Analysis
Seven Theses on the Crisis
and Disintegration of the Arroyo Terrorist State
This May election may
prove to be a decisive turning point both for Arroyo and the
anti-imperialist united front. Either Arroyo will cheat and entrench her
authoritarian rule, or the popular resistance will unseat her in a series
of flanking moves and direct confrontations hitherto unforeseen.
BY
E. SAN JUAN,
JR.
Contributed to Bulatlat
In memory of Benjaline Hernandez, Alyce
Claver, Rei Mon Guran and countless other victims of political
extrajudicial killings
A fortuitous
conjuncture of recent events seems to augur the inexorable downfall of the
Arroyo presidency. With the defiant manifesto of “Nanay Ude” (Lourdes
Rubrico) of Umaga (Ugnayan ng Maralita Para sa Gawa at Adhikain)
Federation and the attempted killing of Karapatan (Alliance for the
Advancement of People’s Rights) officer Jose Ely Garchico and the
abduction of Maria Luisa Posa-Dominado (Selda, Samahan ng mga Ex-Detainee
Laban sa Detensyon at para sa Amnestiya) and Nilo Arado (Bayan, Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan or New Patriotic Alliance),
we confront the desperate panic of the regime side by side with the
implacable resistance of the popular forces. Oppression always begets
resistance, as the adage goes. And with more oppression goes certain
retribution.
The inertia of
tyranny at first seemed impervious to humanitarian blandishment. Arroyo
may shed crocodile tears, but her cabal of generals and security advisers
doesn’t care and seems addicted to the opium of violence. Despite Alston’s
exposure in the Human Rights Council of the “Order of Battle” blueprint of
Oplan Bantay Laya (Operation Freedom Watch) I and II, Arroyo’s minions
continue to ratchet up the score of extra-judicial killings and forced
disappearances. Despite the judgment of the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal (PPT)
and rigorous condemnation by Amnesty International, National Council of
Churches of the Philippines (NCCP), Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC),
and others, of the obscene platform of “impunity” for operatives linked to
the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine National
Police (PNP), the political murders show no signs of abating. In an
unprecedented “overkill,”AFP troops have saturated urban poor communities
in Metro Manila and elsewhere to openly harass and intimidate citizens
inclined to Bayan Muna (People First) and other progressive party-list
candidates in the weeks before the May elections. What more atrocities are
being hatched in Malacanang in step with Bush’s global war of terror?
Before the May 14
elections, the Arroyo clique may be gearing to “clean up its act” by
public-relations magic. In a belated response to U.S. Sen. Barbara
Boxer’s and the U.S. Department of State’s concern over U.S. aid being
used for the vilification and summary executions of activists, the Arroyo
-AFP’s show of a “state of denial” can be gleaned from the bureaucratic
maneuvers of creating so-called special courts to try human rights cases.
This comes after UN (United Nations) Special Rapporteur Philip Alston’s
witnesses were killed, betraying the tendentious character of such
reforms. Could this cover up or compensate for the utter insipidity of
Task Force Usig and the Melo Commission? It would be wishful thinking to
believe in a sudden reversal of entrenched policy.
Unless her U.S.
sponsors demand more concrete measures to stop the killings, the Arroyo
clique will cheat—as Kontra Daya and others have predicted based on plans
already hatched with premeditated care—and cheat massively in the May
elections. It is only proceeding with “business as usual,” in the
time-honored tradition of elections since 1946. The regime will then
quickly proceed to implement the Human Security Law that will finally
legalize the “de facto martial law” which, for Sen. Jamby Madrigal
(speaking at the PPT at The Hague in March), already prevails. But
legitimacy cannot be earned by legislative fiat. Last April 18, the
University of the Philippines (UP) University Council passed a resolution
condemning Arroyo’s curtailment of civil liberties, a mild show of protest
from a fraction of the salaried intelligentsia. However, that is still
symptomatic of the fact that Arroyo lacks that essential element of
hegemonic consensus needed for any ruling bloc to survive. Violence may
soon become the only weapon available, a sign of total moral and political
bankruptcy of that “elite democracy” so beloved by former “left-wing”
friends who hailed “the democratic space” of Cory Aquino as she was about
to massacre the Mendiola peasant protesters, a class penchant proved again
in the Hacienda Luisita massacre of Nov. 16, 2004.
Urgent questions
interpose themselves between local and international developments. Amid
unceasing U.S. political-military intervention, can the realization of
martial law de jure be stopped? Can the killings and abductions be
deterred if not halted? Can the national-democratic opposition initiate a
wider, more in-depth realignment of all anti-imperialist forces throughout
the country? Can we establish a more radical discursive and organizational
framework to build the united front for nationwide insurrection, rallying
the middle strata beyond what has already been accomplished so far?
As of now, Bayan and
Bayan Muna by themselves alone cannot mount a sustainable challenge to the
terrorist Minotaur without either getting the support of other non-leftist
anti-Arroyo forces, or neutralizing them. What other sectors can be
mobilized to strengthen the democratic forces and unleash emancipatory
energies that have been stifled by authoritarian habits and practices
grounded in the comprador-feudal structures of our society? What historic
openings for liberation might be seized from this coming electoral
exercise that can precipitate immediate change? Or if not that, at least,
catalyze a regrouping of forces that can ultimately prove pivotal not just
for the collapse of the Arroyo regime but also for the continued growth of
participatory democracy centered on worker-peasant protagonism? What
theoretical and practical breakthroughs may be read from the signs of
micropolitical resistance in the city and countryside, as well as in the
turmoil of the recalcitrant Filipino diaspora worldwide?
Here we take
cognizance of the economic and social facts already rehearsed in the March
29, 2007, CPP (Communist Party of the Philippines) Central Committee
Message on the New People’s Army (NPA)’s accomplishments, as well as
numerous IBON analyses of the sharp polarization of social classes in the
last six years. On another occasion, we hope to explore the problem of why
the strategy of people’s war predicated chiefly on military action
deviates from the principle of class struggle as a political resolution of
historic contradictions by a combination of diverse means/modes, not just
by violent means. Any physical combat in the social realm is, as
Clausewitz once observed, always an extension of politics by other means.
Yes, “el pueblo unido seran jamas vencido.” But it is still a long
way to go in uniting “el pueblo,” ridden as it is with sharp
divisions across the multiple axes of gender, ethnicity, religion,
locality, and other cultural/ideological determinants that underlie the
structural class cleavage. The U.S.-imposed neocolonial “social contract”
may show signs of unraveling; the point is not just to interpret but to
hasten its complete breakdown.
We demur from the
triumphalism of our comrades, notwithstanding the heroic advances that
have already been registered in the ejection of U.S. bases in 1991 and the
Subic rape case in 2006 (to cite only two examples). The dogmatic hubris
of vanguardism cannot let us forget the regression to militarism/urban
adventurism committed by those who were targeted by the Second Great
Rectification Movement. Such left and right tendencies will always exist
in a neocolony severely ravaged everyday by capitalist alienation,
commodification, anomie, as well as the destructive effects of archaic,
feudal practices (such as sexist-masculinist abuses, clientelism,
religious skullduggery, etc.). Neither pessimism of reason nor optimism of
the will can help, I think, but a consistent regimen of
criticism-self-criticism of political calculation can assist us in
learning from mistakes of the past and thus forge a less wasteful path of
social transformation.
We seek to broach
here a more heuristic and self-reflexive line of cognitive mapping of the
sociopolitical arena. We hope to advance the anti-imperialist struggle
within the framework of what is feasible in the short-term compass of
Arroyo’s moribund tenure. “Realize the impossible!” – this slogan rests on
grasping what is possible, just as freedom rests on comprehending
necessity. To be sure, the people’s cause of social justice and true
independence will emerge victorious in the end, via an orchestration of
all means of struggle attuned to the dynamic changes in the political
consciousness of various sectors. Vanguardism cannot preempt the slow hard
labor of mass political education, organizing, and critique. The basic
question is: how can we move out of this morass of impunity and relative
disarray of anti-Arroyo forces? After all, Anakpawis (Toiling Masses) Rep.
Crispin Beltran is still detained by the military, and Bayan Muna Rep.
