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Panganib sa trabaho

Araw dapat nila noon, araw ng lahat ng katulad niya. Sa halip, naranasan ni Mae Ann Gausit, 30, ang pinakamasakit at malupit na karansan sa kanyang buhay noong Mayo 1, 2018, Pandaigdigang Araw ng Paggawa.

Nagtatrabaho siya sa isang pabrikang gumagawa ng mga materyales sa konstruksiyon, ng iba’t ibang parte sa bahay na gawa sa bakal at plastik. Matatagpuan ito sa sinasabing “plastics capital” o sentro ng mga pagawaan ng plastik sa bansa—Valenzuela City.

Walang pasok o holiday dapat ang Mayo 1. Pero ang iba sa mahigit 30 manggagawa sa pabrika, inobligang magtrabaho. “In-alternate nila (kami). Halimbawa, holiday ngayon, papasukan pa namin, sa sunod na araw, wala po kaming pasok. Hindi siya double pay, o wala po siyang (dagdag na) bayad,” paliwanag ni Mae Ann.

Mae Ann Gausit, 30. Hazel Gane Pilapil

Alas-singko ng hapon noon. Door pad (iyung nakapatong sa door knob sa ilang mamahaling pinto) tinatakbo ng mga makina. Operator si Mae Ann ng isa sa mga makina na nagmomolde ng door pad.

“Pagkuha ko (ng door pad), yung dulo ng damit ko, pumasok sa switch,” kuwento niya. Hinawi niya ang damit niya. Nahatak ang switch. Ang nakabukas ang dalawang nag-uumpugang bakal na nagmomolde ng door pad, biglang nagsara. Sakto, nasa gitna pa ang kaliwang kamay niya.

“Noong panahong iyon, ako lang ang nasa machine. Wala kaming kasamahan kasi holiday. Wala rin ‘yung boss namin. Wala rin ‘yung operator,” aniya.

Durog ang kamay ni Mae Ann. Nakalaylay ang natitirang laman at buto, pero hindi pa gaanong dumudugo ito. “Tumakbo ako palabas, dala-dala ko pa yung kamay ko. Hawak-hawak ko,” sabi pa niya. Humingi siya ng saklolo sa nagulat niyang mga kamanggagawa. Maya-maya, nawalan na siya ng malay.

Dinala si Mae Ann sa sasakyang pang-delivery ng kompanya. Hindi man lang nakatawag ng ambulansiya. Mula sa Valenzuela, tinakbo si Mae Ann sa Philippine Orthopedic Center. Isang oras din ang tinagal ng biyahe. Pumila pa siya, sa dami ng pasyente.

Maraming pang biktima

Karima-rimarim ang nangyari kay Mae Ann. Pero hindi siya ang una o huling naaksidente—sa kompanya pa lang nila. “Pangatlo na ako. May mga naputulan ng daliri dati. Pero ako na ang pinakamalubha,” aniya.

Noong araw ring iyon, may isa pang manggagawa, tinamaan ng bakal sa ulo. Ani Mae Ann, dinala lang siya sa canteen. At ginamot—ng dinikdik na dahon ng malunggay. “Wala man lang first aid,” aniya.

Mistulang bukas na sikreto sa lungsod ang mga kuwento ng aksidente sa mga manggagawa sa loob ng mga pagawaan. Matindi ang kalagayan ng mga pagawaan: Kadalasang maiinit, kulang sa bentilasyon, kulang o walang kagamitang proteksiyon sa manggagawa. Langhap ang amoy ng mga kemikal na ginagamit sa mga plastik at bakal. Maiinit at mapanganib ang mga makina. Kulang sa maintenance. Laging nasisira.

Sa pabrika ng Sampson Build Product Corporation sa Valenzuela, nagtrabaho si Aling Lea (di tunay na ngalan). Nagtatrabaho siya sa mga tela, pero langhap niya ang lahat ng alikabok at amoy ng mga kemikal ng plastik sa buong pabrika. Dahil dito, nagkasakit siya ng matinding sinusitis. At dahil sa sakit niya, tinanggal siya sa trabaho.

“Kaya nireklamo ko sila sa DOLE (Department of Labor and Employment),” ani Aling Lea. Nakakuha siya ng backwages. Ngayon, wala na siyang trabaho, at nagtitinda na lang ng lutong pagkain sa kanilang bahay sa Pearl Island, Valenzuela. Pero kapag inaatake ng matinding ubo, hindi siya nakakapagluto. Walang mapakain sa mga anak kapag di nakakapagtrabaho.

Samantala, inilalaban din ni Mae Ann ang kaso niya sa DOLE. Noong una, aniya, inalok siya ng settlement na P80,000. Habambuhay ang pagkawala ng kamay, at pagkawala ng kabuhayan. Ang P80,000, sa ilang buwan lang, ubos na. Hindi siya pumayag. Tinanong din niya sa manedsment ng kompanya kung papaano ang pagkubra niya sa Social Security System (SSS). Ang sabi ng kompanya, sa kanyang ahensiya (dahil kontraktuwal siya, at sa ahensiya “regular”) itanong. Pero ang ahensiya, hugas-kamay rin.

Inakyat sa P130,000 ang alok ng kompanya. Basta huwag na raw kumubra sa SSS. “Napag-alaman kong hindi pala sila nagbabayad sa SSS ko, kahit kinakaltasan ako,” kuwento pa ni Mae Ann. Kaya pala ayaw na siyang pakubrahin sa SSS, kasi tiyak na mabubuking ang ahensiya at kompanya na binubulsa lang nila ang kontribusyon ng mga manggagawa sa SSS at di binabayad. Tumanggi siya sa bagong alok, at inireklamo na sa DOLE.

“Sa ngayon, wala pa rin silang kontak sa akin,” ani Mae Ann, patungkol sa kompanya at manedsment. “May nakapagsabi sa akin (na dating katrabaho sa pabrika) na di na raw ako makakapasok sa compound (ng pabrika).”

Di biro ang dinaranas niya: Araw araw na sakit ng katawan, pangangalay. Wala pa riyan ang pakiramdam na hindi na siya kumpleto, wala nang kamay, hindi na pantay ang katawan, tagibang na. May panahong nagkulong lang siya sa bahay, sa hiya, at para iwasan ang pangungutya.

Napangibabawan lang niya ito nang magdesisyong ilaban ang kanyang kaso—sa tulong ng Kilusan ng Manggagawang Kababaihan at iba pang progresibong grupo sa lugar.

Bulnerable kasi kontraktuwal

Bulnerable ang mga manggagawang tulad nina Mae Ann at Aling Lea sa mga aksidente sa di-ligtas na trabahuan. Bukod sa di-ligtas na mga pagawaan, bulnerable rin sila sa kanilang istatus sa trabaho—bilang mga kontraktuwal.

Si Mae Ann, pinagpasa-pasahan sa pagitan ng kompanya at agency noong nagtatanong na tungkol sa kompensasyon niya bilang biktima ng aksidente sa trabaho. Nagtuturuan ang dalawa sa kung sino ang dapat managot.

Nitong Lunes, Agosto 20, pinirmahan ni Pangulong Duterte ang  Republic Act 11058 o An Act Strengthening Compliance with Occupational Safety and Health Standards (OSHS). Batay ito sa panukalang batas ng Gabriela Women’s Party. Bagamat “napahina” ang mga probisyon nito sa proseso ng deliberasyon sa Kongreso, maituturing na dagdag na legal na kasangkapan ito ng mga manggagawa para igiit ang karapatan sa ligtas na lugar ng trabaho.

Ayon kay Rochelle Porras, executive director ng Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research (Eiler), medyo kumapos ang naturang bagong batas, halimbawa, sa pagpataw ng P100,000 lang kada araw na multa sa bawat araw ng paglabag ng kompanya. “Gusto sana natin i-criminalize (ang mga paglabag ng mga kompanya),” aniya. Gayunman, magagamit ang batas, halimbawa, para igiit ang inspeksiyon sa mga pabrika sa loob ng export processing zones, anumang oras. Gagawin din umanong mas istrikto ang pagpapatupad ng maayos na pagsasanay sa mga manedsment at manggagawa kaugnay ng safety.

