A couple of weeks ago we were treated to the arguments
presented by both camps, that of Senator Grace Poe - chair of the public
services committee in the Senate and that of Department of Transportation
Arthur Tugade.
Both traded comments which other,but none is more
damaging when President Rodrigo Roa Duterte said he does not the Emergency
power since it basically a little pass two years before he steps out of
Malacanang, let the horrendous daily
traffic be the legacy of Grace Poe for her failure to grant emergency powers to
the executive branch of the government principally –she does not like it.
As early as 2016 the present administration already
asked for the emergency power to address the traffic in Metro Manila, Poe did
not grant it for fear of corruption might be done while in the exercise of the emergency
power, and after being re-elected her reason now for the non-granting ig
emergency power is that the DOTr has not presented any masterplan to solve the
traffic a requirement before the grant of such.
Senator Grace Poe's legacy - traffic in MM (photo credit to owner) |
Mr. Rigoberto Tiglao
in his published article in The Manila Times “Poe is such a huge argument against democracy” correctly depicts
what is Poe to this big equation dealing with the horrendous daily traffic in
Metro Manila.
“the proposed bill
giving the president emergency powers hasn’t moved at all since it was first
proposed in 2016 because the chair of the public services committee that would
have to process the bill for deliberation by the entire Senate, Grace Poe,
doesn’t like it.”
“The bottom line is this: solving a
crisis that has made hell out of the daily commute of three million people is
being blocked by one senator, voted into office by 20 million voters. And just
how did Poe, who had decided before to pursue the American dream as an
immigrant, get the support of such a huge number of Filipinos?”
For the convenience of the
reading public, information, clarity, and understanding please read the full
article below:
Poe is such a huge
argument against democracy
THE EDSA traffic is becoming more
horrendous each day, and in this day and age of technology and rationality, one
would assume that government could use all its resources and sovereign power to
solve a big obstacle to the country’s economic growth and relieve its citizens
of their daily hell.
The traffic is a veritable crisis,
and it is long past the time for debating that it isn’t. Metropolitan Manila
consists of 16 cities and one municipality. Even if EDSA traverses only six
cities (Caloocan, Quezon, San Juan, Mandaluyong, Makati and Pasay), any
solution to the avenue’s gridlocks would have to involve nearly all of Metro
Manila’s 17 local governments, all of which have the authority to pass
“ordinances” that tend to hinder efforts to solve this huge problem.
One solution, for example, would
involve opening up the posh “villages” — parts of Forbes, San Lorenzo, Wack
Wack and Greenhills, among others — but their rich residents would certainly
get the courts to stop it.
It is a no-brainer that a solution to
the EDSA traffic mess requires the grant of emergency powers to the country’s
chief executive, the President. After all, extraordinary problems require
extraordinary solutions.
But then because of our Republican
set-up, it is Congress that has the power to grant the President such emergency
powers, or authority beyond what he normally has to fulfill his duties.
Emergency
And because of the rules of one chamber of Congress, the Senate, the proposed bill giving the president emergency powers hasn’t moved at all since it was first proposed in 2016 because the chair of the public services committee that would have to process the bill for deliberation by the entire Senate, Grace Poe, doesn’t like it.
And how she has struggled to justify
her position. In the past 16th Congress, she claimed that granting emergency
powers to the President would lead to corruption, just as she claimed that the
Electricity Crisis Act of 1993 had led to graft.
What is she saying? The crisis did
grant huge advantages to the Yellow oligarchs, but that was according to the
provisions of the law. There hasn’ been any charges of corruption, nor
convictions, related to that Electricity Crisis Act.
Recently, Poe changed her
justification for dragging her feet, claiming that proponents must present a
master plan first. But several plans have already been submitted to Congress,
Transport Secretary Arthur Tugade testified in congressional hearings. I bet
she’ll claim next time that she isn’t satisfied with these plans.
The bottom line is this: solving a
crisis that has made hell out of the daily commute of three million people is
being blocked by one senator, voted into office by 20 million voters. And just
how did Poe, who had decided before to pursue the American dream as an
immigrant, get the support of such a huge number of Filipinos?
Popularity
Because of, and only because of, the tremendous popularity of her father, the most beloved Filipino action star ever, Fernando Poe, who died a few months after he lost the presidential elections in 2004. As in the case of Benigno Aquino 3rd, Filipinos vote with their emotions — and their superstition that the child is the reincarnation of his or her parent. In Poe’s case, the masses even confused her father for “Panday,” the movie hero.
But that’s democracy. No wonder that
even Plato, one of the founders of Western rationality, viewed democracy as mob
rule in disguise.
In this era of technology and the
primacy of rationality, what should be a government’s approach to solving the
EDSA traffic crisis, or for that matter any problem confronting the nation,
such as poverty? It doesn’t require rocket science to outline it:
First, organize a group of experts —
totally independent from any outside influence, especially from politicians,
and even from government and its agencies–to study the problem with the all the
state-of-the-art tools of natural and social sciences, and come up with
solutions, which would include what the military calls the “operation plan.”
Second, before implementing the plan,
test it on a small scale, a “pilot project.” Draw lessons from that pilot
project and incorporate these into the original plan.
Third, implement the plan vigorously,
without interference from any other entity.
Am I just up in the clouds?
Think tanks
Not at all. While probably also done by the US and other countries, this three-step approach has been demonstrated more transparently by the People’s Republic of China (PROC) since the early 1980s.
The “group of experts” I mentioned is
known in China as a “think-tank,” which explains why it now has the third
biggest number of such entities, 507, next to the US’ 1,871 and India’s 509. I
suspect though that many of the US think-tanks, are more academic-oriented, or
even Central Intelligence Agency fronts.
In contrast, Chinese think-tanks are
problem-oriented, usually attached to, but independent of, a government
ministry.
Former PROC president Hu Jintao had
called for improving intellectual support to policy-making, leading to a “fourth
generation” of think tanks around 2007 to 2009. In 2012 and 2013, President Xi
Jinping called for the buildup of “think tanks with Chinese characteristics.”
China’s “Belt and Road” Initiative
was formulated by a group of think-tanks. In July 2004, China’s State Council
(its equivalent of a Congress) upgraded its Hainan Research Institute of South
China Sea set up in 1996 to a national-level agency and changed its name to the
National Institute for South China Sea Studies to address China’s territorial
disputes in that area. By contrast, our foreign affairs department doesn’t even
have a team to act as a think-tank to study and propose solutions to our
territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
China’s use of think-tanks has been a
big factor in its economic growth. No wonder that even World Bank president
Robert Zoellick declared in 2004: “Between 1981 and 2004, China succeeded in
lifting more than half a billion people out of extreme poverty. This is
certainly the greatest leap to overcome poverty in history.” The latest World
Bank figures show that China has lifted out of poverty 850 million people,
which one economist gushed over as the miracle of this century.
Oops! All these think tanks of course
operate under a one-party rule, and they aren’t blocked or bothered by some
politician whose motives are almost entirely in pursuit of her ambitions in a
future election.
Let’s face it, democracy is so
overrated. The likes of Poe more and more convince me that it is so. Ask
anybody trapped for an hour in that EDSA tunnel in Makati — as I was recently,
which almost triggered a panic attack — and he will certainly be more than
willing to give up his right to vote, just as long as he arrives at his home in
even half the time that it usually takes.
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Report from Manila Times
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