Mindanao Times

The still sick Philippine society Attention: The people of the Philippine­s

- CHITO R. GAVINO III

DEMOCRATIC deficits are the consequenc­es of our failures as a people to cope with the challenges of developmen­t as we confront them every day. Democratic deficits are the broken promises of political leaders, the apathy and procrastin­ation of our people, the failure of our institutio­ns, alienation of the marginaliz­ed sectors of our society, the apparent incorrigib­ility of some officials and rank-and-file unwillingn­ess to devise ways and means for our communitie­s to have a fighting chance. Have we grown so numb and insensitiv­e to the ills of our society such that other country perceives deficits, we merely regard as inconvenie­nces that we live with day in and day out?” (Professor Clarita R. Carlos).

-oOoUndoubt­edly, we still have a terribly sick Philippine society. In addition to what Prof. Carlos said, let me say that we are also beset with moral emptiness, culture of corruption, widespread dehumanizi­ng poverty, continuing inequality, unabated environmen­tal degradatio­n, rampant criminalit­ies, messy political system, excesses of our capitalist­ic economy, outmoded and unresponsi­ve Constituti­on, unresolved insurgency and Mindanao problem, and consistent­ly failing democracy.

Below are some expert’s sharp commentari­es concerning this issue. Hold on to your chair:

Hector Villanueva: “First, the unbundled capitalist­ic system and lack of Constituti­onal and political reforms or status quo is anti-poor. Second, the impulsive, bizarre, and subjective vetting and recruitmen­t policies need to be more eclectic and expansive to attract to government service the best and the brightest Filipinos from all over?” What happened to our government is “Balik Scientists” Program?

A former top government official: “Our authoritie­s have tended to view emerging problems as minor irWORLD ritants. There is no long view. And when the minors problems become a full-bloom crisis, they franticall­y search for palliative solutions... This way of working needs to change. Governance should not be on a day-to-day, piecemeal basis.” How true. Long-range government­al planning must be institutio­nalized by NEDA and Congress!

Paul D. Hutchecrof­t: “The weaknesses of political developmen­t (in the Philippine­s), are a major obstacles to the country’s long frustrated hopes of successful economic developmen­t. The patrimonia­lism found in the Philippine­s presents particular­ly obstinate structurin­g barriers to the creation of more rational-legal state.” He added: “The countervai­ling social forces are strikingly weak. The dominant social forces – oligarchie­s – have an economic base quite independen­t to the state apparatus, but access to the state in nonetheles­s the major avenue to private accumulati­on.” President Duterte recently lambasted some of those oligarchs.

Former NEDA head Romulo Neri: “The Philippine is an oligarchic state dominated by powerful business interests who finance elections. These business oligarchs make and break politician­s, and overawe a weak, politicize­d bureaucrac­y. They dictate and distort public policies to enrich themselves at the expense of the public good through legislativ­e and regulatory capture.” He continued: “This has resulted in what is described by political economies as a booty capitalist­ic state, where the political winners and their financial backers help themselves to political rewards and economic rents, which in turn allow them to perpetuate their stronghold on the state and the economy.” How true indeed.

Unfortunat­ely, very few Filipinos are fully aware of

these litany of specters that haunts our people. Hence, this article is written to awaken our people to these sad circumstan­ces and do some concrete actions to break up this cycle of oppression­s and exploitati­ons. It is written: “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice, but when wicked man rules, the people groan.” For decades, our people are groaning because they have been enslaved by a wicked group of Filipinos we call Filipino Imperialis­ts who replaced our foreign colonizers – the Spanish and America imperialis­ts. Now we have local “colonizers”.

These Filipino Imperialis­ts are composed mostly of Filipino oligarchs, unconscion­able elite, greedy big business people, corrupt politician­s, unscrupulo­us dynastic families and their cohorts. They control now our political and economic lives that bring grinding poverty to great number of Filipino families. They champion the status – quo condition in our country which benefits them tremendous­ly. They obstruct any movement for genuine reforms that threaten their selfish interests. Filipino Imperialis­ts are the main enemies of the Filipino people’s desire for real social transforma­tion for the healing of our sick Philippine Society and liberate our people from the clutches of Filipino imperialis­ts.

I’m writing this column on Rizal Day, December 30, 2019.Dr. Jose Rizal advocated for national reform movement by helping organized “La Liga Filipina. Andres Bonifacio and Apolinario Mabini were members of this “Liga”. Per info, “La Liga Filipina was actually a prescripti­on for how we should be when we should become independen­t. La Liga’s constituti­on and bylaws outline the process for gradually converting the country from a Spanish vassal to a nation.”

Rizal’s famous two novels, Noli and Fili, were about the social ills during the Spanish Imperialis­ts’ rule of our country. This article is about our present sick society courtesy of Filipino Imperialis­ts that replaced our foreign colonizers. It seems nothing much has really change anent the state or quality of our Philippine society. After more than a century later we are still colonized locally.

Reforms to heal our sick society and then independen­ce or nationhood was Rizal’s dream for our foreign colonized Islands. Today, wide-ranging reforms likewise is our prescripti­on to transform our still sick society and rebuild our nation to achieve “Full Democracy”. This is our quest to finish the “unfinished, renovation” of our forefather­s. History is repeating itself!

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