Para sa Institute for Occupational Health and Safety Development (Iohsad), “Malaking ganansiya pa rin ang makasaysayang pag-apruba sa OSH Bill para sa hangad ng mga manggagawa at biktima para sa hustisya. Positibong hakbang ito sa kampanya natin para igiit ang batayang karapatan ng mga manggagawa sa kalusugan at kaligtasan.”

Gayunman, tulad ng iba pang deklarasyon o hakbang ni Duterte kaugnay ng mga manggagawa, ang mahalaga’y maayos na maipatupad ang batas na ito—para bigyan-hustisya ang mga biktima (tulad ng 74 manggagawang nasawi sa sunog sa pabrika ng Kentex sa Valenzuela din, noong Mayo 2015). Ang problema, kung pagbabatayan ang implementasyon sa deklarasyon ni Duterte kontra sa kontraktuwalisasyon, malamang na hindi basta-basta maipapatupad ang batas ng mga kapitalistang gusto laging nakakatipid kahit napapahamak ang mga manggagawa.

Para kina Mae Ann at Lea, natutulak lang ang gobyerno at mga kapitalista kung kumikilos at nagbubuklod ang mga manggagawa sa paggiit ng kanilang mga karapatan. Pareho silang matapang na nagsampa ng kaso sa mga kompanyang pabaya sa kanilang kalagayan.

Pero higit dito, nakikiisa sila sa kolektibong pagkilos ng mga manggagawa—tulad ng mangyayaring Martsa ng Manggagawa sa Agosto 27 sa Mendiola para igiit ang pagpawi sa kontraktuwalisasyon at paggalang sa kanilang mga karapatan.

May ulat ni Hazel Gane Pilapil 

Courageous Women religious strengthen commitment to serve the poor and marginalized

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The challenges being posed by the continuing imposition of Martial rule on the poorest in Mindanao doesn’t seem to deter the members of the Sisters Association in Mindanao (SAMIN) who are renewing their commitment to serve those whom they called “God’s Anawim” (Greek word for God’s poor).

8 dead as ‘Ompong’ rips through North Luzon

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Typhoon Ompong made landfall in Baggao, Cagayan on Saturday, by 1:40 a.m., and has left a trail of destruction and eight persons dead before leaving the Philippine area of responsibility.

The rich not the poor should stop playing the victim

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Everybody suffers during an economic downturn. Less profit for the rich, reduced luxuries for the middle class, and precarious living for the poor and minimum wage workers. But when the troubling indicators of the economy are replaced by what is often referred to in mainstream media as ‘strong fundamentals’, the rich and their social climbing apologists ridicule the poor for whining like ‘crybabies’ and helpless victims.

The poor are accused of flaunting their poverty and laying the blame for their tragic situation in life entirely on the government instead of accepting responsibility by finding work or livelihood. This is an elitist perspective but it is commonly used even by the middle class to mock the poor.

Indeed, the suffering of the poor is often highlighted to expose the failure of the economic system to uplift the conditions of everybody. But when the poor speak out about their miseries, they merely reveal what they endure every day. They do not assume to know more about the ‘inconvenient truths’ of modern living or how others are faring in life.

Contrast this to the rich and their ambitious acolytes who invoke the name of the poor every time they resist a government regulation or enjoin the public in ranting against various social evils.

The rich, not the poor, are actually guilty of complaining too much while raising imagined specters of unruly crowds to get what they want.

They want to have their cake and grab more cakes from everybody while pointing the finger at the hungry poor for desiring to eat some cake.

Consider how they react to the demand of workers for a wage hike. Capitalists manifest their resistance by painting a gloom scenario about the impact of a minimal wage increase. They warn about job losses, factory closures, and rising prices. They even claim that the proposal is anti-poor. Yet what they are not really admitting is that they refuse to cut down their earnings and allow workers to get a slightly bigger share of the company profits.

Perhaps the unspoken awareness of the inequality that they are perpetuating makes them fearful of a coming retribution. It drives them to highlight the deteriorating peace and order situation caused by the alleged anti-social activities of the poor. They spread hysteria over rising criminality which they use to justify the implementation of overkill and repressive police measures. They normalize segregation in society by building higher walls and stronger fences, and installing ubiquitous Big Brother instruments all over the city to monitor the suspicious behavior of the poor. They succeed in redirecting public gaze over what the poor are doing instead of the supposedly victimless crimes committed by their friends.