Satur Ocampo still faces an uphill legal battle, and all anti-imperialist
militants face threats of prison or “neutralization” every moment of the
day.
Here we will
concentrate on the specific contradictions faced by the ruling bloc and
its ramifications. This positing of problems faced by the enemy is offered
as a way of revitalizing the project of communal democracy so necessary to
advance the national-democratic program as a stage of socialist
reconstruction, within the framework of an uninterrupted revolutionary
process. Of course, unpredictable events and new players/actors may
intervene that could gradually, or by leaps and bounds, change the
parallelogram of forces and require a new theoretical calibration of class
trajectories. However, we need to always pursue the principle of
historical-materialist analysis in order to unfold the inner laws of
motion from the surface of everyday circumstances whose bizarre
oscillation may seduce us into easy consolations and premature
celebrations of victories. True, you need to break eggs to make an
omelette; but there is no guarantee that the omelette will be edible or
savory at all. The categorical imperative for the wretched of the earth is
still: Makibaka, huwag matakot! (Fight, be not afraid!)
Needless to say, the
propositional form of this intervention invites further scientific inquiry
and practicable exchange, with the resulting hypotheses to be tried in
concrete praxis in the historical arena. What is necessary is to agree on
the purpose and goal of the national-democratic project of replacing the
Arroyo regime, not only illegitimate but politically and ideologically
bankrupt, with one reflecting the liberatory aspirations of the exploited
classes and all sectors committed to egalitarian democracy and genuine
national independence. Here the desideratum of “the mass line,” its
ripeness, signifies everything.
Thesis 1: After the
Garci exposure and the failed impeachment attempts, the Arroyo bloc has
definitively lost any shred of legitimacy it may have putatively enjoyed
after People Power 2. While bribes and other inducements offered to
Batasan trapos have practically made the impeachment route
counterproductive, the educational-propaganda value of the impeachment
case, as well as the obscenity of extrajudicial killings, has not been
fully exhausted. Other venues have to be found. A preponderant number of
Filipinos in the U.S., for example, doesn’t know the details, much less
the implications, of the Garci fraud. Like other migrants, they still
cling to the belief that the incumbent (like the Marcos regime in the
seventies) should be allowed to run the government and preserve law and
order for everyone.
The task then is to
engage in a wide-ranging pedagogical, “conscientizing” effort of
propagating the merits of the impeachment brief to as wide a constituency
as possible, appealing to the traditional sense of fair play, clean
elections, honesty, and so on. This will reach otherwise conservative,
pro-U.S. sectors of the population in the country and abroad, and also
energize liberal fractions of the “national bourgeoisie” (now reduced to
rentier and comprador pursuits). This is not to endorse parliamentary
cretinism; rather, it is to maximize what is still legally allowed in a
republican framework of class conflict and use it as a point of departure
for accelerating political education and organizing toward insurrectionary
readiness. This is to engage the bulk of civil society still adhering to
the old maxim, Salus rei publicae suprema lex, bearing in mind that
this current rei publicae exists to reproduce class inequality and
imperialist domination.
Thesis 2: The nearly
absolute reliance of the Arroyo clique on AFP/PNP counterinsurgency
tactics, including extrajudicial killings and selective persecution
(Beltran, Ocampo) of progressive dissenters, is a clear symptom of
weakness due to the loss of suasive power. A militarized bureaucracy
(entrenched since the Marcos period) has no political intelligence at all,
tied to a technocratic ethos. Its tactics are reactive, hence their agents
fall prey to conventional guerrilla maneuvers even with the help of
sophisticated techniques given by Pentagon/U.S. advisers. Without genuine
popular support, the regime’s days are numbered.
Aside from private
armies of thugs and assorted mercenaries, the main coercive agency of the
ruling bloc is the U.S-trained and U.S.-indoctrinated military and police
apparatus. Such limitation of agency cannot be remedied by more bribery of
politicians, or by expedient compromises with other fractions of the
oligarchy: the Marcoses, Joker Arroyo-type vacillating “libertarians,”
etc. Arroyo and her Cabinet Oversight Committee on Internal Security (COCIS),
however, are bedeviled by three ineluctable determinants: 1) internal
dissension within the military ranks due to the politicized nature of
promotions, division of the loot, etc.; 2) limited internal resources,
including decimation of ranks through desertion, casualties, intractable
clandestine activities, etc.; and 3) utter dependence on the Pentagon and
Washington for logistics, training, etc., which may suffer the
vicissitudes of political shifts in the metropole. Aside from clientelism
and opportunism, the military-police bureaucracy is riddled with vicious
in-fighting and personality cults that cause inefficiency, paralysis, etc.
Moreover, as in any uneven, dependent formation, there exist in the ranks
honest elements who may be won over in the course of the struggle, hence
the key lies in commonalities of political aims, not ideological
standardization.
Thesis 3: A wholly
new condition has emerged since the Marcos dictatorship: the phenomenal
increase of OFWs (Overseas Filipino Workers). About 3,000 leave everyday,
a million every year, adding to the nearly 10 million Filipinos abroad. As
already established, the temporary stability of the economy hinges on the
ability to pay the foreign debt, which in turn depends on the continuing
growth of remittance of dollars from OFWs, a large part of which comes
from the Middle East and
North America. Foreign investments have
declined considerably, though transnational corporations can still exert
some influence (as in the Walmart-Gap criticism of Arroyo policies
handicapping union struggle for work-place rights). What is more valuable
for the corrupt Establishment is the huge reservoir of taxes and fees
extorted from OFWs through the OWWA Omnibus Policies amounting to at least
P17 billion so far, which will surely be raided again for this May
exercise. If the migrant community becomes fully mobilized in fighting for
social, cultural and political rights, this can deliver the heaviest blows
on the ability of the regime to deliver on its debts in time, satisfying
the IMF (International Monetary Fund)/World Bank and the greedy appetite
of finance capital.
Given the precarious
nature of overseas hiring (consider recent Saudi Arabia’s restrictions,
Taiwan’s prohibitions, etc.) tied to the geopolitical prospect of
heightened conflicts in the Middle East, as well as periodic tremors in
the Asian region (affecting Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong—the largest
employers of OFWs), the Arroyo regime is vulnerable to such
reverberations. Any explosion of conflict in those regions is bound to
produce dire repercussions on the local political economy. This is where
Migrante International and other formations oriented to OFW concerns are
bound to play a key and possibly decisive role in precipitating a crisis
of failure to pay both internal and external debts fatal to the ruling
bloc.
Thesis 4: The Moro
insurgency remains an integral part of our national-democratic struggle.
The Moro people have suffered the most since the Marcos dictatorship:
hundreds of thousands killed, with more than half of the four million
internal refugees coming from the Moro villages and towns. They have also
rallied the largest armed combatants in the country and inflicted severe
blows on the AFP. The unrelenting resistance of the Moro community
(represented currently by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and
sections of the Moro National Liberation Front or MNLF) cannot be
assuaged, or fully pacified, by Arroyo’s diplomacy and cooptation. Nor can
the AFP/PNP, even with the help of U.S. Special Forces, ever succeed in
eliminating the Abu Sayyaf or the conditions that reproduce such a
phenomenon. Not because the Abu Sayyaf is a parasitic and coeval creature
of the CIA and its military/civilian patrons, which remains the
case—Bush’s War on Terror subsists on the continuing existence of this
bandit group—but because this is tied with the whole turbulent milieu of
the Islamic world (Indonesia, Malaysia, parts of Thailand, Bangladesh,
Pakistan, etc.) and the internal decay of its structures and ethos. Note
that a large part of the combat-ready AFP troops are tied with the
fighting in Mindanao and Sulu, thus enabling breathing space (exchanging
space for time) for building up the liberated zones and pursuing a war of
attrition and encirclement.
Here, the
Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) is a crucial international body
whose ideological shifts will certainly affect the capacity of Moro
separatism to grow or diminish. What is imperative is for the radical
assemblage to incorporate the Islamic resistance much more adequately than
it has done so far. A wider anti-imperialist united front cannot be
realized without the substantive participation of the Moro movement for
autonomy. Luis Jalandoni’s affirmation of the Moro (and other national
minorities’) right to self-determination, emphasized in his March 23
presentation to the PPT, is a salutary move in the right direction.
Thesis 5: Aside from
the Bangsa Moro people, the indigenous communities (Lumads, Igorots, etc.)
need special inducements for their inclusion in the united front against
the Arroyo clique. So far, this has not been done, despite advances in the
Cordillera front. We need to pay closer attention to indigenous practices
of solidarity and coalitional work, esp. in the mines, remote villages,
and plantations. Perhaps the nationalist appeal for liberation needs to be
modified to promote the local demands for livelihood, preservation of
ancestral lands, and fostering of local religious customs, including
prophetic millenarianism. The same goes for the utopian experiments of
artists, anarchists, and other marginalized sectors. Christian chauvinism
remains the main obstacle here as well as dogmatic scientism and other
“orientalist” prejudices. Can our Postmodern babaylans
(priestesses) stir up the slumbering chthonic energies of Mother
Filipinas?
Thesis 6: The
religious front requires special analysis in the light of unrelenting
U.S.-influenced evangelization. While the theology of liberation may have
been eclipsed by actual practices of progressive “fundamentalist” sects,
this aspect of the underground movement during the Marcos era may still be
reconfigured to draw quietistic and conservative believers to a more
dynamic worldly thrust that will dovetail with emergent programs of
industrialization, sustainable development, and the building of a
self-reliant economy. Given the attacks on the Philippine Independent
Church (PIC), and reformist church officials of the Protestant
denominations, there exist great opportunities to channel anti-statist
sentiments in a more decolonizing political direction. This has been done
with women, gays, and unorthodox intellectuals with their utopian dreams,
so why can we not appeal to the messianic/salvific impulse and direct it
to secular ends (material well-being, health, care for the environment)?
Fr. Ed de la Torre’s incarnational politics awaits vindication in a
revitalized theology of national liberation disabused of petit-bourgeois
reformist illusions.
Thesis 7: The public
support of the U.S. is probably the only driftwood the Arroyo bloc still
clings to. But there is no certainty in permanent U.S. patronage that is
always based on the prior claims of U.S. racial “manifest destiny,” that
is, global hegemony. What is bound to snap the U.S-Arroyo linkage is this:
Arroyo cannot pacify the internecine fighting of oligarchic factions,
which may push Washington to opt for a substitute among the contending
elite politicians. A carnage-prone state that cannot reconcile the
internal feuds within elite ranks, much less conciliate the dispossessed,
cannot defeat the popular challenge.
Comrades during the
Marcos dictatorship failed to predict the dispensability of the dictator
for the U.S., thus withdrawing from the electoral struggle in 1986. As the
case of the Subic rapist Daniel Smith has recently shown, the U.S. always
tests any administration in the crucible of subservience, whether by
bribes (more military aid) or coercive pronouncements (suspension of the
Balikatan exercises). And no group of subaltern functionaries is
indispensable, as withdrawal of support for the Marcos dictatorship has
shown if what is at stake is the preservation of the subordinate social
relations of capital accumulation and its governability. If Arroyo proves
totally discredited, and the impasse of her corrupt, fraudulent rule
jeopardizes U.S. control and precipitates the entry of the National
Democratic Front (NDF) into the scene, then the U.S. will immediately
abandon Arroyo and substitute the next compromise elite fraction. Thus the
fight against U.S. political and military intervention remains central to
the articulation of all the demands and goals of the national-democratic
assemblage.
In sum, the
U.S.-Arroyo terrorist state is plagued with incoherence, vulnerabilities,
and intrinsic inadequacies characteristic of the authoritarian state in
the periphery (an earlier treatise on this, Clive Thomas, The Rise of
the Authoritarian State in Peripheral Societies, 1984, may be useful;
obviously, the “global war on terror” and U.S. unilateral hegemonism have
changed the historical context, thus the need for new analysis). The
Arroyo state is neither a populist nor a classically fascist (European)
state. It has neither vast popular cross-class support nor does it promote
a messianic leader to channel middle-class frustrations, a racialized
savior who promises redemption, or even to make “the nation great again”
(as Marcos tried to do with the help of shoddy pundits like Blas Ople and
other hirelings). Its use of violence is narrowly instrumentalist, not
mystical or primordialist. (The old debate among Ernesto Laclau, Ralph
Miliband, and Nicos Poulantzas on fascism and populism in the European and
Latin American context may be instructive here.) Of course, even if the
Arroyo regime is saddled with multiple problems sketched earlier, it will
not fall by itself (barbarism exceeding yesterday’s carnage is always an
option)—the popular forces have to dismantle it gradually, or by leaps and
bounds.
