayaran..." suggests a sarcastic, resigned, or frustrated tone—pointing to cronyism, fixers, and the "palakasan" system.
Below is a good piece (an editorial-style commentary) tailored for that topic. You can use it as a blog post, speech, or social media caption.
Breaking the isang tawag culture is uncomfortable because it means confronting our own complicity. How many times have we willingly used—or benefited from—the same system we complain about?
Real change begins not with a loud protest, but with a quiet refusal. Refusing to ask Ninong for an undeserved favor. Refusing to be the Ninong who grants one. Refusing to laugh off corruption as "diskarte" instead of calling it what it is: injustice with a polite smile. 71698- Isang Tawag Lang Kay Ninong Pag Bayaran ...
Why would someone borrow from 71698 and then avoid payment? Because the terms are predatory. Let’s do the math:
If you cannot pay after one week, the app rolls over the loan. After 30 days, you owe PHP 4,000+. Borrowers soon realize they borrowed PHP 1,700 but are expected to repay double or triple.
At that point, the borrower says: "Sige, iwasan ko na lang itong si Ninong." But unlike a real godfather, digital Ninong does not take "No" for an answer.
The phrase "Isang tawag lang kay Ninong" implies simplicity. In the old days, if you needed money, you called your Ninong (godfather). There was no credit check, no interest rate, just a verbal promise and a bottle of brandy at Christmas. The modern digital version promises the same speed: one tap, one OTP, one biometric scan—and cash lands in your e-wallet.
But the keyword continues: "...pag bayaran, iwasan na." This is the twist. Borrowers are saying: It’s easy to borrow from Ninong (the app), but when it’s time to pay, I’ll avoid him. Tell me which scope you want and provide
This is not just a joke. It’s a confession of a debt trap.
“71698: Your account is overdue. Please settle Php 6,500 immediately to avoid escalation.”
If 71698 or any lending app:
You can and should report them to:
You are allowed to stop paying only if you file a formal complaint first and negotiate a restructuring. Ignoring the debt without action is not "iwasan," it's default. Breaking the isang tawag culture is uncomfortable because
While the meme is funny, it points to a painful truth about economic inequality and the "Ninong System" in the Philippines.
Dito madalas pumapasok ang harassment at public shaming:
“71698: Last warning. Kakausapin na namin ang Ninong mo sa barangay, pati mga kapitbahay mo. Bayad na o kakasuhan ka.”
At sa mga illegal na OLA (na gumagamit din ng 71698), may mga text na:
“Ipost ka namin sa Facebook. Pakita namin mukha mo sa lahat ng kaibigan mo. Bayad na!”
https://www.high-endrolex.com/41