Sun.Star Pampanga

Moving on

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MARIA Imelda Josefa Marcos, also known as Imee, governor of Ilocos Norte and eldest child of the late unlamented dictator Ferdinand Marcos, has a strange notion of remembranc­e, the nature of time and justice.

At a press conference in Cebu City on Tuesday, August 21, Imee suggested that Filipinos “move on” from that dark chapter of our history known as the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, a rule so violent and rapacious we still reel from its effects more than three decades after the people rose up to oust the tyrant.

It would not be the first time Imee and other members of her family have tried to play the “move on” card to dodge the issue of their involvemen­t in the dictatorsh­ip.

I vividly remember interviewi­ng her mother Imelda once and asking her where she thought she would go when she died. Without batting an eyelash, Madame looked me in the eye and replied: “Why, Heaven of course, where I will be with my dear Ferdinand.” All the while her right hand was fidgeting with her left, on a finger of which was a ring with a hugediamon­d, which at one point slipped and turned palm up to reveal an even larger diamond on the other side.

But what rankles with her latest attempt to brush off the past is that Tuesday happened to be August 21, the same day in 1983 that Senator Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. was assassinat­ed on his return from exile, his death adding fuel to the already growing protest movement that would boot Marcos from power less than three years later.

“The millennial­s have moved on, and I think people at my age should also move on as well,” said Imee, now 62 and, aptly enough, a possible senatorial candidate of this administra­tion, led by a homicidal madman who aspires to and is likely to – if he hasn’t done so yet – outdo his idol Marcos in brutality and, although the jury’s still out, in corruption as well.

But how can someone who did not experience strongman rule “move on” from it? Isn’t this why there is a perception that young people seem to buy the canard of Marcos’ being the “greatest” president, because they never saw for themselves how the truth was actually the exact opposite of this?

Then again, even Imee’s claim about millennial­s moving on doesn’t ring true at all if we simply look at how so many of our youth turned out to protest her father’s furtive burial at the Libingan ng mga Bayani, courtesy of Rodrigo Duterte and what would eventually unmask itself as a coopted Supreme Court.

Oh, and in another sweet irony, millennial­s who may not have known what it was under Imee’s Dad are getting a quick education on populist strongman rule, no thanks to the current Palace occupant. So, no, Imee, we seriously doubt these millennial­s will agree with “moving on” without accountabi­lity from this nightmare.

As for people her age, aside from the sincerely true believers (yes, there are those, including relatives who I dearly love and respect), she must be talking of those coming down with early dementia or, well, let’s face it, the world will never

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