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Posts tagged: gibo

I do not approve. And I Am Not Resigned.*** (part 2)

This election feels as sad and as sordid as a love affair gone wrong. Don’t tell me to grin and bear it, I have my mind to speak and try as I might, I can barely disguise my contempt mixed with a little ironic amusement at how the cards have fallen. Am I surprised at the outcome?

Yes, and I am partly to blame for it. I was looking at politics through heavily-tinted, rose-colored glasses. The vibrant spirit of debate and discourse online misled me into thinking that it’s the same everywhere. I even had the temerity to speak for the ‘silent majority’ who are for my President, forgetting that the true silent majority are mired in poverty, uneducated and jaded. They have their reasons for voting, and they have their own unrealized aspirations. If they are offered P1000 to vote for this and that, I can’t blame them for taking it. I don’t intend to patronize them or trivialize their own tribulations.

Hold on though, it’s not just the C-D-E who voted although they are the majority. That’s right, media outfits, opinion leaders and the upper echelons of wealth, social and prestige dived right in. Perhaps it’s our penchant, as a people, for happy endings, or avoidance of unpleasant things in favor of smooth interpersonal relations as anthropologist Landa Jocano put it, or symptomatic of a deeper, more pervasive amnesia/repression that overcomes our people when it comes to our fragile political memories.

How quick people are to say now (Noynoy supporters and others alike) - move on, stop the whining, we have a new President now. I spent the last few months of my life taking personal and professional risks to support and campaign for my President as a mere volunteer. It was just 4 days ago, 4 days ago when my index finger bled purple and I was hoping (and actually praying) so hard that the next 6 years of my life will be under a new leadership, under a good man with the capacity to lead the country. Please lang, it’s only been four days. There are thousands, possibly millions who are still angry that FPJ didn’t win in 2004. Give me a break.

I wanted to cry when the results trickled in one by one. Now, you ask me to get over it and move on - in the name of national unity? If there is anyone I would believe in who called for it, it would only be Gibo. I say this because he led by example and he continues to practice what he preaches. I don’t have the patience for other people’s hypocrisies, much less the very candidates who sowed divisiveness and rancor in lieu of platforms.

I never wrote about the reasons I would never vote for Noynoy, and if only I had the foresight, I would just give you the link and save myself the trouble.

Call me bitter, or sourgraping, a naysayer because I continue to register my disappointment and disillusionment over the results of the 2010 elections. I would like to hope that later on I will be proven wrong, but I have nothing to go on to feel that way. I don’t know which is worse, to be bitter and jaded,  or just to have no basis for hope.

Feel free to ignore what I have to say because it’s counterproductive, divisive and just laced with sarcasm - the last I checked, I have every right to lament just as others can celebrate the 2010 elections with champagne.

**** Title quoted from Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem, Dirge Without Music

I do not approve. And I Am Not Resigned.*** (part 1)

I have no issues with those of you who cared and fought and rallied your support for your chosen candidate. (Except maybe for the horrible people online who just engage in pointless name-calling and all sorts of profanities just because you’re not on their side) Regardless of stripe, and even if debates among supporters tend to mimic how their candidates behave, I commend you nonetheless for your sincere conviction. It’s a small comfort.

BUT.

I do have issues with the indifferent ones who voted anyway, who voted based on convenience, who easily believed the already tarnished promises of Cory Aquino when she promised a clean and honest government under her watch without trying harder, without going beyond what the media is forcing down our throat. You who voted for the lesser evil, who was afraid of a bogeyman who never actually existed. You who voted with little compunction or regard for the rest of us, you who didn’t really care one way or another, but whose vote is just the same as ours. One is to one.  

You loved the surveys, loved how SWS and Pulse Asia narrowed the battle down to two and successfully convinced you that what is popular must be right. (I hated them only insofar as they were used for conditioning. What did Noynoy have to go on as basis for making that irresponsible statement about Philippines and Thailand’s current crisis? Surveys.)

You loved that battle of good versus evil. And boy, that battle was as heated and polarizing as the holy wars. Election season was the season of holier-than-thou. I’m not saying that character isn’t important, but talk is cheap. There were other choices of integrity and proven competence.

You are the market ready to consume and recreate the sensationalized word wars (mudslinging) of Villar and Noynoy throughout the election. You didn’t want to hear about platforms or programs. You, you wanted the Noynoy-Villar word wars, too. You wanted to get down and dirty about the true meaning of poverty, you wanted the truth about Noynoy’s alleged mental problems and you, you enjoyed them slugging it out, trading barbs and insults. It doesn’t matter how educated or uneducated you are, you played along. You loved the mudslinging, you were just as angry when Noynoy said the debate moderators are biased against him, The New York Times is against him, and perhaps even when he said the Philippines will be like Thailand if he didn’t win the elections.

What limited time there was to talk about issues and platforms was laid to waste thanks to these stupid demolition jobs and mudslinging waged by both camps. One candidate got so pissed off at these survey firms, he cussed and sued them. The other candidate who tried to sow unity, to tell you about his plans, you conveniently ignored and labeled as PGMA’s male version?

