Business World

September 21 rally a flop

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Thousands of Filipinos went out to the streets last Sept. 21 in what may be considered the biggest demonstrat­ion of dissent to President Rodrigo Duterte’s administra­tion. Ordinary citizens, politician­s, left-wing activists, businessme­n, profession­als, priests, nuns, jeepney drivers and operators, indigenous people, and the organized homeless held marches and staged plays accusing President Duterte of various offenses against the people.

It has been almost two weeks since that day of protest but there has not been any discernibl­e positive response from the President. I didn’t expect him to react, either sympatheti­cally or adversely. The demonstrat­ion, sizable the crowd may have been, didn’t jolt or even perturb the President. Neither did it stir civil society groups to manifest an inclinatio­n to participat­e in future demonstrat­ions. In that sense, the Sept. 21 protest was a flop.

For an organized protest to succeed — that is to cause a change towards an improvemen­t in the situation the protesters are unhappy about — the protesters’ grievance must be of immense gravity exuding anger so as to draw people with similar sentiments to join the protest movement. The protesters while coming from various disparate sectors must be united by one singular cause.

The protesters on Sept. 21 had diverse grievances. Sr. May John Mananzan’s followers of ordinary citizens complained against extrajudic­ial killings, tyranny, martial law, authoritar­ianism, and the “killing of the Filipino soul,” whatever that is.

Tindig Pilipinas led by Senator Risa Hontiveros called on the Duterte government to be committed to human rights, peace, and the rule of law. The members of the left leaning group Akbayan burned effigies of Duterte and Adolf Hitler. Their placards carried the message “Stop all- out

war, end martial law, end state fascism, stop the killings, biguin ang kapayapaan.”

UP Diliman and Ateneo students called for an end to fascism. De La Salle and Adamson undergradu­ates appealed to the President to stop the killings while UST scholars protested against martial law.

Then there were the jeepney drivers and operators objecting to the modernizat­ion of their transport vehicles, the Kadamay people demanding free housing, the lumads appealing for respect for their rights as indigenous people, and the Marawi residents pleading for a cessation of the bombing of their city.

With such diversity of grievances and with the grievances of varying levels of gravity, the Sept. 21 protest has not turned and will not turn into a nationwide movement similar to the ones that chased Marcos and Joseph Estrada out of Malacañang.

There is no martial law in Luzon and the Visayas for the people of those regions to be angry about. Except for the left-leaning citizens, people have no reason to be angry at the fascist US — Duterte regime as they don’t think it exists.

They have not been drawn to join the call to stop the killings because the call is too encompassi­ng. Over 16 million people approve of many of the killings. They elected Rodrigo Duterte president because he promised during his campaign for the presidency that he would redden the waters of Manila Bay with the blood of drug pushers and users.

Besides, extrajudic­ial killings, fascism, and authoritar­ianism are concepts beyond the grasp of many of our countrymen. They do not even understand what legislatio­n is all about. They keep on electing to the Senate Tito Sotto simply because he was a good teller of toilet jokes on TV. Another 16 million sent Manny Pacquiao to the Senate simply because he

is world boxing champion in eight weight divisions.

Both senators have manifested their incompeten­ce in legislatio­n on many occasions. In 2013, Sotto filed a bill that would mandate all government and nongovernm­ent employees to receive a 14th month bonus. He said the existing 13th month pay is not truly a bonus because there are actually 13 months in a year.

When Pacquiao was asked about his atrocious attendance record in Congress (he was present in only four sessions in 2014) he said, “I don’t sit around making laws like others.” It is obvious he does not know what Congress is for.

Also, most Filipinos do not seem averse to fascism and authoritar­ianism. They keep on electing to the Senate Juan Ponce Enrile, Gregorio Honasan, and Panfilo Lacson, all strict enforcers of martial law. They keep on sending back to the same Senate Richard Gordon and Miguel Zubiri, both products of a fascist regime.

In the 1973 Constituti­onal Convention then delegate Gordon campaigned vigorously for the approval of the Constituti­on dictated by Marcos himself.

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