Within the Joker’s Grasp
By Niña Terol
And now we face yet another hundred-million-peso scandal, unfolding in real-time in the august chambers of the Philippine Senate, involving yet another fall guy who is now the country’s hottest topic (and butt of jokes) but who will later on be forgotten. The moment I heard his name—a few years ago, when my mom casually mentioned the name of the Rotary’s then-District Governor—I immediately felt that there was something fishy about a man named Jocelyn, who called himself Joc-Joc. I think that any public servant who respects his position enough should at least find a more suitable nickname upon assuming a position of great responsibility. Don’t trust a man who calls himself a joke—or, perhaps more accurately, a two-faced joker.
But I digress. This latest scandal to rock the Philippine shores—er, fields—paints yet another ugly caricature of this present administration and its cohorts and once again makes the Filipino nation look like a bunch of idiots. How can anyone justify distributing funds for agricultural inputs that are of the wrong kind, given at the wrong time, for the wrong districts? (And, oh yes, they were grossly overpriced, too.) I felt a brief moment of admiration for Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago when she admitted that, although she is an administration ally, Joc-Joc Bolante was simply “defending the indefensible.”

Former Agriculture undersecretary Jocelyn "Joc-Joc" Bolante at today's Senate hearing. (Inquirer.net)
There is simply no way of getting around this. And we cannot let these corrupt, unscrupulous officials get away with it. If I were a guy, I’d say that “nakakalalaki na ‘tong gobyernong ito (this government is challenging my manhood–or something to that effect).”
This whole episode reminds me of Dr. René Azurin’s book, aptly titled Power Without Virtue. In his introduction, he exhorts us to exact accountability from government, saying that “their powers should be strictly limited, constantly monitored, and held always in check.” Allow me to share some excerpts from his book’s introductory essay:
“… Tremendous discretionary power over public funds, public resources, and public policies is vested in those who capture control of government, and that power has been consolidated, increased, refined, guarded, and avariciously used over the years by the nation’s politicos for their own private and personal gain. Irrespective of any labels or party names that presidents, senators, congressmen, and local government officials have attached to themselves over the more than hundred years since [Mabini’s time], all have been joined… by the notion that the positions they occupy are opportunities ‘to grasp’ and not ‘to serve.’
“By its very nature, of course, it is inescapable that power is vested in government and, by extension, in government officials. Because, however, it is not reasonable to expect that our public officials will be as moral or as ethical as the ‘sublime’ Mabini [whom Dr. Azurin refers to early on in his essay], their powers should be strictly limited, constantly monitored, and held always in check. Discretionary allocations in the national budget—like the huge presidential discretionary funds and legislative pork barrel—should be eliminated altogether. The decisions to award public projects should always be minutely scrutinized, publicly justified, and never cloaked in ‘executive privilege.’”
Joc-Joc Bolante has yet to invoke “executive privilege”, but he has asked that his right against self-incrimination be upheld, even if this is a right extended only to the accused and not to witnesses. He insists that he never knew who recommended him as Undersecretary of the Department of Agriculture, even if he later on admits that the only one he knows from the upper echelons of Malacañang is First Gentleman Mike Arroyo, a “good friend” of his. He apologizes for having made the Senate wait for three years for him to surface and offer his testimony, even if he has had plenty of opportunities to surface before his incarceration in the United States. Moreover, he is adamant that the President had nothing to do with this scandal, although incumbent officials acknowledge that Mrs. Arroyo is a micro-manager who dips her fingers (or those of her husband) in practically every matter in this government. Nobody believes that P728 million could be disbursed to over a hundred districts in the country without this president’s knowledge.
Clearly, what we have in front of us is a joker who cannot be trusted or given the benefit of the doubt. He is one of those avaricious men whose primary motivation for joining government is to enjoy its many under-the-table perks. Now that he has surfaced, we will have to bear with days—possibly even weeks—of a live telenovela that makes the Filipino people look tanga (idiotic) in the worst possible way. How much more of this will we take? Aren’t we tired of scandal after scandal, and of government officials who think that we’re stupid, apathetic, and callous, even?
