Philippine Daily Inquirer

Corrupting a country

- MELBA PADILLA MAGGAY

How did it happen that a president can have the audacity to publicly say he lied about a senator’s supposed bank account overseas? Is the unabashed disclosure a sign of his increasing­ly brazen self-assurance that no one will register even a whimper over it? Why is it that many buy the idea that the thousands who have been killed in the war on drugs are mere collateral damage in the campaign and not, at bottom, a terrible symptom of a careless and brutish disregard for human life—a product of a policy, though unwritten, of simply eliminatin­g those who are seen to be the scum of society, in this case mostly the defenseles­s poor? Why is it that after more than four decades of the memory of martial law, we stand on the brink of another wholesale collapse of our institutio­ns? Once again, as in the Marcos regime, state instrument­alities are being used to hound and silence critics, particular­ly those who stand up to Malacañang in defense of human rights and the rule of law. to publicIt is supreme shaming irony for that beinga senator “immoral”of the and realma “slut”is exposed when Mr. Duterte himself is a known womanizer and cohabits with someone who is not his legal wife. He excoriates Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales for “selective justice” when Sen. Leila de Lima is in detention despite the fact that his own secretary of justice, Vitaliano Aguirre, knows that the testimony of convicted drug lords, who are not disinteres­ted parties, will not stand in court. Aguirre is himself guilty of playing fast and loose with facts and the law, announcing secret meetings between senators and terrorists, and, when caught plotting red-handed via his own cell phone, fumes and rages and files suit. army executeMr. for Duterte’shis legislatin­g apocalypti­c cohortsin aid designs.in of Congress persecutio­n,Speaker have Pantaleonb­ecomedark horsesa Alvarez, virtual who himself still shadowed by his involvemen­t in past scandals like Piatco, has put into motion impeachmen­t moves against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno for alleged corruption. Vice President Leni Robredo has also been threatened with impeachmen­t for “betrayal of public trust” for her disclosure­s to the United Nations about the extrajudic­ial killings: She has supposedly ruined the country’s reputation (“siniraan ang bayan”).

Yet Mr. Duterte is the one single person that has once again ruined the reputation of this country. Never mind the opinions of the United States or Europe, but in this region, people invariably ask, “What has happened to your country?”—the subtext being: How, after so bright a promise at the restoratio­n of our democratic institutio­ns in 1986, the Philippine­s is back to the delusion that strongman rule makes for a strong state. ment, There let are me manyjust comment interrelat­edon the answers perplexity­to this. of For some the over moMr. Duterte’s continuing popularity and the oft- repeated notion that Filipinos are personalis­tic and thus gravitate to personalit­y rather than platform or ideology. This is why our “people power,” it is said, while it has inspired other countries to similarly rise in revolt, has failed to get institutio­nalized into mechanisms that would foil the rise of authoritar­ianism once again. First, there is nothing wrong with our culture of personalis­m. It is precisely because we take personally the depths to which our public morals and civic culture have been degraded that our people are once again taking to the streets. We do our people a disservice when we fault them for lacking ideologica­l moorings or tar them as merely “dilaw” or “pula,” or whatever color- coded labeling we inflict on them, when what they are actually doing is rising to that call inside them, which is in fact more primal: the sense of right and wrong, of just and unjust, of what is decent and indecent as our parents have taught us and as our culture has conditione­d us. Second, we do not account to culture what are really issues of power. We do not have a “damaged culture,” as pundits like to echo an American journalist who only had a cursory look at the distortion­s caused by our colonial history. What we have is a long- running ruling class— political dynasties dating back to colonial times, whose sense of accountabi­lity is not to our people but to their colonial overlords or the current equivalent: whoever captures the apparatus of power and commands all the levers that dispense the spoils of privilege. Hence the mass migration to the party in power, and the 119 members of the House who toed the line and voted to reduce the 2018 budget of the Commission on Human Rights to P1,000. That we prefer personalit­y to an impersonal bureaucrac­y or an abstract ideology we must accept as a given. This means that the quality of leadership in our institutio­ns is critical. Leaders, because they possess coercive power, are in a unique position to shape their organizati­onal culture. They set the boundaries, the unwritten code of what can and cannot be done. Mr. Duterte, in his vast carelessne­ss about law and language, has let loose a virulent moral virus that has contaminat­ed the few good people around him and now threatens to engulf the entire nation like a plague.

———— Dr. Melba Padilla Maggay is a social anthropolo­gist and author of “Rise Up and Walk, Culture and Religion in Empowering the Poor,” published in Oxford, UK.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines