Power Member

|
A Damaged Culture
We put individuals ahead of the nation. We put short-term comfort ahead of long-term considerations. We are constantly unable to subordinate the particular to the general, the peculiar to the universal. When the going gets tough, we are prone to seeking out quick fixes that bring momentary relief at the price of further complications down the road. Sunday, November 04, 2007 EDITORIAL — Left behind Monday, November 5, 2007 - PHILSTAR.COM
The Philippines has inched up in global competitiveness, according to the World Economic Forum. Still, being ranked 71st among 131 countries in the annual WEF Global Competitiveness Report is not much to crow about, especially when the country is rated behind its Southeast Asian neighbors.
Never mind perennial economic achiever Singapore, which might be unhappy with its ranking at seventh place in the Global Competitiveness Index, ahead of Japan and the United Kingdom. Malaysia’s ranking at 21st place was no surprise either; that country left us behind years ago. What should be cause for concern is that the Philippines was rated too far behind Thailand, which placed 28th despite violence and political instability since last year. The Philippines was rated behind even Indonesia, which ranked 54th. Most worrisome of all was that Vietnam was ranked ahead of the Philippines, at 68th place.
The Global Competitiveness Index is based on the quality of infrastructure and institutions, macroeconomic stability, health and primary education, higher education and training, efficiency of the goods and labor markets, sophistication of the financial market, technological readiness, market size, business sophistication and innovation. Some 11,000 business leaders in 131 countries were polled, and their rating for the Philippines is not surprising.
The Philippines placed 55th in business sophistication, 62nd in higher education and training and 64th in goods market efficiency. The United States, with its excellent educational and research institutions and technological innovation, was rated the world’s most competitive country, followed by Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Germany and Finland, with Chad getting the lowest rating. Last year the Philippines ranked 77th among 117 countries in the GCI.
Local and foreign business groups alike have long expressed concern over the Philippines’ slipping global competitiveness. They have also pointed out the many factors that must be addressed to stop the slide. So far, many of the key concerns have not been addressed. Institutions remain weak. Infrastructure is inadequate, and almost every big-ticket infrastructure project becomes bogged down in a corruption scandal. The country now faces a crisis in public health care. Education is a disaster, and there is minimal investment in research and technological innovation. Unless dramatic steps are taken soon, the country will see itself being left ****her behind by its neighbors.
posted by Admin at 7:57 PM 0 comments Tuesday, April 03, 2007 Red tape As a foreigner, I have noticed this "why should we care" attitude in government departments during the course of my helping to run a business here. The red tape in the bureaucracy, the gross inefficiencies, the overwhelming time consuming (wasting?) processes and at times sheer laziness of some government staff to give any meaningful assistance or show a real sense of urgency. These are, to my mind, some of the major reasons why foreign business stays away from the Philippines while those already here complain about the difficulty in doing business and getting anything done in a reasonable time frame. And without having to "pay off" someone to achieve it.
One would think such efficiency would make government departments here squirm with embarrassment, but not so. They merely shrug their collective shoulders and don’t seem to care. After all, they’re not there to serve the public. They are there to look after themselves!!! And the government’s spokespeople (i.e. spin doctors) wonder why the country is at or near the bottom of the heap in so many world and regional rankings.
posted by Admin at 9:26 PM 0 comments All in the family DEMAND AND SUPPLY By Boo Chanco - The Philippine Star 04/04/2007
I am disappointed in my idol, Sen. Joker Arroyo, for saying that political dynasties are good. Perhaps Sen. Arroyo merely wanted to say that it is a fact of life in Philippine politics and it isn’t bad per se. It is a cultural thing that cannot be legislated away, no matter that the Constitution frowns on it.
Everywhere you turn today, two or three members of a family are running for public office. ANC reported the other night that a Muslim politician and his three wives are all running for various offices in Basilan. That is taking politics as a family affair to the extreme.
This situation can’t be good for the Philippines. In fact, this could be the very reason why good governance is almost impossible within our political system. The "all in the family" tone to politics has alienated most people from taking a more active part in civic affairs. Family-oriented politics have reduced everyone else to outsiders looking in.
Let me put my fears in context. I think we can trace most of our problems today to an anomaly in the national psyche. We do not have a sense of nationhood… we are unable to think as one Filipino nation. Outside of a rare moment as EDSA 1, we are not inclined to put national interest (something quite abstract) above that of ourselves, our families, our friends, our regional ties, etc. That’s why corruption scandals normally include family members as principals and accessories. The Garcia and Ligot families, for instance, are implicated in the military financial mess now being litigated by the Ombudsman.
posted by Admin at 9:22 PM 0 comments Monday, May 22, 2006 PAL Operations in LAX This is an example of “Our circle of loyalty has a uniquely small radius, limited to family, clan, tribe, ethno-linguistic group, but rarely expanding to cover nation.”
Just observe the Philippine Airlines operation in the Los Angeles International Airport. We have seen the damaged culture in action. Passenger at the end of the line can be served first due to personal connection, as a classmate or kaibigan or cousin of one of the PAL employees to the detriment of the 100 or more passengers who showed up one hour earlier.
posted by Admin at 10:20 PM 0 comments Friday, May 05, 2006 LOOKING AT THE SUN “The Philippines, A Damaged Culture” was published in the November, 1987 issue of the Atlantic Monthly. An expanded version was included in Looking at the Sun.
posted by Admin at 9:06 AM 1 comments Friday, April 14, 2006 The Human Condition A damaged culture by: Tony Joaquin, Oct 27, 2004
AS I monitor our country’s daily sufferings – made even worse by our articulate and thought provoking Filipino columnists – I am saddened, even to the point of depression.
Then, harking back to an American writer who has since been an acquaintance of mine an incisive truly stark analysis of Philippine society hits us between the eyes.
I am referring to James Fallows, associate editor of Atlantic Monthly, who wrote an analysis some 16 years ago about the Philippines. The title of his article was, “The Philippines – a damaged culture.”
Fallows observed that the Philippines is a “society that had degenerated into a war of every man against every man.”
Naturally, our Filipino pride was piqued – and rightly so since we get “observers” from time to time who visit Manila for three days and leave being an “authority” of sorts of the country’s ills.
Many columnists, veteran ones led by Teddy Beningo “thought James Fallows then was guilty of rank hyperbole, a know-it-all Yankee, jeering and arrogant, who deserved to be lynched.”
But alas, 15 years after, this very columnist claims that “this quondam roving correspondent of Atlantic Monthly has turned out to be dead right. Right on every count.”
Benigno continues, “We Filipinos indeed have a damaged culture, more damaged even than we think. Thomas Hobbes, the philosopher of stern social discipline, of crowding humankind into a disciplined cage, was certainly describing the Philippines, among others, when he said without order, life was “nasty, brutish and short.”
Ferdinand Marcos had a sense of smell better than most when he said the Philippines was “sitting on top of a social volcano” and that was more than 30 years ago.
Historian O.D. Corpuz (Roots of the Filipino Nation) wrote in 1989 that civil war, revolution or a coup could break out in a matter of years. Any day now? Then later, upon invitation, we had another sharp critic, Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore, who predicted that our “exuberant democracy” of fiestas and good time would come to no good end.
In 1994, Fallows again wrote in his book, “Looking at the Sun,” “The least successful-seeming society in East Asia is the Philippines ... a society most heavily shaped in the American image.”
He continued: “This is the largest country the United States ever attempted to colonize. It is the one part of East Asia to embrace most fully the ‘American Way’ of two-party elections and an uncontrolled press.”
“Except for Burma, the Philippines is the only country in the region where life seems to be moving backward. In the early 1990s Malaysia per capita income was nearly $2,500; Singapore’s more than $10,000; Thailand’s more than $1,500 and all, of course, were going up. The per capita income in the Philippines has been stagnant at about $700 for several years. By government estimates, roughly two-thirds of the people in the country live below the poverty line, as opposed to about half in the pre-Marcos era.”
“Individual Filipinos are at least as brave, kind and noble-spirited as individual Japanese, but their culture draws the boundaries of decent treatment much more narrowly. Because these boundaries are limited to the family or tribe, they exclude at any given moment 99 percent of the other people in the country.
Because of this fragmentation, this lack of useful nationalism, people treat each other worse in the Philippines than in any other Asian country I have seen ... The tradition of political corruption and cronyism, the extremes of wealth and poverty, the tribal fragmentation, the local elite’s willingness to make a separate profitable peace with colonial powers – all reflect a feeble sense of national interest. Practically everything that is public in the Philippines seems neglected or abused.”
Fallows focuses on the 400 years the Philippines spent under Spain’s thumb, and following that “the distorting effects of the Philippines’ encounter with the United States ... But American rule seemed to intensify the Philippines sense of dependence. The U.S. quickly earned or bought the loyalty of the ilustrados. It rammed through a number of laws insisting on free ‘competition’ at a time when Philippine industries were in no position to compete with anyone.”
Remember the infamous parity provision? In short, we have a mendicant society with a mendicant leadership with a mendicant culture.
The grossest insult is we are to be pitied and deprecated like Burma. That’s about as low as low can get.
posted by Admin at 12:14 PM 0 comments ACCUSED OF COWARDICE ALEX MAGNO: DAMAGED CULTURE MANILA, July 20, 2004 (STAR) FIRST PERSON By Alex Magno - As soon as we start arguing with foreign commentators, we begin walking into a quagmire.
Global opinion, not surprisingly, has been harsh on us – first, for actually trying to negotiate with terrorists and, second, for withdrawing our token force in disgrace.
