Monday, 4 May 2026

The Thinning of the Mind

The Thinning of the Mind

 Or: "On General Education, Technocratic Reform,
and the Quiet Making of a Useful but Unfree Citizenry" 


There is a certain kind of educational reform that does not enter the public square as an enemy of thought. It does not announce that philosophy must be weakened, that literature must be made optional, that history must be compressed, that the arts must be treated as decorative, or that the social sciences must be tolerated only when they serve immediate employment. It comes instead under the language of reason. It speaks of streamlining, responsiveness, employability, technological change, curriculum refinement, flexibility, upskilling, professional readiness, and the avoidance of repetition. It says it is not removing education but improving it. It insists that it is not killing General Education but rescuing it from redundancy. 

That language deserves to be taken seriously, because it is not wholly foolish. There are indeed General Education courses that have become repetitive, poorly taught, bureaucratically delivered, and disconnected from the intellectual maturity expected of university students. There are topics introduced in Junior High School and Senior High School that should not simply be repeated in college as if students had learned nothing before entering the university. There is a legitimate need to rethink what higher education should do in a world shaped by artificial intelligence, digital platforms, global labor mobility, ecological crisis, and technological acceleration. No serious critic of reform should pretend that the old curriculum was perfect merely because it was old. 

But there is a difference between reforming General Education and thinning the human being. 

That distinction is the heart of the matter. 

The supporters of reduction make an argument that appears, at first glance, practical and moderate. They say that many General Education subjects have already been introduced during basic education. They say the university should not waste precious time going over the same material. They say that college should be a place for advanced learning, discipline-specific formation, and practical abilities that help students enter professional life. They argue that digital literacy, collaboration, analytical thinking, communication, and workplace readiness are now urgent. They say that learning resources are widely available, so students can independently explore many concepts outside formal coursework. They insist that the goal is not to remove General Education but to improve it by finding the right balance between intellectual development and real-world application. 

This is the respectable version of the pro-reduction case. It should not be caricatured. It is not, in its strongest form, a crude demand to abolish the humanities. It is not necessarily an open attack on philosophy, literature, history, or the arts. It presents itself as a call for curricular efficiency. It says: teach foundations earlier, then let universities focus on depth, specialization, employability, and adaptation to a rapidly changing world. 

Yet precisely because this argument sounds reasonable, it must be examined more carefully. 

The problem begins with its assumption that introduction is equivalent to formation. A topic may have been introduced in basic education, but that does not mean the student has been formed by it. A teenager may have encountered ethics, but that does not mean the student has learned moral reasoning. A student may have studied history, but that does not mean the student has developed historical consciousness. A poem may have appeared in a module, but that does not mean literature has opened the student’s imagination. Civic life may have been discussed in school, but that does not mean the young person has learned citizenship as a discipline of judgment, participation, criticism, and responsibility. 

Education is not a checklist. The mind is not formed merely because a concept has appeared once in the curriculum. 

There is a childish version of a subject, and there is a mature version of it. There is a basic recitation of history, and there is historical interpretation. There is values education, and there is ethical judgment under conditions of conflict. There is reading literature for appreciation, and there is literature as an encounter with suffering, desire, memory, contradiction, class, gender, nation, and exile. There is communication as grammar and presentation, and there is communication as rhetoric, persuasion, propaganda, silence, and truth. There is social studies as information, and there is social thought as the disciplined study of power. 

A university does not exist merely to repeat basic education. But neither should it pretend that the work of human formation was already completed before the student arrived. 

The real task of college-level General Education is not repetition. It is deepening. It is not to reteach the same lesson at the same level. It is to return to the great questions at a point in life when the student is more capable of understanding their consequences. A first-year or second-year college student is not the same person as a high school student. The university student is closer to work, voting, family responsibility, public speech, migration, professional identity, and political participation. The questions that may have seemed abstract in adolescence become concrete in young adulthood. What is justice? What is work? What is a nation? What is truth? What is technology doing to society? What does it mean to be free? What does it mean to be human? 

To remove or reduce the spaces where such questions are seriously asked is not modernization. It is a narrowing of the mind at the very moment when the mind is ready to become more dangerous, more generous, more critical, and more fully awake. 

This is where Paulo Freire becomes indispensable. Freire warned against an education that treats students as passive containers, as if knowledge were merely deposited into them by those in authority. He called this the “banking” concept of education, a model in which knowledge is treated as a gift from those who consider themselves knowledgeable to those considered ignorant. In such a system, education does not awaken the student; it domesticates the student. It trains the student to receive, store, repeat, and comply. 

Freire’s most relevant warning is that education is never neutral. In the foreword to Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Richard Shaull summarizes Freire’s view: education either integrates the young into the logic of the existing system, or it becomes “the practice of freedom” (Freire, 1970/2000). That distinction is the key to the present debate. A reduced, skill-centered, employability-driven General Education may still call itself education. It may still use the words “critical thinking,” “ethics,” and “communication.” But if its practical effect is to make students more adaptable to existing systems without giving them the intellectual tools to question those systems, then it becomes less an education for freedom than an education for adjustment. 

This is not to say that skills are unnecessary. Students need skills. They need to write clearly, speak responsibly, work collaboratively, understand data, use technology, and prepare for employment. A hungry graduate cannot live on abstractions alone. A family that sacrifices for tuition has the right to hope that education will lead to livelihood. The critic of curriculum reduction cannot dismiss these realities. To do so would be arrogant and politically unserious. 

But the choice between employability and humanistic formation is a false choice. The issue is not whether students should be prepared for work. The issue is whether they should be prepared only for work. 

A university worthy of its name must prepare students for employment without reducing them to future employees. It must teach communication, but also the ethics of speech. It must teach data, but also the politics of evidence. It must teach technology, but also the human consequences of technology. It must teach labor readiness, but also labor history, labor rights, class relations, and the dignity of work. It must teach global trends, but also the structures of inequality that shape globalization. It must teach adaptability, but not servility. 

The danger of the proposed reduction lies not merely in the number of units. It lies in the philosophy implied by the reduction. Once General Education is treated primarily as a set of competencies to be delivered efficiently, it begins to lose its role as formation. The language of competencies is not wrong in itself, but it becomes dangerous when it becomes the total language of education. A person can be competent and shallow. A person can be employable and unfree. A person can be digitally literate and historically ignorant. A person can interpret data and still fail to understand suffering. A person can speak professionally and still lack moral courage. 

That is why a society cannot measure education only by what can be immediately applied in the workplace. The deepest results of education often appear slowly. They appear in the way a graduate refuses corruption, recognizes propaganda, sympathizes with the poor, questions unjust authority, understands historical distortion, resists cruelty, reads beyond slogans, and refuses to reduce other people to functions. 

These are not soft outcomes. They are civic necessities. 

What makes the proposed thinning of General Education more troubling is not only its curricular consequence, but the philosophy of the human being that appears to stand behind it. It sounds, in its deeper implication, anti-human. It does not necessarily say so openly. It does not declare war on the student’s interior life. It does not announce that wonder, reflection, doubt, imagination, memory, and moral judgment are useless. But by repeatedly framing higher education around employability, upskilling, career transition, workplace readiness, and direct professional application, it begins to reduce the student into a future employee before the student has even been fully formed as a person. 

This is employeeism masquerading as reform. 

By employeeism, one does not mean respect for labor. Labor deserves dignity. Work deserves protection. Students deserve livelihoods. Families deserve the assurance that education can lead to material security. No one who understands ordinary life can dismiss the importance of employment. The son or daughter of a working family does not enter college merely to indulge in abstraction. There are bills to pay, parents to help, siblings to support, rent to meet, food to buy, and futures to secure. 

But employment is not the total meaning of education. 

The danger begins when the quest for learning becomes merely the requirement for a credential. The student no longer enters the university primarily to encounter the world more deeply, to wrestle with history, to sharpen judgment, to ask what is true, to discover beauty, to understand injustice, or to become more fully human. The student enters because a degree is required. The course becomes a pathway. The classroom becomes a checkpoint. The diploma becomes a pass. The mind becomes a résumé. 

This is the tragedy of credentialism: education remains in form, but learning is hollowed out in spirit. 

The repeated language of “upskilling” makes this problem even sharper. Upskilling is not wrong in itself. Workers should be able to learn new tools, adapt to changing industries, and improve their prospects. A society that refuses to help people develop new capacities condemns them to stagnation. But when upskilling becomes the dominant language of education, the university begins to sound less like a place of learning and more like a human resources department. The student becomes a portfolio of competencies. The teacher becomes a trainer. The curriculum becomes a productivity instrument. The graduate becomes an output unit calibrated for market absorption. 

In such a climate, learning is praised only when it can be immediately converted into employability. Philosophy must justify itself as critical thinking for the workplace. Literature must justify itself as communication skills. History must justify itself as civic branding. Art must justify itself as creativity for industry. Language must justify itself as a market advantage. Ethics must justify itself as professional compliance. 

Everything must kneel before usefulness. 

But usefulness, as defined by the labor market, is too narrow a measure for education. A human being is not useful only when employable. A citizen is not useful only when productive. A mind is not useful only when it can serve an institution, corporation, office, laboratory, or bureaucracy. A person is also useful to society when he can resist falsehood, remember injustice, defend dignity, criticize power, imagine alternatives, care for others, and refuse to become an instrument of cruelty. 

This is where the contradiction becomes almost absurd. Institutions now speak endlessly of adaptability, but too often they define adaptability in the language of employment alone. The graduate must adapt to industry. The graduate must adapt to technology. The graduate must adapt to global competitiveness. The graduate must adapt to workplace demands. Yet the richer educational traditions, including those supposedly praised by reformers, have long understood adaptability in a deeper sense: the capacity of the human being to live meaningfully in society, to understand others, to revise judgment, to confront change without losing conscience, and to participate responsibly in the common life. 

True adaptability is not mere employability. It is human readiness for society. 

A person adapts not only by learning software, reading data, speaking in meetings, or acquiring credentials. A person adapts by learning how to live with difference, how to interpret conflict, how to speak ethically, how to remember history, how to care for the vulnerable, how to understand labor not merely as a contract but as human dignity, and how to ask whether a changing society is becoming more just or merely more efficient. 

Employment is part of society. But it is not the whole of society. 

That is why the best educational models do not separate humanness from practicality. They understand that a person becomes more adaptable to work precisely because he or she has been formed more broadly as a human being. The graduate who has read literature may understand people better. The graduate who has studied philosophy may reason more carefully. The graduate who has studied history may recognize patterns of abuse and reform. The graduate who has encountered the arts may perceive nuance and form. The graduate who has studied social thought may understand institutions, inequality, and collective life. These are not ornamental capacities. They are the human foundation of meaningful adaptability. 

Thus, the issue is not whether education should help students find work. It should. The issue is whether education should be redesigned as though work were the final horizon of the person. 

That is the anti-human tendency that must be named. 

A university that trains students only to be employable may succeed in producing workers. But it may fail to produce citizens. It may produce applicants, but not thinkers. It may produce personnel, but not persons. It may produce graduates who can fit into offices, hospitals, laboratories, schools, companies, and agencies, but who cannot ask whether those institutions are just, humane, truthful, or worthy of obedience. 

This is why the reduction of General Education cannot be treated as a neutral adjustment. It belongs to a larger movement in which education is increasingly absorbed into the logic of credentialism, employability, and institutional compliance. The language may be modern. The result may be old: the domestication of the student. 

The university must resist this. It must prepare students for work, but it must not worship work. It must teach skills, but it must not reduce knowledge to skills. It must respond to technology, but it must not let technology define the human being. It must help students earn a living, but it must also help them understand what kind of life is worth living. 

The supporters of reduction often argue that concepts can now be explored independently because learning resources are widely available. This argument has the smell of modern common sense. The internet contains lectures, books, archives, courses, essays, documentaries, and debates. Students can, in theory, learn almost anything. 

But this argument romanticizes access. 

Access is not education. Availability is not formation. Information is not wisdom. A student may have endless resources and still lack the discipline to judge them. In fact, the age of abundant information may require stronger General Education precisely because students now live inside a flood of competing claims, propaganda, half-truths, artificial intelligence outputs, influencer expertise, historical distortion, political manipulation, and algorithmic distraction. 

The problem today is not the scarcity of information. The problem is the collapse of judgment. 

Students need teachers not merely to give them facts but to help them interpret the world. They need classrooms where claims are tested, sources are examined, assumptions are exposed, language is questioned, and evidence is placed within history. They need philosophy because not all problems are technical. They need literature because not all truths are statistical. They need history because every present arrangement has a past. They need the arts because human beings do not live by utility alone. They need the social sciences because private suffering often has public causes. 

To say that students can explore these things independently is to abandon the public responsibility of education. Yes, some students will read on their own. Some will search for philosophy, novels, political theory, history, and criticism beyond their formal programs. Some will become self-taught intellectuals despite the curriculum. But national education policy cannot be designed around the exceptional student who already knows what to seek. 

Those who most need intellectual deepening are often the least likely to receive it outside the curriculum. 

This is where class enters the issue. A reduction of General Education may be presented as flexibility, but flexibility in an unequal society often means that the privileged retain depth while the less privileged receive the minimum. Well-funded institutions may preserve rich General Education. They may continue offering philosophy, literature, advanced history, cultural studies, arts criticism, political economy, and serious interdisciplinary courses. Their students will still encounter a broad intellectual world. They will still be trained to question, argue, interpret, and lead. 

But many other institutions will not have the luxury of expansion. They will comply with the minimum. They will cut costs. They will reduce faculty loads. They will streamline offerings. They will market efficiency. They will tell students that the essentials have been covered. They will deliver the required units and move students through the system. 

The result may be a two-tiered education system: There will be thick General Education for the elite and thin General Education for everyone else. 

This is the most serious danger. The reduction does not merely change curriculum. It may reproduce inequality at the level of consciousness itself. The privileged student will still be educated to ask why. The ordinary student will be trained to function. Both will graduate. Both will be called competent. Both will be told they are critical thinkers. But one will have passed through a broader discipline of reflection, while the other will have been given a leaner, more instrumental education shaped by compliance, employability, and institutional constraint. 

That is not democratization. It is stratification. 

When depth becomes optional, it becomes vulnerable. When depth becomes vulnerable, it becomes expensive. When depth becomes expensive, it becomes a privilege. And once depth becomes a privilege, the country has accepted the idea that some students deserve a fuller education of the mind while others need only enough education to work. 

This is a dangerous bargain for any republic, but especially for a country already burdened by historical amnesia, disinformation, authoritarian nostalgia, shallow public discourse, and the reduction of citizenship to spectacle. A nation suffering from weak democratic habits cannot afford to weaken the disciplines that teach people to think historically, ethically, and critically. 

The pro-reduction argument also draws a distinction between programs where General Education supposedly belongs and programs where it supposedly becomes burdensome. It says that General Education can naturally be taught within social sciences and humanities programs. But for highly technical fields such as biology, chemistry, mathematics, engineering, pharmacy, and medical technology, it may be more practical not to reteach content already introduced earlier. These students, the argument goes, need more time for advanced disciplinary and professional skills. 

Again, this sounds practical. But it rests on a narrow view of technical life. 

The engineer does not build in a vacuum. The engineer builds structures, systems, roads, bridges, software, machines, energy networks, and infrastructures that shape human communities. If the engineer lacks social imagination, technical excellence may serve unjust ends. 

The chemist does not work outside morality. Chemistry may serve medicine, food security, manufacturing, environmental protection, warfare, pollution, or corporate profit. A chemist without ethical formation is not neutral; he or she is merely available. 

The biologist studies life. Biology touches ecology, reproduction, disease, biodiversity, agriculture, genetics, and the boundaries of intervention. It cannot be separated from questions of dignity, risk, justice, and stewardship. 

The pharmacist and medical technologist operate inside systems of care. They deal with diagnosis, access, trust, error, vulnerability, and the difference between a patient as a person and a patient as a case. They need more than technical precision. They need moral and social understanding. 

The mathematician may enter finance, artificial intelligence, logistics, state planning, surveillance, cryptography, economics, or research. Abstraction can govern human lives. Numbers are not innocent simply because they are exact. 

The more technical the profession, the more dangerous it becomes when detached from humanistic formation. A society does not become safe merely because its professionals are skilled. Skill without conscience can serve any master. Technical intelligence without moral imagination can become efficient cruelty. 

The twentieth century offers enough warnings. Bureaucracies of oppression were often staffed not by fools but by educated functionaries. Systems of domination have always needed engineers, doctors, accountants, administrators, statisticians, lawyers, scientists, and teachers. The problem was not that such people lacked training. The problem was that training had been separated from conscience. 

That is why General Education matters most precisely where some would remove it. The future engineer must ask not only how to build, but for whom. The future scientist must ask not only what can be discovered, but what must be restrained. The future health professional must ask not only what procedure is correct, but what human dignity requires. The future business graduate must ask not only what is profitable, but what is just. The future technologist must ask not only what can be automated, but what should remain human. 

This is not anti-technology. It is the only humane way to live with technology. 

The present age speaks endlessly of artificial intelligence, digital transformation, automation, data analytics, and global competitiveness. These are real forces. Education cannot pretend otherwise. But a curriculum that responds to technology by shrinking the humanities has misunderstood the problem. The rise of the machine is not an argument against humanistic education. It is an argument for more of it. 

As machines become more capable of producing text, images, predictions, classifications, and decisions, the human being must become more capable of judgment. The student must learn not only how to use tools but how to ask what the tools are doing to attention, language, labor, privacy, truth, and power. The student must learn not only responsible AI use but also the political economy of platforms, the ethics of automation, the danger of algorithmic bias, the displacement of workers, and the temptation to treat human beings as data points. 

A machine can process language, but it cannot suffer language. It can produce a summary, but it cannot possess memory. It can classify emotion, but it cannot experience grief. It can generate an answer, but it cannot take responsibility for truth. It can mimic style, but it cannot become a citizen. If education allows the machine age to define knowledge purely as efficiency, then the human being will be trained to imitate the very systems that threaten to reduce him. 

Let human beings control the machine. Do not let the machine define the human being. 

This is why the old humanistic disciplines remain urgent. Philosophy teaches that not every possible act is permissible. Literature teaches that human life exceeds categories. History teaches that power always tells stories about itself. The arts teach that usefulness is not the only measure of value. The social sciences teach that private hardship often has public structure. Political thought teaches that obedience is not the same as citizenship. Ethics teaches that the question “Can we?” must always be followed by “Should we?” 

Freire’s language of liberation is useful here because it reminds educators that teaching is not merely the transfer of information. One Freirean formulation puts it clearly: “Liberating education consists in acts of cognition, not transferrals of information” (Freire, 1970/2000). That sentence exposes the weakness of an overly streamlined curriculum. If education becomes chiefly the delivery of content and competencies, it may produce functional graduates. But it may not produce persons capable of naming their world. 

Freire insisted on dialogue because dialogue breaks the passivity of the learner. It allows the student to participate in the making of meaning. The student is not a container, not raw material, not a future worker to be processed, not a silent recipient of institutional wisdom. The student is a subject in history. Education must help that subject read the world, not merely adapt to it. 

Here the Philippine context deepens the argument. Renato Constantino wrote that education is “a vital weapon” for a people seeking economic emancipation, political independence, and cultural renaissance (Constantino, 1966). That sentence remains relevant because the Philippine educational question has never been purely technical. It has always involved nationhood, colonial memory, class formation, language, labor, and the struggle over what kind of Filipino the school system produces. 

An education that merely produces employable Filipinos is not enough. The country needs Filipinos who understand why employment is precarious, why labor is cheap, why history is distorted, why public institutions fail, why language carries class power, why migration becomes destiny, why corruption survives, why poverty is normalized, and why citizenship is reduced to voting, spectacle, or obedience. These are not questions that can be answered by digital literacy alone. They require history, political economy, literature, ethics, philosophy, and social analysis. 

A thin General Education may still teach Rizal. But will it teach students to read Rizal as a critic of colonial society, clerical power, racial hierarchy, and intellectual servility? A thin General Education may still teach labor education. But will it teach students to understand contractualization, union-busting, wage suppression, migration, gendered labor, and the history of working-class struggle? A thin General Education may still teach communication. But will it teach students to recognize propaganda, euphemism, class-coded language, bureaucratic deception, and the manufacture of consent? A thin General Education may still teach data. But will it teach students to ask who collects data, who is counted, who disappears from the numbers, and whose suffering is made statistically invisible? 

The answer depends on whether General Education is treated as formation or as compliance. 

The supporter of reduction may reply that reform does not necessarily mean thinning. Institutions may still offer additional General Education units. Autonomous institutions may go beyond the minimum. The curriculum can remain flexible. Those who value depth can preserve it. 

This reply returns the debate to inequality. 

A minimum is not neutral when institutions are unequal. A wealthy university may treat the minimum as a floor. A struggling university may treat it as the ceiling. The policy may say “flexibility,” but the system may produce austerity. The policy may permit depth, but economic pressures may punish it. The policy may allow institutional identity, but many institutions may lack the resources, faculty, time, and administrative courage to maintain a serious humanistic core. 

Thus the reform’s practical effect may be different from its stated intention. It may not formally abolish philosophy, literature, arts, or social thought. It may merely make them easier to cut. 

That is how many things disappear in modern institutions. They are not banned. They are made optional. They are not denounced. They are declared nonessential. They are not attacked. They are displaced by something more measurable. They are not killed loudly. They are slowly starved. 

The danger, then, is not one memorandum alone. The danger is the philosophy of education that finds such thinning sensible. It is the belief that college is mainly for job seekers, not learners. It is the belief that broad intellectual formation belongs to secondary education and that the university should concentrate on professional specialization. It is the belief that the humanities are important in principle but expendable in practice. It is the belief that a subject’s worth must be proven through direct workplace application. 

This belief must be resisted. College is not the end of general learning. It is the point at which general learning should become more conscious, more disciplined, and more adult. The university is where a student begins to understand that no profession exists outside society. It is where the future accountant learns that numbers can hide exploitation. It is where the future architect learns that space reflects power. It is where the future nurse learns that care is shaped by class and policy. It is where the future lawyer learns that legality and justice are not always identical. It is where the future teacher learns that instruction can liberate or domesticate. It is where the future entrepreneur learns that profit without responsibility is organized appetite. It is where the future programmer learns that code can reproduce bias. It is where the future citizen learns that obedience is not virtue when the order itself is unjust. 

To remove these encounters is to impoverish specialization itself. 

A purely technical education is not truly advanced. It is merely narrow. True advancement means that a student understands the field more deeply because the field has been placed in relation to society, history, ethics, language, and human consequence. The best engineer is not the one who only calculates well, but the one who understands the social life of what is built. The best doctor is not the one who only diagnoses well, but the one who understands the human being beyond the chart. The best scientist is not the one who only discovers, but the one who understands the responsibility of discovery. The best professional is not the one who only adapts, but the one who can judge what adaptation costs. 

