What to do? (concluded)

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The President has announced she will not attend the Philippine Military Academy homecoming this weekend (because of a startling coincidence involving assassinations plots) . She is in a mess of her own making, and which requires loyalty at a time when her officials have to wonder if it’s worth it to lose all, for her. Read Tony Abaya’s column to understand why Jun Lozada has engaged the sympathy of many people and why government’s resources have failed to impeach his credibility.

As Mon Casiple muses,

The instruction of the president for government to work with private business sector, academe and Church in the anti-corruption work and the sudden interest of the Ombudsman and DOJ in the ZTE-NBN case aim to seize initiative in the issue. The NBI raid on Lozada’s office, on the other hand, is more in the same league as the failed discrediting of Lozada for corruption.

Many top officials in the GMA administration have been put on the spot, had their reputation besmirched, or are in danger of prosecution themselves because of their actions in defense of the Arroyo family. They are under intense pressure from their own families, friends, and peers to stand for truth and decency on the issues confronting the First Family.

The signal role of the Lozada case is in bringing forth these pressures. In turn, the pressure on the president to resign will intensify. Ironically, the effective pressure may come from her own official family and camp rather than from the outside.

The Palace has also had to backtrack on its attempt to divert public attention by means of prematurely launching it’s amendments scheme. The Vice-President, for obvious reasons, has begun to grow a spine.

Yesterday, the Inquirer editorial pointed out that what is undeniable, is that the administration’s engaged in a Conspiracy. One that entailed a whole roster of officials collectively insulting the intelligence of the public, as Manuel Buencamino sardonically demonstrated in his column.

The group Action for Economic Reforms, in calling for the resignation of the President, puts it this way:

Criminal justice will come, but now is the time to take political action……

The first family is the capo di tutti capi, the boss of all bosses. The Macapagal-Arroyo family has turned the Philippine government into a mafia family, with Cabinet men, congressmen, and other functionaries as their mob lieutenants. We have state capture not by the elite but by a Filipino mafia headed by the first family.The Philippines is not lacking in laws and institutions against corruption and plunder…

Much effort has been undertaken to address chronic corruption…

Despite all this, what is missing is the simplest answer to the problem: Fighting corruption is a question of leadership.Since the leadership itself is brazenly engaged in plunder, corruption remains unabated. Under the leadership of a non-corrupt president, anti-corruption programs and institutions will be effective. Under a corrupt presidency, the same programs and institutions only become a protective veil for corruption itself…

With GMA’s repeated betrayal of the public trust, she has no right to sit as President a minute longer. All other officials involved in the ZTE-NBN deal, including Secretary Romy Neri, DOTC Secretary Leandro Mendoza, and members of the NEDA-ICC must step down from their government posts. The officials involved in the abduction of Jun Lozada and its cover-up in the media, such as PNP Chief Avelino Razon, Secretary Lito Atienza and DILG Secretary Ronaldo Puno, must likewise step down.

We must expunge the Philippine Mafia.

And yet even as more and more people add their voices, from Harvey Keh to the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (perhaps, taking its cue from the national lawyer’s association, and perhaps statements such as Jovito Salonga’s, the law school governments of the Ateneo, UP and other law schools are reportedly meeting and are expected to call on the President to resign) to the Makati Business Club (and if there were any divisions in its ranks, they’ve closed ranks over Secretary Favila’s threat to unleash the BIR on businessmen; as Boy Blue replied, “bring it on!”) except for that old Palace reliable, Vivianne Yuchengco, the debate goes on and on about the President. The debate is distilled to its essence by this quote from the play, A Man for All Seasons:

William Roper: So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!

Sir Thomas More: Yes! What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?

William Roper: Yes, I’d cut down every law in England to do that!

Sir Thomas More: Oh? And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned ’round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man’s laws, not God’s! And if you cut them down, and you’re just the man to do it, do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I’d give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake!

Yet we know that in real life as in the play and film, More ended up imprisoned and put on trial, charged with treason: bearing the full brunt of “Man’s laws,” because the King wanted him forced to publicly recant his private opposition to the King’s divorce and remarriage, which More found contrary to God’s laws. The world remembers him as a man who submitted to the law, to prove his fidelity to a higher one. Recognition the laws of man can be flawed, and man’s justice profoundly unjust.

There is another gripping scene where More is undergoing trial (“betoken,” as used in the dialogue, means “be a sign of; indicate”) and his refusal to publicly take an oath as demanded by the king is taken as proof positive of treason:

Cromwell: Now, Sir Thomas, you stand on your silence.

Sir Thomas More: I do.

Cromwell: But, gentlemen of the jury, there are many kinds of silence. Consider first the silence of a man who is dead. Let us suppose we go into the room where he is laid out, and we listen: what do we hear? Silence. What does it betoken, this silence? Nothing; this is silence pure and simple. But let us take another case. Suppose I were to take a dagger from my sleeve and make to kill the prisoner with it; and my lordships there, instead of crying out for me to stop, maintained their silence. That would betoken! It would betoken a willingness that I should do it, and under the law, they will be guilty with me. So silence can, according to the circumstances, speak! Let us consider now the circumstances of the prisoner’s silence. The oath was put to loyal subjects up and down the country, and they all declared His Grace’s title to be just and good. But when it came to the prisoner, he refused! He calls this silence. Yet is there a man in this court – is there a man in this country! – who does not know Sir Thomas More’s opinion of this title?

Crowd in court gallery: No!

Cromwell: Yet how can this be? Because this silence betokened, nay, this silence was, not silence at all, but most eloquent denial!

Sir Thomas More: Not so. Not so, Master Secretary. The maxim is “Qui tacet consentiret”: the maxim of the law is “Silence gives consent”. If therefore you wish to construe what my silence betokened, you must construe that I consented, not that I denied.

Cromwell: Is that in fact what the world construes from it? Do you pretend that is what you wish the world to construe from it?

Sir Thomas More: The world must construe according to its wits; this court must construe according to the law.

In More’s case he submitted, as a believing Christian, to the secular power precisely because he was obedient to a higher authority: one that compelled him to bow down before the laws of man because they are as nothing compared to the laws of God, which required fidelity to the death.

The law, he recognized, could serve as defense for certain things but there come points when the law compels obedience even when the law itself is unjust; yet compels that submission because the law’s limitations are clear, it cannot intrude into the distinctions a person’s conscience creates between what is legal and what is just.

A similar question was tackled by the scientist Stephen Jay Gould, when he discussed how the debate between those who believe in science and those who look to a supernatural authority are engaged in a futile debate. See his essay Nonoverlapping Magisteria:

I believe, with all my heart, in a respectful, even loving concordat between our magisteria — the NOMA solution. NOMA represents a principled position on moral and intellectua] grounds, not a mere diplomatic stance. NOMA also cuts both ways. If religion can no longer dictate the nature of factual conclusions properly under the magisterium of science, then scientists cannot claim higher insight into moral truth from any superior knowledge of the world’s empirical constitution. This mutual humility has important practical consequences in a world of such diverse passions.

By all means the law is often our shield against injustice, but there are certain forms of injustice our laws are impotent to address.

What is at stake is the position held by the President of the Philippines. A position not hers by right, but by grace; a position only temporarily hers and not her inalienable possession like her life, for example. What she can claim a right to is a fixed term; but the term is hers by virtue of certain assumptions, among them her receiving a popular mandate that is genuine and not so marred by controversy as to make it suspect; or that she continues to enjoy the confidence of the people who consider her fit to continue in office.

The supreme law, the Constitution, gives her the opportunity to declare herself unfit to hold office at any time (resignation); it grants the power to declare her unfit for office not only to Congress, by means of a prosecution begun by the House and a political, not judicial, trial in the Senate; and even to her subordinates, the Cabinet, who can declare her unfit for office and who can even force a vote in Congress; and it grants the public at the very least the right to petition government for the redress of grievances and enshrines the citizenry as the ultimate arbiter of what is legal: for, if need be, the public can overturn the fundamental law of the land by means of revolution (if it succeeds).

Her critics do not call for the murder or assassination of the President, or that she should be denied the chance to adequately defend herself in court; but what they assert is that the President may continue to enjoy the presumption of innocence as far as the courts are concerned but no longer enjoys that assumption as far as the public is concerned; that in a sense, in the face of the President’s acts of commission and omission as well as those of her henchmen, a significant portion of the population has what lawyers call a moral certainty of her guilt; this moral certainty does not meet, as of yet, the requirements of the courts when it comes to depriving her of life, liberty, or property; but it is more than enough in the political sphere, to justify citizens calling her to relinquish her office.

Because, as Joker Arroyo in a previous incarnation declared, we cannot afford to have a country run by a thief. Whether it was run by thieves in the past or will be run by thieves in the future is absolutely irrelevant and immaterial, if your honors please. We are talking about the incumbent President and no one else. We can deprive only the incumbent President of office and no one else; the punishment is specific because it can only apply to one person at a time.

What is the law’s is the law’s; what is the people’s as a political entity is entirely something else.

The question is how the people, as a political entity, should dispense with political questions, such as the fitness of their head of state and government for office. Public opinion and the threat of impeachment drove Nixon from office; de Gaulle, facing student protests and a lost referendum vote, resigned. Politics recognizes force majeure when it comes to the terms of its highest officials: when a party loses the US House of Representatives, traditionally the Speaker from the party that lost Congress resigns his seat; it is not just in parliamentary systems that there can be votes of confidence -whether in elections or in mobilized public opinion.

Oliver Cromwell embarked on his dictatorship by dismissing the Long Parliament with these famous words on April 20, 1653:

It is high time for me to put an end to your sitting in this place, which you have dishonored by your contempt of all virtue, and defiled by your practice of every vice; ye are a factious crew, andenemies to all good government; ye are a pack of mercenary wretches, and would like Esau sell your country for a mess of pottage, and like Judas betray your God for a few pieces of money.

Is there a single virtue now remaining amongst you? Is there one vice you do not possess? Ye haveno more religion than my horse; gold is your God; which of you have not barter’d your conscience for bribes? Is there a man amongst you that has the least care for the good of the Commonwealth?

Ye sordid prostitutes have you not defil’d this sacred place, and turn’d the Lord’s temple into a denof thieves, by your immoral principles and wicked practices? Ye are grown intolerably odious to the whole nation; you were deputed here by the people to get grievances redress’d, are yourselves gone!So! Take away that shining bauble there, and lock up the doors. In the name of God, go!

And this is the warning that echoes down in history: in face of wrongdoing or plain incompetence, the longer people confuse procedures for actual government, the greater the temptation to banish those fussing over procedures to restore what’s right. But one needn’t embark on the path of dictatorship to realize that an essential attribute of the democratic system, is the opportunity it affords to discard a discredited leader, rather have the whole system go down in flames to preserve one person’s political life.

As the British parliament agonized over the question of whether to continue its fight against Hitler or surrender, one MP, Leo Amery, quoted Cromwell in urging Neville Chamberlain to resign:

Some 300 years ago, when this House found that its troops were being beaten again and again by the dash and daring of the Cavaliers, by Prince Rupert’s Cavalry, Oliver Cromwell spoke to John Hampden. In one of his speeches he recounted what he said. It was this:

‘I said to him, “Your troops are most of them old, decayed serving men and tapsters and such kind of fellows.” You must get men of a spirit that are likely to go as far as they will go, or you will be beaten still.’

It may not be easy to find these men. They can be found only by trial and by ruthlessly discarding all who fail and have their failings discovered. We are fighting today for our life, for our liberty, for our all; we cannot go on being led as we are.

I have quoted certain words of Oliver Cromwell. I will quote certain other words. I do it with great reluctance, because I am speaking of those who are old friends and associates of mine, but they are words which, I think, are applicable to the present situation. This is what Cromwell said to the Long Parliament when he thought it was no longer fit to conduct the affairs of the nation:

“You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go”

Chamberlain resigned; Churchill became Prime Minister, despite the great misgivings, even obvious mistrust, of his peers. When Chamberlain died, Churchill, in turn, paid tribute to his predecessor:

It is not given to human beings, happily for them, for otherwise life would be intolerable, to foresee or to predict to any large extent the unfolding course of events. In one phase men seem to have been right, in another they seem to have been wrong. Then again, a few years later, when the perspective of time has lengthened, all stands in a different setting. There is a new proportion. There is another scale of values. History with its flickering lamp stumbles along the trail of the past, trying to reconstruct its scenes, to revive its echoes, and kindle with pale gleams the passion of former days. What is the worth of all this? The only guide to a man is his conscience; the only shield to his memory is the rectitude and sincerity of his actions. It is very imprudent to walk through life without this shield, because we are so often mocked by the failure of our hopes and the upsetting of our calculations; but with this shield, however the fates may play, we march always in the ranks of honour.

At stake, let me repeat, is the President’s political life; as to the sum total of her life we can’t pass judgment, yet, though it is, of course, possible that in retrospect, when that time comes, she may come off better than she seems, today; or worse. But it is not too soon, to pass judgment on her fitness for office. This is a judgment call in which the law is only relevant in terms of our layman’s appreciation of what it’s spirit ought to be, and whether under her leadership, the government has proven itself faithless to that spirit.

The question however, settled in many minds, remains unsettled in the minds of others; it hinges, in those minds, on whether the dangers of an aroused public are so grave, as to justify denying the public their sovereignty; it is a question involving fears as old as Edmund Burke’s condemnation of the French Revolution:

Were all those dreadful things necessary? Were they the inevitable results of the desperate struggle of determined patriots, compelled to wade through blood and tumult, to the quiet shore of a tranquil and prosperous liberty? No! nothing like it. The fresh ruins of France, which shock our feelings wherever we can turn our eyes, are not the devastation of civil war; they are the sad but instructive monuments of rash and ignorant counsel in time of profound peace. They are the display of inconsiderate and presumptuous, because unresisted and irresistible, authority. The persons who have thus squandered away the precious treasure of their crimes, the persons who have made this prodigal and wild waste of public evils, (the last stage reserved for the ultimate ransom of the state), have met in their progress with little, or rather with no opposition at all. Their whole march was more like a triumphal procession, than the progress of a war. Their pioneers have gone before them, and demolished and laid everything level at their feet. Not one drop of their blood have they shed in the cause of the country they have ruined. They have made no sacrifices to their projects of greater consequence than their shoe buckles, whilst they were imprisoning their king, murdering their fellow citizens, and bathing in tears, and plunging in poverty and distress, thousands of worthy men and worthy families. Their cruelty has not even been the base result of fear. It has been the effect of their sense of perfect safety, in authorizing treasons, robberies, rapes, assassinations, slaughters, and burnings, throughout their harassed land. But the cause of all was plain from the beginning.

But we are heirs, not to Burke, but to the Frenchmen he condemned; even Rizal was convinced, if not of the desirability, then at least of the inevitability, of revolution; else our national narrative would still be that of a province of Spain or State of the Union. We can detect at least a familiarity with his arguments, by way of Rizal: who ultimate advice was, you cannot force events, they will unfold in their own good time (see my disquisition on Rizal’s Pilosopiya ng Pagtitiis).

Well, things are unfolding, but it would be wrong to assert they will unfold in a precise, pre-determined manner. But they are unfolding in a manner that is demolishing the arguments used, so far, by those who wanted to keep rationalizing their implied or overt support for the administration.

This is just political noise? The increasing decibels of public protest are preferable to the silence of the tomb or the cold vaults where even colder cash is piling up for the President’s favored few.

They are all the same? Perhaps when they could moderate their greed; but the greed is unmoderated, it is accelerating, and along with the avarice is an out-of-control contempt for every Filipino, rich or poor, educated or not, urbanite or rural dweller, who dares defy the administration.

What will it achieve? An end to the insanity, closing a chapter to the hubris, restoring the enfeebled democratic muscles of the electorate, reviving the dulled sense of right and wrong of a public.

What about the economy? For those who believe in trickle-down, removing the dam that has held captive the people’s money; for those who wanted prudence and professionalism in the management of our natural and financial resources, the chance this will finally happen and not be feigned.

It boils down to the administration’s scale of greed at the very least matching, if not exceeding, that of the government that preceded it. And a public realizing that it must stand up to it, end it, punish it, for now it sees its your style, or lack of it, but your performance while in office, that must be the sole, standard, measure of a leader’s fitness for office. The mafiosi in slippers and the mafiosi in an expensive suit are both plain thugs.

The President overturned her policy of preferring BOT deals, to add to the debts of the country, to obtain foreign funding for a project whose cost was bloated by the demands of her family and allies. To consummate this deal, she left the bedside of her potentially dying husband to please her allies. She would have pursued it, if the public hadn’t opposed it. Yet she has kept trying to find more and similar deals. This is just part of the pattern, one that consists of her recklessly spending government finances, then figuring out a way to blunt the effects of her spending, only to find new ways to spend that involve accumulating unnecessary and indefensible obligations.

Minguita Padilla asserts that the inflated commission demanded by Abalos equals the annual budget of the Philippine General Hospital: multiplied five times. I’ve heard another assertion that the amount equals the annual budget of the Department of Agriculture.

A few weeks back, a dispirited critic of the President asked another critic (an agnostic if not an atheist), “Do you think God put her here to teach us something?” And the agnostic/atheist critic instantly replied, “Yes, to teach us freedom isn’t gained so easily.”

The long road began, for some, in 2001, for others, in 2004, for others, in 2006 and so on. They have come together, taken time to understand each other, hammered out consensus, taken stock of past mistakes and appropriate things to do; all the while hounded by those united in support for the President because she dressed better, spoke better, was better-educated and showed better executive control, than her predecessor.

But when, as now, she’s revealed as nothing better than him, and in many ways worse because if he was slothful, she has been industrious in undermining institutions, intimidating any organization critical of her, and corrupting the various petty crooks and mulcting officials who have always been there, but who have grown fat, proud, and left stupefied by her drowning them in money and in stripping them of whatever self-control and professional values they had left.

The result is that the enemies of the people should really be named Legion -for they are many; the ones in the cabinet who serve her with enthusiasm and no scruples; the soldiers she has infiltrated into sensitive civilian posts; the business communities she has turned into her propaganda organs; the rank-and-file who have lost even the nominal prestige their positions should accord them.

The line of men and women who have abandoned all pretenses to serving the public, who are reduced to serving the President and her family, according to their humiliating whims, has grown so long that the President’s leaving office will only be the first step in a process that will many of the formerly well-connected turned potential social and political pariahs.