We have been accused of cowardice. Our concessions to terrorists have been described as grossly irresponsible, endangering the lives of other nationalities as well as those of our own countrymen by making them more delectable targets for hostage-taking.
The lowest point, I think, was reached this weekend when the radical leftist group Pamamalakaya demanded that American talk show host Jay Leno issue an apology for making comments he was "in no position to make".
It seems the leftists have not only lost their sense of national dignity and collective responsibility to the community of nations, they have lost their sense of humor as well. That is truly tragic.
For those who missed it, Leno in his highly-rated talk show said that the entire Philippine mission to Iraq could fit in a Humvee. He later said that the record for the 100-meter dash was broken recently by Filipino troops hurrying to flee Iraq.
Leno was not being unfair.
Exaggeration, of course, is the essence of comedy. And comedy is most biting when it rests on a grain of truth.
The grains of truth in Leno’s comments are that our mission was miniscule to begin with and that it was withdrawn in indecent haste by a government caving in to terrorist demands.
If his comments hurt, the pain is not undeserved.
If we could not stand by our commitment to other nations, we cannot henceforth demand other nations to stand by their commitment to us. If we cannot put national pride above private grief, we ought not to demand respect from other states.
Stop the hewing and the hawing. Let’s not try and mystify everybody else with senseless rhetoric about "complex considerations" leading us to trade off national self-respect for some mistaken notion that we are doing all our overseas workers a favor by caving in to terror.
That will not even be correct, to begin with. By caving in to terrorists, we have endangered our own workers overseas. We took a myopic view of the strategic situation and succumbed to shallow emotionalism. Our government allowed itself to be intimidated by cynical leftist groups obviously trying to exploit an emotional moment to mount stale propaganda.
All the hewing and hawing will only expose our insincerity or worse, our own intellectual confusion.
If we cannot stand by our commitment to fight the scourge of global terror, then let us at least find the decency to accept that we are flimsy. If the demagoguery of the leftist groups could not be contained by a government capable of explaining national policy so that it makes sense to every Filipino, then we allow the intellectually bankrupt demagogues to dictate national policy.
If we cannot present a longer horizon of considerations for our people to appreciate, then we lose credibility to the global perception that we are an unreliable nation ready to succumb to every expediency that comes along. We are worthless allies who will break and run at the slightest discomfort. We are an unprincipled country ready to cut a separate peace with every terrorist band.
Last Thursday, on **** Puno Live, I had what I thought was a very revealing debate with the usual mouthpieces of the Filipino Left. It was a debate, I believe, that unmasked their intellectual dishonesty.
Fr. Joe Dizon of Bayan filibustered about why those who took Angelo de la Cruz hostage and beheaded his Bulgarian companion were not terrorists. By trying to assign some noble cause to this murderous band, Dizon seems to be subliminally trying to convince us that the atrocities committed by his friends in the NPA – including the on-going hostage-taking of two Army lieutenants in Quezon – were not acts of terror.
Liza Masa of Bayan Muna tried to sound profound by trying to redirect the debate to the "context" of an unjust war. That "context" would have given her the pretext to launch yet another tirade against an "imperialist invasion" that would excuse acts of terrorism. That ploy would have distracted us from the real question: the moral repugnancy of any act of terror.
Some half-wit from Sanlakas arbitrarily redefined "nationalism", turning the concept upside down, by claiming "nationalism" meant putting the interest of the individual above that of the nation state. Let me remind that half-wit that the root word of "nationalism" is "nation" and the sentiment describes putting considerations of the national entity above self. His twisted definition actually refers to "individualism", whose root word is "individual" and refers to the sentiment that puts individual interest ahead of the nation.
But let’s not belabor the semantics. Our diplomacy and international standing are in a mess. This is a moment of national shame.
The least we could do is to try to understand why we now find ourselves in this mess. Those elements that caused us to bring this upon ourselves are the same elements that explain why our whole development as a nation is in a mess.
We have a damaged culture.
We put individuals ahead of the nation. We put short-term comfort ahead of long-term considerations. We are constantly unable to subordinate the particular to the general, the peculiar to the universal. When the going gets tough, we are prone to seeking out quick fixes that bring momentary relief at the price of further complications down the road.
Some of my friends have needled the unyielding position I have taken on this tragic incident, asking me what I would do if I were in the place of Angelo de la Cruz.
I have pondered that question long and hard. I have decided that even if my own life was on the line, I would not – with all due respects to Angelo – plead for my survival at the expense of asking my government to humiliate my nation.
