Tuesday, April 19, 2016

The Dirty Job that Makes Democracy Work


A lot of well-meaning people are ashamed, nervous, and disgusted by the way Duterte responded to Australia. "Stay out," he said. Such boldness coming from a brown man, a lumpen-proletariat as how one Filipino political analyst characterised Duterte, telling his white bourgeoisie superiors to bugger off.
Ironically, the same people were angry recently at the United Nations, after the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention declared that former president Arroyo is arbitrarily detained and must be freed. The Aquino Administration also said: Stay Out. However, unlike Duterte, the language the Aquino Administration used is less abrasive: "only a Philippine court can decide on such matters."

Different form and actors, but same message: Stay Out. When the fig leaf of power lifts, hypocrites abound.

Duterte is making us confront the dirty side of democracy. He is really indeed Du-dirty, as he is often called. We are so used to a candy floss image of democracy: chattering classes that talk like how they do in Batibot; no middle fingers allowed. We are so used to seeing the fig leaf of democracy and the white collar workers running its bureaucracy - your Roxas, Binay, Santiago, and Poe.

However, behind that leaf is a scandalous vagina, a penis that makes people blush. There are blue and brown collar workers making democracy work. There's A LOT of dirty work to be done in order to polish the shoes of Demokratia that often gets dirty for constant use.

Duterte is that scandalous vagina; the penis that makes the religious blush. While we speak, he raises his middle finger. We are Plato: presentable, someone you'd like to invite to dinner and present to mama, perfumed, smells like fresh decent Lysoled linen. Duterte is Diogenes, who masturbates in public, spits, acts like a dog, mocks Plato, smells like patis.

Duterte is the brown collar worker of democracy. The toilet of our democracy isn't flushing because its septic tank is already full of shit - and no one wants to do the dirty job of emptying it.

Duterte tells us he will do it. When we hear what it's like inside the septic tank of democracy and the amount of dirty work needed to be done in order to empty it, we cringe, we scream: We want Plato!

The idealists are afraid of Duterte. But realist political philosophers like me know this very well: Order is a dirty business; and without order, no democracy. Nobody wants to do the dirty work. Duterte is telling us he can, he will, and fuck you. My mouth is dirty, Duterte tells us, but I will give you a clean government.

Duterte's fierce attitude reminds me of how Lee Kuan Yew boldly stood up against the Western critiques of his leadership. An American columnist once called him "Little Hitler." But don't get too excited: Such attitude was also displayed by Moammar Gaddafi. Will Duterte become a Lee or a Gaddafi? Only time will tell. And only Duterte can and will decide which path he will take.

"and the best at murder are those who preach against it
and the best at hate are those who preach love
and the best at war finally are those who preach peace"
- Charles Bukowski, The Genius of the Crowd