Wednesday, July 24, 2013

SONA? So what?


From the column, AND THAT’S THE TRUTH, CBCP Monitor
By Teresa R. Tunay, OCDS

At last July 22’s SONA, riot police held flowers instead of guns—a row of them, like shy little flower girls at a wedding, and they behaved.  But the crowd did not.  Marchers raucously waved hate placards saying “Patalsikin si Noynoy”.  They hurled invectives, stones, and water bottles at the law enforcers.  They injured and were ready to be injured; a handful had to be rushed to hospitals.  And towards SONA’s end they burned an effigy of the president.  So what’s new?
            What’s with the flowers?  Why disarm a good number of riot cops while elsewhere more fully armed, helmeted and shielded ones stood behind a formidable barricade of concrete and barbed wire?  Bakit binakla ang pulis?  Elementary, my dear Watson: it’s a great photo-op for gimmick-hungry media.  And a not so subtle reminder of the half-baked revolution that put an Aquino in power.  Now, almost three decades later, the heirs are still using “people power revolution” as their ace, a credential to boost the undeserved credibility of an administration that’s fueled by a catchphrase—Daang matuwid. 
            Daang matuwid was the battle cry of the latest SONA.  But a daang matuwid founded on what?  And going to where?
            I had hoped to hear something new and substantial in Noynoy’s fourth SONA.  It was a midterm report, after all; I expected the president’s outlook to have somewhat evolved after his three years in office.  But I heard the same old stuff: numbers, numbers, sunshine and flowers.  Nothing on big foreign policy issues like China and Sabah, or on his campaign promise to prioritize the passing of the Freedom of Information (FOI) bill.
            While there’s nothing terribly wrong in boasting about one’s accomplishments, it’s never enough to portray the true state of a nation.  Growth?  Progress?  Projects for the poor?  Past administrations also effected those in varying degrees, and also bragged about them in their respective SONAs, but this SONA would have us believe that only this administration has turned the country around, and in barely three years.  Fantastic.
            Daang matuwid—investors allegedly come in because the government is clean, it said.  For me, an ordinary citizen, there is at present a discrepancy between the news and reality.  The Philippines is claimed to be second strongest economy in Asia, yet beggars still roam the city streets, people still dwell on sidewalks and under the bridges, I still have no choice but to pay Manila Water the monthly minimum of 175 pesos even when I consume only three cubic meters, and in my favorite pansitan, the prices remain unchanged but the portions are now 40 percent smaller.   Traveling and meeting the poor in the countryside is like being in another world, and faced with so much want I find it hard to even imagine that the country is indeed experiencing economic growth.  There is no economic boom until the gains are felt by the masses; for all its hype about the country’s economic recovery, this SONA failed to reconcile the contrast between the so-called economic gains and the living condition of our masses. 
Photo courtesy of skilledtoserve.com
           This SONA extolled anew the much-touted economic leap, crediting the
            The SONA called for peace and unity (the attainment of which demands empathy, humility, compassion, forgiveness, dialogue) but it continued to blame past leaderships for saddling the present with problems.  In politics, blaming predecessors for “inherited” ills is nothing new but this administration is ruthlessly consistent at this exercise, even citing actions of enemies long dead.  Reminds me of a vulture, keeping itself strong by gorging on carcasses. 
            Somewhere in his SONA, the president said it was not his SONA but everybody’s SONA.   “SONA mo ito!”  “Inyong SONA ito!”  Whatever he meant by that it struck me as another gimmick, the same as “Kayo ang boss ko!”—a trick at sidewalk diplomacy calculated to win “pogi points” from a gullible public and to shore up support for his daang matuwid camp.
            Sorry, guys, but I think daang matuwid is a self-serving battle cry.  Polishing your public image while heaping manure upon your perceived enemies only serves to keep this nation politics-crazy and divided.  I cannot go along with your daang matuwid if it means running after the corrupt but sparing your friends.  How can I support daang matuwid when it does not believe in the strength of the Filipino poor whose numbers it wants to decimate by passing a deceptive “reproductive health” bill?  How can I stomach daang matuwid when it wants us to hurt our fellow Filipinos by spending our tax money on drugs, devices, and services that endanger the health of our daughters, sisters and mothers?  A daang matuwid that is not founded on respect for life and that bows to no authority higher than itself cannot but lead to death.
            Daang matuwid also claims, “Kung walang corrupt, walang mahirap!”  So why delay the passing of the FOI bill, which is an anti-corruption bill?  This SONA did not even touch that issue, so how can anyone believe that the daang matuwid sincerely fights for the poor, clean governance, and the truth?   If we had the FOI as law by now, anyone could have found out for themselves the facts and figures revealing the true state of the nation.  As it is, this SONA is worth nothing more than a press release.  And that’s the truth.

Kiko and Lean

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