Philippine Daily Inquirer

Not crazy for Edsa I @30

- —EDRE U. OLALIA, secretary general, National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers, nupl2007@gmail.com

CRONYISM IS still endemic. A new set of oligarchs has repackaged themselves. Corruption is still prevalent. Plunderers are living it up. Penury is still appalling. And we remain largely backward.

Rights violators still strut around. Victims still cry for justice. Political prisoners still abound. Rallies are still blocked. And those that Edsa I put in power are now drunk with power.

The military thinks we are all communists. And the communists are the “usual suspects.”

The police body mass index is still horrible. Criminalit­y is even more pervasive.

The law remains a tool of the high and mighty. The courts remain frustratin­g to many.

More migrants are in exodus. Many farmers remain landless. Many workers stay as slaves.

Children still die of simple illnesses. Many of our youth are clueless of the lessons of history.

Trapo get themselves as stinky as they could. Congress is essentiall­y a rubber stamp. Elections essentiall­y remain a circus and a musical chair game.

GI Joes are still here. Or did they ever leave at all?

Our islas bonitas have been exploited, defiled and sold to the devils; our lives mortgaged.

And yes, we have voted the remorseles­s “imeldific” Imelda Marcos back in power, and we might have a reinvented Ferdinand Marcos Jr. as our next president soon. And Gloria Arroyo is running even as she is sick. While Juan Ponce Enrile is, well, just sick. The successors of torturers and other rights violators Ver, Aguinaldo and Abadilla are resurrecte­d in Palparan, Baladad and Zaragoza.

If this is what Edsa I is after 30 years, then we are not crazy for you.

That we have run full circle is an indubitabl­e indictment of the past and present administra­tions that allowed this.

So instead of the hullabaloo, drama and fanfare, it is time to be honest for once. Instead of resorting to populist romanticis­m, we need to take stock and really change things fundamenta­lly. Instead of cynically accommodat­ing the poor and exploited and the hypocritic­al showcasing of exceptions rather than the rule, it is time for redress, if not karma. The people must take back the power. Over time.

So what’s wrong with just celebratin­g Edsa I @30 and allowing things to change even as they remain the same all these years?

A whole damn lot.

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