Distraction to demobilize movements

September 15, 2020 by
D

by Arjan P. Aguirre

For decades, scholars in social movements have been struggling to know why and how movements mobilize. Their earlier works have been useful in informing us about the importance of social problems and how and what type of “collective behavior” and calculated “collective action” would emerge to address them. Subsequent scholars have also looked at the relevance of “resources,” “opportunities” to intervene, and the existing “political processes” for the emergence, changes, and decline of movements. Later on, a new breed of theorists offered claims and theories that focus on the role of “identities,” schema of ideas or “framings” and their alignments, “emotions,” among other things, in understanding contemporary social movements.

In terms of demobilizing movements, many social scientists have already informed us of how “state repression,” patronage politics, and “resource curse,” to name a few, tend to counter the growth and expansion of movements through sheer physical violence, unequal political access, control of resources, etc. These works were valuable in telling us of how contemporary movements struggle to survive or remain relevant especially in facing a powerful government, counter movements, and other stakeholders in the society.

The 160 year old science on Manila Bay that people need to know

September 11, 2020 by
T

by Benjamin Vallejo Jr.

That citizens have noticed the pile of white dolomitic sand off Manila Bay’s Baywalk promenade is good news. It only means many citizens are now aware of the value of Manila’s seafront and that the national government and the city government have taken steps to enhance it.

There was always a beach there. Old photographs dating from the Spanish colonial era show a wide sandy, low slope reflective beach, reflective means to beach scientists, a shore in which waves are dampened and make the beach safe for recreation. It was safe enough that the Spanish era Ateneo de Manila in Intramuros taught its students to swim approximately where Manila Ocean Park is now located.

Ekis: The gigil over Filipinx

September 9, 2020 by
E

by Tuting Hernandez

The x in Filipinx is rooted in the 1970s English neologism Mx., an alternative to Mr. and Ms. for people who do not identify with neither Mr. nor Ms. By analogy, this morphological process was extended to Latinx and folx and more recently to Filipinx. Analogy (or what some might derisively call gaya-gaya o nakiki-uso) is actually a very productive linguistic process. Some of the regularities in languages are because of analogy.

The label is not meant to replace existing identities. It was coined as an alternative to Filipino/Filipina for those who do not identify with this binary. It also carries with it the histories, relations, and alliances of those who choose to own and identify with this label — histories that are unique and have long diverged from the histories of other Filipinos in the Philippines and in diaspora; relations that are their own, forged in communities that are different from ours; and alliances borne out of the political need for visibility in a struggle that might be far from our everyday life.

And this cannot be denied. Who are we really to deny the identity (and with it the label) of a group who is trying to assert itself amidst the threat of erasure?

Bitching about the beach

September 5, 2020 by
B

by Apa Ongpin

There’s been a lot of noise, since yesterday, about a pile of sand on Roxas Boulevard. I guess many people are fed up and disgusted with the gross incompetence, lies and insincerity displayed by this government in so many areas, to the point where in their eyes, everything this regime does is wrong. It’s just a pile of sand, but it has begun to assume the proportions of the Sierra Madre.

The point of this piece is not to defend the government’s actions, but try to examine this issue a little more objectively.

In fact, let’s talk about science, and numbers.First of all “this government” is not monolithic. It has many moving parts, many of which act independently of the others, and this happens in at least three dimensions: over time, across geographic space, and across intellectual space.

President Duterte could not control every single part of this government, even if he wanted to (and every indication is that he wishes he could), for many reasons. One of them is that he simply lacks the leadership and management ability. I believe this has been well demonstrated. He is unfocused, disorganized, ad hoc, and has no strongly defined overall policy or agenda except to exact political revenge against his imagined enemies and to kiss Chinese ass.

Duterte has also shown (with a few exceptions) that he cannot effectively delegate authority, and in many cases, appoints people to critical positions who are not only unqualified for the positions, with no strong experience in the field and no track record except of loyalty to him personally, but downright incompetent as well.

Worst of all, he is often a micromanager, preferring to devote his time to trivialities, and interfering in matters that he has no clue about, like telling the public to wash their facemasks in gasoline or diesel fuel.

The pile of sand on Roxas Boulevard is a tiny component of a project that originated well before the pandemic was even on the horizon. This project, formally named the “Manila Bay Rehabilitation” was launched on January 26, 2017, by DENR Secretary Roy Cimatu, and you can read about it right here.

Illegal and extra-constitutional #RevGov

August 22, 2020 by
I

Just some quick notes here.

1. The people advocating a revolutionary government are in effect calling for a self-coup, or an “autogolpe” in Spanish, where a legitimately elected leader illegally dissolves the other branches of government and assumes extraordinary powers for himself.

2. A power grab is a power grab, regardless of who the beneficiary is. Remember that a President is not the same as the government. Government is a balancing of the powers of the three branches of government—the executive, the legislative, and the judiciary. The different branches are supposed to act as checks and balances for each other.

If, and that is a big IF, a President accedes to the proposal and declares a revolutionary government and dissolves the legislature and controls the judiciary, that is still clearly a power grab.

“A RevGov could also happen if the insiders—the people in actual and constitutional control of the government actively assisted by the military (or the military officials themselves)—set aside the constitution, sweep out the incumbent officials, install new ones, and run the government according to their will and ways,” warned former SC Justice Artemio Panganiban in 2017, when President Duterte was still openly flirting with the possibility of declaring a revgov.

Since then, Duterte seems to have dropped the idea.