The defenders of reduction may also say that some educators affected by the changes can shift to areas with strong demand, such as foreign language teaching. This may be practical as a labor adjustment. It is true that foreign languages are valuable. They open doors in diplomacy, migration, scholarship, tourism, business, cultural work, and global careers. A multilingual graduate may indeed have an advantage. 

But this cannot be allowed to obscure the deeper issue. The answer to the weakening of General Education is not merely to retrain affected faculty into marketable areas. A philosophy teacher is not obsolete because language skills are in demand. A literature professor is not expendable because the labor market rewards multilingual communication. A historian is not redundant because students want professional advantage. A social scientist is not unnecessary because employers prefer technical competencies. 

Even language itself becomes diminished if defended only by market demand. Languages are not merely employability tools. They are entrances into civilizations, memories, ways of seeing, histories of power, and forms of imagination. To teach French, Spanish, Japanese, Mandarin, Arabic, Korean, German, or any other language merely as a job-market advantage is to reduce language to utility. Language belongs to humanistic formation, not only to professional mobility. 

The great sickness of the present educational climate is that everything must justify itself before the labor market. Philosophy must prove its usefulness. Literature must prove its employability. History must prove its profitability. Art must prove its market value. Ethics must prove its corporate relevance. Even language must prove its return on investment. 

But the deepest things in education cannot always be translated into immediate economic gain. That does not make them useless. It makes them civilizational. The purpose of education is not only to help a person earn a living. It is also to help a person know what kind of life is worth living. 

A society that forgets this may become efficient and still become cruel. It may become globally competitive and still become spiritually poor. It may produce workers and fail to produce citizens. It may produce professionals and fail to produce persons. 

The 1980s language of national crisis remains useful here because the debate is not merely academic. It concerns the formation of a people under pressure. A country marked by debt, labor export, political spectacle, corporate concentration, weak institutions, and historical confusion cannot afford an education that asks fewer questions. It cannot afford to make depth a luxury. It cannot afford to train young people only to fit into systems that may themselves require transformation. 

Freire’s warning returns: education either integrates the young into the logic of the present system or becomes a practice of freedom. The present system already speaks loudly. It tells young people to be employable, flexible, competitive, productive, pleasant, credentialed, adaptable, and grateful. It tells them to build a personal brand, accept precarity, adjust to technology, and treat survival as success. It tells them that the world is changing and that they must keep up. It rarely tells them that they may also ask who designed the world, who profits from its changes, who is sacrificed in its transitions, and what alternatives may be imagined. 

General Education, at its best, is one of the few places where those questions can still be asked. 

That is why it must not be reduced into a narrow package of competencies. It must not become the polite ceremony before professional training. It must not be converted into a thin civic-technological-workplace module. It must not become the educational equivalent of a résumé workshop with national symbols attached. 

It should instead be reimagined as the intellectual spine of undergraduate education. 

A serious General Education curriculum should not lazily repeat Senior High School. It should assume that students have been introduced to certain concepts and then demand more. It should ask students to read primary texts, interpret social realities, write arguments, debate ethical problems, analyze institutions, encounter art, study labor, confront technology, understand history, and reflect on the self in relation to community. It should be interdisciplinary without becoming shallow. It should be practical without becoming servile. It should address technology without worshiping it. It should address work without reducing life to work. 

In such a curriculum, communication would not be merely professional expression. It would include rhetoric, public discourse, media manipulation, propaganda, and the ethics of speech. 

Data literacy would not be merely interpretation of graphs and evidence. It would include the politics of measurement, the social life of statistics, the problem of bias, and the moral consequences of abstraction. 

Technology would not be merely emerging tools and trends. It would include labor displacement, platform power, surveillance, artificial intelligence, ecological cost, and the question of human dignity. 

Rizal and Philippine studies would not be reduced to compliance with a law. It would become a broader confrontation with colonialism, nationalism, language, memory, class, citizenship, and the unfinished project of freedom. 

Labor education would not be mere workplace readiness. It would include labor history, rights, unions, wages, contractualization, migration, gendered work, and the moral meaning of dignity in labor. 

Institutional General Education would not be branding. It would be the place where a school asks what kind of human being it claims to form. 

This is reform worth defending. 

But a simple reduction of units, even when dressed as flexibility, risks moving in the opposite direction. It tells institutions that less may be enough. It tells students that depth can wait. It tells technical programs that humanistic formation is peripheral. It tells administrators that General Education may be compressed without grave loss. It tells the public that college should become more directly useful. 

And perhaps that word—useful—is the battlefield. 

No one should despise usefulness. A useless education is an indulgence. But usefulness must be defined humanely. An education is useful if it helps a person work, yes. But it is also useful if it helps a person resist deception. It is useful if it helps a person understand grief. It is useful if it gives language to injustice. It is useful if it teaches one to recognize beauty. It is useful if it makes corruption intolerable. It is useful if it prevents obedience from becoming cowardice. It is useful if it reminds the future professional that the poor are not abstractions. It is useful if it teaches the citizen not to surrender memory. 

The market has no right to be the sole judge of usefulness. 

The nation, too, has a claim. The community has a claim. The future has a claim. The human soul has a claim. 

The supporters of reduction are right that education must change. They are right that redundancy should be removed. They are right that college-level learning must not merely repeat basic education. They are right that digital literacy, collaboration, analytical thinking, and professional readiness matter. They are right that universities should prepare students for a changing world. 

But they are wrong if they believe that the answer is to reduce the common intellectual inheritance of students. They are wrong if they assume that basic education has already completed the work of forming judgment. They are wrong if they treat the humanities as naturally belonging only to humanities students. They are wrong if they imagine that technical fields need less philosophy, less literature, less history, less ethics, or less social thought. They are wrong if they believe that independent access to online resources can replace guided intellectual formation. They are wrong if they fail to see how minimum requirements become maximum offerings in unequal institutions. 

The issue is not nostalgia. It is not sentimental attachment to old subjects. It is not the defense of teaching loads disguised as national concern. Faculty displacement is a legitimate labor issue, but it is not the deepest issue. The deeper issue is what kind of mind the university is expected to produce. 

Will it produce graduates who can think beyond their function?
Will it produce citizens who can interpret power?
Will it produce professionals who can ask ethical questions before obeying institutional demands?
Will it produce human beings who can live with technology without being ruled by it?
Or will it produce efficient, adaptable, digitally fluent, professionally communicative, globally competitive workers who know how to enter systems but not how to transform them? 

This is why the thinning of General Education must be opposed. 

Not because reform is unnecessary, but because reform must deepen education rather than flatten it. Not because technology should be ignored, but because technology must be humanized. Not because work is unimportant, but because the worker is more than labor power. Not because basic education is meaningless, but because college must raise foundational learning into adult consciousness. Not because technical fields are inferior, but because technical power without humanistic judgment is dangerous. 

The country does not need a university system that merely produces job seekers. It needs a university system that produces learners, citizens, builders, critics, creators, professionals, and persons. It needs graduates who can work, but also graduates who can ask why work is organized unjustly. It needs graduates who can use machines, but also graduates who can refuse to become machines. It needs graduates who can analyze data, but also graduates who can see the human being behind the number. It needs graduates who can communicate, but also graduates who can speak truth. It needs graduates who can adapt, but also graduates who know when adaptation becomes surrender. 

In the end, the debate over General Education is a debate over the meaning of the university itself. 

If the university is only a credentialing plant, then reduction makes sense. If college is only a path to employment, then the leaner curriculum is efficient. If the student is mainly a future worker, then the humanities can be trimmed. If society needs compliance more than criticism, then the thinning of the mind is not a problem but a feature. 

But if the university remains a place where the young are formed into persons capable of judgment, then General Education is not a dispensable ornament. It is the foundation of freedom. 

A nation may survive with skilled workers. But it cannot remain free without critical citizens. 

A country may build industries with technical graduates. But it cannot build a humane society with technical training alone. 

A people may learn to use machines. But they will lose themselves if they forget what machines cannot teach. 

The human being is not a machine. The university is not a factory. Education is not the mere transfer of competencies. General Education is not excess baggage before employment. It is one of the last organized spaces where the young may still be invited to ask what it means to be human, what it means to live with others, what it means to remember, what it means to work, what it means to doubt, and what it means to be free. 

That invitation must not be reduced. It must be strengthened. 

For once depth becomes optional, it becomes a privilege. Once it becomes a privilege, the poor are given training while the powerful keep education. And once that happens, the nation will have accepted the quietest form of inequality: not merely unequal wealth, unequal schools, or unequal jobs, but unequal consciousness. 

That is the real danger: Not that students will fail to find work, but that they will be prepared only for work. Not that they will lack skills, but that they will lack the deeper freedom to ask what those skills are for. And when a society no longer teaches its young to ask that question, it has not modernized education. 

It has merely made obedience more efficient. 

*** 

References

Constantino, R. (1966). The miseducation of the Filipino. Journal of Contemporary Asia.

Freire, P. (2000). Pedagogy of the oppressed (30th anniversary ed.; M. B. Ramos, Trans.). Continuum. Original work published 1970. 

The Solar Roof against the Old Monopoly

The Solar Roof against the Old Monopoly

Or: "When the Ratepayer Becomes His Own Utility"


There is a particular kind of public anger that emerges when a company says something technically defensible but politically tone-deaf. It is not always the content of the statement that provokes the reaction. Sometimes it is the timing, the institutional history behind it, and the public’s suspicion that the official explanation is not the whole explanation.

That is why the recent reaction to Manila Electric Co.’s position on rooftop solar has been so severe. Meralco has called for the establishment of technical standards for rooftop solar equipment and for tighter regulation of so-called “guerrilla” installations—systems that are allegedly installed without proper permits, registration, or safety checks. From a strict utility-management standpoint, the argument has a rational foundation. A distribution utility has an obligation to know what is connected to its grid. It has to worry about backfeeding, poor wiring, low-quality inverters, fire hazards, and safety risks to line workers. It cannot simply allow thousands of unknown systems to connect to homes and businesses without any technical oversight.

But that is not how many consumers heard it.

To the public, especially at a time when electricity costs remain a recurring burden, Meralco’s call sounded less like a neutral concern for safety and more like an incumbent utility trying to discipline the very people who found a way to reduce dependence on it. That may not be Meralco’s intended message, but in business and politics, perception is not a side issue. It is often the central issue. A company that occupies a dominant role in an essential service cannot speak as if it were an ordinary market participant. When it discusses regulation, the public immediately asks whether the regulation is meant to protect consumers or protect the franchise.

This is the difficulty Meralco now faces. It may be correct that rooftop solar needs technical standards. It may be correct that unregistered installations pose risks. It may be correct that the Energy Regulatory Commission and other agencies need clearer authority to streamline net metering and ensure safe interconnection. But those points now sit inside a much larger public debate about electricity costs, monopoly power, consumer self-reliance, nationalization, and the future of distributed energy in the Philippines.

At a recent Senate hearing, Meralco vice president and head of utility economics Lawrence Fernandez supported proposed amendments to the Renewable Energy Act, including expanded authority for the Energy Regulatory Commission to streamline net metering rules and approvals. He cited more than 20,000 net metering installations in Meralco’s franchise area, totaling over 170 megawatts. He also pointed to around 370 megawatts of commercial rooftop solar capacity operating outside the net metering program, bringing total rooftop capacity in the franchise area to more than 500 megawatts. These numbers matter because they show that rooftop solar is no longer a marginal development. It is becoming a serious, visible, and politically meaningful part of the energy landscape.

For many households and businesses, solar is no longer a green lifestyle statement. It is a balance-sheet decision. It is a hedge against rising bills. It is a form of private energy security. It is a way for a business to reduce exposure to volatility and for a household to regain some control over monthly expenses. In that sense, rooftop solar is not merely an environmental technology. It is a consumer response to economic pressure.

This is why Meralco’s use of the term “guerrilla” is politically combustible. The term may be intended to describe unregistered or unauthorized installations, but it also implies concealment, irregularity, and defiance. It frames the solar adopter as a kind of underground actor. In a purely regulatory document, that may be tolerated as shorthand. In public debate, it becomes loaded. It suggests that consumers who install solar outside the formal process are not merely noncompliant but somehow insurgent.

That framing is dangerous because it risks collapsing important distinctions. A rooftop solar user who failed to register properly is not the same as someone who steals electricity through an illegal connection. A homeowner or business that installs panels to reduce consumption from the grid is not morally equivalent to a person who bypasses a meter and shifts costs onto other paying customers. The distinction should be obvious, but public anger often begins precisely when institutions fail to recognize obvious distinctions.

If this so-called guerrilla mode of setting up solar panels is itself evil in the eyes of Meralco, then so be it. But even then, it is at least better than the old school unauthorized electrical connection that bypasses a meter to steal electricity from the grid. The rooftop solar owner may be administratively irregular. He may need inspection, certification, and proper registration. His installer may need accreditation. His equipment may need to meet standards. But he is not necessarily stealing electricity. In many cases, he is trying to avoid taking as much electricity from the grid in the first place.

That distinction should be at the center of policy. Unsafe rooftop solar should be made safe. Unregistered systems should be regularized. Substandard equipment should be phased out. Reckless installers should be sanctioned. But the household or business that invested in solar should not be treated as if self-generation itself were suspicious. If anything, the state and the utility should ask why so many consumers felt compelled to move faster than the formal process.

One public comment captured the resentment sharply: "Having rooftop solar equipment has turned everyone into a stockholder. Why blame them? For reality's sake, it's the lesser evil as opposed to old school stealing from the power grid." The same commenter added: "You better tread lightly here; this could backfire on you catastrophically."

The word “stockholder” is important. It may not be legally precise, but it captures the psychological transformation created by rooftop solar. Under the traditional model, the customer is a passive buyer. Electricity flows from generators through transmission and distribution networks into the home or business, and the consumer pays the bill. With rooftop solar, especially when paired with net metering, the consumer becomes a partial producer. He does not merely consume power; he can offset demand, generate supply, and in some cases export excess electricity back into the grid. He gains a limited but symbolically powerful stake in the energy system.

This symbolic change should not be underestimated. A consumer who generates some of his own electricity is no longer fully captive in the old sense. He still depends on the grid, especially at night or during cloudy periods, but his dependence is reduced. He has a measure of leverage. He has some control over costs. He has invested in an alternative. For a utility, this changes the customer relationship. For the public, it changes the meaning of energy citizenship.

Here lies the deeper business challenge for Meralco. The company is not merely dealing with a technical integration problem. It is dealing with a change in customer identity. The consumer is becoming more sophisticated, more independent, and more willing to use technology to manage costs. This is happening across industries. Telecommunications customers use messaging apps to avoid legacy charges. Retail customers use online platforms to bypass traditional stores. Transport users compare platforms, routes, and fares in real time. Energy consumers are now doing their version of the same thing. They are using technology to reduce dependence on a legacy provider.

A forward-looking utility would treat that not as a threat but as a market signal. Rooftop solar adoption means customers want affordability, resilience, transparency, and some level of participation. The business response should be to create services around that demand: safer interconnection, faster registration, financing partnerships, certified installer networks, battery integration, demand-response programs, and community energy models. The defensive response would be to frame the trend primarily as a compliance problem. That may win a narrow regulatory argument, but it risks losing the larger public argument.

This is where the rhetoric of capitalism becomes awkward. For decades, the Filipino public has been lectured about self-reliance, private initiative, entrepreneurship, thrift, discipline, and resilience. The small shopkeeper is praised. The family business is romanticized. The sari-sari store is treated as proof of Filipino enterprise. Households are told to budget better. Workers are told to upskill. Small businesses are told to innovate. Consumers are told that they cannot always rely on the state and must find practical ways to survive.

Then the household does exactly that. It installs solar panels. It invests private money. It reduces its demand from the grid. It practices energy self-reliance in the most literal sense.

And suddenly, the same social order that praises self-initiative begins to sound uncomfortable.

This is why many people find the situation absurd. Since capitalists often babble about self-initiative and self-reliance, opposition to rooftop solar independence makes the very idea ridiculous. The citizen is praised when he is entrepreneurial in ways that do not disturb major incumbents. He is praised when he opens a small store, sells food, starts a side business, or works harder to pay rising bills. But when he invests in a system that reduces dependence on a powerful utility, the language shifts. Now the same initiative becomes a grid concern, a regulatory problem, a “guerrilla” matter.

The contradiction is obvious. The public is told to be self-reliant, but apparently not too self-reliant. It is told to be entrepreneurial, but not in a way that changes its relationship with monopoly infrastructure. It is told to invest, but not in a way that turns the household into a miniature energy producer. It is told to adapt to high costs, but when it adapts too effectively, the adaptation becomes suspect.

This is why the question practically asks itself: are they scared of every household becoming a stockholder?

The fear may not be literal. Meralco may not fear every solar household as a corporate shareholder. But it may fear, or at least be structurally pressured by, the erosion of the old customer model. A customer who only consumes is predictable. A customer who produces, offsets, stores, and exports is more complicated. A community that can coordinate generation is even more complicated. A subdivision, school, factory cluster, parish, or barangay that can organize a microgrid begins to challenge the assumption that electricity must always be centrally controlled and distributed through one dominant franchise structure.

That is why another public comment was more radical: "Either we allow solar microgrid service cooperatives within the Meralco franchise area or we nationalize Meralco. Perhaps both."

This line should not be dismissed as mere online anger. It reflects a broader political instinct: when essential services feel too expensive, too centralized, and too insulated from ordinary consumers, people begin to look for structural alternatives. Some will call for cooperatives. Some will call for more aggressive regulation. Some will call for public ownership. Some will call for breaking up monopoly arrangements. These demands may differ in policy quality, but they share a common source: declining trust in the existing bargain.

The call to nationalize Meralco may sound extreme to some ears. But such calls do not arise from nowhere. They arise when citizens begin to believe that essential services are too important to be left to private dominance. They arise when the public feels that regulation has become too weak, too captured, or too technical to express popular anger. They arise when the monthly bill becomes a political document.

If nationalization is necessary, then yes, it is necessary. That statement should not be treated as a scandal in itself. Electricity is not merely another commodity moving through a private market. It is the operating blood of modern society. It powers homes, hospitals, factories, schools, transport systems, communications, food storage, water systems, digital work, and ordinary domestic life. Without electricity, the modern economy does not simply slow down; it begins to fail.

That is why electricity is not only a natural monopoly in the textbook sense. It is eminent domain by nature. It belongs to the category of services so essential that their control cannot be treated as purely private convenience. The wires may be owned by a company. The franchise may be granted by law. The assets may sit on corporate books. But the function itself is public in character. Electricity touches every household and every productive activity. It is infrastructure, necessity, and social power at once.

Nationalization is not automatically a solution. State ownership can be inefficient, politicized, corrupt, or financially unsustainable if badly designed and managed by the usual political appointee or a 'technocrat' that can't get away from the accustomed corporate world. A nationalized utility can fail consumers just as badly as a private monopoly if it becomes a vehicle for patronage or bureaucratic stagnation. But the return of nationalization as a slogan should still alarm private utilities. It means the public is beginning to believe that the existing model no longer deserves automatic legitimacy.

This is where the old Edisonian approach to utilities becomes politically fragile. The electric utility model inherited from the age of Thomas Edison accepted the idea that electricity distribution would often take the form of a centralized private monopoly, justified by scale, infrastructure costs, and technical coordination. In that older world, the customer consumed, the utility delivered, the regulator supervised, and the monopoly was tolerated because duplication of wires and systems seemed inefficient.

But rooftop solar has begun to disturb that settlement. It does not eliminate the need for the grid, but it weakens the ideological comfort of the private monopoly. It shows that generation can be distributed, that households can produce, that communities can organize, and that electricity does not always have to move from the center to the edge. The customer is no longer merely a load. He can become a participant.

In a time when entities still cling to an Edisonian approach to utilities as private monopolies, it is not surprising that those who install solar panels are seen as acting against the so-called natural monopolies embodied by private distributors. The solar roof becomes more than equipment. It becomes a quiet challenge to the old utility order. It says that the household need not remain entirely captive. It says that the community may generate some of its own power. It says that monopoly may still manage the wires, but it no longer owns the imagination of electricity.

A private distribution monopoly cannot claim permanent legitimacy while treating consumer self-generation as a suspicious deviation. If the public begins to feel that the franchise exists mainly to preserve dependence, the argument will no longer be about solar permits. It will be about who should control the infrastructure of modern life.

The same is true for solar microgrid cooperatives. They are not a magic answer. They require serious technical rules, financing models, governance structures, maintenance capacity, and consumer protections. Poorly managed cooperatives can fail. Unsafe microgrids can create hazards. But the idea is gaining emotional force because it responds to a real desire: the desire for communities to have some control over the cost and reliability of an essential service.

So much for the community being merely a social slogan. In the rooftop solar debate, the community begins to appear as something more serious: a potential energy actor. A subdivision can become a small power community. A barangay can become a resilience unit. A cluster of small firms can become a shared generation network. A school or church can become both a consumer and a producer. In this sense, the community is itself a small state capable of taking power—literal power—against the establishment.

That is precisely what makes the old system uneasy. The fear is not only about unsafe wiring. It is also about the possibility that crisis produces self-organizing citizens. A ratepayer who sees his bill rise repeatedly may begin with complaint, then move to conservation, then to solar, then to battery storage, then to community coordination, then to political demands. The household becomes a site of economic resistance not through ideology alone but through hardware. The roof becomes a quiet form of leverage.

This is what some might describe, provocatively, as the fear of having left-Kaczynskis in a time of crisis—not in the sense of endorsing violence or primitivism, but in the sense that modern systems can create their own critics when they become too expensive, too opaque, and too domineering. The more centralized and incomprehensible the system becomes, the more some citizens are tempted to withdraw from it, resist it, or build parallel alternatives. The ratepayer who was told to be rational and self-reliant may eventually ask why he should remain dependent on a machine that treats him mainly as a billing account.

This is not an argument for disorder. It is an argument for institutional intelligence. Meralco and regulators should not ignore genuine safety concerns. Rooftop solar systems must be properly installed. Equipment standards must exist. Installers must be qualified. Net metering must be orderly. Grid stability must be protected. Line workers must be safe. No responsible energy policy can pretend otherwise.

But the method matters. If regulation becomes punitive, expensive, confusing, or visibly protective of incumbents, it will intensify distrust. If regularization feels like punishment, households will hide. If standards become barriers to entry, consumers will suspect cartelization. If installer accreditation becomes too narrow, small installers will be pushed out and costs will rise. If net metering remains slow or difficult, people will bypass the process. In that case, the problem Meralco complains about will not be solved; it will be driven further underground.

