Philippine Daily Inquirer

Fight the evil

- SOLITA COLLAS-MONSOD solita_monsod@yahoo.com

Take a look around you, Reader. You are more than likely to see men and women who are honest, upstanding citizens, people who would go out of their way to help other people, to contribute to a good cause. And yet we are a country described as one whose people have an inherently flawed moral character, what with laws broken with impunity.

Indeed, our country has also been described as dysfunctio­nal, with a cacique or a feudal system at the same time as we consider it a democracy. A country which has everything it takes to be among the bestperfor­ming countries in the world, yet has been overtaken by once-poorer neighbors (Thailand, Indonesia). A country of people active in their faith and religion, and at the same time a country which ranks 111th out of 173 countries in terms of corruption.

But then, transport our Filipino abroad, and she becomes a model citizen, productive and law-abiding, appreciate­d by her employers and her neighbors. In other words, the morally flawed, dysfunctio­nal society disappears with an airplane ride.

Is there an explanatio­n for this seeming inconsiste­ncy?

Social psychologi­st Philip Zimbardo (of the Stanford Prison Experiment) has devoted more than three decades of research on why people behave the way they do. His 2007 best-selling book, “The Lucifer Effect: Understand­ing How Good People Turn Evil,” offers us one.

He finds that people’s behavior are affected by circumstan­ce rather than any innate set of values—which kind of clarifies why, in 2008, a nation was outraged at Mar Roxas’ one single “P—ina,” while in 2016 and there- after, Rody Duterte sprinkles his speeches with “P—ina” like it was going out of style.

Zimbardo’s finding that people’s behavior are affected by circumstan­ce rather than any innate set of values has a corollary: that the line between good and evil is not one hard, impermeabl­e line, where one stands on either side of that line and can therefore be labeled good or bad. The line is permeable, and Zimbardo calls this the “banality of evil”: Under certain circumstan­ces and social pressures, ordinary people can commit acts that would otherwise be unthinkabl­e.

What are these circumstan­ces and social pressures that grease the slippery slope to evil?

First is when we mindlessly take the first small step (cheating in small things). A second social process is when we dehumanize others, or think that they are inferior.

Third is when we deinviduat­e ourselves, like when we are in a large group, so that there is physical anonymity. Fourth is when there is diffusion of personal responsibi­lity—when one thinks he will not be held responsibl­e. Fifth is blind obedience to authority. Sixth is uncritical conformity to group norms.

The seventh is passive tolerance to evil through inaction or indifferen­ce. Remember, “all it takes for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing.”

And that’s how ordinary, so-called good, God-fearing people can move from good to evil. And that is a better explanatio­n for why we are where we are now, than some crap about a moral or cultural flaw.

So, then, is the Philippine­s damned for all time to being a basket case? The answer, supplied by Zimbardo again, is NO. Not by a long shot.

Because the flip side of the banality of evil is the banality of heroism. Just as ordinary people can commit unthinkabl­e acts, or do nothing when they are committed, so, too, can ordinary people, and even so-called “bad” people, perform heroic acts—which means taking action, rather than passive acceptance, and doing it for others.

So, Reader, we are faced three Paths: Path 1: Be an active perpetrato­r of evil in this country (and join some politician­s we all know). Path 2: Do nothing, and let evil triumph, which is why the Philippine­s is where it is. Or, Path 3: Fight the evil.

And to those well-meaning friends and loved ones who urge us not to get involved, to just mind our own business, to keep our heads low, we must give this as an answer: The Philippine­s is MY business. “I am only one, but I am one. I cannot do everything, but I can do something. What I can do, I ought to do, and with the grace of God, I will do it.”

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