The Manila Times

Can Duterte combat illegal drugs if not by the Mao Tse-tung line?

- SAMONTE MAURO GIA SAMONTE profit 70million everyone, needed their forced can never force

Now we are witnessing a frenzied drug campaign by the new Duterte government, as though curbing the illegal drug menace is the key link in the multi-process character of Philippine governance. A veritable euphoria daily seizes the nation with news of continuous killings, which Duterte has owned up to in his avowed determinat­ion to rid the country of illegal drugs. As reports go, an average of 10 drug elements (junkies and pushers) got killed daily starting from July 1, the day after Duterte took over Malacañang.

A comrade claiming to be a nephew of Duterte who was once a member of the special operations unit of the New People’s Army operating in Metro Manila asserts that, indeed, the drug campaign is the key link in achieving good governance in the country. Drug lords, he avers, control the electoral process, thereby ensuring the election to executive and legislativ­e positions of persons who, in turn, ensure protection of the narco trade.

On the other hand, as Duterte - erals of the Philippine National Police have been in connivance with drug syndicates, which should explain why despite arrests every now and then of illegal drug trade operators, the trade machinery on the whole has been virtually left untouched.

In the case of some big drug operators who ended up in jail, the national penitentia­ry has become just their playground, continuing to command their respective businesses right from within their well-appointed detention cells.

Tanauan Mayor Tony Halili at onetime admitted to me that the drug syndicate in his city is being run by its leader, who is in jail.

All told, in the spheres of the executive, the legislativ­e, and the judicial—the three branches of the Philippine government—the narco trade is well ensconced and guar

So it would seem that in pursuing good governance, by seizing the illegal-drug campaign as the key link in the chain of processes of governance, Duterte is on the right track.

Is he?

Mao Tse- tung had said, “Cure the sickness in order to save the patient.” When Duterte goes on a killing rampage against drug addicts and drug pushers, is he saving the patients sick of the narco trade? He simply kills those patients but not curing the illegal drug menace.

Facebook friend Tony Lacaba, brother of one of the often acclaimed slain heroes of the revolution­ary armed struggle, Eman Lacaba, posted an article on his Facebook page which serves to answer the question. Titled “How Maoist Revolution Wiped Out Drug Addiction in China,” written by C. Clark Kissinger, originally posted on Revolution­ary Workers Online, the article offers a truly credible insight by which we may be enlightene­d on the ongoing Duterte campaign against illegal drugs.

For an opener, the article states: “In the United States today, ending drug addiction seems impossible. The system claims to be medication­s, religion, new therapies, and ‘just say no’ campaigns. But despite all of this the drug problem won’t go away—while armed police enforcers harass and brutalize the people.

“Why? Because this dog- eatdog system causes drug use, and because powerful forces within the system off of drug sales. The production, transporta­tion and sale of drugs is a multibilli­on- dollar business. It is run by big- time capitalist­s who have ties throughout the US government, the CIA and the police. Meanwhile, the top rulers of this system blame the people for the ‘drug problem’ –especially poor ghetto youth.”

The article then proclaims a dictum as a lead to its lengthy elaboratio­ns: “ALL OPPRESSION, INCLUDING DRUG ADDICTION, CAN BE OVERTHROWN!”

Yes, no doubt about that. But the problem is, how?

According to the article, old China had the world’s biggest drug problem.

“Before Mao’s revolution won, in 1949, the people of China were miserably poor, ruled by a handful of rich landowners, warlords and foreign capitalist­s.

“Under that old society, many people were strung out on the pipe. There were junkies in China—addicted to opium, morphine and heroin. Halfstarvi­ng laborers used the sweet opium dreams to cover the pain of hunger and hopelessne­ss. And their empty hours. In some areas

even children, smoked opium. In the cities, tiny bottles of drugs were sold on the street corners like ice cream. People got high on the job.

“The people of old China suffered terribly from this drug addiction. Many poor people used their pennies on the pipe instead of food. Addicts often abandoned their children or even SOLD their children to buy more drugs. Addicted women were often forced to become prostitute­s and many died of diseases.”

The article traces the history of drug addiction in China and, in so doing, drives home the point that the drug menace is endemic in a capitalist­ic society. Here’s how the article puts it:

“Drugs were on China by the rich colonialis­ts of Europe and America. The British government even waged the famous Opium War, in 1839, to China to accept opium brought on English ships. Malcolm X wrote: ‘Imagine! Declare war upon someone who objects to being narcotized!’

“This drug trade started because big capitalist­s could make fortunes selling addictive drugs, and because colonialis­t government­s

takeover of China itself. Corrupt helping the foreign capitalist­s enslave the people. This is similar to the way the US ruling class helped create today’s worldwide plague of drug addiction. The US ruling all levels—they often organize it, into oppressed communitie­s to pay for their secret war in Laos. Then, in Reagan’s 1980s, the Nicaragua. US drug companies - ers, which are sold in both legal and ‘ illegal’ ways. The official connection goes down to the street level—where cops demand

“The experience of both China and the US shows why this system solve drug addiction. The system causes the suffering and isolation that makes many people escape into drugs. The system uses drug addiction to weaken the people and enslave them. And all kinds of capital money from drugs. In short, this system CAUSES drug addiction

“In China, the Maoist revolution ended drug addiction QUICKLY. Mao’s revolution­ary armies defeated the oppressors’ armies in 1949. THREE YEARS LATER, in 1952, there were no more addicts, no more pushers, no more opium poppies grown, and no more drugs smuggled in. In only three short years China went from 70 million drug addicts to none.”

Given the above insights, I am constraine­d to view the ongoing Duterte campaign with a large dose of skepticism. The drug menace is not the malady; capitalism is. No matter how intense you campaign against drug addiction, you will never succeed without at the same time campaignin­g against the ogre that needs to feed on drug addiction continuous­ly in order to sustain its monstrosit­y.

By this I do not mean to motivate the President into campaignin­g against the abolition of capitalism. He won’t do it; he can’t. Like the character of the proliferat­ion of drug in old China, which came about as an offspring of capitalism, the Duterte presidency is an offspring of capitalist­ic funding.

What I am only suggesting is for Duterte to call a spade a spade. His ostensible campaign against illegal drugs amounts to nothing but a deodorizin­g of the terrible stench of capitalist­ic oppression, which he is absolutely helpless to prevent.

In conclusion, here is this dossier from an informant that the foreign vessel that dumped some P1.8 billion worth of cocaine in the Eastern Samar coast in 2009 had still got plenty of it cleverly stashed in hidden compartmen­ts when it proceeded to dock in Davao City; those that had been dumped in the Eastern Samar coast simply served the purpose of a decoy to distract attention from the bigger cargo. Bricks of that bigger hot stuff were then reloaded into containers cleverly lumped with innocent-looking the world over.

Question: Why is—or rather, was—Davao City apparently made the transshipm­ent point to the world for the precious substance that originated in South America? Why the need to take that long route to ship cocaine the world over? Because it was there that such shipment, in the guise of transport of bananas, could be convenient­ly done? Who was the Davao City Mayor in Dec. 2009?

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