By
Rolo B. Cena
Hushed
Poppies
Dumaguete
Star Informer
7
October 2012
Cebu City,
Philippines
– Early this week, political aspirants flooded the offices of the Commission on
Election nationwide to file their Certificate of Candidacies (COCs). Adding color to this event was the presence
of their fans and supporters who came in throngs to express their genuine and
otherwise financially-capped fanatical support.
New
faces, whose political affiliation springs from family ties, friendship, or spot
choice, stumbled upon traditional ones whose political affiliation stems from
hand-me-down formula that dates back to as old as the heydays of the Martial
Law. New faces choreographically create political
ripples for a thirty-second spotlight; traditional ones sing the old song sans
consideration of the emerging musical genre the new breed of change-hungry
Filipinos chant.
Juxtaposed
with all other aspirants, new and old have one thing in common: They love to kiss the rose nestling atop that
thorny stalk. Paradoxically, in
presenting themselves to the populace, politicians always love to march the
jeweled isle.
Strangely
enough, after all these years – after EDSA, the electorate has not completely changed: traditional politicians are still lurking in
the dark, bipolar world of politics because people make them believe and behave
the way they now do. They still exist
because we manage them the way they wanted, otherwise, they could have fallen
out one after the other.
The
approach to changing the political dynamics of the country, which is the thrust
of P-Noy, is taking too sluggish. More
than that, the supposed-to-be interventions are too dyslexic in character and
form: CJ Corona’s conviction would have been
a good game-changer but the manner it was seconded seems to create a tailback
somewhere; former Sec. Puno would have been seriously deeply investigated and Sen.
Santiago could have been right. The
truth could have come out of the exquisite political red roses mushrooming in
the grounds of the Palace.
And
these dramatis personae are supposed to help P-Noy completely change the arena;
these political actors are expected to perform at their superlative degree for
the good of the country. But where are
we on this? Arguably though, this is
schizophrenically true since day one politics was born of the people; so
frantically true to its form and substance in the Philippines.
The
game of the moment is to erect their own edifice in the guise of classrooms and
barangay halls, save the lives of millions in the pretext of medical missions,
and construct agricultural ditches masqueraded as channels towards improving
rural economies. But these structures,
missions and ditches have one but only one glitch: These programs are geared towards serving the
political ends these people wanted, not towards responding to the needs of the
majority poor.
Is
fielding young and innovative political leaders who could truly bring real change
difficult to do? The electorate is only
given with traditionally popular names, mentally dehydrated actors and
actresses, and inch-higher aspirants and nothing more. To date, there are names worthy to run for
public office; aspirants who can unquestionably introduce and carry out
change. But they are only a fraction of
the big pie. They cannot speak for and
in behalf of the hundred-million Filipinos.
Liken
these ambiguities to the following scenarios:
K+12 teachers giving instructions to their pupils to cut pictures of
their parents and siblings, collate into one form to create a family picture;
the message of the President that our economy improves over the increasing
numbers of starving Filipinos. Click the
drop down in your political system and you will see more of these
grayer-than-gray behind-the-scenes phenomena.
Sadly,
these are all as inchoate as the ditchwater.
Truly, not arguably, this is the reason why we are missing the whole
point.
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