That is the dictate of patriotism.
posted by Admin at 11:24 AM 0 comments Wednesday, November 23, 2005 Love of country Rodel Rodis, Jul 20, 2005, Philippine News
In his 1987 Atlantic Monthly essay, "Damaged Culture," James Fallows observed that there was a noticeable lack of nationalism, or love of country, among Filipinos compared to other people in other countries. One American he met in Manila explained that "This is a country where the national ambition is to change nationality" citing a 1982 survey of 207 Filipino grade school students who were asked their preferred nationality. Less than five percent (10 students) answered 'Filipino.'
Nationalism is valuable because, as Fallows wrote, it causes people to look beyond themselves rather than pursuing their own interests to the ruination of everyone else. Japan is strong because its ethics dictate that all Japanese deserve decent treatment. In contrast, Fallows notes, Filipino culture places more importance on loyalty to one's family, compadres, and members of his or her region rather than to the nation or people as a whole.
"When observing Filipino friendships," Fallows wrote, "I thought often of the Mafia families portrayed in The Godfather: total devotion within the circle, total war on the outside. And since boundaries of decent treatment are limited to the family or regional group, they exclude at least 90% of the country. Because of this fragmentation - this lack of nationalism - people treat each other worse in the Philippines than in any other Asian country."
Most Filipinos will tell you that the main cause of poverty in the Philippines is the endemic and systemic corruption in the Philippines. It is so demoralizing that, because of it, many Filipinos want to "change nationality."
But a Korean student by the name of Jaeyoun Kim begs to differ. In his essay which has been circulating in the Internet for years, Jaeyoun wrote: "Filipinos always complain about the corruption in the Philippines. Do you really think the corruption is the problem of the Philippines? I do not think so. I strongly believe that the problem is the lack of love for the Philippines."
"Let me first talk about my country, Korea. It might help you understand my point. After the Korean War, South Korea was one of the poorest countries in the world. Koreans had to start from scratch because the entire country was destroyed completely after the Korean War, and we had no natural resources. Koreans used to talk about the Philippines, for Filipinos were very rich in Asia. We envy Filipinos. Koreans really wanted to be well off like Filipinos. Many Koreans died of famine"
"Korean government was awfully corrupt and is still very corrupt beyond your imagination, but Korea was able to develop dramatically because Koreans really did their best for the common good with their heart burning with patriotism. Koreans did not work just for themselves but also for their neighborhood and country. Education inspired young men with the spirit of patriotism. Many Korean scientists and engineers in the USA came back to Korea to help develop the country because they wanted their country to be well off. Though they received very small salary, they did their best for Korea. They always hoped that their children would live in a well off country."
Jaeyoun's fervent message to Filipinos is this: "Please love your neighbor and country. If you have a child, teach them how to love the Philippines. Teach them why they have to love their neighbor and country."
We can follow Jaeyoun's advice and teach our children how to love the Philippines. But can we teach it to the leaders of the Philippines?
posted by Admin at 9:32 PM 0 comments Our "Damaged Culture" The Case For A National Unity Government Blas F. Ople - 31 August 1988
There are some Filipino writers who took offense when the theory of a "damaged culture" advanced by American journalist to explain the unrealized potentials of the Filipinos, gained quick currency in the intellectual circles in this country. After all, Jose Rizal much more deeply analyzed and documented this "damaged culture" in his novels the Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo. The journalist, James Fallows of Atlantic Monthly, however, undoubtedly updated those earlier insights and made them contemporary with "Smokey Mountain" in Tondo. He was the first newspaperman, local or foreign, to study this phenomenon as a cultutral issue and parlayed it into a morbid attraction for tourists eager to explore the seamy side of Filipino society. (Whoever thought of putting Smoky Mountain on the tourist itinerary must be celebrating a streak of sado-masochiam in the national psyche).
The distinctive attribute of our damaged culture, Fallows wrote, was stubborn incapacity to identify with the public interest so that everyone looks out only for himself or his own kin. The result is a dichotomy between the individual and his society, a glaring absence of the sense of community. He found that absence remarkable even by Southeast Asia standards.
The ubiquitous garbage in the metropolitan region, matched by the exponential growth of urban slums, has not created any sense of crisis, as it would elsewhere, perhaps because the leading families nestled in their self-contained enclaves can look out for themselves. The water crisis is for the masses: the rich have their own individual, customized clean wells. There are few public parks. The rich can afford their own private gardens. Why is it that most Filipinos have not been able to expand their loyalty to family and clan to the wider interests of community and nation? Why the notable absence of public spirit? Why has Rizal Park, hitherto a symbol of the nation's capacity for public cleanliness and discipline, now deteriorated into another showcase of civic incompetence and indifference to the common good?
Certainly democracy is not to blame for these shortcomings. Neither hopeless deadlocks, failures of discipline, nor anarchy in the civic realm are the inevitable consequences of choosing the democratic option. Democracy is not synonymous with public apathy. Properly summoned and led, it can generate the leadership and discipline to overcome its own weaknesses or surmount any crises. But whereas the concentrated powers in an authoritarian society can compel obedience, the centrifugal forces of democracy stand in greater need of leadership so that the vast, dynamic and often unruly energies that thrive on pluralism or free choice can be effectively harnessed for the common good.
