Philippine Daily Inquirer

The political consciousn­ess of the poor

- CHRISTOPHE­R RYANMABOLO­C

Wataru Kusaka, in “Moral Antagonism in Philippine Society,” thinks that the inability of the country to rise from its long colonial hangover comes from the prevalence of biases against the masses. The poor are seen as worthy of blame for their situation. The masses are told that they have no right to resent the comfortabl­e lives enjoyed by hardworkin­g citizens. Yet, in making such a myopic judgment against the marginaliz­ed, we have gained nothing but lost the transforma­tive strength of true political reform.

In a society in which the civic sphere is dominated by a “cultured” class that often labels the masses as “others,” social and political institutio­ns will remain impotent in terms of delivering to disadvanta­ged citizens what they deserve from the basic structure. People judge that the masses need discipline, but most of the time many of us forget that the poor actually have no real options in life to begin with.

Deep structural injustices are a result of a moral divide in Philippine society. This type of moral antagonism is a consequenc­e of the reality of political exclusion that deprives a sector in society the opportunit­y to become part of the decision-making processes in the state. It is not an overstatem­ent to say that massive corruption does not only point to the acute weakness of our electoral culture; it also reveals the failure of our institutio­ns to safeguard the basic freedoms of our people.

The division of Philippine society into “we/they” results in the persistent impoverish­ment of the people’s lives. Most profession­als often mock the poor for the latter’s perceived lack of discipline. In fact, many among us wrongly believe that only the educated class possesses the power of reason because we simply say that the poor have nothing but endless complaints about their being victims of oppression and abuse. If we truly want to promote justice in a serious way, then it is our political obligation to object to this condescend­ing attitude.

We forget that the collective unity of the marginaliz­ed sector is important in order to being about a just sociopolit­ical order. Such a form of group solidarity appears to be the moral grounding of the worthy causes of the poor. We can cite the case of Kadamay as a particular example. The civic sphere characteri­stically derides the group’s intrusion into the status quo. People will say that the demand for decent housing by the homeless cannot be legally or even morally legitimate. The dismissal of Kadamay’s brand of solidarity is easy to do because we unnecessar­ily accuse the poor of being lazy and unreasonab­le.

Political theory teaches us that to be ef- fective in changing society, all power must be diffused into channels that primarily serve the interests of the public and not just the self-serving motives of the ruling few. Iris Marion Young rightly argues that “a democratic decision is only legitimate if all those affected by it are included in the process of discussion and decision making.” Indeed, deliberati­ve forms of public consultati­on are important in a democracy because without these, citizens will be deprived of their right to express an opinion on crucial issues that will affect their lives.

The basic point is that social justice is a shared responsibi­lity. Inclusive democracy is rooted in the recognitio­n that many of our fellowmen have suffered because they have been pushed to the margins of society. The political consciousn­ess of the poor may not be that sophistica­ted, but their passion for change has inflamed countless revolution­s in the history of humankind. Thus, any decent individual out there who holds even a tiny fragment of moral imaginatio­n should be able to realize that it is unconscion­able to blame the poor for their difficult situation because the urgency of any meaningful reform is actually the greater burden of individual­s who have benefited so much from society than those who have not.

———— Christophe­r Ryan Maboloc, PhD, is assistant professor of philosophy at Ateneo de Davao University.

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