Balita

Don’t Fuck With Me

“I’m telling the Filipino people, not me, it’s going to be bloody, because I will not sit there as president and just like any other regime, say, ‘That’s all I can do.’ If you put me there, don’t fuck with me.”

“Am I the death squad? True. That is true.”

Rodrigo Duterte.

One of the endearing qualities of being a politician is to be able to speak eloquently. People come to campaign rallies to listen for the candidates who know how to communicate well and extemporaneously. They give a high mark to those who have a clear vision of leading the country for the better.  With that requirement, a politician needs words of logic and persuasion, then comes, of course, the passion to deliver the message without the use of obnoxious language.

The 44th president of the United States, Barack Obama, knows the power of words. His keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention was well-received and propelled him as a bright politician to be reckoned with. Some of his memorable lines called for unity: “Yet even as we speak, there are those who are preparing to divide us, the spin masters and negative ad peddlers who embrace the politics of anything goes. Well, I say to them tonight, there’s not a liberal America and a conservative America—there’s the United States of America.”

Unfortunately, the grandmaster of lies, the peddler of chaos and division, the perfect archetype of a male bully, and the top-dog of grifting, Donald Trump, came and strung along the craziness of his supporters and the Republican Party. He could rail and rant in his speeches with highly offensive and odiously objectionable words and would still get a frenzied applause. I’m afraid that Obama’s warning about the “politics of anything goes” has come to roost. And Trump has become the supermodel of right wing politicians all over the world.

Filipinos are known to be great imitators. In Philippine politics that coveted title belongs to the former president Rodrigo Duterte. In advance of a planned meeting in Laos in 2016, Duterte said about then-President Obama: “Son of a whore, I will curse you in that forum.” Even Pope Francis [may he rest in peace], who was highly-revered in the country and caused traffic jams when he visited, did not escape from Duterte’s swearing: “I wanted to call him: ‘Pope, son of a whore, go home. Do not visit us again.’” 

While planning to become a dictator-for-life, Ferdinand Marcos had thought deeply his justification for invoking Martial Law. He had to legitimize his unconstitutional grab of power by convincing not only the country but the Americans as well that he was the only one who could thwart the advance of communism. His argument was long in a form of a book entitled Today’s Revolution: Democracy (1971). “The decision to suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus was the result of more than one year’s study and deliberation…I have not undertaken this study on revolution in order to discourse the difficulties of leadership…It should be apparent to the responsible citizen that when a democratic government takes strong measures to preserve itself, it is not for the purpose of concentrating power in the hands of one man.” That was a lie, of course, because his so-called “constitutional authoritarianism” lasted for fourteen years.

Here’s Marcos again in paraphrasing the words of Robert Kennedy during his second presidential inauguration on December 30, 1969: “There are too many of us who see the things as they are in this world and complain. Let us instead see the things as they should be and aspire. Let us dream the dream of what could be and not the dream of what might have been. There are many things we do not want about our world. Let us not mourn them. Let us change them.”

Marcos believed in language beautifully articulated. You could not even hear him cursing in his speeches. But Duterte had reversed that civility in political discourses and became president anyway, just like Trump!

One other controversy that marked Duterte’s presidency was his unabashed use of extrajudicial killing (EJK). “Why do they say,” Duterte said, “it’s illegitimate? Why, is it wrong to say Papatay ako ng tao para sa bayan ko? Tell me, is there a crime?” He had one more justification in his sleeve: “You know, they have to realize that they do not have the monopoly of evil in this. It’s not as if because we’re in government, we can’t do anything other than play the good boy. The enemy is evil—which is the lesser evil now? The ones who cooked the drugs and fed it to our children or us who had them killed?”

Duterte was not the only president to use violence against his own people. Marcos did it and, according to Amnesty International, 3,257 died as a result of EJK. The difference was Marcos never acknowledged his culpability. Because Duterte admitted it openly, he became a fair game for human rights investigation, if only one dared. Lo and behold, another courageous journalist of Rappler took the challenge and documented Duterte’s war on drugs. Her name is Patricia Evangelista and her book is entitled Some People Need Killing: A Memoir of Murder in my Country (2023). In reading her book and other news reports, I gathered these facts and observations:

24 April 2025

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