The wiser approach is to regularize rather than suppress. Government and utilities should create a non-punitive pathway for unregistered rooftop solar owners to come forward. The process should be simple, affordable, and time-bound. There should be clear equipment standards, transparent installer qualifications, and inspection protocols that focus on safety rather than revenue protection. Dangerous systems should be corrected. Fraudulent installers should be penalized. Consumers who acted in good faith should be helped into compliance.

This approach would recognize the reality of the market. Rooftop solar adoption is already happening. The choice is not between rooftop solar and no rooftop solar. The choice is between safe, registered, integrated rooftop solar and a growing informal market shaped by confusion, high costs, and distrust. If Meralco truly wants safety, it should prefer regularization. If regulators truly want order, they should make the legal pathway easier than the informal pathway.

The broader policy framework should also stop treating rooftop solar as a nuisance attached to the old grid model. Distributed generation is not going away. Batteries will become more common. Businesses will continue to look for ways to manage power costs. Households will become more energy-conscious. Communities will explore shared systems. A modern distribution utility should be preparing for that future, not speaking as if the future is an inconvenience.

There is a business opportunity here if Meralco chooses to see it. Instead of being perceived as the institution that wants to control rooftop solar, it could position itself as the trusted integrator of distributed energy. It could help build certified installer networks, offer technical advisory services, partner on financing, develop safe interconnection packages, support battery-ready systems, and design community-level solutions that preserve grid stability while giving consumers more agency. It could shift from being merely the seller of delivered electricity to being the manager of a more complex energy ecosystem.

That would require a cultural shift. It would require Meralco to accept that the future customer may not be a passive load. The future customer may be a prosumer: sometimes consuming, sometimes producing, sometimes storing, sometimes exporting, and always watching the bill. That customer will expect transparency and speed. He will not tolerate bureaucratic obstacles dressed up as safety. He will compare alternatives. He will demand that regulation serve him, not merely manage him.

This also requires government to decide what kind of energy transition it wants. If the state wants renewable energy adoption, then rooftop solar cannot be treated as an elite accessory or a regulatory headache. It must be integrated into national energy planning. Net metering must be improved. Local governments must be aligned with national rules. Permitting must be simplified. Consumer education must be expanded. Financing must be widened. Technical schools should train installers. Standards should be enforced, but in a way that builds capacity rather than creates fear.

There is also a social equity issue. If rooftop solar becomes easier only for wealthy households and large commercial establishments, the transition will deepen inequality. Middle-income households, small businesses, schools, local markets, and cooperatives should also have access to safe and affordable solar options. Otherwise, energy independence becomes another privilege of capital. That would be a poor outcome in a country already burdened by unequal access to infrastructure and opportunity.

This is where microgrid cooperatives deserve serious discussion. They should not be romanticized, but neither should they be dismissed. A well-regulated cooperative model could allow communities to pool resources, share generation, manage local resilience, and reduce costs. It could be particularly useful for subdivisions, public markets, industrial estates, schools, and local institutions. The key is governance: clear accountability, technical competence, consumer protection, and coordination with the distribution grid.

The franchise question cannot be avoided. A distribution franchise is not a sacred title. It is a public privilege granted for public service. If distributed energy technologies change what service means, then franchise policy must evolve. That does not necessarily mean abolishing Meralco or nationalizing it tomorrow. But it does mean that the franchise cannot be used as a permanent wall against innovation. The public interest should come first, and the public interest now includes resilience, affordability, decarbonization, and consumer participation.

If private distribution remains the chosen model insisted by the status quo, then private distributors must accept a higher burden of legitimacy. They must not only deliver electricity; they must show that they are not obstructing the public’s ability to generate, save, cooperate, and become more resilient. If they cannot do that, then the demand for public ownership will keep returning. It will return not as nostalgia, but as a practical response to the feeling that private monopoly has become too powerful over a necessity of life.

Meralco’s greatest risk is therefore reputational. It may win support for technical standards and still lose public confidence if it appears to be standing between consumers and relief. In essential services, trust is a strategic asset. A utility that is seen as fair can ask for cooperation. A utility seen as defensive will face resistance even when its technical points are valid. This is why tone, sequencing, and policy design matter.

The company should openly acknowledge why rooftop solar is growing. It should say plainly that consumers are seeking relief from high electricity costs and that this desire is legitimate. It should affirm that rooftop solar has a place in the energy future. It should support a regularization program that does not punish good-faith adopters. It should distinguish clearly between unsafe installations, administrative noncompliance, and actual electricity theft. It should avoid language that makes consumers sound like enemies of the grid.

The distinction from electricity theft must be repeated because it is central. Illegal tapping and meter bypassing are acts of theft. They harm the system and other consumers. Rooftop solar, by contrast, is an act of self-generation. It may be badly installed. It may be undocumented. It may need correction. But it is not inherently theft. In fact, it may reduce strain on the grid if properly integrated. To blur that difference would be both unfair and strategically foolish.

The public understands this intuitively. That is why the backlash emerged so quickly. People know the difference between stealing electricity and trying to produce one’s own. They know the difference between a jumper wire and a solar panel. They know the difference between evading payment and reducing consumption. If Meralco does not make that distinction clear, the public will make it for them—and not gently.

At the heart of this issue is a changing idea of power. Electricity used to be something delivered from above. Now, increasingly, it can be produced from below. This does not eliminate the need for utilities. It does not make the grid obsolete. But it changes the moral and economic structure of the relationship. The consumer is no longer simply the endpoint of infrastructure. He can become a participant in it.

That is a profound shift. It deserves better than defensive language. It deserves a serious business and policy response.

The Philippines does not need unsafe rooftop solar. It does not need chaotic interconnection. It does not need fly-by-night installers, fake equipment, or avoidable electrical hazards. But neither does it need a regulatory regime that treats consumer self-reliance as a problem to be contained. The country needs a framework that makes rooftop solar safe, legal, accessible, and integrated. It needs rules that protect the grid without protecting monopoly psychology. It needs standards that help consumers comply rather than frighten them away.

The practical solution is clear enough. Establish technical standards. Certify equipment. Accredit installers. Streamline net metering. Create a regularization window for unregistered systems. Penalize dangerous and fraudulent actors. Educate consumers. Allow responsible community energy models. Require utilities to facilitate, not obstruct, distributed generation. Ensure that the process is affordable and transparent.

That is the reasonable middle path. It protects safety without suffocating initiative. It protects the grid without treating the public as a threat. It recognizes that Meralco has legitimate technical concerns while also recognizing that consumers have legitimate economic grievances.

The worst path would be to turn rooftop solar into another battleground between monopoly and survival. If that happens, the politics will only harden. Consumers will begin to see every technical requirement as anti-solar. Utilities will see every informal installation as defiance. Regulators will be caught between engineering realities and public anger. The result will be less trust, slower compliance, and a more polarized energy transition.

Meralco should avoid that outcome. It should tread lightly, as the commenter warned, not because rooftop solar owners are above regulation, but because the issue touches a raw public nerve. Electricity is not an ordinary commodity. It is part of daily survival. When people act to reduce their dependence on a costly essential service, they are not merely making a consumer choice. They are making an economic and civic statement.

The solar roof says the old bargain is no longer enough. It says the consumer is tired of being only a payer. It says the household wants some measure of control. It says the community may no longer accept being permanently passive. It says that self-reliance, once preached as a virtue, has now become a technology.

That is the irony Meralco must confront. For years, the public was told to conserve, adjust, endure, innovate, and be self-reliant. Now that consumers are doing so through rooftop solar, the system must decide whether it truly believes in self-reliance or only in obedience.

The answer will shape more than solar policy. It will shape public trust in the energy sector itself. It will shape whether private utilities can retain legitimacy in an age of distributed generation. It will shape whether the franchise remains a public-service instrument or becomes a symbol of private control over public necessity.

The sun does not belong to Meralco, Congress, regulators, or any boardroom. It falls on every roof. The real question is whether the power system will learn to live with that fact intelligently—or whether it will make the mistake of treating sunlight as competition.

Sunday, 3 May 2026

The Miseducation of Gratitude

The Miseducation of Gratitude

Or: "Why Constantino is Misread — and Why Moralism is Repeated
in a Time of National Upsurge"

By: Lualhati Madalangawa-Guererro


Renato Constantino
(1919-1999)
There are moments in the life of a country when old phrases return with new force. They reappear not because they are fashionable, but because the conditions that first gave them urgency have not disappeared. In the Philippines, one such phrase is Renato Constantino’s "The Miseducation of the Filipino". It is quoted in classrooms, cited in student circles, invoked in arguments about language, history, labor, national policy, colonial mentality, and the purpose of education. Yet it is also frequently misunderstood — not only by those who disagree with it, but also by those who reduce it to a slogan.

The deeper problem is that the misunderstanding itself becomes evidence of the very miseducation Constantino described.

When some people hear the word “miseducation,” they assume the argument is merely that colonial education was foreign, and therefore bad. They answer with the usual inventory: schools, roads, English, universities, civil service, courts, business methods, professional training, and technical discipline. They ask whether the Filipino is supposed to reject all these. They ask whether studying in the University of the Philippines, or in any modern institution, should not produce gratitude toward the colonizer because the colonizer supposedly “did good.” They say that the system is already there, that one must deal with it, that people should not complain about the “goodness” left behind.

But this is not an answer to Constantino. It is a symptom of the disease.

Constantino’s essay was not a demand that the Filipino retreat from modernity. It was not an order to burn books, abolish English, smash institutions, reject science, or return to some imagined precolonial innocence. His proposition was more serious: education is not neutral. It is a social instrument. It either forms a people capable of freedom, or it trains them to live conveniently inside another people’s design. Constantino began his essay by calling education a “vital weapon” in the struggle for economic emancipation, political independence, and cultural renaissance. For him, Philippine education had to produce citizens who understood national problems and possessed the courage to work for the country’s salvation.

That is why the current resort to moralism matters. When national consciousness rises, moralistic rebuttals often rise with it. The student asks about colonialism; the answer is gratitude. The worker asks about wages; the answer is discipline. The citizen asks about sovereignty; the answer is practicality. The young person asks about history; the answer is “values formation.” The educated Filipino asks what kind of nation must be built; the answer is that the system already exists and one must be thankful for whatever food it has placed on the table.

This introduction, then, begins from a simple contention: the misreading of Constantino is not merely an academic mistake. It is a political and moral reflex. It reveals a mindset that confuses benefit with benevolence, survival with justice, schooling with education, and gratitude with submission. In this view, colonialism may be condemned only after its “gifts” have been properly acknowledged; labor may ask for dignity only after proving discipline; students may study history only if it does not disturb employability; and citizens may love the nation only in forms that do not challenge the inherited order.

Such a view is not education. It is pacification with manners.

The Business of Miseducation 

A business-style reading of miseducation begins with a deceptively simple question: "what kind of person did the school system intend to produce?" This is not a cynical question, nor is it an attempt to reduce education to factory logic. It is a necessary institutional question. Every system has an output. Every curriculum carries an assumption about the human being it hopes to form. Every school, whether it admits it or not, trains not only the mind but also the habits, loyalties, fears, ambitions, and limits of the person passing through it.

A seminary produces clergy trained to interpret doctrine, shepherd communities, and preserve a religious tradition. A military academy produces officers trained to command, obey, calculate risk, and defend a state. A technical school produces specialists who can operate machines, design systems, or solve practical problems. A business school produces managers who can read markets, organize capital, and impose efficiency on human activity. In the same way, a colonial school system produces a particular kind of subject: not simply a literate person, but a governed person; not simply a professional, but an intermediary; not simply a citizen-in-training, but a native made useful to an order he did not design.

This is why Constantino’s argument remains unsettling. He did not treat colonial education as a harmless extension of enlightenment. He treated it as part of the machinery of rule. In his view, American colonial education in the Philippines was not an accidental act of generosity, nor merely the arrival of modern schooling in a land supposedly waiting to be civilized. It was a system introduced under specific political conditions: conquest, military occupation, pacification, and the defeat of a nationalist revolution. It came after Filipinos had already asserted a claim to independence. It came after force had been used to settle the question of sovereignty. Education, therefore, did not arrive in an empty room. It entered a room already rearranged by power.

That context matters because institutions must be judged by function, not merely by appearance. A schoolhouse may look benevolent. A textbook may look neutral. A classroom may appear to be an innocent place of instruction. Yet the social purpose of education depends on the political order that builds it. If a free republic builds schools, those schools may be designed to deepen citizenship. If a colonial power builds schools, those schools may be designed to stabilize rule. In both cases, children may learn reading, writing, arithmetic, hygiene, history, and language. But the deeper question remains: toward what consciousness are they being led?

Constantino specifically argued that the educational system introduced under the Americans corresponded to American colonialism and to the “economic and political reality of American conquest.” That sentence is crucial because it refuses sentimental interpretation. It does not deny that education happened. It asks what kind of education was necessary for a conquered country to be governed. A colonial order required Filipinos who could communicate with the regime, serve in offices, administer records, teach the next generation, participate in commerce, and accept the language and assumptions of the new authority. It needed a class fluent enough to function inside the colonial machine, but not sovereign enough to question the machine’s design.

This kind of education produced a native intermediary: educated enough to administer, obedient enough to trust, ambitious enough to imitate, and grateful enough to mistake training for liberation. Such a person could become a clerk, teacher, lawyer, minor official, translator, accountant, journalist, or professional. He might rise in status. He might speak the language of the ruler with polish. He might become more employable than his less-schooled countrymen. But the test of miseducation was never whether he could succeed personally. The test was whether his education equipped him to understand the condition of his own people and to participate in the building of a sovereign national life.

That is where the business analogy becomes useful. A manager does not judge a system merely by whether it produces activity. He asks whether it produces the intended result. A factory that produces goods unsuited to local need is inefficient, no matter how busy its machines appear. A corporation that trains employees only to serve another company’s strategic interest has failed its own shareholders. In the same way, an educational system in a colonized country cannot be judged merely by literacy rates, professional output, or bureaucratic efficiency. It must be judged by whether it produces citizens capable of national direction.

The practical question, then, is not whether colonial education taught literacy. It did. Nor is it whether it produced clerks, teachers, professionals, civil servants, and administrators. It did. Nor is it whether many Filipinos used colonial education to improve their own lives. They did, often with brilliance and sacrifice. But none of these facts settles the issue. The harder question is whether the system was designed to create a people conscious of their national condition, capable of economic independence, and prepared for political self-direction. Constantino’s answer was no. The system could produce competence, but not necessarily sovereignty. It could produce advancement, but not necessarily emancipation. It could produce employability, but not necessarily national consciousness.

This is precisely the point that many defenders of colonial gratitude fail to grasp. They continue to answer a different question from the one Constantino asked. They ask whether the colonizer provided something useful. If the answer is yes, they conclude that gratitude must follow. This is the ledger-book view of history. It treats colonization as though it were a business account: injuries on one side, infrastructure on the other; domination on one side, education on the other; humiliation on one side, employment on the other. Then it asks whether the account ended in profit.

But a nation is not a ledger. Freedom is not an accounting entry. A people cannot be asked to total the roads, schools, courts, and offices left by domination and then pronounce domination justified if the arithmetic appears favorable. Such reasoning confuses utility with justice. It assumes that because a thing became useful to the colonized, it must have been benevolent in its origin. But history is more complicated than that. People often transform what was imposed on them. They turn instruments of control into tools of survival. They use the colonizer’s language to write against empire. They use inherited courts to demand rights. They use schools originally designed for compliance to form rebels, critics, reformers, and nationalists. But the later use of a tool does not sanctify the original purpose for which it was forged.

This is why the question of gratitude becomes misleading. A structure may produce some useful goods and still be unjust in origin, design, and operation. A plantation may feed its workers and still exploit them. A mine may provide wages and still consume the bodies of laborers. A dictatorship may build highways and still destroy freedom. An empire may construct roads and still dominate those who travel on them. A colonial school may teach reading and still train the mind to admire subordination. The existence of benefit does not prove the absence of injury. The presence of utility does not prove benevolence.

In fact, miseducation often works precisely by turning limited benefits into moral evidence for the system. It teaches the subject to say: because he learned, the system was good; because he survived, the system was justified; because he found employment, the structure was fair; because he gained a credential, the institution was liberating. The person trained this way becomes unable to distinguish between personal advancement and collective emancipation. He may rise above his neighbors and think the ladder itself is proof of justice, without asking who built the ladder, where it leads, and why so many remain below.

This is the core of the business of miseducation. The colonial school system did not need to produce fools. It could produce intelligent, competent, and industrious people. Indeed, it had to. A functioning colonial order required capable locals. It needed teachers, accountants, nurses, lawyers, translators, supervisors, police, clerks, technicians, and administrators. But intelligence alone does not guarantee freedom. A person may be highly trained and still politically domesticated. He may master the colonizer’s language but lose confidence in his own society. He may become professionally successful while accepting national dependency as common sense. He may speak of progress while measuring progress by the standards of the former master.

That distinction — between usefulness and justice, between schooling and liberation, between personal success and national consciousness — is precisely what miseducation erases. It encourages the Filipino to see inherited institutions as gifts rather than as contested instruments. It encourages him to treat survival as proof of goodness. It encourages him to answer criticism with gratitude, and history with practicality. Above all, it teaches him to mistake the ability to function within a system for the freedom to transform it.

A genuinely national education would reverse that logic. It would not ask students to despise every inheritance, nor would it indulge in empty nostalgia. It would teach them to examine institutions as historical products. It would ask who designed them, whose interests they served, what habits they produced, what possibilities they closed, and how they might be remade for the people. It would teach that a tool may be retained without worshiping the power that introduced it. It would teach that a nation may use roads, schools, courts, languages, and bureaucracies without surrendering moral judgment over the domination that shaped them.

In that sense, the business of education should not be merely the production of employable individuals. It should be the formation of citizens capable of historical judgment and national responsibility. The failure of colonial education, as Constantino understood it, was not that it taught too much foreign knowledge. It was that it taught Filipinos too little about themselves as agents of history. It made them participants in administration, but not always authors of national destiny. It gave them tools, but not always the consciousness to ask what the tools were for.

That is why the business of miseducation remains unfinished. It continues wherever education is reduced to employment, wherever history is replaced by obedience, wherever gratitude is used to silence criticism, and wherever the success of a few is used to justify the subordination of many. It continues whenever the Filipino is told that because the system gave him something, he must not ask what the system took away.

Gratitude as Managerial Discipline

The most effective defense of a system is not always force. Force may silence opposition, but it also exposes the insecurity of the power that uses it. Gratitude is subtler. It enters the conscience before it enters the law. It does not need police lines, censorship boards, or formal prohibitions. It asks the subject to discipline himself. It teaches him to look at what he has received before he looks at what has been taken from him. It tells him that criticism is morally improper because some benefit has already been granted. In that sense, gratitude can become one of the most economical instruments of social control.

This is why gratitude appears so harmless. It sounds like a virtue, and in private life it often is. A person should be grateful to parents who sacrificed, to teachers who taught, to workers who produced, to farmers who fed, to nurses who cared, to writers who preserved memory, to taxpayers who sustained public institutions, and to all the unseen hands whose labor makes education and survival possible. A society without gratitude becomes crude, arrogant, and forgetful. It loses the ability to recognize dependence, sacrifice, and inherited obligation. No serious moral life can exist without some form of gratitude.

But gratitude becomes political when it is used to prevent judgment. It becomes managerial when it is used not to deepen responsibility, but to suppress inquiry. The moment gratitude is converted into a command to stop thinking, it ceases to be a virtue and becomes discipline. It no longer says, “Remember those who helped you.” It says, “Do not question those who ruled you.” It no longer teaches humility before sacrifice. It teaches silence before power.

This is the logic of the moralistic defender of the system. The system fed him, therefore he must not criticize it. The colonizer built schools, therefore the colonized must be grateful. The employer gave work, therefore the worker must not complain. The university gave credentials, therefore the graduate must not interrogate the institution’s history. The state gave order, therefore the citizen must not ask what kind of order was imposed, whose interests it served, who paid for it, and who was excluded from its benefits. In each case, gratitude is not being used to cultivate responsibility. It is being used to narrow the field of permissible thought.

This is not gratitude in any serious sense. It is obedience disguised as virtue. True gratitude expands the moral imagination because it reminds a person that life is sustained by others. False gratitude shrinks the moral imagination because it tells a person that receiving anything from a system obliges him to accept the system as good. The first produces responsibility. The second produces submission. The first honors sacrifice. The second protects power.

In business language, this is a form of reputational shielding. A firm with a poor labor record may sponsor scholarships and call itself socially responsible. A monopoly may donate to charity and present itself as a partner in development. A government may build infrastructure and treat the visible road as an answer to every invisible injustice. A colonial power may open schools and use literacy as proof of benevolence. In each case, the institution converts partial benefits into moral immunity. It uses selective goods to cover structural injury. It places a plaque over the wound and calls the plaque civilization.

This technique works because benefits are real. The school may indeed teach. The road may indeed connect towns. The employer may indeed pay wages. The state may indeed provide order. The university may indeed give credentials. The problem is not that these things are false. The problem is that they are made to carry a moral burden they cannot bear. A useful act cannot automatically justify an unjust structure. A benefit does not erase domination. A wage does not cancel exploitation. A credential does not redeem miseducation. A meal does not prove that the arrangement that produced it is just.

This is why the phrase “food on the table” is so powerful and so dangerous. It is powerful because hunger is real. No honest critic should dismiss the urgency of survival. The poor cannot eat theory. A family cannot pay rent with abstract nationalism. A student whose parents sacrificed for tuition may indeed feel pressure to choose the course that leads to employment. A worker with children, debts, medicine, transport fares, and rising prices may accept humiliation because survival is more immediate than dignity. It would be cruel to speak of freedom in a way that ignores hunger.

But the same phrase becomes dangerous when survival is weaponized against criticism. Once “food on the table” becomes the supreme argument, every injustice can be defended by the mere fact that the victim did not perish. A colonized people survived colonization; therefore colonization is called good. A worker survived low wages; therefore the employer is called generous. A student survived a misdirected education; therefore the school is called sufficient. A nation survived dependency; therefore dependency is called practical. The argument begins with compassion for necessity but ends by consecrating the very conditions that made necessity so brutal.

This reduces human life to endurance. It teaches people to judge systems not by whether they produce dignity, justice, freedom, and public responsibility, but by whether they allow enough people to continue breathing, eating, working, and paying bills. Under this logic, the exploited are told to be grateful because they were not abandoned entirely. The colonized are told to be grateful because conquest came with classrooms. The underpaid are told to be grateful because unemployment would be worse. The miseducated are told to be grateful because credentials still have market value. The nation is told to be grateful because dependence has not yet become collapse.