But it’s that first step that can and should unite us. It unites those who wanted it years ago, with those who have come to see as a necessary thing, only now. We are together now, having seen not only the best, but the worst, in each of ourselves; but collectively, better for coming together now.

What to do? Make a list. Those who can no longer deserve a position paid for from the public coffers, and who must resign immediately. Those who supported the government to the extent they advocated means no genuinely democratic government would have conceived of adopting in the past. Those whose perks and power are made possible by their closeness to the President, who cast aside their own reputations in her service.

And make a list of the things that failed to work: impeachment, presidential commissions, appointments to departments and the judiciary, the military, only to cause those institutions grave scandal and the gutting of professional pride and esprit de corps.

And make a list of the things you want, and not the things you hate; for it is easy to hate but difficult to be for certain things. Clean elections? Greater or less party discipline? Efficient and honest tax collection, social services as a right of the people and not personally-bestowed patronage? The list is yours, but armed with similar lists, there we will have the chance to come together with a truly meaningful reform agenda.

But until then: march.

Until then: make noise.

Until then: write, call, text, to share what you feel.

From now on, forget your past mistakes, or disappointments, and focus on the task at hand.

They say: they represent public opinion.

We must say: we do!

You must say, I have had enough with feeling helpless, or fearful, or embarrassed over past loyalties; instead, I will stand, not someone, but for me; and if there are many like me, I will link arms with them; and whatever happens, let it not be said that at the country’s present opportunity for redemption, you were will trying to find excuses to postpone the inevitable.

The Black and White Movement gives you three opportunities to register your protest:

1. Log on to our website — www.blacknwhite-movement.com and register your name to declare your support for Jun Lozada.

2. Send text “Sa Totoo Tayo” to 0915-3296830 to be counted. Also, text this message to all of your friends and relatives: “Kung naniniwala kayo sa sinasabi ni Jun Lozada, text “Sa Totoo Tayo” to 0915-3296830. Visit www.blacknwhite-movement.com for latest count and activities.”

3. And if you’re in Metro Manila, join us on Sunday, February 17, 2008, 10 AM at La Salle Greenhills for a Mass organized by President Cory Aquino and the La Salle brothers in support of Jun Lozada and his family.

The time to act is now. Sa Totoo Tayo. Now na!

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Manuel L. Quezon III.

509 thoughts on “What to do? (concluded)

  1. “shit happens, benigs, especially when you get diarrhea of lies and deception.” — inodoro ni emilie

    Yeah.

    But ADULTS with diarrhea still poop in toilets. Not on streets.

    There’s a proper channel even for sh1t you know…

  2. My point is, the more we exhibit our silly penchant for dancing the ocho-ocho in the streets everytime we are unhappy, the MORE we look like a bunch of morons to the rest of the world.

    And we wonder why being proud to be Pinoy is such a tough sell to the youth…

  3. But ADULTS with diarrhea still poop in toilets. Not on streets.

    only if you’re provided access. point is, the admin has kept lock the door to the biggest toilet around: the batasang pambansa.

  4. My contribution to the Blogswarm at http://www.geocities.com/kabayanone/ is short and sweet lifted from a statement I posted here with a photo of Emperor Palpakparin Arroyo. Each and every day, the Emperor attempts to tighten her grip(“Empress” nga sana eh kaya lang hindi bagay sa itsura.)

    As of late she’s going to send her BIR stormtroopers against the Makati Business Club while a surveillance camera is installed in front of La Salle Gate (what now, she thinks that the Makati Business Club and La Sallites are Communists and Jihadists now? ***Canned laughter***)

    Love your “Fighting Filipinos” image you posted above Manolo. 🙂

  5. “As of late she’s going to send her BIR stormtroopers against the Makati Business Club while a surveillance camera is installed in front of La Salle Gate (what now, she thinks that the Makati Business Club and La Sallites are Communists and Jihadists now? ***Canned laughter***) — Kabayan

    Well now, this makes the whole thing a bit more interesting now, doesn’t it?

    See, if people were less busy TAKING SIDES and labelling each other as Pro or Anti Arroyo, they’d be more able to better appreciate the amount of sh1t coming to light as a result of these quaint circuses REGARDLESS of who is doing what to who.

    Instead of taking sides (and dancing to one side’s tune or another like morons), why don’t we as a people sick one over the other — kind of like a three-way mud-wrestling match involving (1) Anti-GMA cretins, (2) Pro-GMA morons, and (3) the Catholic Church leadership — and sit back, have a beer and a few laughs.

    The one who comes out of it holding all the bras wins!

    It’s simple, really. 😀

  6. sit back, have a beer and a few laughs

    only if this is a laughing matter. and only if you’re not down under.

    sigh.

