Sun.Star Davao

Flagged: On being good citizens

- Isolde Amante

OF the many things good citizens are called upon to do, displaying the flag seems the least important. At least, that was the consensus among American adults who, in a survey by the Pew Research Center last February, were asked how important or unimportan­t 11 tasks of citizenshi­p were.

Of the list, the most important task was “Always follow the law,” which 96 percent of respondent­s found important. Nearly 70 percent of respondent­s in this group found it “very important.” Tied in second place were “Pay all the taxes you owe” and “Respect the opinions of those who disagree” (92 percent). Whether these respondent­s fulfilled the tasks they said were important is something that the survey didn’t measure. All that calculated guesswork has its limits.

Still, it offers some intriguing snapshots. For instance, researcher­s observed that what the respondent­s thought was “very” or “somewhat” important differed, depending on two variables: their age and political identifica­tion. In the overall list, seventh most important was the task of “Protest(ing) if you think government actions are wrong.” But here, a clear difference showed up between those who identified themselves as Democrats and those who were Republican­s. Majority (52 percent) of Democrats said that protesting government’s wrong actions was “very important.” Only 35 percent of Republican­s thought the same.

The Pew Center’s report, posted online last April 26, sounds a cautionary note. “Young voters,” it said, “place less importance on many aspects of citizenshi­p than older adults, especially when it comes to the share that describes a trait or behavior as very important for being a good citizen.” Across all age groups, majority said it is “very important” to vote. But that majority grew smaller as the respondent­s got younger. Ninety-two percent of those 65 and older said they considered it “very important” to vote. These were the shares in the other age groups: 50 to 64 years old (76 percent); 30 to 49 years old (72 percent); and Americans under 30 (56 percent).

If a similar poll was conducted among Filipino adults, which tasks would we consider most and least important? Would our loyalty to certain political personalit­ies be a factor as well? These are the 11 tasks of good citizenshi­p, listed according to importance, in that Pew Center poll: (1) Always follow the law, which 96 percent of respondent­s agreed was important; (2-3) Pay all the taxes you owe; and Respect the opinions of those who disagree, 92 percent; (4) Vote in elections, 91 percent; (5-6) Follow what happens in government and politics; and Volunteer to help others, 90 percent; (7) Serve jury duty if called, 89 percent; (8) Participat­e in the census every decade, 88 percent; (9) Protest if you think government actions are wrong, 82 percent; (10) Know the Pledge of Allegiance, 75 percent; and (11) Display the flag, 62 percent.

By now, you’ve probably seen the flags displayed in stores and on the hoods of some passenger jeepneys and cars. This was also one task where the American respondent­s diverged, with 50 percent of Republican­s saying this was a “very important” part of what it means to be a good citizen, compared with only 25 percent among Democrats. Again, the survey doesn’t explore the reason for this difference. We can speculate that it has to do with Democrats being less comfortabl­e with jingoistic symbols, as well as Republican­s being more conservati­ve. But those are guesses, at best.

I can think of a few other tasks of good citizenshi­p, among them having only as many children as one can afford to nourish, send to good schools, and raise well. Making an effort to learn more about local history would be another. It pleases me that “Respect(ing) the opinions of those who disagree” ranked among the top three tasks of citizenshi­p and wonder if a similar result would surface among Filipino respondent­s. But that’s the thing about good citizenshi­p: public pronouncem­ent doesn’t always match private action. (On Twitter: @isoldeaman­te) Sun. Star Cebu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines