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The Perils of a Poe
Presidency
by: anonymous contributor
SPEAKING as an ordinary citizen with no claim to political savvy, I
would say that many of the problems confronting us today can be
traced to the candidacy of Fernando Poe Jr. for President of the
Philippines. Foremost among these problems is the deteriorating
economy that is threatening to make our country the basket case of
Asia.
Although not the economic expert that President Macapagal-Arroyo is
reputed to be, many people associate the alarming slump of the peso
with FPJ's announcement of is availability for the highest office in
the land. The Poe candidacy and the probability that it will succeed
have frightened many actual and potential investors, local and
foreign, from risking their money under his admini stration.The
masses, or at least the less discriminating among them, are not
bothered by such dire speculations. FPJ is Da King of Philippine
Movies who always makes his enemies bite the dust with his
rapid-fire guns and staccato punches. Their idol can do no wrong. He
is the invincible Panday.
They see in FPJ their last hope for salvation as our next president.
He will make mince-meat of the nation's problems, including graft in
the government, crime in the streets, neglect of education,
insufficient health care, dissidence and banditry, and other
difficulties past presidents with all their superior credentials
have failed to solve.
The bakya crowd tends to identify with FPJ because, like its
barkers, he too is not a college graduate; in fact, he is only a
high school drop-out. Their confident argument is that if he is
erudite predecessors with all their academic degrees have failed to
improve their lot, President Poe should be given a chance to do so,
and will succeed.
There is, of course, also the possibility that he will fail-which is
more likely because of his inferior recommendations-but that does
not disturb them. He is their hero, right or wrong, and will not
fail them like Erap.
Moreover -- and this is the ace up their sleeves -- President Poe
will not improve their lot by himself alone. Poe will have a staff
of expert advisers who will tell him what to do. (One of them is
Sen. Tito Sotto, the former TV clown.) "Tell" is purposely used here
because that is exactly what they will do to their president who
will be like a blind
man groping in the light.
One can only wonder why such suppo sedly responsible leaders as
Senators Edgardo Angara and Aquilino Pimentel could be so
irresponsible as to inflict Poe on the nation as the next president
of the Philippines. They cannot be so obtuse as to not recognize
their candidate's obvious incompetence for the high position he
presumptuously seeks.
Especially at this time when the country is confronted with
virtually insurmountable difficulties, any person with average
intelligence -- and especially leaders with supposedly superior
circumspection -- should realize that the election of an
intellectual lightweight with no experience at all in the science of
government is fraught with grim
forebodings.
The less charitable conjecture, and it could be the correct one, is
that Poe's supposed advisers are merely setting him up as the
apparent president, with them manipulating him from behind the
scenes like a puppet on a string. The naive FPJ would be fair game
to these schemers who, unable to win the presidency in their own
right, will be using him as a front to achieve their own ends.
Has FPJ read the Constitution of 1987 that he will enforce if he is
elected president of the Philippines? How would he define
globalization? Will he support the open skies policy? Does he
actually understand the pork barrel and its operation? Is he for or
against the coalition forces, and why? And what about the death
penalty, the rhythm method, divorce, political dynasties, religious
electioneering and other debatable issues?
He cannot just say "I don't know" about these vital topics; he must
take a categorical and specific stand on each of them. His now
familiar "Sorry, I hav e to go" every time he is stumped by a
relevant question has become the silly slogan of his know-nothing
campaign. The sorry excuse that others might copy his long-delayed
platform, which has finally surfaced, is characteristic of his
stupid staff. The trite hodgepodge of motherhood goals is not worth
copying at all.
The followers of FPJ, let alone his cerebral advisers, should
realize that it takes more than a handsome face and make-believe
skills in overcoming tinsel villains to solve the mammoth problems
of the country. What is actually needed is competence, a deep sense
of humility and the indispensable trait of patriotism that Ang
Panday so effectively exhibited on celluloid.
If Fernando Poe Jr. is the patriot he claims to be, he can magnify
that virtue by voluntarily withdrawing from the race and avoiding
the ruin of the country under his presidency. That would be for him
the highest form of patriotism and worthy of his make-believe image
as the nemesis of evil.
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