A serious nation cannot build its philosophy on the idea that survival is proof of justice. Survival may prove only that people were strong enough to endure a bad arrangement. A tenant may survive a predatory landlord. A laborer may survive a dangerous workplace. A peasant may survive usury. A student may survive an education that taught him to admire his own subordination. A country may survive a century of dependency. But survival alone cannot be the measure of a civilized order. If it were, every oppressive system could claim success so long as its victims remained alive.

The confusion becomes sharper when gratitude is directed upward rather than outward. The worker is told to thank the employer, but not the fellow workers whose labor created value. The student is told to thank the institution, but not the taxpayers, janitors, teachers, librarians, writers, and public servants who made education possible. The citizen is told to thank the state, but not the people whose labor finances the state. The colonized are told to thank the colonizer, but not their own ancestors who resisted, adapted, translated, preserved, and transformed what domination tried to control. False gratitude always points toward power. True gratitude remembers the people.

This is why gratitude, when distorted, becomes managerial discipline. It manages anger. It manages memory. It manages expectation. It tells workers that wage demands are selfish because they already have jobs. It tells students that historical criticism is bitterness because they already have schools. It tells citizens that national questions are impractical because they already have roads, courts, and offices. It tells the poor that survival should be enough because others have less. It tells the educated that their credentials are proof that the system worked, even when those credentials trained them to accept the system’s limits.

The managerial use of gratitude also works by redefining criticism as a character flaw. The critic is not answered on the merits of his argument. He is described as ungrateful, arrogant, spoiled, ideological, or unrealistic. The worker is not asked whether wages are fair; he is told that many people have no work. The student is not asked whether the curriculum produces national consciousness; he is told that education is a privilege. The citizen is not asked whether inherited institutions serve the public; he is told that things could be worse. Thus the original question disappears. Moral accusation replaces analysis.

This is especially effective in a society where family sacrifice is real. Many Filipinos are raised within an economy of obligation: parents sacrifice for schooling, siblings support one another, relatives remit money, and entire households arrange themselves around the hope that one graduate will lift the family. In such a setting, practicality carries moral force. To question education’s purpose can sound like ingratitude to those who paid for tuition. To choose history, literature, philosophy, or the arts can sound like betrayal when the family expects a stable job. To speak of national transformation can sound irresponsible when bills must be paid. The system hides behind the family’s fear.

But fear is not philosophy. It may explain why people choose survival; it cannot prove that survival is enough. A country may understand why families push children toward employable courses and still insist that education must be more than employability. It may understand why workers avoid conflict and still insist that labor has a price. It may understand why citizens cling to order and still insist that order must be judged by justice. Serious thought begins when compassion for necessity does not become worship of necessity.

This is where Constantino’s warning remains alive. Miseducation is not only a matter of wrong textbooks or foreign curricula. It is also a moral habit. It is the habit of treating the existing system as the final horizon of thought. It is the habit of answering structural criticism with personal obligation. It is the habit of telling people that because they have received something, they must not ask what was taken, distorted, postponed, or denied. It is the habit of converting survival into gratitude and gratitude into silence.

A truly national education would teach a different kind of gratitude. It would teach the student to be grateful, yes, but not servile. It would direct gratitude toward the people whose labor sustains the nation, not merely toward the institutions that govern it. It would teach that one may be grateful for learning while still criticizing the curriculum; grateful for work while still demanding fair wages; grateful for public order while still asking whether the order is just; grateful for inherited tools while still condemning the domination through which many of those tools arrived. It would teach that gratitude is not the end of judgment, but the beginning of responsibility.

The proper question, therefore, is not whether people should be grateful. Of course they should. The question is whether gratitude should lead them to serve the nation or submit to the system. The first kind produces citizens. The second produces subjects. The first enlarges the conscience. The second polices it. The first remembers sacrifice. The second excuses power.

A serious nation must reject the cheap morality that says survival is enough and gratitude should close the argument. It must insist that the table on which food is placed also be examined: who owns it, who built it, who serves it, who eats first, who eats last, and who is told to be thankful for crumbs. Only then can gratitude be rescued from managerial discipline and returned to its proper place — not as a gag placed over the mouth of criticism, but as a debt owed to the people and discharged through the work of building something better.

The Misreading of Constantino

The common misreading of Constantino proceeds from a mistake that appears reasonable only because it is repeated so often. It assumes that criticism of colonial education must mean hatred of education itself, or that criticism of colonial inheritance must mean rejection of every institution, language, law, tool, and method that passed through colonial rule. This is a convenient misunderstanding because it allows the defender of the old system to avoid the central question. Instead of asking what colonial education was designed to do, he asks whether the Filipino is willing to live without schools, roads, courts, English, professions, and administrative order. The argument becomes theatrical. The nationalist is made to look childish, romantic, and ungrateful, while the defender of the system presents himself as practical, mature, and realistic.

But the misreading is built on three false assumptions.
  • The first assumption is that because colonialism left behind institutions, those institutions must be accepted with gratitude. This is the morality of inheritance without judgment. It says that the mere existence of schools, roads, courts, universities, offices, and professional systems proves the benevolence of the power that introduced or reorganized them. It treats inherited structures as gifts, and gifts as moral debts. Under this logic, the colonized subject must not ask too many questions about origin, purpose, design, or cost. He must begin from thankfulness, and if he begins from thankfulness, he will be less inclined to pursue judgment.

  • The second assumption is that criticism of colonialism is equivalent to rejecting everything inherited from colonialism. This is the caricature that makes serious discussion impossible. If the critic questions American colonial education, he is asked whether he wants to abolish English. If he condemns Spanish rule, he is asked whether he wants to erase Christianity, universities, towns, or legal traditions. If he criticizes imported institutions, he is accused of wanting to return to an imagined past. The effect is to turn decolonization into a straw man. Instead of being understood as an examination of power and inheritance, it is presented as irrational nostalgia.

  • The third assumption is that the proper function of education is not liberation or nation-building, but adjustment to reality. This may be the most dangerous assumption because it sounds most practical. It says that education is valuable because it helps the student survive within the system as it exists. It helps him get a job, speak the accepted language, pass examinations, enter an office, migrate, become employable, and adapt to the demands of the market. All of these may be necessary in a poor country. But if adaptation becomes the whole philosophy of education, the school ceases to form citizens and begins to manufacture compliant survivors. It teaches the student not to ask why the system is arranged as it is, only how to succeed inside it.
All three assumptions are wrong because they confuse use with worship, criticism with rejection, and education with adjustment. A people may use inherited institutions without treating them as sacred. A nation may criticize colonialism without rejecting every tool that history has placed in its hands. A student may seek employment without believing that employability is the highest purpose of education. The real question is not whether inherited things exist or whether they can be useful. The real question is whether the Filipino has enough historical consciousness to understand how those things were formed, what they once served, what they continue to reproduce, and how they may be transformed.

Constantino did not say that the Filipino should become incapable of using inherited tools. He was not asking the Filipino to become linguistically helpless, institutionally primitive, or technologically backward. He was asking who designed the tools, why they were designed, what habits they produced, and what consciousness they formed. A tool is not judged only by its present usefulness. It must also be judged by the social relation embedded in it. A language may open doors, but it may also create distance from one’s own people. A school may teach literacy, but it may also teach admiration for the conqueror. A court may speak of law, but it may also preserve property relations shaped by conquest. An office may impose order, but it may also train the citizen to confuse bureaucracy with justice.

This is why Constantino’s concern was never merely the existence of colonial education. His concern was the formation of the colonial mind. The colonial mind is not simply a mind that knows foreign things. A free people may learn foreign languages, sciences, technologies, literatures, and methods without becoming colonized in spirit. The colonial mind is different. It measures intelligence by distance from the native. It mistakes foreign approval for civilization. It sees the people as backward and the colonizer as the source of order. It learns to admire the framework that subordinates it. It may criticize poverty, corruption, and disorder, but it rarely asks how dependency was historically produced. It may love the country sentimentally, but it distrusts the country’s capacity to think, build, and direct itself.

Constantino’s most unsettling point is that conquest does not end when the shooting stops. It continues when the conquered people begin to interpret themselves through the categories of the conqueror. He wrote that the most effective means of subjugating a people is to “capture their minds.” That phrase is severe because it places education inside the politics of power. The gun may seize territory, but the school can normalize the seizure. The army may defeat a republic, but the curriculum can teach future generations to see that defeat as the beginning of civilization. The colonial state may impose authority, but the classroom can make that authority appear natural, benevolent, and modern.

He also argued that American military authorities saw education as a quick means of pacifying the islands after conquest. That argument cuts against the sentimental story of education as pure benevolence. If schooling was understood as pacification, then it cannot be discussed only as charity. It must be discussed as strategy. Pacification does not merely mean preventing open rebellion. It means reorganizing the expectations of the governed. It means training people to seek advancement within the new order rather than independence outside it. It means producing a population that can be administered, classified, instructed, employed, and persuaded that the road to progress passes through the institutions of the conqueror.

That is the uncomfortable part. Once education is understood as pacification, the sentimental narrative collapses. The schoolhouse can no longer be viewed merely as a gift placed before a grateful people. It becomes an instrument within a larger political design. It may teach reading, writing, arithmetic, hygiene, and civic procedure, but it may also teach a hierarchy of admiration. It may teach the child to look upward toward the colonizer for standards, models, language, and legitimacy. It may produce professionals, but also a professional class that equates civilization with foreignness. It may produce fluency, but also estrangement from the majority who do not speak in the same idiom of power.

This does not mean that every teacher was a conscious agent of domination, or that every student was a passive victim. History is never so simple. Many teachers acted with sincerity. Many students used the school to rise, resist, write, organize, and think beyond the limits intended for them. Colonial institutions are often contradictory. They may be designed for control yet become sites of criticism. They may teach obedience yet accidentally provide the tools of dissent. A colonized people is not inert. It adapts, appropriates, transforms, and subverts. But the existence of resistance within a system does not erase the system’s design. It merely proves that people are capable of turning even constrained spaces into arenas of struggle.

This is why the misreading of Constantino becomes an implied miseducation. The person who misreads him often imagines that the issue is whether education brought benefits. Because he can point to benefits, he thinks the critique has been answered. But Constantino was not writing a receipt of benefits. He was asking about consciousness. The miseducated person therefore reveals himself not by ignorance, but by the narrowness of his categories. He can count schools but cannot ask what kind of person they formed. He can praise English but cannot ask what it did to social distance. He can cite employment but cannot ask what kind of economy made employment the highest measure of education. He can defend practicality but cannot ask practical for whom, under what system, and toward what national end.

The miseducated person does not necessarily lack schooling. In fact, he may have too much schooling of a certain kind. He may be articulate, credentialed, respectable, employable, and polite. He may have mastered the vocabulary of professionalism. He may speak of productivity, discipline, competitiveness, values, resilience, gratitude, and opportunity. He may appear modern in every outward respect. Yet he may still be unable to ask whether the system that shaped him was designed for national emancipation or colonial convenience. He may be skilled in navigating institutions, but untrained in judging them. He may know how to succeed in the inherited order, but not how to imagine an order more worthy of the nation.

This figure is especially visible in societies where education has been made synonymous with social mobility. The family sacrifices, the student studies, the graduate obtains a credential, and the credential becomes a passport out of insecurity. Because the process is painful and expensive, criticism of the system feels like an insult to those sacrifices. The graduate is told to be grateful because education gave him a way out. But the nationalist question is not whether education helped him personally. The question is whether education helped the country collectively. Did it create a citizen capable of understanding land, labor, industry, sovereignty, culture, and public responsibility? Or did it create a professional whose main ambition is to escape the conditions of his own people?

The result is a strange figure: the schooled subject who mistakes his schooling for freedom. He has certificates, but not necessarily historical consciousness. He has language, but not necessarily rootedness. He has employment, but not necessarily dignity. He has manners, but not necessarily courage. He has values, but not necessarily justice. He has gratitude, but not necessarily responsibility. He knows how to function inside the system, and because he functions inside it, he assumes the system has been vindicated.

This is the most refined form of miseducation. It does not produce a fool. It produces a competent subject. It does not abolish intelligence. It directs intelligence toward adjustment. It does not prevent ambition. It channels ambition toward individual escape. It does not forbid patriotism. It permits patriotic sentiment so long as that sentiment does not question the foundations of dependency. It does not oppose values. It promotes values that keep citizens quiet, disciplined, and grateful.

To read Constantino properly, then, is to refuse the false choice between inherited tools and national consciousness. The Filipino need not reject schools, English, law, science, technical education, business methods, or modern institutions. But he must refuse to treat them as holy gifts that cancel the history of conquest. He must examine them, alter them, localize them, democratize them, and place them in the service of national life. He must learn to use the tools without inheriting the posture of subordination that came with them.

The misreading of Constantino survives because it is comfortable. It allows the educated class to preserve its self-image. It allows beneficiaries of the system to call themselves practical. It allows moralists to treat criticism as ingratitude. It allows institutions to present their outputs as proof of virtue. It allows colonial inheritance to continue without audit. But an education worthy of a free people cannot be built on comfort. It must begin by asking what kind of mind the school has produced, and whether that mind is prepared merely to be employed by history or to help make it.

The Colonial Ledger and the Myth of Benevolence

The colonial ledger is one of the oldest arguments in defense of domination. It appears reasonable because it speaks in the language of evidence. It says the colonizer brought roads, schools, law, order, language, medicine, religion, commerce, professional training, administrative method, and modern discipline. It lists these things one by one as though history were an inventory of deliverables. It asks how a colonized people can condemn colonialism while continuing to benefit from its residues. It demands gratitude not by denying violence, but by placing violence beside infrastructure and asking the colonized to admire the balance.

This is the logic of the ledger. It does not need to say that conquest was painless. It only needs to say that conquest was productive. It admits injury, but then asks whether the injury was compensated by the roads. It admits subordination, but then asks whether subordination was softened by schools. It admits hierarchy, but then asks whether hierarchy was redeemed by law, religion, commerce, and professional advancement. In that manner, colonial rule is made to resemble a business transaction: there were costs, yes, but also benefits; there were losses, yes, but also assets; there was humiliation, yes, but also modernization.

But a country is not a balance sheet, and a people are not shareholders in their own conquest. Colonial rule was not a contract between equal parties. It was not a voluntary merger. It was not an investment arrangement in which the colonized freely exchanged sovereignty for infrastructure. It was the reorganization of a society under foreign power. To judge it by listing benefits is to mistake administration for justice. It is to ask whether the prison was well-managed while avoiding the question of why the prisoners were there.

The answer to the colonial ledger is simple, though it is often resisted: a people may use what history has left them without worshiping the power that imposed it. There is no contradiction in using an inherited tool while condemning the domination through which that tool arrived. Human societies do this constantly. They inherit damaged institutions, repurpose imposed systems, transform foreign languages, democratize elite spaces, and turn instruments of control into means of expression. The colonized are not morally required to discard every tool in order to prove that domination was wrong. They are required only to remember that usefulness does not equal benevolence.

A Filipino may use English without believing that American rule was morally justified. English may serve as a language of law, business, diplomacy, education, migration, literature, and global communication. It may open doors. It may allow Filipinos to work, write, argue, teach, and participate in international life. But none of that requires the Filipino to conclude that the colonial order that privileged English was just. A language can be useful and still carry a history of hierarchy. It can become a Filipino tool without becoming proof of colonial kindness.

A lawyer may use inherited legal forms without thanking colonial subordination. Courts, statutes, procedures, pleadings, and constitutional language may have passed through colonial influence. They may now serve Filipino citizens seeking rights and remedies. But the use of those forms does not sanctify the political order that once shaped them. Law can be inherited and still be interrogated. It can be used and still be localized. It can provide procedure and still conceal inequity. The real question is not whether the legal form exists, but whether it serves justice in the society that now claims it.

A student may study in a modern university without concluding that conquest was benevolent. The university may teach science, medicine, engineering, literature, political thought, economics, business, and public administration. It may form professionals and intellectuals. It may give the poor a narrow path to mobility. But the institution’s usefulness does not require reverence toward the colonial history that helped shape modern education. The proper response to education is not uncritical thankfulness to power. It is responsibility toward the people whose labor, taxes, struggles, and sacrifices made education possible.

A Christian may practice the faith without endorsing the violence of forced conversion, friar domination, or colonial hierarchy. Religion, like language, can be received, transformed, indigenized, and made part of a people’s moral universe. Faith can outgrow the empire that carried it. The believer need not despise his faith in order to condemn the coercive structures that once accompanied its spread. To say this is not anti-religious. It is historically honest. It distinguishes spiritual life from the political uses to which religion was attached.

A citizen may use roads, bridges, ports, courts, offices, records, and public institutions while still condemning the domination that helped shape them. The road may carry farmers to market, children to school, workers to factories, patients to hospitals, and families to one another. But a road may also have been built first for troops, extraction, taxation, plantation routes, administrative reach, or the movement of goods out of the colony. Later usefulness does not erase original purpose. The nation may travel on the colonizer’s road, but it must not forget where that road was first meant to lead.

The serious distinction, therefore, is not between use and rejection. It is between inheritance and reverence. Inheritance is unavoidable. Every nation receives a past it did not fully choose. It receives languages, laws, debts, institutions, habits, borders, churches, schools, land systems, class structures, and administrative routines. Reverence is different. Reverence is the decision to treat inheritance as sacred, to place it beyond criticism, and to confuse its mere survival with moral legitimacy. A mature nation inherits without kneeling. It uses without worshiping. It remembers without being imprisoned. It transforms without pretending that the past was innocent.

This is why decolonization does not require a childish return to the past. It is not a call to abandon modern medicine, science, law, engineering, business methods, public administration, international language, or global exchange. Such a caricature is often used by those who do not want the audit to begin. They present decolonization as if it meant burning libraries, closing universities, abolishing English, rejecting technology, and retreating into folklore. But decolonization, at its serious level, is not regression. It is adult ownership of the present.

Adult ownership means asking what must be retained, what must be revised, what must be localized, what must be democratized, what must be discarded, and what must be judged without fear. It means looking at inherited institutions not as relics to be worshiped, but as systems to be examined. It asks whether the school forms citizens or merely employees. It asks whether language connects Filipinos to the world while disconnecting them from one another. It asks whether law protects the weak or merely formalizes inequality. It asks whether commerce builds national capacity or deepens dependency. It asks whether professional training serves the country or prepares the best minds to leave it.

This is also where postcolonial thinking matters. It is not an invitation to go backward. It is a discipline of examination after formal independence. It asks how colonial arrangements survive when the flag has changed. It asks how dependency continues through trade patterns, educational prestige, media standards, cultural taste, elite formation, foreign approval, language hierarchy, property relations, and the habit of thinking that national worth must be certified abroad. It asks how a country can be politically independent and still mentally deferential, economically exposed, culturally insecure, and administratively patterned after systems designed elsewhere.

The postcolonial question is therefore not merely historical. It is operational. It concerns how decisions are made, what investments are prioritized, what languages command authority, whose knowledge counts, what kinds of work are dignified, what kinds of industries are developed, and what type of citizen the school system produces. It is about whether the country can act as author of its future or merely as manager of inherited arrangements. It is about sovereignty not as a ceremony, but as a capacity.

Those who dismiss decolonization as nostalgia often reveal that they have not understood the problem. They imagine that the only alternatives are colonial inheritance or romantic primitivism, modernity or backwardness, English or isolation, global participation or native provincialism. This is a false choice. The issue is not whether the Filipino should abandon modern tools. The issue is whether the Filipino can transform tools once designed for dependency into instruments of sovereignty. The issue is whether inherited institutions can be made accountable to national purpose.

This distinction matters because a tool can continue to reproduce the assumptions of the power that designed it. A curriculum may continue to privilege foreign experience as universal and local experience as anecdotal. A business school may teach management without asking what kind of national economy its managers serve. A legal education may train advocates in procedure while leaving them indifferent to structural injustice. A language policy may produce fluent professionals while deepening social distance. A media system may imitate foreign standards while failing to understand the common life of its own people. In each case, the problem is not the existence of the tool. It is the direction of the tool.

The colonial ledger tries to end the argument by saying that the tools exist and are useful. But the nationalist audit begins precisely there. Useful for whom? Useful toward what end? Useful under whose control? Useful at what cost? Useful in building national capacity, or useful merely in making the colonized more employable within someone else’s order? These are not romantic questions. They are business questions, development questions, policy questions, and moral questions.

A serious country does not reject assets because their history is complicated. But neither does it mistake assets for emancipation. A port can expand trade, but trade may still deepen dependency. A school can produce graduates, but graduates may still be trained for export. A language can connect the country to the world, but may also divide the educated from the masses. A bureaucracy can create order, but order may serve convenience rather than justice. An institution can function and still function for the wrong purpose.

This is why the myth of benevolence must be rejected. Benevolence is not proven by the survival of infrastructure. It is not proven by the existence of schools. It is not proven by the usefulness of English. It is not proven by professional success under inherited systems. Benevolence would have required respect for a people’s sovereignty, dignity, and capacity to determine their own development. What colonialism offered instead was rule, and whatever useful residues remain must be understood within that fact.

The mature position is therefore neither blind rejection nor servile gratitude. It is transformation. The Filipino may keep the language, but make it answer to Filipino realities. He may keep the school, but remake its purpose. He may keep the law, but democratize its operation. He may keep the road, but decide its direction. He may keep the institution, but strip it of its colonial posture. He may inherit the tool, but refuse the mentality of the toolmaker.

The colonizer’s road may still be used. But the nation must decide where it leads. If it leads only to markets arranged by others, offices that reproduce dependence, schools that produce grateful subjects, and careers that remove talent from national service, then the road remains colonial in function even after the colonizer has left. If it leads instead to national industry, public dignity, historical consciousness, democratic participation, and a people capable of governing their own development, then the inherited road has been transformed.

That is the work of decolonization. Not the destruction of every inheritance, but the recovery of direction. Not the denial of useful residues, but the refusal to confuse them with justice. Not nostalgia for a vanished past, but the disciplined effort to build a future in which the Filipino is no longer asked to thank domination for the tools he has learned to make his own.

“Values Formation” as a Substitute for History

One of the more telling evasions of historical education is the call to replace it with “values formation.” The phrase sounds harmless, even admirable. It suggests moral seriousness. It appears to answer a real problem: a society cannot live by technical skill alone. It needs citizens who know the difference between honesty and fraud, courage and cowardice, service and selfishness, discipline and disorder, responsibility and opportunism. No serious nation can dismiss the moral formation of its people as unnecessary.

At its best, values formation is not the enemy of history. Properly understood, it is inseparable from history. A people cannot learn courage without studying those who acted courageously. They cannot learn justice without seeing how injustice operated. They cannot learn public responsibility without understanding the institutions, conflicts, sacrifices, and failures that shaped the nation. They cannot learn love of country merely by reciting abstract virtues; they must know what the country has suffered, what it has attempted, what it has forgotten, and what it still owes its people.

But values formation becomes suspect when it is separated from history, economics, power, and social memory. Once values are detached from actual conditions, they become slogans of adjustment. They no longer ask why society is arranged as it is. They teach the individual how to behave inside the arrangement. They cease to be moral education and become behavioral management. They speak of discipline without asking who benefits from disciplined silence. They speak of gratitude without asking to whom gratitude is owed. They speak of patriotism without asking what sovereignty requires. They speak of responsibility without asking why burdens are distributed so unequally.

A values program without history usually teaches behavior without consciousness. It tells the student to be respectful, but not why institutions deserve respect, how institutions lose respect, or when respect becomes complicity. It tells him to be disciplined, but not whether discipline is being demanded in the service of justice or merely in the service of convenience. It tells him to be patriotic, but not how sovereignty is compromised by dependency, elite mimicry, foreign pressure, weak industry, and the habit of seeking validation from abroad. It tells him to be grateful, but not whether gratitude should be directed upward toward power or outward toward the people whose labor sustains the nation.

The same pattern appears in the language of work. Values formation tells the worker to be hardworking, but not why labor remains cheap. It tells him to be patient, but not why wages fail to meet the cost of living. It tells him to be loyal, but not whether loyalty is being reciprocated by security, dignity, and fair compensation. It tells him to avoid conflict, but not whether conflict is sometimes the only language power understands. It tells him to be obedient, but not when obedience becomes collaboration with wrong.

This is where shallow values formation becomes dangerous. It does not merely omit history; it replaces history with manners. The student is trained to appear good rather than to understand goodness. He learns respectfulness without justice, discipline without freedom, patriotism without sovereignty, gratitude without memory, and obedience without conscience. The result is a citizen who may be polite, employable, and socially acceptable, but unable to ask the questions that a free society requires.

History is dangerous to this arrangement because history reveals contingency. It shows that systems were made by human beings and can be changed by human beings. It teaches that poverty is not always personal failure, that wealth is not always proof of virtue, that power is not always legitimate, that institutions are not always neutral, and that the present order is not sacred merely because it exists. History introduces the student to struggle: peasant struggle, labor struggle, anticolonial struggle, constitutional struggle, intellectual struggle, cultural struggle. It tells him that rights were not donated by benevolent authorities; they were argued for, organized for, fought for, and sometimes paid for by people whose names no longer appear in polite ceremonies.

That is why history unsettles moralism. Moralism wants the citizen to ask, “How should one behave?” History adds the harder question: “How did things become this way?” Moralism asks whether people are disciplined. History asks why discipline is demanded from the weak and rarely from the powerful. Moralism asks whether citizens are grateful. History asks whether gratitude is being used to hide domination. Moralism asks whether students are practical. History asks who decided which forms of knowledge are practical and which are useless. Moralism asks whether workers are patient. History asks how long patience has been used to delay justice.

A shallow values formation prefers a linear society. The line is familiar: study, graduate, work, obey, provide, survive, retire. It is a life organized around adjustment. The student must choose the course that hires. The graduate must enter the market. The worker must endure. The citizen must behave. The family must survive. The nation must be patient. In this sequence, history is an interruption. It asks why the line is so narrow. It asks why education is reduced to employability. It asks why work is reduced to survival. It asks why citizenship is reduced to compliance. It asks why nation-building is postponed until after everyone has adjusted to a system that may itself be unjust.

The questioning mind disturbs the line because it refuses to accept necessity as destiny. It understands that hunger is real, but it does not conclude that hunger should govern philosophy. It understands that employment matters, but it does not accept that employability is the highest form of human formation. It understands that discipline is necessary, but it refuses discipline as a substitute for justice. It understands that gratitude is noble, but it rejects gratitude as a gag placed over the mouth of criticism.

This is why, during a national upsurge, moralism often becomes louder. Whenever people begin to ask historical questions, they are told to be grateful. Whenever workers ask about wages, they are told to be resilient. Whenever students ask about national purpose, they are told to be practical. Whenever citizens ask about sovereignty, they are told not to be radical. Whenever the young ask why the past still matters, they are told to move on. Whenever someone asks who benefits, someone else answers with a sermon on discipline.

The timing is not accidental. National upsurge frightens any order that depends on forgetfulness. A people that begins to remember becomes harder to manage. A student who understands colonial education becomes harder to pacify with credentials. A worker who understands labor history becomes harder to silence with praise. A citizen who understands sovereignty becomes harder to impress with borrowed models. A nation that understands its own past becomes harder to reduce to a market, a labor pool, or a grateful client of stronger powers.

Moralism becomes the emergency brake of a frightened order. It is pulled whenever historical consciousness threatens to move too quickly. It slows the argument by accusing the questioner of bad character. The student is not answered; he is called ungrateful. The worker is not answered; he is called entitled. The nationalist is not answered; he is called impractical. The critic is not answered; he is called divisive. The historian is not answered; he is told that values matter more than grievances.

But values without history are not enough. They may produce courteous subjects, but not courageous citizens. They may produce clean slogans, but not national direction. They may produce discipline, but not dignity. They may produce obedience, but not responsibility. A nation that teaches values without memory risks producing people who know how to behave under power but not how to judge power.

The task, therefore, is not to reject values formation. The task is to rescue it from emptiness. Real values formation must be historical. It must teach honesty by confronting official lies. It must teach courage by studying those who resisted domination. It must teach discipline by distinguishing public service from servility. It must teach gratitude by directing it toward the people and not merely toward institutions. It must teach patriotism by linking love of country to sovereignty, justice, labor, language, land, and national development. It must teach obedience only within the bounds of conscience, law, and human dignity.

A serious values education would not fear history. It would begin with it. It would teach that respect is not flattery of authority but recognition of legitimate service. It would teach that discipline is not silence but the strength to act responsibly in common life. It would teach that gratitude is not submission but an awareness of debt to the people. It would teach that patriotism is not ceremony but obligation. It would teach that morality is not the habit of adjusting to reality, but the courage to improve reality when it is unjust.

In that sense, history is not the enemy of values. History is the test of values. Without history, values remain abstract and safe. With history, they become demanding. They ask who suffered, who benefited, who resisted, who collaborated, who remembered, who erased, who built, and who paid. They compel the citizen to see morality not as personal etiquette but as public responsibility.

That is why the substitution of values formation for history must be resisted. It is not because values are unimportant. It is because values become dangerous when they are used to replace memory. A nation does not become moral by forgetting the conditions that made morality necessary. It becomes moral by remembering clearly enough to act differently.

The Linear Mindset and the Cult of Employability

The reduction of education to employability is another form of miseducation. It is not always imposed with cruelty. Often, it appears as advice from anxious parents, cautious teachers, practical relatives, guidance counselors, employers, and public officials who have learned to treat survival as wisdom. They do not always intend to diminish the student. Many of them speak from fear, debt, scarcity, and experience. They have seen unemployment humiliate families. They have seen graduates return home with diplomas but no work. They have seen illness, rent, tuition, remittances, and daily expenses turn dreams into liabilities. Out of this fear, they construct a simple doctrine: education must lead to a job, and the best education is the one most quickly convertible into income.

In this mindset, the best course is the one that produces employment with the least ambiguity. The “hard” course is praised because it appears to lead to salary, board examinations, professional credentials, migration channels, or corporate absorption. Engineering, accounting, nursing, information technology, medicine, law, architecture, and business are treated as serious because they have visible market routes. They seem to promise a desk, a license, a hospital, a firm, a ship, an office, a call center, a foreign contract, or a predictable ladder of advancement. They can be explained to relatives in practical terms. They answer the family’s most urgent question: what will happen after graduation?

By contrast, the so-called “soft” course is dismissed because it appears to ask questions that do not immediately translate into salary. Literature, history, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, political thought, communication, art, and the humanities are treated as luxuries because their return on investment is not obvious to a household under pressure. They are accused of being abstract, indulgent, impractical, elitist, or dangerous. They are tolerated only if they can be converted into teaching, advertising, public relations, law school preparation, civil service eligibility, or some other recognizable occupation. Otherwise, they are described as passion projects, and passion is treated as something a poor or anxious family cannot afford.

This is the business view at its crudest: education as employment insurance. It asks what course can produce a paycheck. It asks what credential can protect the household from downward mobility. It asks what skill the market currently rewards. It asks what field can send a child abroad, stabilize a family, pay for younger siblings, or justify the sacrifices of parents. In itself, this is understandable. A country with precarious work, weak wages, costly education, and insufficient social protection will naturally produce families that think this way. When the future is uncertain, practicality becomes a defensive instinct.

There is therefore nothing shameful in wanting work. There is nothing ignoble in choosing a course because a family needs income. There is nothing romantic or humane about telling a hungry household to ignore employment. In a poor country, practicality is often not a slogan but a necessity. The problem begins when necessity is converted into philosophy. The problem begins when survival is treated not as a condition to be overcome, but as the highest purpose of education itself. The problem begins when the school no longer asks how to form a person, a citizen, or a builder of national life, but only how to deliver a worker to the market.

When practicality becomes the whole philosophy of education, the human being is reduced to a production unit. The student is no longer asked what kind of person he is becoming. He is asked what kind of job he can get. His mind is valued according to employability. His talents are measured according to market demand. His doubts are treated as inefficiencies. His passions are treated as risks. His sense of country is treated as decoration unless it can be converted into a résumé line, a civil service post, or a corporate social responsibility project. He is not formed; he is processed.

The parent says there is no passion. The counselor says choose what hires. The market says become useful. The company says become talent. The institution says acquire competencies. The state says become globally competitive. The family says repay sacrifice. Society says survive first and become human later. The trouble is that “later” rarely arrives. Once life is organized entirely around survival, humanity is postponed indefinitely. The student becomes an employee, the employee becomes a provider, the provider becomes exhausted, and the exhausted citizen is told that questioning the arrangement is irresponsibility.

This is where the linear mindset reveals its deeper political function. Its line is simple: study, graduate, work, obey, provide, survive, retire. It is presented as realism, but it is also a discipline of imagination. It narrows the horizon of the young before they can ask broader questions. It says that the purpose of education is to enter the system, not to understand it. It says that success is movement upward within existing structures, not transformation of the structures themselves. It says that dignity is private security, not public justice. It says that the family must survive even if the nation remains dependent, unequal, and intellectually diminished.

At this point, another moral substitution often appears: the language of “familyhood.” It sounds warm, intimate, and responsible. It appeals to sacrifice. It says the student must think first of the family, repay the family, uplift the family, protect the family, obey the family, and choose what benefits the family. In a society where families absorb the failures of the state, this appeal has enormous force. The family pays tuition when public support is insufficient. The family provides care when health systems fail. The family sends remittances when local wages are poor. The family becomes the welfare state, the insurance system, the employment agency, and the moral court.

But “familyhood” becomes dangerous when it is used to negate nation-building and self-determination. The student who asks about history is told to think of the family first. The worker who asks about labor rights is told not to endanger the family’s survival. The citizen who asks about sovereignty is told that politics will not feed the family. The young person who wants to serve the country through teaching, research, organizing, art, public service, or national industry is told to choose the course that will immediately provide for the household. What appears as love becomes containment. The family’s need becomes the argument against the nation’s future.

This does not mean the family is the enemy. On the contrary, the family is often the first victim of a weak national order. It is precisely because the state fails to provide security, decent wages, affordable education, health care, housing, and meaningful local opportunity that families become desperate. But when the burden of national failure is transferred to the family, the family may unintentionally reproduce the very system that burdens it. It tells the child to adjust rather than ask why adjustment has become necessary. It tells the graduate to leave rather than ask why the country cannot employ its own talent with dignity. It tells the worker to endure rather than ask why labor remains cheap. It tells the citizen to survive privately rather than build collectively.

In this way, “familyhood” can become the domestic version of colonial adjustment. It turns self-determination into selfishness and nation-building into impracticality. It tells the young that the highest duty is not to help build a freer, fairer country, but to secure the household inside the existing arrangement. It reduces public responsibility into private obligation. It transforms the nation into a background condition and the family into the only real moral universe. The result is understandable, but dangerous: a society of heroic families and a weakened nation.

The employability cult therefore does not merely choose one course over another. It creates a hierarchy of human worth. Those who enter market-favored fields are praised as practical. Those who study the humanities are asked what they will do with their lives. Those who pursue history, literature, philosophy, social science, or art are treated as burdens unless they can justify themselves in economic terms. Yet these are precisely the disciplines that ask what kind of life, society, memory, justice, language, and nation are worth building. They do not always produce immediate income, but they produce the questions without which income becomes the only measure of life.

A nation that despises such questions will eventually pay a price. It may produce accountants who can balance books but not ask why wealth remains concentrated. It may produce engineers who can build structures but not ask whose communities are displaced. It may produce nurses who can serve abroad but not ask why care workers must leave home to be valued. It may produce lawyers who can master procedure but not ask whether law serves justice. It may produce managers who can optimize systems but not ask whether the system deserves to be optimized. It may produce information workers who can process global demand but not ask why the country remains a subcontractor of other people’s futures.

This is not an argument against technical education. A serious nation needs engineers, nurses, doctors, accountants, programmers, architects, technicians, scientists, managers, and lawyers. It needs people who can build bridges, treat patients, write code, design factories, run enterprises, manage public systems, and calculate resources. The argument is against the mutilation of education into mere employability. Technical skill without historical consciousness can serve any master. Professional competence without national purpose can accelerate dependency. Efficiency without justice can make exploitation smoother. Talent without citizenship can become export material.

Constantino’s warning cuts directly against this reduction. He argued that education should not be treated simply as the acquisition of information, but as the formation of a person who can function meaningfully within his own society. This is the missing point in the employability cult. Education must help a person live, yes. It must help him work, earn, provide, and survive. But it must also help him understand the society in which he lives. It must prepare him not only to earn, but to judge; not only to compete, but to serve; not only to survive, but to build.

The question, then, is not whether a course leads to a job. That question matters, but it is insufficient. The better question is what kind of consciousness accompanies the job. Does the engineer understand the nation’s infrastructure needs or merely the employer’s contract? Does the nurse understand the political economy of care or merely the overseas labor market? Does the accountant understand public accountability or merely private compliance? Does the lawyer understand justice or merely procedure? Does the business graduate understand national development or merely profit extraction? Does the humanities student understand the people or merely elite discourse? Does the graduate, whatever his field, see himself as a citizen of a country to be built?

A truly national education would refuse the false war between “hard” and “soft” courses. It would insist that technical competence and human formation belong together. Engineers need history because infrastructure always serves a social order. Nurses need ethics and political economy because care is shaped by labor systems and migration. Business students need nationalism because capital without public responsibility becomes predatory. Lawyers need philosophy because law without moral reasoning becomes technique. Historians need economics because memory without material analysis can become nostalgia. Artists need social consciousness because beauty without people can become ornament.

The employability cult fears this integration because integration produces citizens who cannot be easily reduced to workers. A worker who knows history understands that rights were struggled for. A professional who understands colonialism knows that prestige can be a trap. A graduate who understands political economy knows that “market demand” is not destiny. A student who understands nation-building knows that family obligation and public duty should not be enemies. A citizen who understands self-determination knows that survival is not enough.

The tragedy is that many families who reject “soft” education are not wrong about scarcity. They are wrong only when scarcity becomes the final truth. They are right that children need work. They are right that tuition must be justified. They are right that a diploma without livelihood can become a cruel promise. But they are wrong if they conclude that education has no obligation beyond employment. They are wrong if they teach the young that there is no passion, no vocation, no public duty, no national imagination, no human question that deserves attention unless it is first approved by the labor market.

A nation that postpones humanity indefinitely will eventually discover that it has produced many workers and few citizens. It will have graduates who can submit reports but cannot read the country. It will have professionals who can migrate but cannot build institutions at home. It will have employees who can survive but cannot organize public purpose. It will have families that endure but a nation that remains dependent. It will have talent, but not direction.

That is why education must be rescued from the linear mindset. It must still answer hunger, employment, and family need, but it must not be imprisoned by them. It must teach students to provide for their families without abandoning the nation. It must teach workers to survive without surrendering dignity. It must teach professionals to succeed without despising public service. It must teach the humanities not as luxury, but as the disciplines that ask why human beings work, suffer, remember, govern, create, and hope.

To educate is not merely to place a person in a job. It is to place a person in history, society, and responsibility. The employable person asks where he can fit. The educated citizen asks what must be built. A nation that knows the difference will not despise work, but neither will it worship employability. It will understand that the end of education is not merely the hired graduate, but the human being capable of helping a people determine its own future.

From Labor to Talent

The same ideology appears in the corporate replacement of “labor” with “talent.” At first, the change appears harmless. It seems merely modern, a shift from the older language of industrial society to the polished vocabulary of human resources, recruitment, branding, and professional development. The company no longer speaks of workers as labor. It speaks of them as talent. The employment office becomes talent acquisition. Personnel administration becomes people management. Labor problems become talent challenges. Wage dissatisfaction becomes retention risk. Workplace conflict becomes an engagement gap. The old language of work is gradually washed of its political force.

This is not only a change in terminology. It is a change in imagination. “Labor” is an old word, and because it is old it carries history. It recalls factories, docks, farms, mines, offices, plantations, service counters, classrooms, hospitals, kitchens, warehouses, ships, and construction sites. It smells of effort. It contains fatigue, repetition, skill, danger, time, and bargaining. It also contains struggle. The word brings with it unions, picket lines, wage demands, working hours, contracts, benefits, strikes, collective action, and the hard question of how much work is worth. Labor has a price because labor is sold under conditions that must be judged.

“Talent,” by contrast, sounds lighter, cleaner, and more flattering. It suggests personal distinction. It evokes creativity, aspiration, excellence, performance, uniqueness, and potential. To be called talent is to be praised before one is paid. It sounds more dignified than labor because it appears to recognize the person’s gifts rather than merely his work. Yet that is precisely why the word is so useful to management. Talent sounds like something natural, almost moral. It is something one possesses, cultivates, displays, and offers. It is easier to admire talent than to price labor.

The difference is not merely stylistic. Labor immediately raises the question of compensation. Talent raises the question of opportunity. Labor asks: what are the wages, hours, benefits, risks, protections, and rights attached to this work? Talent asks: what can this person become inside the organization? Labor is economic. Talent is aspirational. Labor invites negotiation. Talent invites self-improvement. Labor points to a relation between worker and employer. Talent points to the individual and his potential.

Thus the vocabulary rearranges the moral field. Labor says that work must be paid. Talent says that potential must be recognized. Labor asks what the worker is owed. Talent asks how the individual can grow. Labor organizes because workers share conditions. Talent competes because individuals must distinguish themselves. Labor bargains because it knows that work produces value. Talent proves itself because it is constantly auditioning for opportunity. Labor has rights. Talent has passion.

This is why “talent” is such a useful word in a moralized economy. It allows institutions to praise workers while weakening the language through which workers make claims. The company can speak warmly of talent while avoiding the harsher language of labor cost, wage justice, bargaining power, and workplace democracy. It can say that it values talent while keeping compensation low. It can say that it empowers talent while intensifying work. It can say that talent is its greatest asset while treating people as replaceable entries in a spreadsheet. The praise is generous; the price remains controlled.

The word also helps transform material problems into personal development problems. Low wages become a stepping stone. Long hours become commitment. Overtime becomes passion. Insecurity becomes agility. Layoffs become restructuring. Fear becomes resilience. Exhaustion becomes grit. A worker who asks for higher pay may be told to improve his value. A worker who asks for stability may be told to remain adaptable. A worker who questions workload may be told to manage his mindset. In this language, the system does not exploit. The individual fails to align, upskill, adjust, or perform.

This is the managerial genius of the term. “Labor” places pressure on the employer because it identifies work as a social and economic relation. “Talent” places pressure on the individual because it identifies employment as self-realization. The laborer may say, “Pay the work.” The talent is encouraged to say, “Invest in me.” The laborer may ask, “Why is this work undervalued?” The talent is encouraged to ask, “How can I become more competitive?” The laborer sees common condition. The talent sees personal branding.

In a country trained by scarcity, this language becomes even more powerful. When jobs are insecure and families depend on wages, workers may accept the language of talent because it offers psychological dignity. It tells them they are not merely laborers. They are professionals, creatives, associates, team members, partners, contributors, high performers, future leaders. The language flatters the worker precisely at the moment when bargaining power is weak. It gives symbolic elevation in place of material leverage. It supplies recognition where compensation should be.

This is not to say that skill, creativity, and excellence are unreal. Workers do have talent. Nurses, teachers, drivers, mechanics, programmers, artists, sales clerks, farmers, machinists, accountants, cooks, writers, engineers, and call-center agents all possess knowledge and ability. Work is not merely brute effort. Labor includes intelligence. It includes judgment, discipline, emotional control, craft, coordination, and care. The problem is not that workers are called talented. The problem is that talent is used to erase labor’s price and labor’s politics.

The older word “labor” is uncomfortable because it refuses to separate skill from power. It reminds the company that value does not appear by magic. It is produced by people working under conditions. It reminds the state that development is not only investment, capital inflow, and competitiveness, but also wages, rights, safety, security, and dignity. It reminds society that prosperity depends on those who clean, build, teach, heal, transport, process, write, carry, code, cook, sew, repair, and serve. It reminds the comfortable that every economy rests on bodies and time.

“Talent” can hide that fact because it is individualized. It turns common work into private capacity. The programmer is talent. The designer is talent. The nurse is talent. The teacher is talent. The writer is talent. The call-center agent is talent. Each is invited to compete, brand, improve, and remain employable. What disappears is the shared condition of labor. What disappears is the possibility that these workers, despite different skills, all confront systems that want output at the lowest manageable cost.

The same ideology appears in education. Students are not encouraged to become whole human beings. They are encouraged to become employable talent. The school becomes a pipeline to the market. Courses are judged by placement rates, salaries, global demand, board performance, and corporate relevance. The student is told to build a portfolio, acquire competencies, develop communication skills, become flexible, and prepare for disruption. These may be useful instructions, but they are incomplete. They teach the student how to become attractive to employers, not necessarily how to understand society or serve the nation.

Passion is tolerated only if monetizable. A student may love history, but he is asked how history will pay. He may love literature, but he is asked what job it leads to. He may love philosophy, but he is told that philosophy is for those who can afford not to earn. He may love art, but art must become branding, content, advertising, design, or entertainment. Even service becomes acceptable only when it can be converted into résumé value. The inner life is admitted into the system only after it has been priced.

History is tolerated only if decorative. It may appear in ceremonies, heritage campaigns, tourism materials, commemorations, and institutional speeches. It may supply heroes for posters and slogans for public events. But history becomes unwelcome when it asks who owns, who works, who benefits, who collaborated, who resisted, who was erased, and why the country’s institutions developed as they did. Decorative history is safe because it honors the past without disturbing the present. Critical history is dangerous because it connects memory to power.

Values are tolerated only if they produce compliance. Honesty is praised when it means personal integrity, but not always when it exposes institutional corruption. Discipline is praised when it means punctuality, productivity, and obedience, but not always when it means sustained collective action for justice. Respect is praised when it flows upward, but not always when it requires institutions to respect the people. Gratitude is praised when it silences criticism, but not when it directs the educated toward service to workers, taxpayers, parents, and communities.

Nation-building is tolerated only if it does not disturb investment climate, hierarchy, or inherited privilege. It may be invoked in corporate speeches, school mottos, national holidays, development plans, and commencement exercises. But when nation-building begins to mean industrial policy, labor dignity, historical correction, economic sovereignty, land questions, language justice, public accountability, and the democratization of opportunity, it is suddenly called impractical, divisive, radical, or bad for business. The nation is admired as sentiment but feared as project.

This is the late form of miseducation. The colonized subject becomes the corporate subject. He no longer needs a colonial governor to tell him what to admire. The market will do it. The colonizer once taught him to seek approval from the foreign ruler, the foreign textbook, the foreign language, the foreign institution. The market now teaches him to seek approval from the employer, the ranking, the platform, the recruiter, the client, the algorithm, the investor, and the global standard. In both cases, he is taught to measure himself by forces outside his collective control.

The continuity is not accidental. Colonial education trained the subject to adjust to an order designed elsewhere. Corporate miseducation trains the worker to adjust to a market arranged by others. Colonial language made domination sound like civilization. Managerial language makes insecurity sound like opportunity. Colonial schooling produced native intermediaries. Corporate schooling produces flexible talent. Both can create intelligent, articulate, ambitious people. But both can also weaken the habit of asking who directs the system and toward what end.

The danger is that “talent” appears humane while narrowing the worker’s claims. It tells the person that he is special, but also that he is alone. It praises his gifts, but requires him to compete against others with similar gifts. It tells him to be passionate, but disciplines him when passion becomes a demand for dignity. It tells him to grow, but often inside a structure that captures the value of his growth. It tells him to be grateful for opportunity, but rarely asks whether opportunity without bargaining power is enough.

A serious society should not reject the word talent entirely. It should merely refuse to let it replace labor. Workers are talented, but they are still workers. Professionals are skilled, but they are still laboring persons. Creativity has value, but it still requires time, food, rest, shelter, tools, and pay. Passion may deepen work, but it must not be used to cheapen work. Calling a person talent should not make his wages less discussable, his hours less visible, his rights less urgent, or his collective condition less political.

The recovery of the word labor is therefore not nostalgia. It is clarity. It restores the material truth that work has a cost and workers have claims. It reminds institutions that praise is not compensation. Recognition is not justice. Opportunity is not security. Culture is not bargaining. Passion is not overtime pay. Resilience is not a substitute for decent conditions. Growth is not an answer to exploitation. A company that truly values talent must respect labor; otherwise, talent is only a decorative word placed over extraction.

The same applies to education. If schools truly wish to develop talent, they must also form citizens. They must teach students that employability is not the same as human worth. They must teach that skill without social understanding can serve injustice efficiently. They must teach that the purpose of learning is not merely to become attractive to employers, but to become capable of judgment, service, creation, and national responsibility. They must teach that passion is not childish unless a society has become too poor in imagination to understand vocation.

The Filipino student should not be reduced to future talent for someone else’s enterprise. He should be formed as a person capable of work, yes, but also capable of memory, judgment, solidarity, and nation-building. The Filipino worker should not be praised as talent while being denied the language of labor. He should be recognized as skilled and also respected as a worker with rights. The Filipino professional should not be trained merely to fit global demand. He should be prepared to ask what the nation requires.

In the end, the replacement of labor with talent is not merely a corporate habit. It is a cultural event. It reveals a society uncomfortable with the price of work, the politics of class, and the collective claims of those who produce value. It reveals a system that would rather flatter the individual than negotiate with labor. It reveals a moral economy in which people are praised as gifted precisely so their demands can be treated as excessive.

That is why the old word still matters. Labor is not pretty, but it is honest. It does not flatter as much as talent, but it tells the truth about work. It says that human effort is not a gift to be admired from a distance. It is value produced under conditions that must be judged. It says that the worker is not merely a promising individual seeking opportunity, but a person whose time, body, skill, and intelligence have a price and a dignity.

A country that forgets this will produce talented people who remain insecure, passionate people who remain underpaid, educated people who remain dependent, and citizens who are told to be grateful for the chance to compete. That, too, is miseducation.

Moralism in a Time of National Upsurge

A national upsurge does not always begin with flags and speeches. It does not always announce itself through rallies, manifestos, party programs, or dramatic declarations of patriotism. Sometimes it begins more quietly, in classrooms, workplaces, family conversations, online arguments, campus forums, union meetings, and private moments of doubt. Sometimes it begins when people who were taught to endure begin to ask why endurance has been made the measure of virtue. Sometimes it begins when the ordinary explanations no longer satisfy the ordinary pain.

It begins with questions: Why is history taught this way? Why does the curriculum remember some things with ceremony and forget others with convenience? Why is the worker told to be grateful when wages are low, hours are long, and the cost of living rises faster than hope? Why are the humanities dismissed as useless when they are the fields that ask what kind of human being and what kind of society are being formed? Why is English treated as intelligence itself, as though fluency in the language of former power were the same as wisdom, competence, or moral seriousness? Why are foreign models treated as destiny, and local attempts treated as second-rate before they are even tried?

Other questions follow. Why are national industries weak? Why is the country praised for talent while exporting so much of it? Why is survival treated as proof that the system works? Why is the student told to choose only what hires? Why is the worker told to adapt rather than organize? Why is the citizen told to be practical whenever he asks about sovereignty? Why is criticism called ingratitude? Why is gratitude demanded most loudly by those who benefit from silence?

These questions are dangerous because they connect private frustration to public structure. They take what is often experienced as personal failure and place it within a larger social order. A student who cannot find meaning in schooling begins to ask whether education has been reduced to employability. A worker exhausted by low pay begins to ask whether his hardship is not merely personal misfortune but a labor question. A graduate pressured to choose survival over vocation begins to ask whether the family’s anxiety is rooted in a national economy that has failed to secure its own people. A citizen who feels diminished by foreign dependence begins to ask whether independence has been treated as ceremony rather than capacity.

That movement from private pain to public analysis is the beginning of political consciousness. It interrupts the old habit of blaming the victim. The poor are no longer simply lazy. The underemployed are no longer simply unskilled. The historically minded are no longer simply resentful. The worker is no longer merely demanding. The student is no longer merely idealistic. The graduate is no longer merely confused. Their questions begin to reveal a system. Once that happens, moralism becomes necessary for those who wish to contain the upsurge.

In such moments, moralism returns as containment. It does not always argue. Often, it scolds. It tells people that they are too angry, too idealistic, too ungrateful, too historical, too impractical, too divisive, or too influenced by ideology. It converts structural questions into character problems. Instead of asking whether wages are fair, it asks whether workers are disciplined. Instead of asking whether the curriculum produces national consciousness, it asks whether students are grateful for schooling. Instead of asking whether the economy serves national development, it asks whether citizens are realistic enough to accept dependency. Instead of asking whether history was distorted, it asks whether the historian has proper values.

This is moralism’s peculiar genius. It moves the debate away from institutions and into personality. It does not have to defend the system directly. It only has to make the critic appear morally defective. The worker who demands better pay is told he lacks discipline. The student who studies colonialism is told he lacks gratitude. The citizen who wants sovereignty is told he lacks realism. The graduate who questions employability culture is told he lacks practicality. The historian who asks about power is told he lacks values. The nationalist who asks what kind of economy a free people needs is told he lacks maturity.

In this way, moralism becomes a cheap substitute for analysis. It does not explain why labor remains cheap. It tells labor to be patient. It does not explain why national industries are weak. It tells citizens to be globally competitive. It does not explain why education is shaped by colonial inheritance and market pressure. It tells students to be thankful. It does not explain why history must be studied critically. It tells people to move on. It does not explain dependency. It calls dependence realism. It does not answer nationalism. It calls nationalism backwardness.

This is why the misinterpretation of Constantino is politically important. It is not merely an academic misunderstanding. It is a social reflex. It shows how deeply the command to adjust has replaced the duty to transform. When Constantino is read as though he merely complained about foreign influence, the reader avoids the harder question of what education is for. When his critique of colonial consciousness is answered with gratitude for colonial institutions, the reader reveals precisely the habit Constantino warned against: the habit of measuring education by usefulness to the existing order rather than by its service to national emancipation.

The misinterpretation becomes more visible during a national upsurge because upsurge threatens inherited comfort. A quiet people can be praised as disciplined. A struggling people can be praised as resilient. A dependent economy can be praised as practical. A historically confused education can be praised as modern. But when people begin to ask why discipline is demanded without justice, why resilience is necessary under preventable hardship, why practicality always seems to favor dependency, and why modernity often means imitation, the old vocabulary begins to tremble. Moralism rushes in to steady it.

Constantino himself criticized the tendency of Philippine education to teach patriotism only in general and harmless terms. He noted that colonial education could teach love of country as sentiment while avoiding a realistic understanding of colonial domination. Patriotism could be reduced to respect for the flag, appreciation of scenery, admiration for heroes once they were safely dead, and general affection for the homeland. This kind of patriotism was safe because it did not require economic policy, political courage, social criticism, or national self-direction. It allowed the student to love the country without asking what had been done to it.

He also argued that colonial education failed to provide a realistic attitude toward Spain and the United States. It stressed the “great gifts” of conquerors while concealing cruelty and deceit behind a language of benevolence. That criticism remains painfully contemporary because the same habit continues in modern form. The past is softened into gratitude. Domination is converted into contribution. Conquest is discussed through its infrastructure. Dependency is described as partnership. The colonized are asked to remember what they received more than what they lost, and if they object, they are accused of lacking maturity.

The modern moralist still prefers harmless patriotism. He likes flag ceremonies because they are orderly. He likes national songs because they end on schedule. He likes heroes once they are dead because dead heroes no longer organize, strike, write manifestos, or question budgets. He likes monuments because monuments do not ask for wages. He likes values because values can be taught as obedience. He likes gratitude because gratitude is quiet. He likes history only when history has been drained of danger and converted into heritage.

But he fears national industry because national industry asks who owns production, who controls capital, who develops technology, who benefits from trade, and why a country rich in talent remains dependent on the demands of others. He fears historical consciousness because it asks who wrote the curriculum and whose memory was excluded. He fears labor dignity because it asks why workers must be praised as heroes while paid as costs. He fears the humanities because they ask what kind of life the economy is actually producing. He fears self-determination because it requires more than symbolic independence. It requires material capacity.

This fear explains why moralism becomes louder precisely when the country begins to think more deeply. The moralist senses that questions about education may become questions about economy, that questions about language may become questions about class, that questions about history may become questions about power, that questions about labor may become questions about ownership, and that questions about gratitude may become questions about legitimacy. To prevent that chain from forming, he interrupts early. He says, be grateful. Be practical. Be disciplined. Be realistic. Do not be radical. Do not go backward. Do not complain.

The words differ, but the instruction is the same: adjust. But, adjustment is the opposite of national upsurge. Upsurge asks people to recognize that the present arrangement is not destiny. Adjustment tells them that the present arrangement is the horizon of possibility. Upsurge asks the citizen to examine institutions. Adjustment tells him to respect them. Upsurge asks the worker to understand his collective condition. Adjustment tells him to improve himself. Upsurge asks the student to connect learning with national purpose. Adjustment tells him to become employable. Upsurge asks the nation to transform inherited structures. Adjustment tells it to be grateful for inherited tools.

This is why the debate over Constantino remains alive. It is not merely about the American period or the content of old textbooks. It is about whether education produces people capable of upsurge or people trained for adjustment. It is about whether the school forms citizens who can ask why the nation is arranged as it is, or subjects who can succeed without asking. It is about whether historical memory becomes a force for building or a decorative subject tolerated only during exams and commemorations.

The moralist often claims that he is protecting society from disorder. He says that too much history creates bitterness, too much criticism creates division, too much nationalism creates backwardness, too much labor consciousness creates entitlement, and too much questioning creates instability. Yet what he calls stability may only be the continued management of old injuries. What he calls values may only be the etiquette of submission. What he calls practicality may only be the surrender of imagination to scarcity. What he calls gratitude may only be the refusal to examine power.

A serious nation must distinguish between moral formation and moral containment. Moral formation teaches citizens to act with honesty, courage, responsibility, and public purpose. Moral containment teaches them to behave quietly within inherited limits. Moral formation makes people capable of serving the nation. Moral containment makes them afraid to disturb the system. Moral formation produces conscience. Moral containment produces compliance.

The national upsurge requires the first and rejects the second. It does not reject discipline, gratitude, practicality, or values. It rejects their misuse as barriers against justice. It understands that discipline without justice becomes obedience. Gratitude without memory becomes submission. Practicality without sovereignty becomes dependency. Values without history become manners. Patriotism without transformation becomes ceremony.

This is why the questions must continue. Why is history taught this way? Why is labor praised but underpaid? Why is education narrowed into employability? Why is English treated as proof of intelligence? Why are foreign models treated as destiny? Why is national industry weak? Why is survival treated as success? Why is criticism called ingratitude? Each question opens a door that moralism tries to close.

A country that is afraid of such questions is not protecting values. It is protecting arrangements. A people that asks them is not becoming ungrateful. It is becoming conscious. And consciousness, once it connects private pain to public structure, becomes the beginning of a nation that no longer wishes merely to endure, but to build.

The Filipino as Contented Subject

The contented subject is the ideal product of miseducation. He is not necessarily ignorant, poor, or visibly oppressed. In fact, he may be successful by the ordinary measures of society. He may have a degree, a profession, a position, a title, a house, a car, a résumé, and the polished vocabulary of achievement. He may be a manager, professional, teacher, official, entrepreneur, consultant, or public commentator. He may speak English fluently and lecture others about practicality, discipline, resilience, and values. He may think of himself as realistic because he has learned how to survive inside the system.

This is precisely why he is important. Miseducation does not always produce failure. Sometimes it produces success of a particular kind. It produces the person who can function efficiently within inherited arrangements without asking whether those arrangements deserve to continue. It produces the person who has mastered the rules of advancement but not the language of transformation. It produces the person whose success becomes evidence, in his own mind, that the system works. If he made it, others should make it. If he adjusted, others should adjust. If he survived, survival must be enough.

His creed is simple, though he rarely states it with such bluntness. The system exists; therefore adapt. The colonizer left institutions; therefore be grateful. The employer provides work; therefore be loyal. The school gives credentials; therefore do not question. The market rewards skills; therefore become talent. The poor suffer; therefore teach them values. The nation is weak; therefore depend on stronger powers. History is complicated; therefore move on. This creed does not appear as ideology. It appears as common sense. That is its strength.

The contented subject is not necessarily cruel. He may be polite, charitable, religious, family-oriented, and personally hardworking. He may donate to relief drives, support scholars, praise teachers, and speak movingly about sacrifice. He may believe sincerely that he wants the country to improve. But he wants improvement without disturbance. He wants reform without rupture, history without accusation, patriotism without economic struggle, labor dignity without labor power, values without memory, and education without national reckoning. He wants a better country, but only if it does not require him to revise the assumptions that made his own ascent possible.

This is not conservatism in the serious sense. Serious conservatism, at its best, understands limits, continuity, institutional memory, social order, and the dangers of reckless destruction. It can preserve what is worth preserving and reform what must be reformed. The contented subject does not do this. He does not preserve through wisdom; he preserves through fear. He is not prudent in the classical sense; he is administratively cautious. He does not defend institutions because he has examined them deeply and found them just. He defends them because they are already there, because he has benefited from them, and because questioning them may unsettle the moral story of his success.

Nor is this disciplined reform. Reform requires diagnosis. It requires the courage to see how problems are produced by systems, not merely by defective individuals. The contented subject dislikes diagnosis when it implicates structure. He prefers managerial adjustments: better training, stronger values, more discipline, more competitiveness, improved efficiency, personal responsibility, entrepreneurial mindset, employability, professionalism. These may have their place, but he uses them to avoid the larger questions. He treats symptoms as if they were causes and causes as if they were too dangerous to discuss.

It is submission wearing the suit of realism. The contented subject calls himself practical because he accepts the limits imposed by the system as if they were laws of nature. He calls himself mature because he no longer expects the nation to be transformed. He calls himself responsible because he has narrowed responsibility to family survival, workplace performance, and private advancement. He calls himself grateful because he has learned to direct gratitude upward toward institutions, employers, foreign models, and inherited arrangements. He calls others naive because they still believe that a country can be made otherwise.

The contented subject does not deny that problems exist. He sees poverty, corruption, weak industry, poor education, low wages, migration, class inequality, language hierarchy, and dependency. He may even complain about them. But he privatizes them. He turns public structures into individual failures. If a student fails, the student lacked effort. If a graduate cannot find work, the graduate chose the wrong course. If a worker remains poor, the worker lacked skill. If a family struggles, the family failed to plan. If a community is neglected, the people lacked discipline. If the nation remains dependent, the nation lacked competitiveness. If colonial mentality persists, the people lacked gratitude, values, or confidence.

This privatization is convenient because it absolves structure. Once every social problem is reduced to personal deficiency, no one has to ask harder questions. No one has to ask why education is priced beyond many families’ reach, why wages do not meet the cost of living, why local industry cannot absorb skilled graduates, why public services are weak, why land and capital remain concentrated, why English carries so much class power, why foreign approval still shapes elite imagination, or why the economy repeatedly exports people it claims to educate. The system disappears from the dock. Only the individual is tried.

This habit also allows the contented subject to practice compassion without politics. He may pity the poor, but he will not ask why poverty is reproduced. He may fund scholarships, but he will not ask why education depends on charity. He may admire workers as heroes, but he will not support their bargaining power. He may praise farmers as the backbone of the nation, but he will not ask why those who feed the country remain poor. He may honor teachers, nurses, and public servants, but he will not ask why they are underpaid, overworked, or pushed abroad. His compassion comforts, but it does not threaten.

This is why values language is so useful to him. Values allow him to address suffering without confronting power. Poverty becomes lack of discipline. Low wages become lack of skill. Weak institutions become lack of honesty. Colonial mentality becomes lack of self-esteem. National dependency becomes lack of competitiveness. Historical anger becomes lack of forgiveness. Labor unrest becomes lack of gratitude. The language of values gives moral vocabulary to structural evasion. It permits the contented subject to sound ethical while remaining politically safe.

The same pattern appears in his view of education. He sees the school primarily as a ladder. Its purpose is to lift the deserving individual from insecurity into stability. Once the individual climbs, the school is vindicated. He therefore struggles to understand Constantino’s concern that education may produce personal advancement without national emancipation. To him, the graduate with a job is proof that education worked. To Constantino, the question remains: worked for what, for whom, and toward what consciousness?

The contented subject answers with outcomes that the market recognizes. Placement rates, salaries, board performance, English proficiency, international rankings, migration opportunities, corporate absorption, technical competencies, and professional success become his measures of educational value. He does not ask whether the graduate understands the country. He does not ask whether the curriculum forms historical judgment. He does not ask whether education deepens public responsibility. He does not ask whether the school produces citizens or merely employees. He assumes that employability is enough because employability was enough to secure his own place.

In his political imagination, the nation is often too large and too abstract to command sacrifice. The family is real; the nation is rhetorical. The job is real; sovereignty is abstract. The paycheck is real; national industry is uncertain. The foreign employer is real; domestic development is a promise. The diploma is real; historical consciousness is intangible. The contented subject therefore reduces public duty into private survival. He may speak of love of country, but when love of country requires structural commitment, he retreats to the language of practicality.

This is how “familyhood” can become an argument against nation-building. He says the young must think of family first, as if the family’s suffering were not connected to the nation’s failures. He says the student must choose the course that hires, as if the narrowing of choice were not itself a social indictment. He says the graduate must go where opportunity exists, as if the absence of opportunity at home were not a public problem. He says the worker must keep the job, as if gratitude to employment cancels the demand for dignity. The family’s need becomes the reason to avoid national questions, even though the family is often carrying the weight of unanswered national questions.

The contented subject is also drawn to foreign validation. He does not always admit it, but he often trusts what is certified abroad more than what is built at home. A foreign model seems more reliable. A foreign university seems more prestigious. A foreign investor seems more serious. A foreign accent seems more authoritative. A foreign ranking seems more objective. A foreign solution seems more modern. This habit is not simply personal insecurity. It is part of the colonial residue Constantino warned about: the tendency to measure national worth through external approval.

He may call this global realism. But realism without self-respect becomes dependency with better vocabulary. There is nothing wrong with learning from the world. A serious nation studies foreign experience carefully. But learning is different from imitation. Exchange is different from subordination. Internationalism is different from the assumption that the foreign is naturally superior. The contented subject rarely makes these distinctions clearly because his education trained him to admire what comes stamped with external authority.

In history, he prefers closure. He says the past is complicated; therefore people should move on. But what he often means is that the past is inconvenient. It disturbs the moral order in which institutions appear neutral and success appears purely earned. History reminds him that land, language, class, education, labor, and state power have origins. It shows that the present is not simply the result of individual effort. It reveals debts, violence, collaboration, resistance, exclusion, and unfinished struggles. The contented subject fears this because it undermines the purity of his realism.

Therefore, he likes history when it is ceremonial. He likes anniversaries, heroes, quotations, monuments, and national costumes. He likes history when it inspires discipline or pride without demanding analysis. He does not like history when it asks what kind of state was built, what kind of economy was inherited, what kind of education was designed, what kind of class benefited, and what kind of citizen was formed. He does not like history when it questions the road he has traveled to success.

The contented subject is not beyond redemption. He is not an enemy to be caricatured. He is often the product of real pressure. Scarcity trained him. Family duty disciplined him. Institutions rewarded his adaptation. The market validated his choices. Society praised him for surviving. He learned to treat adjustment as maturity because adjustment kept him alive. But precisely because his experience is understandable, it must be examined with care. The purpose is not to condemn the individual, but to understand the system that made contentment appear wise.

A serious education does not train people to absolve structure. It trains them to examine it. It teaches that personal effort matters, but effort takes place within conditions. It teaches that values matter, but values must be linked to justice. It teaches that gratitude matters, but gratitude must not silence judgment. It teaches that employability matters, but employability is not the highest aim of human formation. It teaches that inherited institutions may be useful, but usefulness does not prove legitimacy. It teaches that survival is necessary, but survival is not freedom.

The contented subject says the system exists; therefore adapt. The educated citizen says the system exists; therefore understand it, judge it, and transform what must be transformed. The contented subject says the colonizer left institutions; therefore be grateful. The educated citizen says inherited institutions must be audited and made to serve the people. The contented subject says the employer provides work; therefore be loyal. The educated citizen says work deserves dignity, rights, and fair compensation. The contented subject says history is complicated; therefore move on. The educated citizen says history is complicated; therefore study it more seriously.

That is the difference between schooling and education. Schooling can teach a person how to succeed inside a system. Education should teach him how to ask whether the system is worthy of human beings. Schooling can produce the contented subject. Education must produce the citizen capable of responsibility. The first adjusts. The second builds.

The Educated Filipino as Nation-Builder

Against the contented subject stands the educated Filipino. He is not necessarily richer, more radical, more sentimental, or less practical than the contented subject. He may also need work, salary, credentials, stability, and survival. He may also carry family obligations. He may also understand why parents worry, why students choose employable courses, why workers avoid risk, why professionals seek security, and why families measure education by its ability to place food on the table. He does not romanticize hardship, nor does he despise practical necessity. He knows that hunger is real, bills are real, unemployment is real, and sacrifice is real.

But he refuses to make survival the highest philosophy of a people.

This is the essential difference. The educated Filipino may be practical, but he is not reduced by practicality. He may be grateful, but he is not silenced by gratitude. He may respect discipline, but he does not confuse discipline with obedience to injustice. He may use inherited institutions, but he does not confuse usefulness with benevolence. He may study in schools shaped by colonial history, speak languages shaped by power, work in systems shaped by inequality, and survive through institutions he did not design. But he does not therefore conclude that those institutions are morally innocent. He knows that to use a tool is not to worship the hand that first imposed it.

He understands that gratitude must be directed properly. Gratitude is not wrong. It is necessary. A person without gratitude becomes vain, rootless, and forgetful. A nation without gratitude becomes incapable of honoring sacrifice. But gratitude must be aimed at the right objects. It must be directed toward those whose labor, struggle, care, and sacrifice made life possible — not toward domination simply because domination left behind usable structures.

He may be grateful to parents who sacrificed, but not to poverty as a teacher. Poverty may have forced discipline, thrift, and endurance upon many families, but it does not deserve romantic praise. It is not noble simply because people survived it. Parents who labored, borrowed, endured humiliation, skipped their own needs, and carried children through school deserve gratitude. The conditions that made their sacrifices brutal deserve examination. To thank poverty itself is to confuse the virtue of the poor with the justice of their suffering.

He may be grateful to teachers, but not to miseducation. The teacher who opens a mind, gives time beyond duty, lends books, encourages courage, and teaches students to think deserves honor. But an educational system that trains students to admire subordination, fear history, despise their own people, and reduce learning to employability must still be judged. Respect for teachers does not require silence about the curriculum. Gratitude to mentors does not require obedience to the system that limited them. Indeed, the best teacher is honored not by passive admiration, but by the student’s willingness to think further.

He may be grateful to public institutions, but not to colonial domination. A public university, a court, a hospital, a library, a road, or a civil service office may serve the people today. They may be improved, defended, democratized, and made more national in purpose. But their usefulness does not require gratitude toward conquest, occupation, extraction, or hierarchy. The educated Filipino understands inheritance as responsibility, not reverence. He accepts that institutions are there, but he asks what they now serve and what they must become.

He may be grateful for language, but not for the hierarchy that made native tongues appear inferior. English, Spanish, Filipino, and other languages may all serve different historical and practical functions. English may open doors to law, commerce, diplomacy, science, migration, and global exchange. But the educated Filipino does not confuse access with superiority. He does not treat fluency in English as proof of intelligence or humanity. He does not allow language to become a class weapon. He knows that a language can be useful and still be implicated in social distance. He therefore uses language as a bridge, not as a badge of contempt.

He may be grateful for employment, but not for exploitation. Work matters because people must live. A job can sustain a family, pay debts, educate siblings, and preserve dignity against hunger. But employment alone does not settle the question of justice. A worker can be grateful to have work and still ask whether wages are fair, hours are humane, conditions are safe, benefits are adequate, and voice is respected. Gratitude for work does not cancel the price of labor. It does not turn low wages into charity. It does not make overtime into love. It does not make insecurity into opportunity.

He may be grateful for discipline, but not for silence. Discipline is necessary for study, work, public life, and nation-building. No serious project can survive without order, patience, punctuality, and steadiness of purpose. But discipline is not the same as submission. A disciplined citizen may speak firmly, organize responsibly, study carefully, argue honestly, and resist injustice with restraint and courage. Silence is not always discipline. Sometimes silence is fear wearing respectable clothes. The educated Filipino knows the difference.

He may be grateful for survival, but not content with survival as destiny. Survival is not nothing. To survive poverty, colonial injury, bad education, weak institutions, labor insecurity, and national dependency requires strength. But a nation cannot make endurance its highest ideal. The fact that people survived does not prove that the arrangement was just. It proves that people were strong enough to endure. The educated Filipino honors endurance, but he does not turn endurance into a cage. He asks why survival had to be so difficult, and what kind of country would allow dignity to become ordinary rather than exceptional.

This is the responsible form of gratitude. It does not kneel before power. It recognizes debt to the people and turns that debt into service. It knows that education is not a private trophy but a public obligation. The graduate is not merely someone who escaped insecurity. He is someone who was carried by many hands: parents, teachers, workers, taxpayers, farmers, drivers, janitors, clerks, nurses, writers, librarians, public servants, and previous generations who struggled so that schools could exist, books could circulate, and citizenship could be imagined. To be educated is to inherit their labor. To be worthy of that inheritance is to serve beyond oneself.

The educated Filipino therefore refuses the easy sentence: because he benefited from the system, the system must be good. He knows this sentence is the root of miseducation. It converts personal advancement into proof of structural virtue. It says that because one person climbed, the ladder is fair. It says that because one family survived, the economy is adequate. It says that because one graduate found work, education has fulfilled its purpose. It says that because colonial institutions became useful, colonization must be thanked. The educated Filipino rejects this reasoning because he knows that individual success can coexist with collective injury.

His better sentence is different: because he benefited despite the system’s contradictions, he owes the nation something better. If education gave him language, he must use language to clarify, not obscure. If education gave him professional skill, he must use skill to build, not merely escape. If education gave him status, he must use status to widen dignity, not merely guard privilege. If education gave him access to institutions, he must ask how those institutions can be made more just. If education gave him survival, he must help make survival less desperate for those who come after him.

This is where education becomes nation-building. Nation-building is not only the work of presidents, legislators, generals, economists, engineers, or industrial planners. It is also the work of teachers who refuse to reduce history to dates; lawyers who treat law as justice rather than procedure; nurses who understand care as public duty; engineers who build for communities rather than contracts alone; business people who understand enterprise as national capacity rather than extraction; artists who give language to collective life; journalists who resist convenience; civil servants who remember the public; workers who insist that labor has dignity; and students who ask why the country is arranged as it is.

The educated Filipino understands that self-determination is not a slogan. It is a habit of thought and a program of action. It asks whether the country can feed itself, teach itself, heal itself, industrialize with purpose, speak in its own voice, defend its workers, honor its farmers, build institutions that deserve respect, and educate citizens who do not measure their worth only by foreign approval or market demand. Self-determination begins when a people stop treating dependency as realism and begin treating national capacity as responsibility.

This does not mean isolation. The educated Filipino does not reject the world. He learns from it. He studies foreign models, languages, technologies, theories, and institutions. But he does not kneel before them. He understands that learning is different from imitation. Borrowing is different from dependency. International cooperation is different from subordination. Global competence is not the same as national consciousness. A people may face the world confidently only when it knows what it seeks to build at home.

This also does not mean contempt for the family. The educated Filipino knows that family is often the first school of sacrifice. But he refuses to let family obligation be used against national obligation. He understands that the family’s suffering is frequently the result of national weakness: poor wages, weak public services, expensive education, inadequate industry, migration pressures, and fragile social protection. To serve the family seriously is not merely to escape the country for the family’s sake; it is also to ask why the country fails so many families. Familyhood and nation-building should not be enemies. A stronger nation is one in which family survival no longer requires the surrender of public imagination.

The educated Filipino also refuses the false opposition between hard and soft learning. He knows that the country needs engineers, doctors, nurses, lawyers, accountants, programmers, technicians, managers, farmers, scientists, and entrepreneurs. But he also knows that technical skill without historical consciousness may serve any master. He knows that a bridge is not merely a structure but a decision about communities; that a budget is not merely arithmetic but moral priority; that a hospital is not merely a facility but a statement about public care; that a business is not merely profit but social power; that law is not merely procedure but the distribution of justice. He knows that a nation cannot be built by skill alone. It must also be built by memory, judgment, and purpose.

This is the difference between education and miseducation. Education forms citizens. Miseducation produces compliant beneficiaries. Education teaches a person to ask what he owes the people. Miseducation teaches him to ask what the system can give him. Education connects personal advancement to public duty. Miseducation converts personal advancement into proof that the system works. Education directs gratitude toward service. Miseducation directs gratitude toward silence.

The contented subject says: he has survived, therefore he must be thankful. The educated Filipino says: he has survived, therefore others should not have to suffer the same way. The contented subject says: the system gave him credentials, therefore he must defend it. The educated Filipino says: the system gave him tools, therefore he must use them to repair what the system neglected. The contented subject says: the colonizer left institutions, therefore gratitude is owed. The educated Filipino says: the people inherited institutions, therefore responsibility begins.

To become educated in this deeper sense is to outgrow the smallness of private success. It is to understand that a diploma is not merely a ticket out, but a summons back. It is to see that the purpose of learning is not merely to secure one’s own position, but to enlarge the country’s capacity for dignity. It is to recognize that the educated person is not above the people, not apart from the people, and not merely a beneficiary of the people’s labor. He is accountable to them.

That is why the educated Filipino is necessarily a nation-builder. Not because he always enters government, joins movements, writes manifestos, or carries a flag. He is a nation-builder because he refuses to let his education end in himself. He refuses to reduce knowledge to career, language to status, discipline to obedience, gratitude to submission, and survival to destiny. He understands that the highest proof of education is not polish, income, fluency, or employability. It is the capacity to help make a society more conscious, more just, more capable, and more free.

Decolonization as Audit, Not Nostalgia

A business op-ed may put it this way: decolonization is an audit of inherited systems. It is not a bonfire of every foreign influence, nor a sentimental return to a past imagined as pure, undamaged, and self-sufficient. It is closer to due diligence. It asks what the nation has inherited, how those inheritances function, what they still conceal, what they continue to cost, and whether they serve the country’s present and future objectives. It is not the work of rejecting tools simply because they came from elsewhere. It is the work of asking whether those tools still carry the assumptions of dependency.

This is why the language of audit is useful. An audit does not begin by assuming that all assets are worthless. It also does not assume that all recorded assets are healthy. It examines. It verifies. It asks whether the balance sheet tells the truth. It asks whether declared assets are productive, whether liabilities have been hidden, whether old obligations distort present decisions, whether management inherited bad practices, and whether the institution is operating according to its own strategic purpose or merely repeating routines from a previous owner. A nation that inherits colonial systems must do the same.

Decolonization asks what assets are useful. It asks which languages, laws, schools, offices, technologies, administrative methods, and professional disciplines can be retained and made to serve the people. It does not deny that many inherited systems can be useful. English can connect. Law can protect. Universities can form professionals. Bureaucracy can organize public life. Foreign technologies can be adapted. International trade can be beneficial. The point is not to reject them because they are foreign, but to ask whether they have been made accountable to national purpose.

At the same time, decolonization asks what liabilities remain hidden. A school system may produce graduates but also reproduce admiration for foreign standards. A language policy may produce global employability but also deepen class distance. A legal system may provide procedure but remain inaccessible to the poor. A bureaucracy may preserve order but discourage public participation. A business culture may praise efficiency but imitate foreign models without asking whether they fit local conditions. An economy may grow while remaining dependent on imported capital, imported technology, imported standards, and exported labor. These are liabilities because they do not always appear as failures. Sometimes they appear as signs of modernization.

It also asks what dependencies distort decision-making. A country may formally possess sovereignty while continuing to think as a client. Its policymakers may hesitate to build local industry because imported goods appear cheaper in the short term. Its schools may teach students to become globally competitive without asking whether the nation has sufficient capacity to employ them at home. Its business elite may seek foreign partnership not as one option among many, but as proof of legitimacy. Its cultural institutions may wait for foreign recognition before taking local work seriously. Its universities may shape curricula according to international rankings while neglecting national needs. In each case, dependency is not only material. It becomes mental and administrative.

This is why institutional habits must be reviewed. Some institutions survive because they work. Others survive because no one has asked why they remain. A colonial bureaucracy may leave behind habits of distance between state and citizen. A school system may leave behind the assumption that knowledge flows from the center to the periphery, from the foreign to the local, from the elite to the masses. A legal culture may leave behind reverence for form over justice. A business culture may leave behind the habit of trading, importing, brokering, and subcontracting rather than producing, inventing, and building. Decolonization asks which habits are necessary and which are merely inherited reflexes.

Language policy is one of the clearest examples. A nation may use English and still ask whether English has become a gatekeeper of dignity. It may value multilingual competence and still ask why many citizens are made to feel intellectually inferior because they speak in the language of home, market, farm, street, workshop, or region. It may participate in global commerce and still ask why fluency in a foreign language is so often treated as proof of intelligence itself. Decolonization does not require linguistic isolation. It requires linguistic justice. It asks whether language connects citizens to opportunity or divides the educated from the people they claim to serve.

The curriculum also requires audit. What kind of student does it form? Does it produce admiration or analysis? Does it teach the student to memorize conquerors’ gifts while muting conquest’s violence? Does it teach patriotism as ceremony rather than responsibility? Does it treat national history as a sequence of dates and heroes, or as a living argument about land, labor, sovereignty, class, culture, and power? Does it train students to ask why institutions exist, or only how to enter them? Does it produce graduates who can explain the nation to itself, or merely workers who can function in markets arranged by others?

Economic arrangements must be audited with equal seriousness. Formal independence does not automatically create economic self-direction. A country may possess a flag, anthem, constitution, and diplomatic corps while remaining subordinate in production, finance, technology, trade, and labor flows. It may export raw materials and import finished goods. It may educate nurses, seafarers, engineers, caregivers, teachers, and technicians for foreign demand while calling this global competitiveness. It may welcome foreign capital as development while failing to ask whether local capacity is being deepened or merely rented. It may celebrate growth while national industry remains fragile. Decolonization asks whether the economy is becoming sovereign in capacity or merely efficient in dependency.

Prestige must also be audited. In a miseducated society, mimicry can be rewarded more than originality. The foreign accent may command attention before the local argument is heard. The imported framework may appear more serious than the locally developed concept. A foreign consultant may be trusted before a local scholar. A foreign brand may be admired before a local producer. A foreign university may certify what the national university has long understood. This is not openness to the world. It is insecurity organized as taste. Decolonization asks why prestige flows the way it does, and what kind of education taught people to distrust their own capacity.

This is not going backward. It is due diligence. No responsible company acquires an old firm without examining its books. No serious investor accepts a balance sheet on faith. No competent manager inherits an organization without asking which systems serve current goals and which merely reflect the priorities of previous ownership. No state should inherit schools, courts, curricula, bureaucracies, economic habits, and prestige systems without asking whether they serve present national objectives. No people can become sovereign if they are afraid to inspect the foundations of their own schooling.

Those who dismiss decolonization as nostalgia often misunderstand the word because they prefer not to face the audit. It is easier to caricature the project as a desire to abandon English, reject technology, close the economy, romanticize the precolonial past, or deny the usefulness of inherited institutions. But these caricatures avoid the central issue. The question is not whether the Filipino should live without foreign influence. No modern nation does. The question is whether foreign influence becomes exchange or dependency, learning or imitation, cooperation or subordination, tool or master.

Decolonization, properly understood, is not the rejection of everything foreign. It is the rejection of dependency as a mental habit. It is the refusal to believe that the Filipino can progress only under foreign supervision, foreign approval, foreign capital, foreign language, foreign models, and foreign standards of worth. It is the refusal to treat the nation as permanently immature. It is the refusal to assume that what is local is automatically inferior and what is foreign is automatically authoritative. It is the insistence that a people may learn from the world without surrendering the right to define its own development.

Constantino’s essay argued that many Filipinos came to believe they could not progress without foreign capital and foreign entrepreneurs, a distortion he connected to a weak nationalist outlook produced partly by schools. That point remains crucial because it shows that the debate is not only cultural. It is economic. Colonial mentality is not merely a matter of taste, accent, textbook, or attitude. It shapes investment priorities, industrial policy, labor policy, education planning, and national ambition. A people trained to doubt its own capacity will often design an economy that depends on others to do what it has not been taught to believe it can do.

This is why education and economy cannot be separated. A school system that teaches students to admire foreign superiority will produce policymakers, managers, professionals, and consumers who reproduce dependency in practical life. They may not call it dependency. They may call it competitiveness, openness, partnership, modernization, or realism. But the result may be the same: local production remains weak, foreign approval remains decisive, and the educated class becomes better at leaving the country than building it.

A miseducated nation imports not only goods, but standards of legitimacy. It admires foreign investors more quickly than local producers. It treats industrial weakness as natural, as though some countries are born to manufacture and others to consume, serve, remit, or subcontract. It praises the export of labor as global success while failing to ask why so much national talent must find dignity elsewhere. It turns migration into destiny and calls it opportunity. It calls workers “talent” while denying labor its price. It teaches students to become globally competitive while leaving the nation locally fragile.

This is refined dependency because it no longer looks like colonial rule. There is no governor-general ordering the curriculum. There is no imperial flag over the schoolhouse. There is no colonial officer openly declaring that the natives must be trained for subordinate roles. Instead, the incentives do the work. Rankings do the work. Recruitment pipelines do the work. Foreign demand does the work. Prestige does the work. The market does the work. The educated subject learns to choose what the system rewards, and the system rewards what keeps dependency profitable.

Decolonization asks whether this is development or merely improved adaptation to dependency. It asks whether an economy that exports workers but imports dreams can call itself successful. It asks whether a school system that produces employable graduates but weak national consciousness can call itself liberating. It asks whether foreign investment that does not deepen local capacity is development or tenancy. It asks whether global competitiveness means the Filipino can stand with others as an equal, or merely that he can serve efficiently in systems designed elsewhere.

The audit must therefore be practical, not rhetorical. It must ask what industries the country must build, what forms of knowledge must be cultivated, what languages must be empowered, what histories must be taught, what labor must be dignified, what public institutions must be repaired, what economic dependencies must be reduced, and what foreign partnerships must be judged by national benefit rather than prestige. It must ask how education can serve national development without becoming narrow propaganda. It must ask how openness to the world can coexist with confidence in the people’s own capacity.

A serious decolonizing project does not flatter the nation with illusions. It does not say that everything local is good, everything foreign is bad, and every inherited system must be destroyed. That would be another form of laziness. It knows that the local can be unjust, provincial, corrupt, or inefficient. It knows that foreign ideas can be useful, liberating, and necessary. But it insists on judgment. It insists that usefulness be examined, not worshiped. It insists that inheritance be transformed, not merely maintained. It insists that the Filipino be trained not as a grateful user of systems, but as a conscious author of them.

In business terms, the country must stop operating inherited systems as if they were untouchable legacy assets. Some should be kept. Some should be repaired. Some should be merged with local realities. Some should be written off. Some should be replaced. Some should be democratized. Some should be redirected toward national objectives. This is not ideological vandalism. It is strategic management of history.

The deeper point is that sovereignty is not merely political status. It is capacity. A sovereign people must be able to think, produce, teach, govern, remember, trade, negotiate, and imagine from its own standpoint. It may borrow, but it must not be borrowed away from itself. It may cooperate, but it must not depend so deeply that cooperation becomes obedience. It may use inherited tools, but it must not remain trapped inside inherited purposes.

Decolonization as audit is therefore one of the most practical tasks a nation can undertake. It asks what the country owns, what it owes, what it has mistaken for assets, what liabilities have been hidden by prestige, what capacities must be built, and what habits must be unlearned. It asks whether education is producing citizens who can perform that audit or subjects who fear it. It asks whether the Filipino has been trained merely to inherit systems or to transform them.

The answer determines whether the nation is merely postcolonial in date or sovereign in fact.

Education, Freedom, and Conformity

The issue is not unique to the Philippines. Every society must decide whether education will train people to fit into the existing order or prepare them to examine, judge, and transform it. This question appears differently in different countries, but the underlying tension is old. Education can become a ladder into the system, or it can become a means of understanding the system. It can teach the young how to succeed under existing arrangements, or it can teach them how those arrangements came to be and whether they deserve to continue.

Paulo Freire famously drew this distinction when he argued that education either integrates the young into the logic of the existing system or becomes the “practice of freedom,” enabling people to deal critically and creatively with reality. That insight clarifies Constantino’s relevance. Constantino was not warning against education itself. He was warning against education for conformity in a society that required freedom. He was warning against schooling that could produce literacy, competence, professionalism, and even social mobility while leaving the deeper structures of dependency untouched.

Miseducation, therefore, does not mean the absence of schooling. It may exist in the most formal, polished, credentialed spaces. It may wear a university seal, speak fluent English, pass board examinations, win scholarships, publish reports, and deliver conference speeches. It may appear modern, disciplined, and respectable. Its danger is precisely that it can look like success. The miseducated person may not be ignorant in the ordinary sense. He may be highly trained. What he lacks is not information, but freedom of judgment.

In a colonial or postcolonial society, conformity may easily be mistaken for achievement. The student who learns the dominant language, masters the accepted curriculum, imitates foreign standards, and earns approval from recognized institutions may be praised as excellent. The professional who adjusts himself to market demand may be praised as practical. The manager who speaks in polished phrases about values, productivity, talent, resilience, and gratitude may be praised as modern. The citizen who avoids difficult historical questions may be praised as mature. But one must ask: excellent for what, practical for whom, modern according to whose standards, and mature in relation to what national task?

