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"It is enough for good people to do
nothing, for evil people to succeed."
“In questions of power, then, let no more be said of confidence in
man,
but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.”
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The 1987
Constitution of
the Republican of the Philippines
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Monday, Mar. 10, 1986
By Roger Rosenblatt
Try not to
forget what you saw last week. You say now that
it would be impossible to forget: Filipinos
armed to the teeth with rosaries and flowers, /
massing in front of tanks, and the tanks
stopping, and some of the soldiers who were the
enemy embracing the people and their flowers.
Call that a revolution? Where were the heads
stuck on pikes? Where were the torches for the
estates of the rich? The rich were in the
streets with the poor, a whole country up in
flowers. In a short string of remarkable days a
crooked election was held and exposed; a
dignified woman established her stature and
leadership; a despot ranted, sweated, fled; a
palace changed guard--all with a minimum of
blood lust and an abundance of determination and
common national will. Not since 18th century
France have Americans approved so heartily of a
rebellion.
Yet the events
may slip away quickly, for the same reason they
seem so vivid at the moment. The revolution
during the past few weeks has been played on
television, a serial docudrama of easily read
scenes and unambiguous images. Network anchormen
went on location for the elections. The
principals in the story sought news shows as
their war grounds. English was spoken there.
Exposition was clear, continuity assured. As if
to emphasize the context, the major battle was
over a television station. Strong characters
emerged: Vice President Salvador Laurel
(crafty); General Fidel Ramos (heroic); the
once- and-future Defense Minister Juan Ponce
Enrile (sophisticated); White House Emissary
Senator Paul Laxalt (resolute). Corazon Aquino
came across as increasingly impressive as did
American diplomacy, in a rare successful role.
The villain, as ever, was Marcos, his face a
chart of unreason, corruption and bluff. The
hard eyes asked always: Is there one more hand
to play? The people: No. Close-up on the
shrunken leader, descending a plane, protected
by an umbrella.
Unforgettable
images, so one says; yet democracy is always
more picturesque seizing government than
governing. If peace and order continue, the show
from the Philippines will be off the air in a
week, and the ecstatic new government will stop
dancing and stare coldly at its prosaic problems
of too many insurgents and too little money.
Then it may still be easy enough to recollect
the plot and the cast of the revolution. But
will you remember the theme?
The theme is
in fact our own: that a people released from
oppression will, of their natural inclinations,
seek humane values. A revolutionary thought to
the likes of Hobbes, who called democracy an
aristocracy of orators, but not so wild an idea
to Americans, who over the tortuous and often
backsliding years * have seen the theme take
hold. History in some of its blacker moments has
shown that democracy can twist itself into the
tyranny of the many, can run to chaos and go
mad; but in the long run, if it is given the
long run, it usually turns generous and fair.
The Filipinos did not appear to require a long
run; the normal revolutionary process seemed
edited for television. Looking ahead, the world
wants to see if the country can cast off a
history of violence and corruption that long
preceded Marcos. For a stunning moment, however,
the essential impulse stood up for all to marvel
at. There before your eyes a thought became a
decision became a deed, with no other impetus
than that a people realized they had a claim on
their own souls.
Where does one
come up with such a radical idea? Bertrand
Russell wondered sadly, "If one man offers you
democracy and another offers you a bag of grain,
at what stage of starvation will you prefer the
grain to the vote?" Astonishing that democracy
ever prevails, the unwieldy comic hero of stage
and screen. The Philippines offered
astonishment. Somewhere in people's minds, among
the vacillations and flaccidities, an insistent
voice resides, murmuring the old familiar lines:
Everyone counts. Everyone is responsible for the
honor of his life. Try not to forget what you
saw last week. It was ourselves in eruption far
away.
With Knowledge Comes Power
Start learning the
laws the country is said to hold
so we can stop the corruption by keeping one
another accountable.

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JOSÉ
PROTACIO RIZAL MERCADO Y ALONSO REALONDA
(born 19 June 1861, Calamba, Philippines- died
30 December 1896, Manila, Philippines),
patriot, physician and man of letters whose
life and literary works were an inspiration to
the Philippine nationalist movement.
QUESTION:
To Jose Rizal, what is the most
important contribution of every Filipino
to his country’s progress?
ANSWER:
The main thing is that every Filipino
must be a good man, a good citizen so that he
can help his country to progress by
contributing his heart, and if need, be his
arm. (With the head and heart, we
ought to work always; with the arm when the
time comes when physical strength is needed.
The principal tool of the heart and the head
is the pen. Other prefer the brush; others the
chisel. On my part, I prefer the pen.)
"government of the people, by the people,
for the people, shall not perish from the
earth"
Jose Rizal's favorite quote by
Abraham Lincoln
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