  7. “As of late she’s going to send her BIR stormtroopers” — Kabayan

    Anyone who’s seen the movie ‘Elizabeth’ would appreciate the the genius behind people who not only hold power, but USE it shrewdly.

    We all know who comes out the winner at the end of that movie. 😉

    Think of the rather unique set of characters performing their song and dance today:

    (1) An unpopular leader who is presiding over statistical economic prosperity who’s actually got BRAINS;

    (2) An Edsa-“revolution”-weary people who just simply want to get on with their jobs;

    (3) A few delusional bozos who are still beating their old street revolution drums;

    (4) A poor sod of a fall-guy barking up the wrong tree.

    (5) A world-class information dissemination cash machine (the Philippine Media) profiting from all this.

    I think I’ll be placing my bets on who’s gonna come out of this holding all the proverbial bras. 😀

  8. In the end Benigno0, when there are irreconcilable differences between parties where one side chooses darkness while the other is light and the other option is to choose the JDV kind of gray, the people will just have to choose a side.

    As it is, I and a lot of decent Filipinos do not agree with the shade of gray where this administration “moderate their corruption” or “moderate their greed” (an oxymoron really) where 22% grease money is an “acceptable rate”. If this administration would like to end this polarization of society, they must leave their corruption and abuse of power and choose the side of light.

    Ayaw nila iwan ang kasamaan at ayaw rin namin sumali sa kanilang kasamaan. Ayaw nilang piliin ang kabutihan sa paraan ng pamamahala, kaya nandito tayo ngayon.

    The basis of unity is good, honest and moral governance.

  9. “only if this is a laughing matter. and only if you’re not down under.” — inodoro ni emilie

    To be honest, dude, it actually is a laughing matter from where I sit.

    You should try watching this circus on ABS CBN’s ‘Bandila’ while curled up in a cozy couch in 22 deg-C natural climate knowing that your adopted country’s parliament is debating things that actually matter to the ordinary citizen.

    You’d be amazed with what you SEE when you’ve got an outsider’s perspective…

  10. see, benigs, your generalization comes from viewing abs-cbn from where you are sitted. which means your view is predefined. you need the pulse of the people to ascertain what you’re being fed with.

  11. supremo, recall how many revolutions the french have undergone. even the english had their civil war and then their glorious revolution; the americans had their revolution then a civil war and then the peaceful equal rights and anti-war movements.

  12. I was given many chances to get out of the Philippines, but I stuck it through, benign0. As a Filipino, I felt it would be selling out to the Philippines that I hold dear if I were to immigrate to a different country.

    Feel free to make fun of your home country while you’re in the comfort of your foreign home. Those of us who stayed behind are not amused.

  13. “As a Filipino, I felt it would be selling out to the Philippines that I hold dear if I were to immigrate to a different country” – JMCastro

    It’s ironic you’d say that, considering that 10% of the economy is propped up by expat Filipinos’ remmittances and up to half the population buys their celphone trinkets using these funds.

    Go figure.

  14. “Feel free to make fun of your home country while you’re in the comfort of your foreign home. Those of us who stayed behind are not amused” – JMCastro

    I am indeed exercising this “freedom” that everyone is supposedly “fighting” for. 😀

  15. “see, benigs, your generalization comes from viewing abs-cbn from where you are sitted” – inidoro de manille

    Did I say that I believe and internalise any of what I see through this poor excuse of a news programme?

    As I said, it’s all just for laughs. It is after all just the latest circus in a string of circuses that dot Pinoy history.

  16. I don’t know how can these people make a ‘comisioner’ who has enriched himself already be their hero?!

    He’s out to save himself only and monolo and his cohorts is celebrating the second coming! Nuts

    go to court guys not the streets

  17. just a note, much as i’ve been disagreeing with them. cAt and bencard are most definitely not paid agents or associated personally in any way, with cruella’s regime. they are not mercenaries, they are expressing their genuine convictions (with which i disagree).

    for the record. as for other commenters i have no personal knowledge of their bona fides.

  18. You should try watching this circus on ABS CBN’s ‘Bandila’ while curled up in a cozy couch in 22 deg-C natural climate knowing that your adopted country’s parliament is debating things that actually matter to the ordinary citizen…You’d be amazed with what you SEE when you’ve got an outsider’s perspective…

    Australia is a model to follow, but its decades ahead in political development. This is also a country built on the blood of many, for which they have apologised very recently.

    It boggles the mind how you lack imagination and hope in possibilities Manong Benigs, especially when you are witness to (and have been enjoying) a polity that values and cares for the majority.

    Well, we see the exact same newscast at 6h45 in the morning, and we have vastly different reactions. You laugh, I cry.

  19. hawaiianguy :
    JMCastro,

    You may be communicating with a troll, a ghost or another kind of pinoy monkey.

