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disquiet

The Anti-Government SONA

August 4, 2020 by
T

In the absence of a feasible and laudable plan to re-open schools, I am imagining how homework for many students would be when they are asked: What did you take from the President’s State of the Nation Address?

This exercise is often perceived as perfunctory in civics classes but has the deeper purpose of completing the feedback loop, making sure that the population, especially the young, is aware of the State’s plans, at the very least. Knowingly or not, teachers assigning homework related to the SONA actively take part in the State’s project of “nation-building.”

The role of the annual SONA is no different from sales rallies where company executives show up for their salespersons on the ground to deliver a rousing speech, just to be sure everyone is on the same page. In not so many words, Erap’s best sales pitch was when he exited through Commonwealth Avenue after his speech and met with protesters in the pouring rain; GMA’s was her bringing of three kids onstage and the myth of the bangkang papel. These proved to be effective talking points for their respective administrations’ annual push forward.

This year’s SONA was special. Stripped of the usual trappings and the faux Hollywood vibe, we see the SONA now for what it is. We expected a masterplan for the coming months, formulated for both Legislative and Executive branches, to address the fatal and colossal pandemic. But we got no categorical answers from Duterte. With the twice-a-week feed of “Late Night with Rodrigo Duterte” and the illusion of micro-management it brings, it would have been great to hear a New Year’s resolution of sorts, upon which we could anchor the next three to six months. So while this show of incompetence is not new, it was still disappointing.

By way of an introduction

January 30, 2020 by
B

To think of doing a group blog with political opinion and commentary seems so … year 2000, when one considers that we now engage with each other on Facebook and Twitter threads, and build our sense of national issues and current events out of our social media feeds. 

But the downside, one that we realize especially given the past four years of disinformation and government propaganda, is that there is no actual place we can go to that might function as a portal, not just of opinions, but more importantly of the more important issues of our time. There is no way to file these insta-reactions that social media cradles—hashtags can be hijacked, and paid posts, influencers, boosted opinion, and troll farms allow for those with money to takeover public (social media) opinion.