Today, almost in direct proportion to the sense of drift that pervades government, leadership has become a nagging issue - and some say a disturbing one - in our country.
This is the text as originally published in the magazine. Copyright 1987 Atlantic Monthly Company The Atlantic Monthly: November, 1987
posted by Admin at 9:22 PM 0 comments No Soul By Antonio C. Abaya May 29, 2003 TAPATT Foundation Inc.
The recent publication by Anvil of the Philippine edition of Benedict Anderson?s ?Imagined Communities? occasioned a thoughtful piece by Columnist Raul Rodrigo in Today (May 20) and a personal reminiscence from Columnist Patricio Abinales in the Philippines Free Press (May 17).
I had previously heard of the book but never got around to reading it; I must do so now that it is available at a reader-friendly price. In the meantime, let me comment on Raul?s quote of what must be the essence of Anderson?s thesis: ?(The nation) is imagined as a community, because, regardless of the actual inequality and exploitation that may prevail in each, the nation is always conceived as a deep, horizontal comradeship.?
Raul is correct this ?deep, horizontal comradeship? has continued to elude us Filipinos. Writes Raul: ?Whatever national comradeship we feel is neither deep nor horizontal..?
Why this sense of nationhood has eluded us, and why whatever national comradeship we feel is neither deep nor horizontal, should concern thoughtful Filipinos because it is in the righting of this wrong, in the definition of our national soul, that we Filipinos can redeem and rediscover ourselves. And I do not mean becoming anti-American and anti-capitalist, which in essence is how Marxist-Leninist ideologues, who have transformed this country into a black hole forever lost and wandering aimlessly in time-space, continue to define that soul.
James Fallows wrote that we suffer from a ?damaged culture?. We have a weak sense of nationhood. Our circle of loyalty has a uniquely small radius, limited to family, clan, tribe, ethno-linguistic group, but rarely expanding to cover nation.
To some extent, this is true. Unlike the Japanese or the Koreans or the Chinese or the Indians, we are not heirs to a great and ancient civilization. When the Europeans first came to impose their culture, this archipelago was largely inhabited by animist tribes; only parts of Mindanao had been settled by Muslim colonists from what is now Indonesia..
Unlike the Indonesians, the Cambodians, the Burmese, we have no Borobodur, no Angkor Wat, no Pagan to remind us of a spectacularly rich heritage. The closest that we have in the way of monuments are our Catholic mission churches, some of truly remarkable architecture, but if they remind us of anything it is that we are an anomaly in this part of the world: that we are an outpost of a civilization that has no authentic roots in the indigenous soil.
But the absence of any outstanding monuments to a past civilization has not deterred the Malaysians or the Singaporeans from succeeding in defining their national souls. A task much more complex for them because they are ethnically, linguistically and religiously much more diverse than we are. And yet, look at them, seemingly united in building their nation and going from success to success, and then look at us, forever quarrelling with each other, with a weak sense of nationhood, and going nowhere fast
Judging by their success and our failure, I would say that the difference lies in the political culture and the political leadership.
First, our political culture is defined to a large extent by the political system and values inherited from the Americans: jealously liberal, nominally egalitarian and ideologically protective of the individual (and his family or tribe) rather than the national community.
Political liberalism has not been beneficial to the Philippines. It has allowed Marxist-Leninists to infiltrate and influence practically every sector of Philippine society: media, the clergy, academe, labor unions, student bodies, women?s groups, environmentalists, government employees, public school teachers, fisher-folk, urban poor, peasants, even Congress.
Since Marxist-Leninists will never be content unless and until a communist government is in power, the culture of unremitting protest against everything that smacks of capitalist profit-seeking (oil prices, bus fares, power and water rates, PPA, Bt corn, tuition etc) has been and will continue to be a permanent feature of our political life, magnifying a conflict when there is one, creating one when there is none, crippling the efforts of the government, any government, to arrive at consensus and unity, and all designed to create an environment conducive to their revolution.
(In Malaysia and Singapore [as well as South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia and Thailand], by contrast, communists are pointedly and specifically excluded from their political life under pain of indefinite detention without trial, allowing their governments the stability and civil peace to concentrate on economic development.)
Nominal egalitarianism has helped trivialize our politics and idiotize our masa by opening the doors of public office to anyone with the least common denominators. It is simply inconceivable that a patently illiterate and ignorant person like Erap, or a mere TV news reader like Noli de Castro, can ever be elected prime minister of Malaysia or Singapore, where the idea of setting high standards for public office is not considered offensive to political correctness.