This May election may
prove to be a decisive turning point both for Arroyo and the
anti-imperialist united front. It will certainly narrow the paths open to
all contending forces. Either Arroyo will cheat and entrench her
authoritarian rule, or the popular resistance will unseat her in a series
of flanking moves and direct confrontations hitherto unforeseen. We are in
that interregnum where the people can no longer accept the status quo and
the ruling elite can no longer implement phony democracy in the old
style—an in-between phase of the struggle replete with morbid symptoms;
hence, either the old system crumbles, or its agonizing death-pangs are
prolonged at the expense of the intolerable suffering of millions from
globalized market profiteers and their local henchmen.
Let us repeat what
seems to be commonplace now, though inflected in a more dialectical
stance. Arroyo’s makeshift combination of trapos and militarists,
Cold War ideologues, and petit-bourgeois propagandists, betokens an
expedient mechanism for narrow get-rich-quick schemes by manipulation of
the State apparatus and raiding the public treasury. Except for its
disproportionate use of the military and police in extrajudicial killings,
regional counterinsurgency drives, massacres and tortures, the Arroyo
state is a conjunctural result of several intertwined contingencies:
electoral fraud, advanced disintegration of the oligarchic bloc of
comparators-landlords-bureaucrat capitalists (their productive base has
considerably diminished and their ideological control over peasants and
workers has been countered by increased underground agitation and
labor-union organizing); and, sad to say, the still divided mass of
workers, peasants and middle elements who have not yet been effectively
interpellated and fused into a revolutionary counterhegemonic bloc. In
short, the objective conditions have ripened, but the subjective forces
have not yet fully matured to take over state power, or articulate a new
consensus, a new “common sense.” The alibi or escape route of OFWs still
beckons. Nonetheless, the process of maturation can occur rapidly,
depending on a sudden turn of circumstances that cannot be predicted
despite our claim to know “the laws of motion” of the capitalist mode of
production.
Our neocolonial
condition has always been a permanent state of emergency. But it is not
one imposed by Presidential Proclamation No. 1017, but by the vicious
operation of sustained colonial oppression and imperialist havoc. The
treason of the technocrats that Alejandro Lichauco (see his Hunger,
Corruption and Betrayal, 2005) bewails is only a symptom of the
general crisis of a minor neocolony that has been sharpening since 1946.
No doubt, mass hunger has worsened. But everyone knows that poverty and
suffering do not translate automatically into a fight for justice and
equality. There are 25 million hungry Filipinos (roughly 3.4 million
households) who are desperately hungry, but not all are marching for food
and the overthrow of the iniquitous order.
Customary traditional
beliefs, together with subaltern mentalities and habits, offer outlets of
anger and grief; emigration and charity drives another. In After
Postcolonialism: Remappping Philippines-United States Confrontations (Rowman
2000) and also in U.S. Imperialism and Revolution in the Philipppines
(Palgrave 2007), I tried to analyze the institutionalized ideological
mechanisms that perpetuate subalternity. No appeal to neoliberal “free
market fundamentalism,” nor pluralist governance (how can the Batasan or
the courts perform check-and-balance procedures when a culture of
corruption and opportunism prevails?) will enable the reform of the
Comelec (Commission on Elections), the trial of Gen. Jovito Palparan and
his ilk, or the successful investigation of corruption and electoral fraud
by the courts or the Ombudsman of the current regime. Arroyo, however,
cannot institutionalize anxiety and fear for a classic fascist
mobilization since she has no genuine mass movement to deploy. Nor is
there any affective identification with a leader who can channel
persecutory anxiety against “communist fronts” (as Franz Neumann noted in
The Democratic and the Authoritarian State, 1964). Her gambit
hinges on the passivity of an electorate that can, however, be volatilized
and reoriented by critical popular interventions in a revolutionary
direction.
