Ideals and betrayals

Almost everyone will probably agree that our national life today is pervaded by a sense of exhaustion.  This is best indicated by the weariness we exhale at seeing the faces of the same persons who have dominated the political stage in the last forty years.  Instead of finding in them traces of the values we … Read more

The pessimism of spectators

The more we regard events as having a life of their own, rather than as things we can shape, the more paralyzed we feel.  The less we act, the more our society appears distant from us.  The more we demand guarantees before we can act or believe, the more we feel like outsiders to our … Read more

The day after

Ferdinand Marcos and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo – in their uncanny parallel ways — show that the easy part of power is seizing it.  The difficult part is using it with wisdom and restraint.  This is where most extra-legal takeovers falter. Their objectives remain too general; the limits of their intervention are left undefined. The Philippines had … Read more

The military in politics

Every time we allow politicians to steal elections with impunity, to rule without accountability, to rob the public coffers routinely, and to lie brazenly – we are creating the conditions for military intervention. Professional armies go hand in hand with strong democracies.  We are not a strong democracy; that is why the temptation to play … Read more

Sociology of crowds

In the last analysis, some people must take responsibility for what happened at the Ultra.  Mass poverty set the stage for the tragedy, and mass media commercialism made it happen.  For the purpose of assigning liability, the legal system cannot avoid attributing motive and allocating blame. In search of better forms of solidarity, we cannot … Read more

The work of a columnist

Without mentioning my name, but quoting liberally from my column last Sunday, my friend and fellow Inquirer columnist, Amando Doronila, takes issue (PDI, 02/01/06) with me on my criticism of Consultative Commission Chairman Jose V. Abueva and newlyappointed Presidential Adviser for Electoral Reforms Hilario G. Davide, Jr. I welcome Doro’s defense of Abueva and Davide. … Read more

Pacquiao: the trade in images

The word “pakyaw” appears in many of our languages.  It means “wholesale”, though it’s rarely used as a family name.  The family of Manny, our boxing champion, spells it “Pacquiao”, the Latin/Italian form in which the 16th century voyager Pigafetta rendered the words he first heard in our islands.  The word itself could have originated … Read more

The tragedy of people power

It is amazing how people power, a form of non-violent political action that Filipinos accidentally developed in their struggle against a dictatorship, has suddenly become an embarrassment to its inventors.  Rather than draw strength and renewed commitment from its remembrance, those who mounted it now only feel disgust.  Its prime beneficiaries – those who came … Read more

Protecting the Constitution from politicians

Amending a constitution is serious business; writing a new one is even more so.  A mature nation does it for the right reasons – to take account of new realities in the world or in the country itself, to solve persistent problems that cannot be cured by ordinary legislation, etc. It is irresponsible to undertake … Read more

Pure risk and open-ended play

Today I turn 60.  I bow to time, to its effects, to its chanciness, and its promise of change.  With knowing smiles, my older friends welcome me to the land of senior citizens, where movies, meals, and medicines cost less.  But, I tell them: I rarely go to the movies, I mostly eat at home, … Read more