Mention the breakdown of law and order and the first thing to be emphasized in media reports, school papers, and government advisories are the petty crimes that the poor are doing. Not the plunder of our nation’s wealth, not the displacement of small farmers and indigenous peoples from their lands, not the smuggling and trafficking of banned goods.

Recently, even the harmless act of being a ‘tambay’ was criminalized and endorsed by a paranoid ruling class which considers it as a preemptive strike against what the vengeful poor might do to the sons and daughters of rich families.

It is also convenient to blame the poor for the social problems which cause suffering to everyone. For example, the rich pretend that they empathize with the common tao when they condemn the worsening traffic and pollution but their preferred solution is to evict the poor from their homes.

Complain about ‘Carmageddon’ and then convince the riding public that it’s the effect of motorists, pedestrians, and street vendors lacking discipline; and not because of the importing of too many cars and the absence of a reliable mass transportation system.

Raise alarm over garbage pollution and then highlight the dirty lifestyle of the poor in the streets and informal settlers living near waterways. Ignore the factories producing industrial waste, real estate projects that flatten hills and pour cement over our coasts, and prime investments that target our forests and watersheds.

Instead of cleaning up their acts, the rich express concern for the environment by feigning helplessness over the seeming indifference of the poor about the garbage they are producing.

Then, if the poor understand how their impoverishment is linked to bad governance and class oppression, they are quickly repudiated by reminding them that they are responsible for selling their votes to incompetent politicians. Their bad voting decision is compared to the supposedly intelligent voting behavior of the rich and educated. The poor ‘bobotante’ get what they deserve but they also prevent the rich from electing visionary leaders who can lead and transform the country for the better.

But what choices do voters have? Political dynasties, despotic landlords, warlords, and greedy capitalists? Besides, the voters might be more than wise enough to know that their votes don’t matter anyway in an electoral and political system designed to uphold elite rule.

It is the rich who are the real ‘bobotante’: campaign donors of trapos, enablers of political patronage, cronies, and influence-peddlers.

Defending the privilege of the rich is legitimized by glorifying the lives of some tycoons. They claim that they became wealthy through hard work and by making a lot of sacrifice in life. The poor are told that self-pity is futile and that they should be inspired by the success stories of some self-made billionaires.

What is wrong and unfair in this assertion is that it depicts the poor as lazy simpletons who are not dreaming or working hard enough to overcome their poverty. It reinforces the propaganda that the poor have no one to blame but themselves if they remain trapped in the intergenerational cycle of destitution. It denies the existence of structural causes that allow the rich to accumulate more riches at the expense of the working poor. It buries the long history of how a cabal of ambitious and money-hungry individuals conspired with other powerful blocs in society that led to the systematic pauperization of the working classes.

Since they own and control the opinion-making institutions, the rich project their fears by persuading the rest of society to share the same sentiments. They condition our minds to distrust any attempt by the poor to dismantle the forces that institutionalize inequality and injustice. They constantly warn about the destructive mob, the anarchy from below, and the need to quell discontent.

But we should ask ourselves this: Who benefits from aligning our interest with the aspirations of the wealthy who had all the resources and opportunity to remake society but failed or refused to act, and instead chose to thwart all the grassroots challenge to the present by demonizing it as a threat to so-called modern peace, prosperity, and social harmony?

The post The rich not the poor should stop playing the victim appeared first on Manila Today.

Moro group blames Duterte for the massacre of Tausug evacuees

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National minority group Suara Bangsamoro blamed President Rodrigo Duterte for the massacre of seven Tausug civilians Friday in Patikul, Sulu by the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). “President Duterte’s all-out war policy is killing more and more of our Moro brothers and sisters. We are enraged that, to appease his Filipino soldiers, he would […]

Lanzones at Mangosteen (o sa pitong kabataang Tausug)

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Ni Pia Montalban   Nanlalagkit ang dagta, kahit anong tamis ng kabataang hinog at di huhulas ang lilang lamog mula sa mga nilagusan ng pulbura’t tingga. Pitong bungang pinitas, dagta’y pula ang tagas… Pitong kabataang mag-uuma yakap-yakap mga kahon ng bunga, ngayo’y ikakahon silang terorista— A-bu sa-yaff!   Ngunit gumugulong sa kalsada ang nabitawang mga […]

Muddy is the Revolution

Alex de Jong has again attacked the national democratic and Communist Left in the Philippines, and again, Jacobin Magazine served as his platform. There is something new, though. In “Muddying the Revolution” the Dutch activist, who often writes about the Left in the Philippines and Southeast Asia, was triggered by an interview with Jose Maria Sison, founding chair of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP). The interview “The Fate of the People’s War” was published in – surprise, surprise! – Jacobin itself.

Comrades who were more prompt than this author in responding to de Jong have criticized Jacobin for publishing his article. This is understandable, because the magazine had come out with a string of articles negative and largely unsupportive of the Philippine Left, and even refused to publish this author’s response to one of them, another de Jong article. For a moment, however, let us give Jacobin the benefit of the doubt. One may choose to see it as a publication that is at least open to publishing views from various strands of the international Left, or is honestly trying to arrive at the correct socialist stand on various issues, and say: it is a good thing that it published the interview with Sison. This is a step in the right direction for the magazine and one hopes that it continues to give space to the Philippine Left – or, if that label is imprecise for the publication’s taste, the biggest and strongest formation in the broad Philippine Left – for the benefit of its many left and liberal readers.

Now, knowing Jacobin’s record of criticizing the Philippine Left, it is not surprising – rather, it is to be expected – that the Sison interview would elicit critical responses in the same website. Sison may be “the most influential living Marxist-Leninist,” as Joe Iosbaker claims, but even the greatest Marxist-Leninists – heck, even Marx and Lenin themselves – are roundly criticized by those who seek to learn from them, more so by those who are better off seeking to learn from them. Can one criticize Sison and the Philippine Left? Of course. Filipino activists and revolutionaries take pride in the fact that their movement has not resorted to, and has no need to resort to, anything resembling a cult of personality.

The problem, however, is that de Jong’s criticism of Sison and the Philippine Left is simplistic to the point of being malicious. De Jong tries to narrow down his target to Sison, but the so-called crimes for which he blames Sison necessarily implicate the Philippine Left. Getting desperate in preventing Jacobin readers from knowing and supporting the Philippine Left, he depicts the Philippine Left as synonymous with killings and death. First, he reinforces the anti-Communist black propaganda that the Communist Left in the Philippines has a policy of killing leaders and members of other leftist formations on the basis of their political beliefs. Second, he ignores the historical context of the Philippine Left’s previous statements favorable to Rodrigo Duterte, and assigns the movement a share of the blame for the extra-judicial killings carried out by the Philippine president.

It can be inferred that de Jong wants either the removal of Sison from the leading position which he thinks continues to be occupied by the CPP founding chairperson, or perhaps no less than the Philippine Left’s destruction. From our standpoint, it is the more the latter than the former. His writings – and through Jacobin, the broad dissemination thereof – work hard to discredit the Philippine Left before international audiences. In this, de Jong objectively sides with the imperialists and the ruling classes in the Philippines and even Duterte’s authoritarian regime. One can make the case that writings such as de Jong’s do not deserve to be in the pages of any magazine that claims to be socialist.

There is also the issue of bad timing, as Sarah Raymundo states in a perceptive Facebook post.

In fighting the Duterte regime, the national-democratic Left have recently forged a tactical political unity with the leftist grouplets that de Jong champions. In the midst of this important recognition of common ground, De Jong brings up an issue divisive among the broad Philippine Left; responses to the ill-timed article emphasize the taking of sides – fostering disunity, not unity. Moreover, responding to de Jong’s critique of the Philippine Left’s support of Duterte’s earlier statements necessitates bringing up what was once perceived good in Duterte. With regard to the first, it can be argued perhaps that there can still be struggle despite the tactical political unity. With regard to the second, it is hoped that with sufficient explanation, readers will move closer to understanding the Philippine Left.

