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Filipinos
have had a long history of government functionaries lording it over
them. Government functionaries often invoke the "eminent
domain" prerogatives of the nation state, supposedly on behalf of
the people and for our benefit. However, national officials often do
this in serving their own interests or serving, directly or indirectly,
the foreign-elite domination of our society as collaborators.
National
government is not higher than local government. It is only the
synergized, i.e. effectively facilitated, national constituency that is
higher, actually larger, than any of the local
constituencies taken separately.
When
a group of households builds a synergy among themselves, they may set up
a simple mechanism to facilitate that synergy—mass meetings at the
plaza, bulletin boards, a council of elders or of chosen leaders, to
resolve conflicts and coordinate bayanihan-type efforts. With such
mechanisms in place, the synergy may work very well to serve the needs
and will of the people in the clustered households. Two or more such
clusters can join together in a bigger and stronger synergy, called a
barrio or baranggay, with more complex facilitation mechanisms, and two
or more such baranggays can build among themselves what they might call
a municipality, and set up a bit more complex mechanism to facilitate
the synergy and serve well the needs and the will of all the people in
these clusters of clusters of clusters.
Baranggay
Poblacion where I live, is not under the City of Makati, it is within
Makati. And this city is not under Metro Manila but within Metro
Manila, which is not under the Philippines, but within the Philippines.
Get the drift? Only monarchies and miitary command structures have
hierarchies. Democracy, which is premised on the equality of all
persons, is not supposed to have one. The equivalent word for democratic
setups is holarchy, from the word holon which means an entity being
simultaneously a whole of smaller synergizing parts and a part of a
bigger whole.
As
we go to wider and wider scopes, the mechanisms become more and more
complex but the essence should remain the same. And
that is, the mechanism at whatever scope should be serving the
needs and will of the people in all those component clusters of
clusters of clusters, not ruling them. Even the necessary
discipline for basic order in society emanates from collective interest
and will, not on the will or moods of any government functionary. This
is expressed in the principle, "government of laws, not of
men."
These
government officials and functionaries on various scopes of constituency
are not in any hierarchy, only their respective constituent
communities are (in holarchies). The facilitating mechanisms are
tools of the people, funded by their money, with authority
emanating from them as citizenry. These, being just tools (government
instrumentalities such as councils, agencies, Houses of Congress,
executive departments, Cabinet, Palace) cannot be higher than the
people. It follows that the elected or appointed functionaries
posted in them at any given time are not any higher than us at all,
except perhaps janitors while cleaning towers or pilots while flying
planes.
They
are not monarchs or military dictators or benevolent despots although
they may convincingly feel and play-act the part and be rewarded with
usually-undeserved respect (with the title "Honorable" and its
attendant protocols) and bloated opportunities for largesse and perks.
Only by having performance records of competence and dedication as
servants of the people can these persons ever deserve the respectability
they so conspicuously seek. But even the competent functionaries of
competent administrations have no real right to swagger among the
people, much less allow their underlings to do the swaggering for them.
Only the ignorant and the hypocrytical opportunists can be
"impressed" by their airs of self-importance.
The
complexity of the mechanisms for nationwide governance, the over-bloated
bureaucracy, have had the effect of confusing all of us enough to forget
the essence. A congressman should consult with his constituents not to
ask them what their problems are but to ask them what their proposed
solutions are to the problems of the nation, so the congressman can
faithfully represent their voice in policy discussions within the
national legislature. Basketball courts, waiting sheds, bridges, etc.
are matters that should be the left with governors and mayors and
barangay chairmen to address as executives.
A
larger cluster is not more important than a smaller one. Plans and
policies of local constituencies should be synergized to be the plans
and policies of wider constituencies. The national government
should therefore be a mechanism for synergizing the Filipino people’s
own physical, mental and spiritual capabilities to serve their own needs
and their own collective will. Contrary to what we have started
getting used to, it is not supposed to be a mechanism to facilitate the
control of our country, of our regions and provinces and towns and
communities, neighborhoods and homes, by the powerful elite of Global
Greed.
In
birthing the Filipino nation, which was its more important historic
function than successfully fighting and defeating Spanish rule, the
Katipunan (the root word of is name is tipon) gathered and wove
in a unified tapestry the diverse communities in this archipelago. That
process is opposite the direction of the Spanish conquistadores
who claimed the Islands wholesale, and proceeded to divide up the land
into smaller and smaller parcels to vassals and sub-vassals and
sub-sub-vassals. Each land parcel included the flora, fauna and native
people living on it.
The
building-blocks logic of the Katipunan should be promoted today. For
this reason, local communities, instead of awaiting devolution of
government functions (usually including many "unbudgeted
items"), should assert their command over their collective
patrimony, and be prepared to synergize with adjacent communities on
larger perspectives of stakeholdership.
People’s
Self-Empowerment
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The
hierarchy paradigm is promoted and maintained by national officials who
seek to call attention to their so-called authority over smaller
clusters while at the same time invoking pragmatism to justify their
meek obedience the Trojan-Horse "recommendations" of foreign
overlords represented by the World Bank-IMF, World Trade Organization
and similar entities.