    Then another is a ventriloquist with a dummy. HAHAHA! Check the last thread, HG.

  20. btw, that poster is from 1943, published by the government-in-exile, to rally support for the filipinos that fought in bataan and corregidor.

  21. The right to peaceful assembly can be conducted in places where there are no explicit prohibitions for such activities, like for example close to Power facilities (nuclear plants)children schools and permits may not necessary. And minor inconveniences like temporary traffic delays could not be an excuse for the authorities to use Unreasonable Force as means of dispersing the exercise of that right, but instead they will be helping conduct the smooth and effective transmission of the messages of the protesters…

  22. I posted my blogswarm post yesterday and the surprising thing about it is it felt hollow although that’s the best I could do for now.

    It felt hollow because I’m sure that it’s not going to affect Gloria, or the pro-Gloria crowd anyway. It’s confirmed by her pronouncement that she’s going to finish her term because she said that “Filipinos love stability”! She must really believe that, or she’s just plain thickskinned.

  23. who cares if it’s a ghost, a troll, a pinoy monkey or, as contributed by one who is insanely ecstatic about his own sick idea, a ventriloquist, as long as they make sense and contribute something worthwhile to the discussion. the ones who pollute this blog are the real dummies who are only good at heckling, insults and personal attacks. but the worst are those lowlifes who think they are great just because they can heckle the loudest and laugh like a fiend at their own miserable “jokes”.

  24. Jon Mariano said:

    “I posted my blogswarm post yesterday and the surprising thing about it is it felt hollow although that’s the best I could do for now.

    It felt hollow because I’m sure that it’s not going to affect Gloria, or the pro-Gloria crowd anyway. It’s confirmed by her pronouncement that she’s going to finish her term because she said that “Filipinos love stability”! She must really believe that, or she’s just plain thickskinned.”

    ======

    Hi Jon,

    I guess, there is a nagging feeling that we should do something more given the worsening situation. In any case, you can do it a bit at a time till you’re comfortable with the next steps that needed to be taken in the future.

    Can you post the link (url) to your blogswarm? Thanks.

  25. titanium,

    so why were you raising a howler over dirk pitt’s parody, when he (a troll according to your perception) was–well–making sense?

  26. Bencard: “peaceful assembly”? look at the inflammatory rhetorics here. look at the red flags and headbands massing around (atat na atat) with heavy signs saying “patalsikin”, “litsunin”, “bitayin” “paalisin, “now na”, or similar exhortations.

    So inflammatory rhetoric is already ‘coercion’ in your legal opinion? Sheeeesh. IMO, a government that would feel coerced by rhetoric, red flags, and slogans is a wimpy one indeed and doesnt deserve to govern. Im hoping that this government will resign because theyll do some serious soul-searching and conclude that it is bringing the country down after hearing from the governed whose consent they need to continue governing.

  27. jeg, all those i cited as examples of inflammatory rhetoric may all be taken as manifestations of threats and intimidation which, when accompanied by overt acts of violence (as in the storming of malacanang gates in 2001 by erap fanatics) may be considered as coercion. Well, you can hope but i don’t think it will happen unless, maybe, more than half (not from poll surveys) the country’s population rise up and demand her resignation.

  28. I agree with Bencard — commitment to non-violence (including protest rhetoric) can dramatically reduce the probability of a harsh police/military response.

    Unity was achieved in People Power ’86 precisely because of its commitment to prayerful non-violence.

    Moreover, this kind of atmosphere is exactly the sort of calm before the storm which can make the effect of any protest all the more effective — that, I feel, more than anything resulted in the dissolution of the Marcos regime.

  29. Bencard: Well, you can hope but i don’t think it will happen unless, maybe, more than half (not from poll surveys) the country’s population rise up and demand her resignation.

    The numbers arent necessary, as past experience has shown. All that’s needed are voices that the government will listen to, even though they are in the minority, numbers-wise. It could be church leaders, business leaders, government leaders (“Cut and cut cleanly, Mr. President.”), even military leaders. That’s the reason theyre leaders. The population allows them to lead and speak for them.

  30. “Moreover, this kind of atmosphere is exactly the sort of calm before the storm which can make the effect of any protest all the more effective — that, I feel, more than anything resulted in the dissolution of the Marcos regime.” — JMCastro

    There’s the small matter of the following two factors that need to be considered before we start comparing the ridiculousness of today’s situation with that of 1986:

    (1) We’ve had no less than three Edsa “revolutions” and one Commonwealth Avenue “revolution” in the last two decades (all yielding very little fundamental change in our society)

    (2) Given the above, it’s been a general observation that Pinoys are all generally “revolution”-weary.

    (3) Compare this to 1986 when street “revolutions” could still be considered to be an innovation, today such “revolutions” are no more than a poignant reminder of how imagination-challenged we as a people collectively are in the application of this great concept we call democracy.

