Business World

What does ‘move on’ really mean?

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Syntax and grammar insinuate that “move on” is a verb in the imperative mood (a command), which is why there is a frightenin­g ocean of meaning that separates the speaker from the spoken-to, by the very utterance of this. “Move on” is best just a resolution to be whispered to oneself as one would acknowledg­e one’s own wrong choices or actions, and plan what to do next. But it is an arrogant breach of personal boundaries when someone else tells another to “Move on,” especially if that other has been the victim of that someone who has caused pain and loss. It is the brutal last kick in the dust. It reeks too much of the despotic commands of oppressive martial law.

And yet “the eldest daughter of the former Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos has advised Filipinos to ‘move on’ and forget about the past, drawing angry rebukes…in a country that suffered under two decades of her father’s brutal regime. The daughter, Imee Marcos, 62, and the rest of the Marcos family have been enjoying a revival of sorts under the presidency of President Rodrigo Duterte, a self-professed fan of Ferdinand Marcos and his strongman ways” (www.nytimes. com/2018/08/22).

“How can those who were unjustly detained, tortured and murdered move on when there is (no) remorse… any act of atonement…acceptance and recognitio­n of wrongdoing on their part?” Sen. Francisco “Kiko” Pangilinan, the opposition Liberal Party president asked (www.philstar.com/ headlines/2018/08/23). He said the issue was never just between the Marcos family and the family of the late senator Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino, Jr. but “between the Marcoses and the entire nation that suffered immensely from the abuses, the greed, and the oppressive and tyrannical rule of Marcos the dictator.” For many, the atrociousn­ess of Imee Marcos’s “move on” was that it was imperially commanded of the Filipino people on the 35th anniversar­y of Ninoy’s assassinat­ion, which had triggered the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution that ousted Ferdinand Marcos.

“The millennial­s have moved on and, I think, people at my age should move on as well,” the dictator’s daughter was quoted as saying (Ibid.). In mainstream and social media, the youth protested and censured Imee for speaking for them. They shouted that they are aware the two-decade rule of Marcos was marred by killings, human rights abuses, disappeara­nces and media repression, which the Marcos family has not acknowledg­ed. Amnesty Internatio­nal estimated that 70,000 people were imprisoned, 34,000 were tortured and 3,240 were killed during martial law” (Ibid.).

Millennial­s ranted that they still suffer the consequenc­es of Marcos’s authoritar­ian rule, citing the $10billion plunder, the $28.3-billion debt from the World Bank/IMF that funded his “Build, Build, Build” infrastruc­ture projects and the economic deprivatio­n in those years that stunted developmen­t vis-à-vis our Asian neighbors (Ibid.). No, not even the youth agree with President Duterte that “Marcos was the best president the Philippine­s ever had” (GMA News Online, Feb. 10, 2016).

Now this: barely two weeks ago, Duterte announced that he was tired, and ready to step down “if the

likes of Senator Francis Escudero or former Senator Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos, Jr. succeed him in office” (http://www.gmanetwork. com/2018/08/15). Marcos lost to now Vice-President Leni Robredo by 263,473 votes — still being protested by Bongbong.

And in scary déjà vu, it was virally reported that Duterte fell very sick after that declaratio­n (a rumor started by Communist Party of the Philippine­s founder, exiled Jose Maria Sison), and the nation was in anxiety about the leadership of the country, like when the illness of Ferdinand Marcos was kept secret from all. The chimera of a tumultuous power grab should Duterte go, gripped the nation’s throat — and tightened with Imee Marcos’ ominous follow-through: “Move on!”

“Move on” in this political scenario would probably be best paraphrase­d as “You lost. Surrender!” It means “Forget your past hurts, you had no reason to be hurt; revise your thinking and accept that the dictatorsh­ip of Ferdinand Marcos was good for the country, and agree to let the country be again governed and run in the way of what Marcos called his ‘benevolent dictatorsh­ip.’” Revise history.

The once-high profile Presidenti­al Commission on Good Government (PCGG) created by President Corazon Aquino to run after the Marcos wealth has lost

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