De Jong accuses the CPP, which leads the armed revolutionary group New People’s Army (NPA), of having a “policy of assassinating other leftists and former members.” He links to websites that are also making the same accusation, never the actual statements of the CPP and the NPA. He claims that “dozens” have been killed, but implies that the number could be bigger because “information is difficult to gather, and people are afraid to come forward.” Audacious as de Jong is in his claims, however, he cannot say that the deaths exceed a hundred, or even fifty. This makes one wonder whether “other leftists and former members” are so few throughout the country, or if the NPA is merely so inept at carrying out its policy.

The truth is simple: there is no such policy. True, the phrases “counter-revolutionary” and “pseudo-progressive” are often thrown around in Left discourse in the Philippines, but they are political categories and not death sentences, used in analyses and not ambushes. De Jong refuses to pay attention to the reasons cited by the CPP and NPA for the death sentences meted out to “other leftists and former members”: their actual crimes, especially those that result in deaths, undertaken individually or in cahoots with the Philippine military. These reasons were enumerated by Fidel V. Agcaoili of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines, the umbrella revolutionary organization to which the CPP and NPA belong.

There is a civil war raging in the Philippines, and these things do happen. One may agree or disagree with these reasons, but to say that the CPP and NPA kills people for their “pseudo-progressive” or “counter-revolutionary” beliefs, and not their crimes, is false and sheer calumny.

De Jong then cites Pierre Rousset, another Trotskyist hater of the Philippine Left, in trying to explain the alleged policy: “the will of the CPP-NPA-NDF to impose its monopoly of power above the people’s movement.” For Marxists, it is more reasonable to believe that “monopoly of power above the people’s movement,” especially one that is long-standing, hardly uncontested, and universally recognized, would stem from a superior ideological, political and organizational line, not from the use of force. If the CPP-NPA-NDF’s alleged use of force is the reason being cited by de Jong’s and Rousset’s allies in the Philippines for remaining weak and politically marginal despite the funding they receive abroad, then their lies should be put to right, not perpetuated, by their foreign comrades.

Indeed, there has never been a need for the Philippine Left to resort to a policy of killing “other leftists and former members” in order to weaken the latter’s organizations or maintain its dominance. It has always led the armed and unarmed struggles of the Filipino people. The leftist grouplets that de Jong supports never got anywhere near the Philippine Left’s strength, not even before they split among themselves, or before the electoral party Akbayan – the biggest among the grouplets – gladly surrendered all progressive pretenses to the regime of Noynoy Aquino as an adjunct to the Liberal Party.

One reason for this is the Philippine Left’s main focus on what it considers as the main enemies – imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism. It surpasses other leftist groups not by trying to surpass them per se, but in trying to surpass the strength of all reactionaries in the country. It may engage in political and ideological struggle with these groups, but its main efforts are directed at the class enemies. It may sound like boasting about its strength victories when compared with these groups, but it is humble in studying and facing new situations and challenges in order to move the revolution closer to victory.

De Jong claims Sison helped “to bring about” Duterte’s presidency and “carries part of the responsibility” for the death of thousands of people under Duterte’s “war on drugs.” Sadly, de Jong is not the first to make this grand accusation; some anti-communists in the Philippines who also happen to be critical of Duterte are also saying the same, blaming the so-called “totalitarian Left” and the “totalitarian Right” – embodied by the family of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos which is allied with Duterte – for the rise of Duterte and the so-called “sabotage” of what passes for Philippine democracy. One can make this case only if one oversimplifies the socio-economic realities that underlie Duterte’s rise to power, and the Philippine Left’s complex approach to Duterte as presidential candidate and new president.

Indeed, how did Duterte win the 2016 elections? We know now that he had a solid, but small and much-hated, ruling-class base: he counted on the support of the Marcoses, former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and, one can reasonably surmise, China. He played up his alliance with the Marcoses to get the support of their base and prop up Bongbong Marcos’s campaign for the vice-presidency, making a fool of his own running mate, while he downplayed his connection with Arroyo and China. Duterte also highlighted his “peace and order” platform to get support from the police and the military as well as sections of the populace who have grown wary of rampant criminality. In comparison, other factions of the ruling classes and their respective support bases were fragmented and weaker; their messaging, more of the same, business as usual.