This
paradigm is challenged by the People’s Self-Empowerment (PSE)
paradigm, where the ideal of social justice is combined with
"teaching a man to fish so he can feed himself forever." And
there are three distinct frameworks groups and individuals can choose
from for attaining and enjoying empowerment in governmental power, in
other words, political power. These are:
1)
"Proxy empowerment" framework wherein an organized entity that
is out of the corridors of power seeks to acquire and exercise political
power in the name of the people and for the "objective" and
"fundamental" benefit of the people, earnestness assumed;
2)
"Dole-out and Token Empowerment" framework where wherein an
entity and persons already in possession of power claim to empower the
people out of their magnanimity. But sets limits to such empowerment so
as not to put in jeopardy their own decisive hold on power and their
very own agenda; and
3)
"Direct self-empowerment of, for, and by the People," both as
individual human persons attaining full development of their respective
individual human faculties and potentialities, and as groups of such
individually-uplifted people synergizing their capabilities for
collective self-determination and effective self-governance. In this
framework, various entities and individuals can serve, or partake in
embodying, the people’s self-empowerment process (institutions,
agencies and NGOs can serve this process one way of another; and each PO
can partake in embodying this self-empowerment).
It
is up to each individual and to each group to choose the framework to
pursue one’s own efforts. Indicators of success or significance of the
efforts would include the approval and validation of these efforts by a
growing percentage of the citizenry, and of course the actual impact of
these efforts on the people.
The
first framework is premised on building the strength and
"ideological purity" of the entity that seeks to acquire power
for and in the name of the people. Thus it naturally tends to require or
encourage monolithic structures and practices which have the inherent
tendency to stifle the initiative and creativity of many of the people
involved and, in many cases, have even resulted in the actual
disempowerment of these people.
I
choose to be predisposed to give this framework an assumption of
earnestness of intent to act, speak for, and serve the
"objective" and "fundamental" benefit of the people.
History has apparently proven me to be "too generous" for
deciding to have such a predisposition. For this reason, traditional
politicians in the Philippines or elsewhere, can only appear to belong
to be working under this framework, but are more akin to the second
one" token empowerment doled out to the people.
The
second framework is hazardous, just like the first, because it creates
illusions among the people and feeds on such illusions until such time
that the people, who initially pin their hopes on it, pendulum-swing to
the extreme cynicism. The "people empowerment" component of
the reform program of a past Philippine administration spoke glowingly
of guaranteeing the marginalized sectors of society inside-track access
to decision-making bodies of government, but did not guarantee that such
representation would go beyond window-dressing. The scheme tended to
backfire on government in most cases where representatives of such
marginalized sectors were patronizingly humored and officially heard but
not really heeded in those decision-making bodies.
The
third framework builds a well-founded confidence in the people’s
capability not to lose sight of the need for fundamental changes and
actually builds the people’s direct capability through synergism to
effect such changes.
The
people have to raise their standards as to which changes may be
considered essential and beyond the cosmetic or palliative. This
framework does not harbor or foment a fear of petty reforms, for many
reforms and immediate gains can really be used as steppiong stones in
the people’s march to achieving fundamental changes in society.
Among
the three alternative frameworks enumerated above, I subscribe to the
third one, and I would even go to the extent of asserting that it is the
only framework that can result in the people actually being empowered. I
say this because the framework of people’s self-empowerment is direct,
well-rounded and rooted in the empowerment of individuals making up the
majority of our people. At the same time, the third framework can
actually support, encompass, and check for earnestness and
effectiveness, those working within the first framework and/or the
second framework.
Governance
by the People
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Some
people who shall have read this part would probably say I am very
disrespectful of government. Well, history of governance in this country
has not given me any reason to give it more respect than I feel now.
And
the summary of my "personal policy" toward government is one
of "maximum tolerance." It taxes us to death
while shortchanging us on basic public services (which are getting
privatized), it sels us and our children and our children’s children
down the river. It makes glowing claims and promises and shortly
afterwards it justifies utter failure to fulfill or validate them,
blaming the citizenry for "over-dependence" and blaming
specific groups of people for engaging in "destabilization."
Still
I would not think of raising a call to overthrow it – that would be
too much bother, and in that case all my time and energy awould be spent
on fighting and hiding, instead of on helping solve the people’s
problems the government should have prevented or solved to confirm the
value of its existence.
No
way! I would rather spend quality time and enthusiastic energy on
helping the people attain direct self-empowerment through
synergy-building. So that whenever government or one of its
functionaries does something good, the people would be prepared to
maximize on it, and whenever the government goes on its usual
performance pattern, we will be able to resist or to cope whichever
response the people deem to be more prudent at any given time.
AS
SOON AS the Filipino people can attain empowerment beyond protesting and
beyond coping (which includes joking about everything), and revive the
spirit of Bayanihan and the Katipunan in facing collectively the
problems of communities we belong in, only then can we say we shall have
arrived as voters.
Then
the personalities and exciting dramatics shall have become mere
sidelights and not main events in our periodic electoral exercises.
Can
we all be determined to attain this status even of very gradually? Or
are we actually enjoying the hollowness of our exciting national
pastime? The Odyssey of the Filipino Voter continues, and my faith
springs eternal.
The
Filipino can indeed rise above and beyond this, from the despicable
abyss of traditional politics to the lofty realm of noble statesmanship.
Ed
Aurelio C. Reyes
Makati
City, Philippines
January
23, 2004