Sun.Star Pampanga

Riskier cut

- ORLANDO P. CARVAJAL

IN a world of changes, some things refuse to change. One is the truism that “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” As long as human nature is human nature absolute power remains a nearly irresistib­le temptation to greed and corruption to even the best of the human species.

That is why I am not down on RevGov (Revolution­ary Government) that some are pushing. It’s too risky. I suffered enough in my nightmaris­h days and nights in a dictator’s “safe house” to risk reducing our nation’s already meager democratic space the way I think a RevGov definitely would.

It is fraught with risk because institutin­g reforms in our admittedly fragile democracy by authoritar­ian or non-democratic means is an oxymoron. It’s like perking up a lethargic horse by firing a bullet to its head. The dictator Ferdinand Marcos killed democracy the moment he declared the Martial Law he wanted to save it with.

I think I know what place pro RevGov people are coming from. Traditiona­l oligarchs are bitterly resisting President Duterte’s attacks on their previously impregnabl­e politico-economic castles. RevGov advocates fear here the potential of a violent reaction from a people that have long been held in bondage by traditiona­l political lords (tyrants really) hiding behind mock democratic façades.

Their fear is not unfounded. History has consistent­ly shown that a suffering majority eventually reaches the end of its rope and goes up in arms against the ruling elite that keep it economical­ly and politicall­y deprived. In fact, the Communist Party of the Philippine­s pins its hopes of winning the protracted war in the countrysid­e on this historical­lyproven eventual scenario.

Pro RevGov people would seem to see Duterte’s populist agenda as a way out of the violent revolution the Communist Party is working on. Hence, they egg him on to push Federalism and his whole populist agenda faster by acquiring the absolute powers of a revolution­ary government.

I know the President well enough personally to trust him with what he is doing, though not necessaril­y with how he is doing it.

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