The special detainee

The rule of law and the norm of equal justice are being invoked to oppose giving special treatment to the detained former president.  But the enormous security precautions deployed to ensure his safety under detention already single him out for special treatment. We cannot treat Erap like an ordinary criminal; he is not an ordinary … Read more

The bright side of the Pinoy voter

A vote, in many ways, is like a dream.  You don’t really know how it is formed, and why it takes the shape it has.  In fact, it is the result of many impressions acquired largely by chance.  There is very little about it that one can consider deliberate or willful. When we have to … Read more

The 2001 elections

The immediate challenge facing the Arroyo government is not whether it can produce a 13-0 sweep in the current senatorial race, but whether it can conduct credible and orderly elections under conditions of heightened political tension.  In the eyes of the world, this is the real test of its viability as a government. In a … Read more

A parable for our times

At the height of the street fighting in Mendiola in the morning of May 1st, my daughter Kara, a television reporter, was sent to Edsa to cover the re-occupation and the clean-up of the shrine by nuns and members of the Couples for Christ.  The little story she stumbled upon in that very site of … Read more

The third time as farce

There is this cynical view that nothing much distinguishes people power from mob rule: you call it people power when you sympathize with it, and mob rule when you disagree with it.  Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago subscribes to a related version of this thought when she reduces people power to “a numbers game.”  From her perspective, … Read more

A mindset for murder

It was shocking to hear how two policemen tried to explain their participation in the gruesome murder of PR man Bubby Dacer and his driver Emmanuel Corbito.  “We were misled,” they said.  “We were made to believe it was a legitimate operation.” These killers were members of the police, specifically of the elite group within … Read more

Christ-like or Pinoy-like?

In this season of Lent, we may forgive Raymond Fortun, Joseph Estrada’s young lawyer, for suggesting that the willful prosecution of his client recalls Christ’s own persecution.  At a recent press conference, he said:  “Two thousand years ago, Christ was falsely accused, deprived of his right to defend himself, thrown to the mob and put … Read more

Can we send an ex-president to jail?

Everything we know about the way our institutions work points to the near impossibility of doing that.  It is true that we can summon enough political will to depose a sitting president by peaceful extraconstitutional means.  And we have proven this not once but twice. Yet nothing in our experience gives us reason to hope … Read more

“Live Show”: a mishandled affair

From the discussions that have attended the banning of the film “Live Show,” we have an idea of what is at issue here and what is not. The choice of subject is not an issue.  One cannot object to the depiction of poverty and its consequences on the ground that it creates the wrong image … Read more

Mobs, crowds, and people power

It happens all the time.  A political earthquake loosens the ground on which hierarchies and institutions rest.  Suddenly, the venerable structures that have governed our daily lives are exposed for what they are – the sediments of past agreements based on fragile trust. The unspent energy from the last earthquake discharges itself in little tremors, … Read more