    So to be still talking about street revolutions like they were some kind of silver bullet that will cure the sad dysfunction of the nation is to me borderline delusional.

  31. supremo says:
    “I got the drift.
    DOCUMENTS=FREEDOM
    Very nice!”

    Licensing for professions exists so that much as you like to practice medicine, the DOCUMENTS ensure that you are at least CAPABLE.

    Licensing for drivers exists so that much as you’d like to just walk into a shop and pick a car you like, the DOCUMENTS ensure that you will not create a 10 car pileup right smack in the middle of a school crossing.

    Granted that implementations of these are far from perfect but I’d rather have these imperfect institutions than having the absence of government at all.

    Freedom is precious and should be treated and USED as such.

  32. To Bencard:

    Fuck the constitution. We have been fuck by the Arroyo mafia from the start. It’s time she and her mobsters go or this country will be torn to pieces.

  33. benign0:

    I read the Winston Churchill website that mlq3 linked to, and you’d be surprised at what a people, convinced of their own righteousness, can do.

    If the British people followed historical forces during World War II, Germans would probably be running the whole of Europe.

    We can beat historical forces — what we need is to be convinced of the righteousness of our cause, and be willing to act on it.

  34. Any updates on the protest rally/s for today? (btw the link to my blogswarm post is under moderatin, i guess. So I’ll just paste it here).

    If you are against corruption and you believe that Gloria’s
    administration is corrupt, then the simple answer is Yes, go and
    support the protest actions. If you think that there will be not
    enough bodies to make a significant protest, then help increase the
    number by bringing yourself. If you think that 2010 is near and
    there’s no need to dump Gloria Arroyo now, just go ahead and join the
    protests to make your sentiment known. It’s as simple and easy as
    that. Just go!

  35. cAt and bencard are most definitely not paid agents or associated personally in any way, with cruella’s regime. they are not mercenaries, they are expressing their genuine convictions (with which i disagree).

    Thanks mlq3.

    Alam ko ahente lang ako ng sweepstakes. mwehehe.

  36. I know that there are some people who are not too excited about joining the mass protest action against the corruption in the Arroyo administration. They’re probably saying, “People Power na naman? EDSA na naman?”

    As Edmund Burke said, “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men do nothing.” Huwag po nating pabayaan ang ilang garapal na opisyal na babuyin ang ating Inang Bayan. Stand up for our Republic!

    And to the people who are saying, “Kayo na lang muna.” I hope you can find some inspiration in the life of Rosa Parks, the African-American woman who protested against racism, in her own “little” way. She showed us the Power of One. I read a nice article about the Power of One and I’d like to share it with you. Read it here:
    http://innerbest.com/articles/powerofone.html

    Thanks,
    Lester
    http://www.lestercavestany.com

  37. jon mariano, why should someone who wants to abide by the rule of law and wait for 2010 go to the rally. to inflate the numbers of the “oust-gloria, now na” crowd? nice try!

  38. Hi Jon,

    Just go to the Black and White movement link that Manolo provided above. In the lower right of the B&W site are the schedule of activities. It’s best also to watch the news now and then for any possible changes. But to my knowledge, today’s initial activity is a go.

  39. mlq3,

    At least France did not go back to absolute monarchy after the French Revolution of 1789. The subsequent monarchs and leaders even ‘moderated their greed’. They are aware that if the French people could overthrow one leader, they could overthrow another. That’s what we need in the Philippines. An event so traumatic for the national leadership that no future leader will even attempt to go against the people.

  40. When a government has control of all the DOCUMENTS; can create, destroy, hold and hide such; if illegal transactions are done by word of mouth and enforced by hit-men, where then would be the relevance of this?

    I agree that documents are important EXCEPT if they are already controlled, tampered and manipulated to be used in nefarious activities.

  41. Bencard, as I said in my post, go and join to make your sentiments known (that you don’t like Gloria).

  42. The assumption being that those who think that 2010 is near still want Gloria out as soon as possible but just don’t think that the protest actions are not going to make a difference.

  43. Sorry for the double negation; it must be the noodles calling me! (Do you know that lunch time in Hong Kong starts at 1:00 PM?)

  44. “jon mariano, why should someone who wants to abide by the rule of law and wait for 2010 go to the rally. to inflate the numbers of the “oust-gloria, now na” crowd? nice try!”

    Precisely. Which is why ‘RIDICULOUS’ is the only adjective that comes to mind. One moment there is all the huff and puff about “rule of law”, then there is huff and puff about street antics.

    When one cruises the streets of populist discussion without the benefit of having their thoughts structured along a proper philosophical framework, you get a lot of these inconsistencies and paradoxes in thinking.

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