Only two final points
can be made here due to space limitations. As an emergency measure to
undercut the “climate of impunity,” a tactical move of armed self-defense
by local communities may be adopted. This can be done through exemplary
arrest, trial and punishment of publicly known assassins, torturers, and
abusive police and military officers. People’s justice needs no special
juridical or moral justification. We don’t have to wait for these
criminals to leave the country and be put on trial years from now in a
European State which recognizes the International Court of Justice. We
need only invoke the provisions of the CARHRIHL (the Comprehensive
Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law)
that the Philippine government signed together with the NDF, which in turn
draws its force from the International Covenant of Civil and Political
Rights and other ratified international laws.
The question is: who
has the power to implement it?
Celebrating the PPT’s
“guilty” verdict against the U.S.-Arroyo collusion, Mrs. Evangeline
Hernandez, the mother of Benjaline Hernandez, one of the over 800 victims
of extrajudicial killings under the Arroyo dispensation (close to 400 of
them belong to activist or progressive sectors), announced in a public
rally last March 27: “We who have lost our loved ones, who have been
violated, will not allow Arroyo to prolong her stay in Malacañang… The
Filipino people will make this government pay for its blood debt.”
This cry of people’s
justice will also signal the advent of a proactive grass-roots initiative
that will begin to Filipinize the so-called “Maoist” insurgency that the
U.S. Department of State exploits to stigmatize the insurgency as
“terrorist.” Why “Maoist” when People’s
China
has long become thoroughly capitalist? Notwithstanding the now jejune
RA-RJ (Reaffirmist-Rejectionist) squabble, why indeed can we not move
beyond parroting the Red Book and invent our own national-liberation
philosophy and methodology from the raw materials provided by our own rich
history of anticolonial revolts combined with the world treasury of
liberatory ideas (from the European Enlightenment that Jose Rizal, Andres
Bonifacio, Apolinario Mabini up to Amado V. Hernandez and Renato
Constantino have incorporated in their praxis)? We have a massive durable
history of revolutionary experiences, from Soliman to the Katipunan, the
Hukbalahap (Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa Hapon), the First Quarter Storm, the
generation of Maria Lorena Barros and Lean Alejandro, and the present
legal and extra-legal resistance.
In the wake of past
defeats of peasant and worker revolts, the indigenous culture of Filipino
nationalism constantly renews its redemptive emancipatory voice by
mobilizing new forces (women, church workers, ethnic minorities, gays,
etc.) and utilizing all means possible in an all-encompassing radical
democratic movement of all the oppressed and exploited millions. This
struggle is organically embedded in local and regional social movements
whose origin recalls the fight for national sovereignty and social justice
in the tradition of third-world struggles (Mahatma Gandhi, Ho Chi Minh,
Che Guevara, Frantz Fanon, etc.), but are in practice identical with the
local insurgencies of diverse communities against continued U.S.
domination.
The Philippines,
prosperous and sovereign, is still a project in the making. Our nation may
be conceived as an “imagined” and actually lived/experienced ensemble of
communities and civic formations—not just families or clans, but
desiring-machines producing and reproducing the paramount Desire called
Becoming-Filipino. Filipinas/Pilipinas, universal and singular, is in the
process of being constructed and nourished through the many-faceted social
and political resistance of Filipinos everywhere, in the homeland and
abroad, against predatory corporate globalization and its brutalizing
commodity-fetishism. The embodied spirit of the nation, its ecumenical
body germinal in the progressive groups and in the thousands of martyrs of
the national liberation struggle, is creatively fashioning an appropriate
culture of subversion, humanist solidarity, and self-empowerment worthy of
its own people’s history, its collective vision and sacrifices, for
freedom, material well-being, and human dignity. Becoming-Filipino, an
invincible power born from the ruins of the terrorist U.S.-Arroyo state—Mabuhay
ang sambayanang lumalaban! Contributed to Bulatlat
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