Still, this was not enough for Duterte to win. And he did not start out to be a strong candidate; he started weak but became strong in the process, topping surveys only one month before election day. What tipped the balance in his favor? To win over various constituencies, he used the skill which Sison ascribes to him: Duterte “is quite capable of saying anything: left, middle or right, whichever serves him at the given moment.” Add to this his personal style – he comes out as compassionate and respectful towards the people he wants to appeal to; he appears honest and sincere in speaking; he makes audacious promises; and he projects the resolve to put his thoughts into action – and you have the perfect “political swindler,” in Sison’s words, which he turned out to be.

In his campaign and immediately after he won the presidency, he tried to woo and wow the masses – and yes, the Philippine Left – through promises of “genuine change” against “the oligarchs”: land reform for farmers, ending contractualization for workers, halting large-scale mining operations for indigenous peoples, preventing the demolition of urban poor homes if relocation sites are not available, among others. To the Philippine Left, he promised to resume peace talks with the NDFP and release all political prisoners. Duterte made promises both to the people and the Philippine Left as a political force; it is dishonest, however, for de Jong to ignore the first and highlight the second. Duterte made important economic promises to the people; this is often ignored because of the shock-effect of his promise to “kill, kill, kill” through the war on drugs and his attacks on the tenets of liberal democracy. And Duterte’s promises resonated among the Filipino people, who have seen regime changes but not real change in the economy and their daily lives.

(What is being described here is similar to, but at a lower level of abstraction, the “populism of the dominant classes” depicted in the early work of political theorist Ernesto Laclau: “When the dominant bloc experiences a profound crisis because a new fraction seeks to impose its hegemony but is unable to do so within the existing structure of the power bloc, one solution can be a direct appeal by this fraction to the masses to develop their antagonism towards the State.” Laclau talked about a populism that “had to appeal to a set of ideological distortions – racism, for example – to avoid the revolutionary potential of popular interpellations from being reoriented towards their true objectives.” In Duterte’s case, such “distortions” came in the form of rhetoric against drug addicts keeling into anti-poor rhetoric, misogyny, among others – not because of conscious design, but as a result of the many constituencies he sought to appeal to. [“Towards a Theory of Populism,” Politics and Ideology in Marxist Theory, 1979].)

Duterte became, in effect, the first major politician and presidential candidate to speak against the neoliberal consensus of successive post-Edsa governments and post-Edsa politics in general – opportunistically, as it turns out. This is another novelty of his candidacy and early presidency, even as talk is cheap in Philippine politics especially during elections. Fed up with the “more of the same, business as usual” being promised by other factions of the ruling classes, the Filipino people gave Duterte a try, with many turning a blind eye to his boasts of carrying out authoritarian measures. The 1986 Edsa “People Power” uprising, by ushering in the intensified implementation of neoliberal policies, laid down the economic situation that ultimately undermined the democracy it promised.

The Noynoy Aquino regime, which presented itself as heir and champion of that uprising, further showed the people that even at its best, the “democracy” won at Edsa is ineffective in bringing about an improvement in their economic situation and in their lives. It was known for boasting about “economic growth,” which critics often derided as “non-inclusive” and which ordinary people described as “not felt.” It is through the backdoor of poverty, of discontent with neoliberal policies and their effects that Duterte’s authoritarianism entered Malacañang, whisking with it to power the original targets of 1986: the Marcoses and their ilk. It is neoliberalism, not the Left, which brought forth Duterte’s anti-democratic regime and further eroded the country’s bourgeois democracy.

(The analysis above was provoked by political theorist Wendy Brown’s depiction of neoliberalism as part of the “constellation of late modern forces and phenomena [that] have eviscerated the substance of even democracy’s limited modern form.” Rereading her essay, however, it appears that what I wrote is a muddy, earthly, more material rendering of her ideas: “neoliberalism as a political rationality has launched a frontal assault on the fundaments of liberal democracy, displacing its basic principles of constitutionalism, legal equality, political and civil liberty, political autonomy, and universal inclusion with market criteria of cost/benefit ratios, efficiency, profitability, and efficacy. It is through a neoliberal rationality that… the state is fortrightly reconfigured from an embodiment of popular rule to an operation of business management” [“We are all democrats now…,” in Giorgio Agamben, et. al., Democracy in What State? 2011].)

