Che Carpio
It's sad that the present standoff in Sabah between the Malaysian government and the "royal army" of the Sultanate of Sulu has resulted in bloodshed and even reports of Malaysian abuses of Filipino civilians caught in the crossfire.
But what is sadder is the utter mismanagement of the issue by the administration and President Aquino's glaring ignorance and even stupidity by his orders for "surrender." To make matters worse, PNoy has even resorted to playing the blame-game and throwing below-the-belt attacks on the Sultan of Sulu.
When Chiz (now Sen. Escudero) and I were studying in Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, DC, for our Master of Laws in International and Comparative Law, we kidded our lawyer-classmates from around the world about our contrasting versions of Philippine history, particularly under then President Marcos.
To Chiz, whose father served Marcos as agriculture minister, it was "Marcos Pa Rin". It was not a "Marcos Dictatorship." Instead, it was the "New Society" that would make the Philippines "great again" as then trumpeted by Marcos who claimed a "covenant with the Filipino People." In fact, Marcos was his personal hero, having shook his hands as a little boy like Bill Clinton as a Boy Scout shaking the hand of then US President John F. Kennedy.
Elections are rooted in the fundamental principle that government exists only on consent of the governed. There are two critical concepts in this proposition, that is, consent and governed. But both terms spring from one and the same tree, as it were: We, the People.
Thus, in our Constitution, it is we, the sovereign Filipino People, who establish the government. And it is through elections that we put individual people to run it or unfortunately in many instances, ruin it.
With the coming May elections, our bishops have decried the "widening practice of political dynasties" through their pastoral statement released on January 29.
"As monopolies in business, monopolies in politics limit the entry that can bring in new ideas and offer better services. Political dynasties breed corruption and ineptitude. We are aggrieved that lawmakers themselves defy the supreme law of the land by not following the mandate of our Philippine Constitution given 26 years ago to make an enabling law to ban political dynasties," the CBCP stated.
"Tuwid na Daan" boasted of 2012 as the year for public accountability through the first-ever removal of a Chief Justice. And the impeachment was doggedly pursued by no less than the President of the Philippines, using all the forces of government at his disposal like the BIR.
But early on in the New Year 2013, the annual practice of multi-million peso Christmas cash gifts by the Senate President to all the senators from senate "savings" was outed. Enrile playing Santa Claus to his peers, a "tradition" of the senate allegedly since the time of Quezon, would have normally gone unnoticed except that four unhappy "naughty kids" complained about the "small" amount of Php250 thousand each that was given them.