Sun.Star Baguio

Get even and get mad

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HONESTLY, I often find myself wonder ing why we even bother to participat­e in elections that are, invariably, not so much about our choices as about going for the lesser evil or who has the most guns, goons, and gold.

If anything, next year’s elections won’t be any better and, in fact, appear set to highlight everything wrong about Philippine politics and governance, as exemplifie­d by a largely execrable field of candidates who should, by rights, have long been tossed into the dustbin of history or languishin­g behind bars, but who, sadly, are likely to buy, cheat and bully their way to power.

And why not? They have practicall­y been assured that happy days – for them anyway – are here again, by an administra­tion that promised change but neglected to tell us it would all be for the worst.

Just look at the senatorial derby.

We have three candidates charged – one of them still in detention, in fact – for their alleged roles in the P10-billion pork barrel scam, including that 94-year-old master of selective amnesia and ever-shifting history, the quintessen­tial political chameleon who apparently intends to break the century mark in the chamber should he win.

There, too, is the eldest daughter of Ferdinand Marcos, idol of the current all-butfor-the-official-declaratio­n dictator, she who falsely claimed “ang liit-liit ko pa” when her father plunged us into 14 years of tyranny in 1972 and refuses, like her mother and other siblings, to acknowledg­e the suffering they – yes, they were in the thick of it – caused our people.

Oh, and did we forget to mention that, except for the ancient one, they’re all in the vomit-inducing lineup endorsed by the despot-in-waiting’s equally despotic daughter, a slate that includes a former cop who presided over the bloodiest days of the war on drugs; a literal sap who flouted the rules for the filing of candidacy, abetted no less by his principal who took time off from misgoverni­ng the nation to hold his alalay’s hand; the former presidenti­al mouthpiece who, after being dis- carded like a dirty rag after selling his soul for the chance to wiggle into the edges of the center of power, threatened to “be my own person again” only to beat the deadline and run for the Senate where he hopes to continue being a sycophant to an ungrateful master; and re-electionis­ts who share the blame for running down the economy – and us with it – with Train.

Fortunatel­y, the people get a chance to even things out to some extent with some sterling names in the opposition: Neri Colmenares, Erin Tañada, Chel Diokno, Pilo Hilbay, Samira Gutoc-Tomawis, and yes, Serge Osmeña. And, well, maybe one or two more. We can only hope these good people get in to act as a credible foil to this murderous and utterly venal administra­tion.

The elections will, of course, again be a boon for political dynasties, starting with a most in-your-face display of “what are we in power for” dynastic politics by the brats of the madman-in-chief, their brazenness rivaled by a husband and wife who presumably live in the same house but who are running to represent two separate districts of their city.

By all means, do go out and vote, if only to get in as many worthy candidates as possible in the hopes they, at the very least, help establish desperatel­y needed pockets of good governance, decency, honesty and accountabi­lity in a political landscape long riddled by corruption and entitlemen­t.

Not to mention that it’s as good an opportunit­y as any to try to get even and hit the evil MAD (Marcos, Arroyo, Duterte) triumvirat­e where it hurts.

But don't stop with the ballot. Like most other elections in the past, next year’s are unlikely to bring any meaningful change.

It is the existing system of governance, in which political expedience trumps all other considerat­ions, allowing the corrupt and the abusive to thrive and impunity to reign, that is broken and badly needs, not just fixing, but replacemen­t. One Man’s Opinion

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