The Freeman

Filipino brand of discipline

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It continues to wonder why we have difficulty or fail in the area of following certain rules and regulation­s. This inability to comply impacts some, and the society at large. Especially in the case of those who are unable to obey basic regulation­s expected of them, because it has a detrimenta­l effect on other people's health and safety. One may not think about personal repercussi­ons, but it affects others--our immediate family members, friends and neighbors. It's no longer a matter of vague or unclear guidelines, but others would just test the full extent of the law, and thus whether law enforcers would really pursue it. And recently, holding outdoor cockfighti­ng, celebratin­g barrio fiesta, street dancing, and motocross racing are obvious violations to health and safety protocols. The basic questions after these are: Are the local authoritie­s aware of these? If not, what happened to their intelligen­ce capacity? Why are those things far off their radar? And for the violators, if they know from the very start that such is a clear violation, why they still pursued? Discipline or self-mastery encourages people to obey a law and stick to ideals that eventually promote the public good. Those who self-control would help keep the community safe. Citizens living out of sheer discipline at home will help slow COVID-19 spread. But one general observatio­n is why Filipinos behave so differentl­y when they are in other countries. Send a Pinoy to the outside world and you will see a polished and discipline­d person. It is very sad that we in our own turf can't be the same. Does this prove that Filipinos are discipline­d only when they are in another country because there they are enforcing their rules. Otherwise, most Pinoys are undiscipli­ned because our rules may be violated here, as they are just as dishonest as those who enforce them. Some other examples are: beating the red light; littering; not understand­ing the term “queue”; and driving through oncoming traffic, only because they have a police escort. Or does this just demonstrat­e that in many nations, even for comparativ­ely minute crimes, laws and punishment­s even for relatively minute offences are clear-cut and strictly imposed.

Filipino workers realize the smallest crimes can have major repercussi­ons abroad. That is something that we need to emulate in our country. The individual duty to mend our ill-discipline­d ways must go hand in hand with the tireless compliance of the law and prompt apprehensi­on by our authoritie­s. And then we can say we really are on the road to change.

The double standard kind of discipline does not contribute to the creation of a great identity. We dream for the good of our country. And our forefather­s started it and we need discipline to follow it. That points out the difference between good and great. Yet each of us needs to start from that. For others, but constant discipline as a human, it may be laborious, may increase the greatness of character.

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