More importantly, what are we going to do about it? I once more refer to Tito Rene’s introduction to show an alternative I do not want to see:
“In theory, the extent of government power is specified by the role the people assign to it. In practice, that role is actually determined by the latitude the political class is given to arrogate powers unto themselves. Unfortunately, ‘the people’—being a dispersed, diffuse mass—have no real ability to limit that latitude. It is therefore left to other organized institutions of society—such as civic groups, business groups, advocacy movements, professional associations, religious institutions, academic institutions, and media—to try to circumscribe (if they are so inclined) the role of government and the powers of government officials, and then hold them to account.
“A community holds together, I believe, largely because there are reasonable expectations that a system exists for ensuring that each member of it will be treated fairly and justly by the community itself, if not necessarily by every other member of it. Without this conviction, I think that communities will inevitably break apart (unless held together by force, in which case a revolt will eventually become inevitable). If the privileged few who exercise power in the community use this power to plunder and exploit, and they vulgarly display themselves as exempt from the rules imposed on the ordinary many without power, there is no compelling incentive for the powerless and unprivileged to stay within the community or, if they do, to follow its rules.”
If we want to keep intact what is left of the Philippine community, we need to demand accountability from our public officials NOW. The jokers in government have already taken too much from us—what else are we going to allow them to grasp?
___
Niña Terol, 28, is an officer of Team RP and YouthVotePhilippines and a member of other reform-oriented groups. She hopes to make real, positive change happen in the Philippines within her lifetime.


Yes, even the average Filipino high school student can see that this Senate Hearing is just “zarzuela con moro moro” simply because there is NOTHING that will happen AFTER the “investigation”!
Yes, WE Filipino Citizens have been treated just like morons, imbeciles, and idiots!
But the “Mother of All Tragedies” is that there is NO collective outrage from us, Filipino Citizens, when what is needed is for US, Filipino Citizens, to come out into the streets and bring down this most insidious and most vicious “Mother of All Plunderers” and all her cohorts in Malacanang, the 14th Congress, and the Supreme Court: the “Syndicated Tripartite Dictatorship” installed and supported by the AFP and the PNP through the COUP D-ETAT of JANUARY 2001 with the “WITHDRAWAL of SUPPORT from the FILIPINO PEOPLE” and trampled upon the 1987 Philippine Constitution into “INDEFINITE SUSPENSION”.
KAILANGAN na PUMALAG na ang MAMAMAYANG PILIPINO!
Kung WALANG kikilos, talagang mga GUNGGONG nga TAYONG LAHAT!
JM Nepomuceno said this on November 13, 2008 at 5:21 pm |
The system is simply ‘bulok’. The corrupt move about it seamlessly while the truth struggles with futililty to be heard. It’s time for change–sweeping, total in all aspects of Philippine life with the political crying with utmost urgency!
Jim Paredes said this on November 14, 2008 at 1:41 am |
[...] Note: This contribution has been posted in the author’s blog. We’re re-posting it here with her [...]
Vox Populi » Within the Joker’s Grasp said this on November 17, 2008 at 5:44 pm |
An editorial caught my attention, the hypertext link says “Obama of the Philippines” written by Carlos Quiros. How can you not resists clicking on the link with a caption like that, and not feed your curiousity. Well, anyway it tallks about aspiring presidentiables followig on the footsteps of Obama. He facetiously contemplated that Binay could be our Obama on the basis of comparison by skin color, “the first black man of Malacanang”. When you come to think about it maybe Binay is even darker than him, looks Binay might have just out-blacked Obama. The reason I brought this up, is our country does not need an Obama type President. We need someone darker and stronger that can clean up this widespread corruption just like it cleaned up Gotham City. Yep, a dark knight , “Batman of the Philippines” “the first bat man of Malacanang”. The setting is perfect, we got Joker also known as Jocelyn Bolante. President Arroyo can be Two-Faced, she used to be a promising leader, educated in Economics and could might have turned our economy around. I did had high hopes for her but ended up just like the rest of our leader, eventually succumbing to the dark side. You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become a villian.
What do meretricious quacks just like Joc Joc “Joker” Bolante, and Pres. Gloria “Two-Faced” Arroyo have in common? If you answered, “They all make antihumanist hermits out to be something they’re not,” then pat yourself on the back. To plunge right into it, I am convinced that there will be a strong effort on Two-Faced part to let 700 million scam in the hands of the most loud hypochondriacs you’ll ever see eventually. This effort will be disguised, of course. It will be cloaked in deceit, as such efforts always are. The Joker and Two-Faced are currently limited to shrieking and spitting when they’re confronted with inconvenient facts. When you least expect it, however, Two-Faced is likely to switch to some sort of “promote the lie of demagogism” approach to draw our attention away from such facts.
At the risk of repeating myself, I must reiterate that we can no longer afford to do nothing about Two-Faced and Joker’s incessant corruptions, instead, we must strike while the iron is hot and advocate social change through dialogue, passive resistance, and nonviolence. We all know they are guilty. Whether or not its true, she alleges that truth is merely a social construct. Naturally, this is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
The Filipino people are suffering while the rich keeps getting richer and the poor are getting poorer, majority of the filipino people are being marginalized. Our country’s dim future does not promise hope for the younger generation. The poor and young Filipinos of this generation dont make plans anymore for the future, they just live life one day at at a time, breathe in and out, just like a dog chasing cars, they wouldn’t know what to do with one if they caught it. An aleatory life, dependent on chance and luck, with no certainty on what lies ahead for them
Our government has plans, the rich have plans, Jocelyn “Joker” Bolante got plans. The fact is, they’re schemers. Schemers trying to control our worlds. The Filipino people are not schemers. The few hopeful, honest and vocal Filipinos try to show these schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are. It’s the corrupt government officials that put our beloved country to where it is now. These are the same schemers, that claims they had plans, and look where our country was led to. Maybe we should take this plan of theirs and turn it around and maybe we can put our country back to the right path.
I have noticed lately the people it seems have given up, tired of reading the same negative news over and over and again and again and again. Can I blame them? The sad thing is the public does not react, panic nor protest for these type of scandalous news, even if the scam is horrifying. If tomorrow the media reports, a robber gets shot, or another government official steals billions of dollars from our treasury, or a drug dealer parttime cop get killed by an honest cop , nobody panics anymore, because it all became part of everyday life. Although, it amazes me if a news, let’s say that of a popular star celebrity actor everyone idolizes dies of unexpected death, everyone loses their minds and goes to mass hysteria, it like you introduce a little anarchy, it upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos. ( LOL, exagerrated to much). Although, you will be amazed the thousands of people that shows up in the funeral sharing the same sentiments.
This country just shows that it’s full of people ready to believe in good. Until their spirit breaks completely. Until they get a good look at their popular idol like Erap, then they realize that all the ideal and heroic deeds it potrayed in the movies are not the same in real life. We thought these elected presidents could be decent men/women in an indecent time. But we were wrong. The world is cruel, and the only morality in a cruel world is chance. It’s Unbiased. Unprejudiced. Fair.
Whyyy Soooo Serious???
I do share your views. I also once advocate political and constitutional reforms. And through our collective efforts of peaceful and non-violent means, we disposed a dictator to achieve these reforms that every Filipino held very dearly. Unfortunately, to only ascertain corruption will persists when greed and selfishness triumphs. Reforms will have to start amongst ourselves, man is a creature of self-interest when presented with incentives to benefit themselves, motivates corruption.
Father of Economics Adam Smith wrote ” How selfish soever man may be supposed there are evidently some principles in his nature, which interest him in the fortune of others, and render their happiness necessary to him, though he derives nothing from it, except the pleasure of seeing it” Basically, Smith argued that people are generally good even without enforcement.
I did see a small spark of hope shimmer and in an instant was extinguished. I lost the will. I have given up for any educated and judicious solutions to country’s widespread corruption. Reality sets in, and theories based on facts will not necessarily lead you to the truth. One morning you will wake up to find out reality is different from the world you perceive it to be. The deeper you go in the rabbit’s hole the more you get frustrated to find out how far this rabbit hole goes.
Oops napahaba, sorry i got caried away. Pardon me for the bad grammars and spellings, I got too lazy to check it.
AGBJR7 said this on November 19, 2008 at 6:50 pm |
[...] is an administration ally, Joc-Joc Bolante was simply “defending the indefensible” READ MORE: http://outoftheuniverse.wordpress.com/2008/11/13/within-the-joker’s-grasp/ ——- Posted by Niña Terol, YouthVotePhilippines core [...]
Within the Joker’s grasp « YouthVotePhilippines said this on September 21, 2009 at 4:35 pm |