In my mind, I imagine you, shouting in unison with the rest, Kurt Cobain’s immortalized line in Smells Like Teen Spirit: “Here we are now, entertain us.”

May you realize one day that politics is not a stupid telenovela that you can turn off when you don’t feel like watching anymore. It’s your 6 years just as it is mine, but unlike you, I will remember what I said today and not be distracted by the next (scandal) commercial. I am not amused. And I am not resigned.

**** Title quoted from Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem, Dirge Without Music

Volunteer Couple for G1BO!!! :)

Volunteer Couple for G1BO!!! :)

Groupie for Gibo (Young Star, Philippine Star)

While I take exception to labeling myself a political groupie, I am lucky to be interviewed about being a Gibo supporter. :)

Below is the full transcript of my interview (conducted via email) for “Pretty Persuasion” the election edition of Young Star, out today, Friday, on the Philippine Star. Muchos gracias to Paolo Lorenzana for interviewing me. Oh, and for the record, my boyfriend’s name is JAT, not Japs, as reported. :P


1. Age, what do you do/year and course? How have you helped your candidate in your place of work/study?

I’m a twentysomething lawyer also currently pursuing graduate studies. I try not to mix work and my personal advocacy, but I do enjoy discussions with my colleagues about the elections. Outside of work, I give away what campaign materials I have on me to undecided voters who may be interested in considering Gibo. My boyfriend is also an active volunteer. He campaigns and helps organize events in his city. So far he has joined all the major Gibo events in Metro Manila. When it’s possible, we try to go to events together.

2. Craziest thing you’ve done for your candidate, if any?

One lazy Sunday, I didn’t eat the whole day because I was so engrossed in writing an essay outlining the reasons I’m voting for him. It’s my personal tour-de-force. I’m proud of it, and I’m happy it’s been getting a lot of great feedback on the internet. I’m exhausting all means possible to send him a copy of the essay I wrote. It’s crazy because I’ve been bugging a number of people to print it and give it to him. Although I don’t consider it crazy, I’ve also given out stickers and ballers to commuters making their way through dirty and congested EDSA-Cubao at one activity organized by the Green team volunteers. I didn’t know anyone and I came alone, but I got to meet some volunteers.

3. What have you done for him lately?

I went to the Gibo Rocks 2010 concert with my boyfriend - it was a wonderful experience with the Greenies. I’ve written an essay on why I’m voting for him, and I continue to share articles and posts about him on social networking sites.

4. When/what was the last instance you defended your vote/candidate?

The other day. I was ticked off and sent a text message to a friend of mine who asked me if I was supporting Gibo because of my boyfriend. Frankly, I was insulted and disappointed. I used up about 480 characters to express how I felt about such a question.

5. What was the moment you realized he was the man?

I already begun considering Gibo but I think it was after reading F. Sionil Jose’s insightful and moving article about him (“Light At The End of the Tunnel”) that I was convinced.

6. What point/s in his platform turn/s you on?

Before I go into the specifics, let me say first that I appreciate Gibo’s approach to the campaign - it’s an insight to what kind of leadership he offers to the country. His message-driven approach which emphasizes the importance of national unity and his professed style of consensus-building, to me, are what our country needs right now to move forward. He also practices what he preaches - a clean campaign founded on positivity and principles. As for the specifics of his platform, I appreciate his development-oriented approach to confronting the problems that face us. In particular, I admire his platform on instituting reforms and revitalizing the agriculture sector, in the hopes of emancipating farmers from poverty and dependency by molding them into agri-entrepreneurs. I also admire his plans for intensifying and rationalizing infrastructure development.

7. If you could change one thing about him, what would it be?

Any flaws that you aren’t too keen on and that could be the reason he may lose votes? It’s a dilemma. Gibo is often painted as elitist, a candidate who lacks ‘masa appeal’ because of his style of campaigning. The best example would be in his ads. Gibo refuses to ‘pander’ to the masses by bombarding us with soundbytes, celebrities and emotional displays. He just doesn’t want to be popular! He wants people to think and decide rationally for themselves - thus, he is not giving up his GMA association just to score more votes. If I were to change that about him - that stubborn, principled side of him, then there would be no point in believing in him, if he’s just like the others. In short, I wouldn’t change anything about him.

8. If it wasn’t him you’d vote for, who would it be and why?

Sen. Richard Gordon. He has a good track record of public service and I know he has the capacity to lead the country.

9. Why do you feel you’ve got the cred to support/campaign for this candidate?

Actually, I am just like any Gibo supporter who can articulate and engage others in relevant discussions about Gibo’s platforms, positions on issues, vis-a-vis the other candidates - you can randomly choose a Greenie to talk to and you will know what I mean.

10. Ever met him? What was said/what happened? If you haven’t, what’d you tell him?

Nope, but I hope to meet him. I would probably thank him for making me believe that there’s real hope for our country.

11. Any little-known fact you know about him that may validate your fan-girl status?

I know Gibo first laid eyes on Nikki at Faces Disco sometime in 1990.