And what political force led the opposition to neoliberal economic policies, the mass campaigns carrying the demands that Duterte took up as his promises? The Philippine Left. For its part, even as the Philippine Left hailed Duterte’s pro-people promises and called on him to realize these and more, it continued to be the staunchest critics of the dominant anti-people aspects of his platform. He claims to be the Philippines’ first leftist president? Then he should try to become a Hugo Chavez! Because the Philippine Left’s statements on Duterte are based on pro-people principles, these were double-edged for him: he got nods from the Left, but pursuant to this, he will be held accountable, exposed and opposed should he renege on these well-documented promises. More importantly, the bourgeois elections is a form of struggle that is considered secondary, very secondary, by the Philippine Left; at no point did the more important effort to arouse, organize and mobilize the Filipino people for national freedom, democracy and socialism stop.

Despite his overtures to the Left, Duterte did not relent in attacking the Left. And the Left never stopped denouncing Duterte – initially on the basis of his anti-poor statements and measures and increasingly on the basis of what was revealed to be anti-poor nature of his regime. It is the Philippine Left that is most outstanding in fighting Duterte – not only in the armed struggle, in which it has a monopoly, but also in the parliament of the streets. Not even the bourgeois opposition in the country can compare. This despite the fact that its members and supporters are the targets of extra-judicial killings, illegal arrest and detention on the basis of trumped-up charges, and harassment, while communities supportive of the Left have experienced militarization, bombing, hamletting, among others. This is the Philippine Left that de Jong does not want international activists and progressives to support. He could only make Duterte so happy.

Complexity is a theme that runs throughout this essay – in its approach to criticisms directed at de Jong and Jacobin as his amplifier, criticisms directed at Sison and the Philippine Left, the reality of accusations of crimes directed at counter-revolutionaries, Duterte’s rise to power, and the Philippine Left’s approach to Duterte as candidate and new president. The international Left can only follow de Jong’s simplistic thinking – reiterating anti-communist black propaganda, demonization by flimsy association with a bloody regime – at its peril.

De Jong attributes the title of his latest article to a putative statement of a CPP spokesperson. Opening the link embedded in his essay, however, one finds out that the word used was “muddling,” not “muddying” – to muddle, not to muddy. This is quite symptomatic: de Jong’s accusation of “muddying the revolution” is a feeble rhetorical attempt to position him and his supported Left grouplets as “clean.” More importantly, it is a refusal to engage in the dirty, messy complexity of the revolution in favor of simplistic preaching and anti-communist demonization from a safe distance. Indeed, waging a revolution is a complex affair. Need we rehearse the favorite Mao Zedong quote about revolutions and dinner parties? The revolution, to conflate the title of a pop song and de Jong’s title, is truly muddy, deeply.

In the end, I think I can speak for many Filipino activists in saying this: We fervently believe in the capacity for critical thinking among activists and progressives around the world. Reading about the revolution in the Philippines through the writings of Filipino revolutionaries themselves is good. A better way to know the truth about the Philippine revolution and test de Jong’s claims, however, is to come to the Philippines, and feel, nay, live the revolution. The Filipino people is not just a suffering people, but a fighting people – a people that also loves to smile, laugh, dance, sing, create, love, and do all sorts of wonderful things in the struggle. The fight against the Duterte regime is intensifying. Joining a recent protest action in Manila, American labor activist Kim Scipes says he remembered how it felt joining the mobilizations in the last days of the Marcos dictatorship. These are interesting and exciting times to be in the Philippines!

We invite you to approach our organizations and come to the Philippines, even as we would also inform you that the Duterte regime is attacking international activists and progressives supporting the Philippine Left. The regime is working to deport an Australian activist nun, it recently kept out an Australian professor, and has issued a list of international activists whom it bans from entering the country. It wants to stop foreigners from supporting the Philippine Left – the same thing that de Jong is trying to do in his latest piece.

We trust that the imperialists, the ruling classes, and the Duterte regime, along with their campaign against the Philippine Left, will fail. Long live the activists and revolutionaries who muddy their feet, slippers, shoes and rubber boots in being with the Filipino masses in fighting for freedom, democracy and socialism!

14 September 2018

Duterte is right

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There’s no need to wait for another publicized tete-a-tete to express our intense admiration of him. When was the last time you thanked your President? Here it goes.