The American glorification of the individual, over and above the community, has created in the Philippines a political milieu where the emphasis is on the rights of individuals, rather than on their responsibilities to the community. Thus in the Philippines, everyone and his grandmother is a vociferous critic of government, but relatively few individuals bother to pay any income tax to allow that government to function.
In Malaysia and Singapore, it is the other way around: there is consensus that there are many circumstances where the good of the community must prevail over the rights of the individual. Thus the good of the greater number is considered more important than the right of individuals to espouse certain political advocacies considered inimical to the greater number.
In such a community-oriented society, it is easier for the political leaders to define the national soul and to nurture a ?deep, horizontal comradeship,? and to define the national soul, among the citizens, than in an individual-oriented one like that of the Philippines. American-style liberalism has stunted the growth of our sense of nationhood.
A further reason for our weak sense of nationhood is the distance in time from the Golden Age of our history ? the Propaganda Movement and Revolution of 1896 against Spain ? to the post-World War II and post-EDSA generations. We have no living memory of our most glorious days as a nation, and whatever we know of that period is mere book-learning, a blur in our collective memory that is soon and easily overwhelmed by the latest must-have fads of the consumer revolution.
Unlike the Vietnamese, who are acutely aware that millions of their fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, and sons and daughters willingly sacrificed themselves for the sake of the motherland. Unlike the Chinese, who were led during their modernizing years by authentic veterans of the Long March. Unlike the Malaysians and the Singaporeans, whose sense of nationhood was forged during the struggle against, first the British, then against the Communists, in the 1950s and the 1960s.
But a major reason for our lack of national soul is the failure of our political leaders, both to articulate and define that soul, and to translate that concept, abstract and ephemeral as it necessarily must be, into concrete programs of governance that would have meaning even to the most humble citizen.
posted by Admin at 9:15 PM 0 comments Arroyo's glittering political *****tale unravels By Louise Williams July 23, 2005 Sydney Morning Herald
The opening move of her political career was nothing short of inspired.
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo understood the women of the Philippines. So when she stepped out on the campaign trail for the first time more than 10 years ago, she headed straight for the airport and left the country.
While her opponents dragged their bread and circus shows along the potholed streets, the well-heeled Dr Arroyo took some time out in Hong Kong, Singapore and Italy.
About 10 per cent of Filipinos live overseas, a giant diaspora of overqualified overseas workers pushed by poverty into menial jobs. Dr Arroyo was looking for maids, millions of them. The hard currency they earn mopping richer women's floors converts favourably back home; their status and influence are designated by the concrete floors of their family homes, dotted among the dirt and thatch huts of abject poverty.
The maids sent a message back to their villages with their next round of remittances: trust Gloria. In 1994 she won the highest number of votes ever recorded for the Senate. By 2001 she was President, the nation's most powerful woman - bar one.
This week's opinion polls suggest 70 per cent of Filipinos no longer trust Gloria.
How her political *****tale unravelled has something to do with all the President's men. Her husband, son and various in-laws have long starred in tawdry rumours, apparently toting around bags of ill-gotten cash. "Big Mike", the First Gentleman, is gone, dispatched overseas, his wife declaring she is now "married to the nation". At least 10 cabinet members have resigned.
Dr Arroyo may be hanging on to power with the tenacity of a pit bull but it was her voice on those recent wire taps, improperly contacting an election official during vote counting in last year's presidential poll. And that directs responsibility right to her door.
Dr Arroyo is the second woman to lead the Philippines.
She came to office with impeccable credentials; daughter of the respected former president Diosdado Macapagal, who was usurped by the hated dictator Ferdinand Marcos. Her own stellar economic qualifications were widely seen as just what the Philippines needed to drag it out of the mire.
But the story of the first woman to lead the Philippines was always a more compelling tale.
Corazon Aquino, housewife, mother and widow of the assassinated opposition leader Ninoy Aquino, was the figurehead of the massive people's power revolution of 1986, which faced down the troops of the Marcos regime and prevailed. She was a shy, devout Catholic and a reluctant president. She once quaintly pointed out the hair and make-up challenges for a middle-aged woman, should a coup attempt drag her out of bed in the middle of the night. Rumours of corruption swirled around her extended family, too, but never reached her own office.
That Mrs Aquino has stepped back into public spotlight to implore Dr Arroyo to resign carries considerable moral authority.
For all the Philippines' veneer of machismo, female authority is, in fact, common. Matriarchal village structures predated Spanish colonialism in many regions; it was the Europeans who introduced the strange notion that only men should rule.
Twenty years since the fall of the Marcos dictatorship the Filipino people are no better served by many of their elected representatives. Burma aside, the Philippines - once second only to Japan in wealth - is East Asia's least successful nation.
A US essayist, James Fallows, provoked national outrage in 1987 when he challenged the post-Marcos euphoria to suggest the Philippines was "a damaged culture". Lacking useful nationalism, life had "degenerated into a war of every man against every man", he said, with decent behaviour reserved only for family or tribe.
But Fallows's words have since been frequently revisited. Much of the political elite seems unable to separate the obligations of public office from the opportunities for personal gain. Dr Arroyo's predecessor, the one-time film idol Joseph Estrada, is in jail on charges of stealing $US77 million ($100 million) during his brief presidency.
Meanwhile, the Philippines is buried under foreign debt and poverty is deepening; a fertile environment for regional terrorist networks linked to the Muslim south. Perhaps most disheartening is that Dr Arroyo was the great hope for reform.
But, as Mrs Aquino said, "Good and effective government has became an impossible undertaking".
With no obvious, competent successor and an opposition united only in its own quest for power, there is plenty of messy, political manoeuvring to go. But Dr Arroyo can no longer serve out her term.
As matriarchs go, Mrs Aquino outranks the pretender.
posted by Admin at 9:06 PM 0 comments A persistently damaged culture Commentary By Paulynn P. Sicam Tuesday, 9 August 2003
In November 1987, when we were still feeling good about ourselves after the glorious EDSA people power revolution of 1986, the American essayist James Fallows wrote a devastating analysis of Filipinos as a people in The Atlantic Monthly. In an essay entitled "A Damaged Culture", Fallows wrote:
"Individual Filipinos are at least as brave, kind and noble-spirited as individual Japanese, but their culture draws the boundaries of decent treatment much more narrowly. Filipinos pride themselves on their lifelong loyalty to family, schoolmates, compadres, members of the same tribe, residents of the same baran*** ... Because these boundaries are limited to the family or tribe, they exclude at any given moment 99 percent of the other people in the country. Because of this fragmentation, this lack of useful nationalism, people treat each other worse in the Philippines than in any other Asian country I have seen ... The tradition of political corruption and cronyism, the extremes of wealth and poverty, the tribal fragmentation, the local élite's willingness to make a separate profitable peace with colonial powers--all reflect a feeble sense of national interest and a contempt for the public good."
We were shocked and angry, insulted by this foreigner who deigned to analyze our culture like he knew us. He was called names, the worst of which was a "parachutist", which referred to foreign correspondents who flew into the country on Sunday, looked around Metro Manila on Monday, flew out of Tuesday, and published an "in-depth" story about us on Wednesday.
We met up with a lot of such enterprising journalists in those days, when the Philippines was the darling of the West and stories about Philippine politics were snapped up by editors who could not get enough of our peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy.
How dare he, many Filipino commentators bristled at Fallows' arrogant assessment of Philippine society during that honeymoon period. His judgment stung--"lack of useful nationalism", "a feeble sense of national interest"--being the worst of all. But what stayed with me was his observation that "people treat each other worse in the Philippines than in any other Asian country I have seen..."
Recently, local commentators, despairing over the bad and ugly politics that have engulfed us in the run-up to the 2004 presidential elections, have dug up their fading copies of Fallows' essay for a closer reading. And they are seeing that the mirror he held to our faces in 1987 may have been accurate then, and is certainly accurate now.
Just observing the Philippine Senate-traditionally been the breeding ground for Presidents- holding a public hearing for ten minutes, we see the worst possible example of tribal fragmentation among the local elite. Administration and opposition senators regard each other with undisguised distrust and disgust, and treat their witnesses-invited guests, if you will--even worse. When the senators cannot get them to dance to their partisan tunes, they call them liars and obstructionists, put words in their mouths and threaten them with contempt and detention.
With kid gloves off and cloven hooves and fangs showing, they gnarl and leap at one another, as well as at anyone whom they wish to bully to follow their line. All the while, of course, they are protected by parliamentary immunity from anyone who wishes to fight back.
Such public displays of meanness and uncivility over national television by our supposedly "honorable" senators add nothing to the Filipinos' sense of national interest or pride in their country and people. They only drive home Fallows' point that in this country, we draw "the boundaries of decent treatment" very narrowly, limiting them to the family or tribe, and truly excluding 99 percent of the other people in the country.
In 1971, Fr. Pacifico Ortiz SJ, in an invocation at the opening of Congress, described the country as trembling on the edge of a smoldering volcano. Well, 32 years later, we are back on the edge of that volcano, which goes to show that we have learned little-if anything - in the last 32 years. Perhaps we never really left the edge; the volcano just dissipated for a while when the dictator departed, and we mistook the restoration of the trappings of democracy for the fundamental changes we needed to implement.
But as it turns out, we have only marked time, wallowing in a culture so damaged, it has, as James Fallows so astutely observed, stood in the way of our development and has made a naturally rich country poor. The Philippines, wrote Fallows, describing the situation here, is "a society that has degenerated into a war of every man against every man".
Recently, the bishops and priests spoke from the pulpit condemning graft and corruption and the life-****ing dirty politics that our daily lives are mired in and distracted Congress from its task of legislation and the Government from governance.
Newspapers are raking it in with paid advertisements from sectoral groups and NGOs pleading with the administration to act on the plight of the poor and powerless, with supposed coup plotters to abandon their destructive ambitions to rule the country by military force, with politicians to set aside their partisan agendas and focus on the larger picture, and with the media to help set a forward-looking agenda for the country, and not be content to merely reflect the mire it is in. The paid advertisements are starting to become news items themselves, especially for a people used to getting their information from reading between the lines.
The call of the hour is for everyone to think outside of themselves and consider the country, the people, our children, and--as the visiting Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra told Filipino businessmen on Monday--think of the next generation.
Thaskin seemed to be talking about the ruinous politics in the land when he told the business leaders the difference between a politician and a statesman: "A politician always thinks about the next election," Thaskin said, "while a statesman always thinks about the next generation. If you think about the next generation, then you can do a lot of change."
Painful as it is to accept the image of ourselves that Fallows has confronted us with, it is time to give it serious thought and action. Nothing else--not self-praise, not self-flagellation, and not those occasional spurts of national pride-has made us the nation that we ought to be by now.
We might start by making James Fallows' essay on our damaged culture required reading for every member of Congress and the administration. And to make sure they understand it, maybe we should commission an illustrated-comics version.
posted by Admin at 8:38 PM 0 comments Damaging culture HERE I STAND By Geronimo L. Sy Thursday, November 24, 2005 - Manila Times
IN the November 1987 issue of the Atlantic Monthly, the American essayist James Fallows wrote, “Individual Filipinos are at least as brave, kind and noble-spirited as individual Japanese, but their culture draws the boundaries of decent treatment much more narrowly. Because these boundaries are limited to the family or tribe, they exclude at any given moment 99 percent of the other people in the country. Because of this fragmentation, this lack of useful nationalism, people treat each other worse in the Philippines than in any other Asian country I have seen. The tradition of political corruption and cronyism, the extremes of wealth and poverty, the tribal fragmentation, the local elite’s willingness to make a separate profitable peace with colonial powers—all reflect a feeble sense of national interest and a contempt for the public good.”
The article started a furious debate on our culture and the right of a foreigner to criticize us. The question “What’s wrong with us?” continues to nag and hound us today in every imaginable forum or discussion. Everyone has an opinion on it, although there is no consensus on what ails us, if at all it is a sickness. It is a good exercise in that it becomes a call for reflection and introspection not only on deciphering our country’s woes but also to help us individually understand, and hopefully act on solutions.
What has not been brought up or clearly presented is that for a culture to be damaged there must be a culprit—a “damager,” so to speak. A damaged culture may mean a deviation from a healthy culture. In the Philippine context, a damaged culture exists only in relation to a damaging culture. Both meanings can be true in that our way of life was good and a-OK until external elements intervened and disrupted our natural state. And who are the guilty?
To blame our colonizers is an easy way out and simplistic, at the very least. To point the accusing finger to our ruling class or elites suffers from the same fallacy. This is not to say that either or both did not contribute or exacerbate our present state of development, rather, underdevelopment. Is it the collective body of Filipinos? No doubt we each are responsible for our actions and should be held accountable for the consequences. Who do we then hold liable for past sins and historical faults?
Regardless of the answer to this question, we need a fresh page to write our destiny. A new day is always the best start to a new life. By all means this is not to advocate forgetfulness or to condone offenders. It is saying that we let go of the mental mindsets and the emotional baggage that hamper us from achieving our potential as a people. By all means, punish the guilty, protect the innocent, make reparations – these cannot be compromised. What can be done is not to stop moving forward into the future even as we deal with our present and look back at our past. The first step is to identify what is wrong with how we live and how we do things and expel and cast it away from our system.
We are a consuming nation, although materialism is not a Filipino value. By and large, I can say with honesty that we value family, character and reputation more than a bigger house and shinier cars. Pervasive corruption is but a result of inverted and skewed priorities.
Relativism is an imported evil. We’ve always had a notion of the good of the community. It is not a “me, myself and I” type of thing. Filipinos are considerate; we treat each other better. We are God fearing and God loving; our self-interest ought to come after the welfare of others. Our politics is a reflection of selfishness and lack of concern.
We can be punctual. Lately, the meetings and functions I attended began on time. Much remains to be done in terms of valuing and respecting time. One way to do it is to simply decide that on December 1, 2005, and henceforth, we will hold events and functions on time all the time. We can also declare that on the same date, all drivers will be courteous and practice defensive driving. Ambitious, yes! Impossible, no!
These modern ills are not ours exclusively. We need not fret or worry too much for today is sufficient unto itself. Indeed, when Fallows said that ours is “a society that has degenerated into a war of every man against every man,” he could as well have been writing about any other country.
|