This is the problem with education that merely integrates people into the existing order. It may produce competent adaptation. It may train students to enter offices, pass examinations, satisfy employers, communicate globally, and navigate bureaucracy. It may give them skills that are genuinely useful. But it may also teach them to accept the limits of the world as given. It may train them to adjust so well that they lose the habit of asking whether adjustment is enough. It may reward those who can move efficiently through inherited systems while marginalizing those who ask why the systems are arranged as they are.

In the Philippine case, this is not an abstract matter. A student may graduate with honors and still not understand why the country’s economy exports so many of its educated workers. A professional may earn well and still not ask why local industries remain weak. A manager may speak of talent development and still not ask why labor remains cheap. A teacher may teach values and still not ask why history has been softened into harmless patriotism. A citizen may be proud of being practical and still not ask why practicality so often means submission to dependency.

If that person cannot ask who benefits from the system, what history produced it, why the nation remains dependent, why labor is cheap, why education serves export markets more efficiently than national development, and why criticism is treated as ingratitude, then schooling has not produced freedom. It has produced competent adaptation. It has produced someone capable of functioning inside an arrangement, but not necessarily capable of judging it. It has produced someone who can comply intelligently.

This distinction is crucial because adaptation is not always wrong. A person must adapt in order to live. A worker adapts to the job, a student adapts to school, a family adapts to hardship, and a small business adapts to market conditions. Adaptation is part of survival. But when adaptation becomes the whole purpose of education, freedom disappears from the curriculum. The student learns to fit, not to question. The worker learns to endure, not to bargain. The citizen learns to comply, not to build. The nation learns to manage dependency, not to overcome it.

Education as freedom does not mean disorder, indulgence, or empty rebellion. It does not mean teaching students to reject every institution simply because institutions are imperfect. It does not mean romantic hostility to discipline, skill, employment, or professional competence. On the contrary, a liberating education must be rigorous. It must teach language, science, history, economics, ethics, technical skill, and civic responsibility. But it must teach them in a way that enlarges judgment rather than narrows it. It must produce competence with consciousness.

The business class should understand this better than anyone. A company that merely adapts to a bad market structure never becomes a leader. It survives, perhaps even profits, but it does not transform its industry. It accepts inherited constraints as destiny. It reacts rather than creates. It becomes efficient within limits set by others. The same is true of a nation. A nation that only adapts to inherited dependency never becomes sovereign. It may administer dependency well. It may produce talented workers for foreign markets. It may attract investment, follow global trends, and speak the language of competitiveness. But if it does not build its own capacity, it remains subordinate in fact, no matter how independent it appears in ceremony.

A person who only adapts to survival never becomes fully human. He may become responsible, hardworking, and disciplined, but his inner life may be narrowed by fear. He may learn to suppress questions because questions threaten the little security he has achieved. He may call his silence maturity because silence helped him survive. He may call his conformity gratitude because gratitude protects him from the guilt of questioning those who sacrificed for him. He may call his lack of imagination realism because realism is rewarded by the system. But the human being was not made only to adjust. He was made to judge, create, remember, love, build, and act with others toward a more dignified common life.

This is where Constantino and Freire meet. Both understood that education is never merely the transfer of information. It is the formation of consciousness. It either teaches people to see reality as fixed or to see reality as historical and therefore changeable. It either teaches them to internalize the system’s limits or to recognize those limits as human-made. It either produces subjects who ask permission from reality or citizens who participate in remaking it.

In a miseducated society, success itself may become evidence of conformity. The successful graduate is displayed as proof that the system works. The overseas professional is celebrated as global talent. The English-speaking manager is praised as world-class. The disciplined worker is praised as resilient. The grateful citizen is praised as well-formed. Yet the national questions remain unanswered. Why must so many succeed elsewhere? Why must talent leave home to be valued? Why does world-class often mean foreign-certified? Why must resilience be demanded so often from the same classes of people? Why is gratitude expected most from those who have the most reason to ask for justice?

A liberating education would not despise success. It would redefine it. Success would not mean merely escaping insecurity. It would mean using one’s formation to enlarge the country’s capacity for dignity. The engineer would not merely build; he would ask what kind of development the structure serves. The nurse would not merely migrate; she would understand the political economy that made migration so necessary. The lawyer would not merely master procedure; he would ask whether law serves justice. The businessperson would not merely maximize profit; he would ask whether enterprise builds national capacity or merely extracts value. The teacher would not merely cover the syllabus; he would form memory, judgment, and courage.

Education for freedom also requires the courage to make students uncomfortable. A student who never encounters the violence of history, the contradictions of development, the dignity of labor, the politics of language, and the unfinished work of sovereignty may graduate polite but unprepared. He may know how to behave in an office but not how to understand a country. He may know how to produce reports but not how to read the society those reports describe. He may know how to speak confidently but not how to listen to the people whose lives his education is supposed to serve.

Conformity is often marketed as responsibility. Students are told to be practical. Workers are told to be grateful. Citizens are told to be realistic. Professionals are told to be globally competitive. Families are told to choose security. These instructions contain partial truths. Practicality, gratitude, realism, competitiveness, and security all have their place. But when they are separated from freedom, they become instruments of adjustment. They teach people to endure the world rather than improve it.

The question, then, is not whether education should help people live in the real world. It must. The question is whether education should teach them that the real world is final. A colonial or postcolonial order depends on the belief that inherited arrangements are permanent, that dependence is realism, that foreign approval is necessity, that labor must remain cheap, that history must be softened, that values must replace analysis, and that criticism must be treated as ingratitude. Education for freedom breaks that spell.

It tells the student that reality is real, but not sacred. It tells the worker that survival is necessary, but not sufficient. It tells the professional that skill is valuable, but not innocent. It tells the citizen that gratitude is noble, but not when directed toward domination. It tells the nation that inheritance is unavoidable, but reverence is optional. It tells the educated person that his task is not merely to enter the world as it is, but to help make the world more just.

This is why the debate over miseducation remains urgent. A country may have schools everywhere and still lack education for freedom. It may produce graduates every year and still lack citizens formed for national responsibility. It may speak constantly of excellence and still train people to conform. It may celebrate talent while neglecting labor. It may honor values while fearing history. It may praise global competitiveness while failing to build local capacity.

The difference between freedom and conformity is therefore the difference between education and miseducation. Education forms people who can live in society while examining it. Miseducation forms people who can succeed in society because they have stopped examining it. Education prepares the citizen to participate in history. Miseducation prepares the subject to adjust to history written by others.

The Mockery of Grateful Miseducation

The deepest mockery occurs when education itself is used to make the educated person grateful to the forces that limited his humanity. Education, which should enlarge judgment, is made to narrow it. Schooling, which should awaken historical consciousness, is made to soften memory. Credentials, which should summon a graduate to responsibility, are made to justify the system that produced him. The student is not merely taught to read, write, calculate, and work. He is taught to thank the arrangement that shaped his limits.

This is the cruel inversion. Education should make a person more capable of asking what happened to his country, what kind of society he inherited, what structures shaped his choices, and what duties follow from his formation. But grateful miseducation teaches him to begin and end with indebtedness to power. It tells him that because he received something, he must not ask what was withheld. Because he learned something, he must not ask what was erased. Because he found work, he must not ask why work is cheap. Because he survived, he must not ask why survival required so much humiliation.

He is told that colonization gave him schools, therefore he must not condemn colonization. The schoolhouse becomes a moral shield for conquest. The curriculum becomes evidence for benevolence. The classroom is made to cover the battlefield, the prison, the plantation, the mission, the tax office, and the bureaucracy. He is asked to admire the institution without asking what political order required that institution. He is asked to thank the colonizer for teaching him while forgetting that the same power also sought to govern the terms of his thought.

He is told that English gave him employment, therefore he must not question linguistic hierarchy. The argument is always presented as practical. English opens doors, secures jobs, connects the country to the world, and allows participation in commerce, law, diplomacy, technology, and migration. All of that may be true. But usefulness does not cancel hierarchy. A language may be useful and still become a gatekeeper. It may connect the educated to the world while separating them from the people. It may create opportunity while also creating shame. It may become a tool of expression, but also a badge of class. Grateful miseducation allows only the first half of the truth.

He is told that hard courses give jobs, therefore he must not waste time learning how to be human. The professional degree becomes the highest proof of seriousness. Engineering, accounting, nursing, information technology, medicine, law, and business are treated as the respectable paths because they appear to answer the family’s immediate fear: employment. The humanities are tolerated only when they can be converted into credentials, teaching loads, corporate communication, advertising, law preparation, or content production. The question of what kind of person the student is becoming is postponed because the question of what job he will get is treated as supreme.

He is told that passion does not exist, therefore he must choose survival. This sentence is often spoken by people who have been injured by scarcity. It is not always said with cruelty. Sometimes it is said with desperation. It means that dreams are dangerous, that vocation is for those who can afford it, that inner life must yield to the market, and that the first duty of the young is to become useful. But when survival becomes the highest doctrine, the person is trained to distrust his own calling. He learns that the self must be reduced to what can be hired, priced, scheduled, evaluated, and monetized. He becomes employable before he becomes whole.

He is told that history is divisive, therefore he must accept values formation. The past is treated as a source of conflict, while values are treated as safe. But the values offered are often stripped of memory. They teach respect without asking why institutions lose respect. They teach discipline without asking who benefits from disciplined silence. They teach patriotism without asking what sovereignty requires. They teach gratitude without asking to whom gratitude is owed. They teach obedience without asking when obedience becomes collaboration with wrong. History is feared because it gives values teeth. Without history, values become manners.

He is told that labor is old-fashioned, therefore he must become talent. The older language of work, with its wages, hours, contracts, unions, bargaining, and rights, is replaced by the polished language of aspiration. He is no longer a worker selling labor under conditions that must be judged. He is talent seeking opportunity. His insecurity becomes flexibility. His low pay becomes a stepping stone. His overtime becomes passion. His fear becomes resilience. His demands become entitlement. He is praised into silence. He is admired more easily than he is paid.

In each case, the same reduction occurs. Human life is narrowed into utility. Education becomes employability. Work becomes survival. History becomes manners. Nationalism becomes nostalgia. Criticism becomes ingratitude. Passion becomes childishness. Language becomes class certification. Institutions become gifts. Foreign approval becomes legitimacy. The nation becomes a background to private advancement rather than a common project to be built.

This is the reductionist mind. It cannot distinguish between being fed and being free. To be fed is necessary, but it is not enough. The plantation may feed, the prison may feed, the barracks may feed, the company dormitory may feed, and the colonial school may train. But food alone cannot prove justice. A people can eat under domination. A worker can eat under exploitation. A student can eat while being miseducated. A nation can survive while remaining dependent. The reductionist mind takes the minimum condition of life and mistakes it for the fullness of life.

It cannot distinguish between being trained and being educated. Training teaches performance within a task. Education teaches judgment within a world. Training asks whether the person can function. Education asks whether the person understands what he is functioning for. Training produces competence. Education must produce consciousness. A country needs training, but it cannot live by training alone. A trained population may run offices, process documents, write reports, answer calls, maintain systems, and serve markets. But without education in the deeper sense, it may not ask whether those offices, documents, systems, and markets serve the nation.

It cannot distinguish between receiving benefits and receiving justice. A benefit may be real. A wage may be paid. A school may be built. A road may be opened. A scholarship may be granted. A promotion may be offered. But justice asks a larger question. Who controls the terms? Who benefits most? Who pays the cost? Who is excluded? Who decides? Who is silenced? The grateful subject points to the benefit and says the matter is settled. The educated citizen points to the structure and says the matter has only begun.

It cannot distinguish between adapting to a system and building a nation. Adaptation is often necessary. People must live. Families must eat. Students must graduate. Workers must keep jobs. Professionals must navigate institutions. But adaptation is not the same as authorship. A nation is not built merely by producing individuals who can survive under inherited arrangements. It is built by citizens who can examine those arrangements, repair them, redirect them, and, when necessary, replace them. The reductionist mind sees adjustment and calls it maturity. The nation-builder sees adjustment and asks whether it has become a cage.

Therefore the reductionist mind calls contentment wisdom. It praises the person who no longer asks difficult questions. It admires the graduate who chooses the safest path, the worker who does not organize, the citizen who does not disturb, the student who does not historicize, the professional who does not challenge inherited standards, and the nationalist who limits patriotism to ceremony. It calls this realism. It calls this discipline. It calls this values. It calls this gratitude.

But contentment under a bad arrangement is not wisdom. It may be exhaustion. It may be fear. It may be adaptation. It may be the result of a lifetime spent learning which questions are punished and which answers are rewarded. To call it wisdom is to confuse the silence of the managed with the consent of the free.

This is the mockery: the educated person is asked to prove his education by not questioning the conditions of his education. He is asked to prove his values by accepting the moral authority of the system. He is asked to prove his gratitude by refusing to examine power. He is asked to prove his practicality by shrinking his idea of the human being. He is asked to prove his maturity by abandoning the thought that the nation can be otherwise.

A true education should do the opposite. It should teach that gratitude is not submission, that work is not merely survival, that history is not divisiveness, that language is not superiority, that usefulness is not benevolence, and that institutions are not holy because they are inherited. It should teach that the human being is more than an employable unit, that the worker is more than talent, that the student is more than future labor, and that the nation is more than a place from which families try to escape.

The mockery ends only when education stops producing grateful beneficiaries and begins forming responsible citizens. It ends when the graduate understands that what he received is not proof that the system is good, but a summons to make the country better. It ends when gratitude is redirected from power to the people: to parents, teachers, workers, farmers, taxpayers, communities, writers, organizers, and generations whose sacrifices made learning possible. It ends when the educated person no longer says, “The system helped me, therefore it must be defended,” but instead says, “The system helped me despite its contradictions, therefore it must be judged, repaired, and transformed.”

Until then, grateful miseducation remains one of the most elegant forms of captivity. It does not chain the mind by forbidding education. It chains the mind by teaching the educated to thank the chain.

Toward a Better Kind of Gratitude

The answer is not ingratitude. The answer is better gratitude. A serious nation does not become mature by rejecting gratitude altogether. It becomes mature by learning where gratitude is properly owed, what gratitude demands, and when gratitude has been misdirected toward power instead of people. There is a kind of gratitude that enlarges the citizen because it reminds him that he did not make himself alone. But there is also a kind of gratitude that diminishes him because it teaches him to thank the very arrangements that reduced his people’s possibilities. The task is to distinguish one from the other.

A nation should be grateful to those who struggled for schools that serve the people. It should be grateful to those who believed that education was not merely a privilege for the few, but a public necessity. It should be grateful to those who fought for classrooms, libraries, universities, scholarships, academic freedom, public instruction, and the right of ordinary families to imagine a future through learning. These were not gifts dropped from above. They were the result of labor, taxation, organizing, teaching, writing, public service, and political struggle. A school that serves the people is not merely a building. It is a social achievement.

A nation should be grateful to teachers who teach beyond colonial common sense. These are the teachers who do not merely cover the syllabus, but ask what the syllabus assumes. They teach language without teaching contempt for the native tongue. They teach history without softening domination into benevolence. They teach discipline without silencing conscience. They teach excellence without worshiping foreign approval. They teach students not only to pass examinations, but to understand the country in which those examinations take place. Such teachers are nation-builders because they refuse to turn education into adjustment.

A nation should be grateful to workers whose taxes sustain public institutions. The student sitting in a public classroom is not sustained only by administrators, professors, and policymakers. He is sustained by the labor of people he may never meet: wage earners, vendors, drivers, clerks, nurses, factory hands, technicians, call-center agents, farmers, seafarers, and employees whose taxes and economic activity help keep institutions alive. To be educated at public expense is to be indebted not abstractly to “the state,” but concretely to the people whose labor finances the state. Gratitude, properly understood, should therefore point outward toward the working public.

A nation should be grateful to farmers, drivers, nurses, clerks, janitors, librarians, writers, and parents whose labor makes education possible. The farmer feeds the household that sends the child to school. The driver brings the student to campus. The nurse protects the body that studies. The clerk keeps records moving. The janitor makes the classroom habitable. The librarian preserves access to memory. The writer gives language to public thought. The parent sacrifices comfort, time, and often health so that a child may continue. Education rests on this invisible republic of labor. To forget them is to mistake the diploma for a private achievement.

A nation should be grateful to students who defended academic freedom, historians who preserved memory, and citizens who refused to mistake obedience for peace. Academic freedom did not survive because institutions were naturally generous. It survived because people defended it. Historical memory did not preserve itself. It survived because writers, archivists, teachers, witnesses, and scholars refused erasure. Public conscience did not grow from silence. It grew because citizens asked difficult questions when obedience would have been safer. A country that benefits from these struggles should not reduce gratitude to polite thankfulness. It should turn gratitude into vigilance.

But a nation should not be grateful to domination simply because domination was efficient. Efficiency is not justice. A colonial bureaucracy may keep records well, collect taxes regularly, build roads strategically, and train clerks effectively, but administrative competence does not redeem the political condition of subordination. A prison may be orderly. A plantation may be productive. A dictatorship may build infrastructure. A company town may provide housing. None of these facts settles the moral question. The Filipino must not be trained to admire domination because domination knew how to organize itself.

A nation should not be grateful to colonization because colonization left tools behind. Tools can be inherited without sanctifying conquest. A language can be used without worshiping the empire that privileged it. A road can be traveled without thanking the power that first built it for extraction or control. A school can be improved without declaring colonial education benevolent. A law can be reworked without praising the hierarchy that once administered it. Colonization may leave instruments, but the nation’s task is to transform them, not to kneel before their origin.

A nation should not be grateful to a system merely because the system allowed some people to survive. Survival is not a moral certificate. People survive poverty, exploitation, corruption, war, migration, bad schools, weak institutions, and unjust economies. Their survival honors their strength; it does not absolve the arrangements they endured. To say that a system is good because people survived it is to praise the cage because the prisoner learned to breathe inside it. A serious nation honors endurance but refuses to make endurance the highest standard of public life.

A nation should not be grateful to miseducation because miseducation produced credentials. A diploma may open doors, but it may also conceal the narrowing of thought. A school may produce professionals while failing to produce citizens. A graduate may become employable while remaining historically unformed. If education teaches gratitude to power, contempt for the native, fear of history, and adjustment to dependency, then its credentials cannot be treated as proof of liberation. The question is not merely whether the student graduated. The question is what kind of mind the school formed.

A nation should not be grateful to exploitation because exploitation came with wages. Work is necessary, and employment can rescue families from immediate hardship. But wages do not automatically prove fairness. The worker may be paid and still be underpaid. He may be employed and still be insecure. He may be praised as talent and still be denied labor’s price. He may be called resilient because the system refuses to become humane. Gratitude for work cannot mean silence about exploitation. A job is not charity when labor produces value.

Gratitude must lead to responsibility, not submission. The person who is truly grateful does not merely bow. He asks what debt he has inherited and how it must be repaid. If he is grateful for education, he must ask how education can serve more than private advancement. If he is grateful for public institutions, he must help make them more just. If he is grateful to workers, he must not despise labor. If he is grateful to parents, he must not romanticize the poverty that burdened them. If he is grateful to the nation, he must not confuse love of country with passive loyalty to whatever already exists.

This is the better kind of gratitude: gratitude that becomes service. It does not silence criticism because it understands criticism as part of responsibility. It does not forbid judgment because it knows that what is inherited must be examined. It does not treat the system as sacred because it knows that systems are made by human beings and may be remade by them. It remembers that one’s education was paid for not only by money, but by labor, struggle, sacrifice, memory, and public hope. Therefore, it asks the educated person to give back not only as a professional, but as a citizen.

The educated Filipino’s task is not to curse every inheritance nor to worship every institution. Both habits are immature. To curse every inheritance is to deny the complexity of history and the capacity of a people to transform what was imposed. To worship every institution is to confuse survival with legitimacy. The educated Filipino must do harder work. He must examine, transform, and build. He must ask what an institution was, what it is, and what it must become. He must ask whether inherited systems serve the people or merely reproduce old hierarchies in modern language.

He must inherit without kneeling. This means accepting that the present contains many things received from the past, including painful pasts, without allowing inheritance to become reverence. He may inherit schools, roads, laws, languages, religious forms, administrative habits, and professional disciplines. But he must not treat them as untouchable simply because they are old or useful. He must know that inheritance is not the same as consent. A free people may receive what history leaves behind and still decide what to change.

He must use without idolizing. The Filipino may use English, law, science, business methods, public administration, and international frameworks. He may learn from foreign countries, foreign thinkers, foreign institutions, and foreign technologies. But he must not confuse use with subordination. Tools must serve national life. They must not become measures of Filipino inferiority. To use a foreign tool wisely is one thing; to believe that only foreign tools can save the country is another. The first is learning. The second is dependency.

He must remember without being trapped. Historical memory is not a prison. It is orientation. To remember colonization, exploitation, resistance, class struggle, labor struggle, and national aspiration is not to live in bitterness. It is to understand the conditions under which the present was made. The person who refuses memory is more likely to repeat inherited mistakes. The person who remembers clearly can choose more intelligently. Memory becomes dangerous only to those who prefer that the people remain grateful without understanding why gratitude has been demanded.

He must modernize without surrendering judgment. Modernization is necessary, but it must not become imitation. A country may build industries, adopt technologies, reform institutions, improve management, expand trade, and participate in the world. But it must ask whose model is being followed, whose interests are being served, and whether modernization increases national capacity or merely refines dependency. Not everything modern is emancipatory. Not everything foreign is superior. Not everything efficient is just. Judgment must accompany progress.

He must work without forgetting labor’s dignity. Whatever his profession, he must remember that work is not merely a private contract but a social relation. He must resist the language that praises talent while cheapening labor. He must understand that the economy rests not only on executives, investors, and professionals, but also on those who clean, carry, drive, farm, teach, heal, cook, guard, encode, repair, and serve. A nation that forgets labor will eventually mistake exploitation for productivity. The educated Filipino must not allow his own advancement to detach him from the dignity of work.

He must study without becoming a stranger to his own people. This may be the hardest duty of all. Education can create distance. It can give language, habits, references, and ambitions that separate the graduate from the community that made his education possible. The educated Filipino must resist this estrangement. He must not use schooling as an exit from the people, but as preparation for service to them. He must learn from books without despising lived experience. He must enter institutions without forgetting the street, the farm, the factory, the classroom, the market, the jeepney, the clinic, the office, and the home.

Such gratitude is not passive. It is demanding. It tells the graduate that the diploma is not merely his. It carries the labor of parents, teachers, workers, taxpayers, and generations before him. It tells the professional that success is not merely proof of personal merit. It is also a debt to a society that needs repair. It tells the citizen that love of country is not only emotion. It is obligation. It tells the nation that the proper answer to inherited injustice is not eternal resentment, but neither is it submissive thankfulness. The answer is transformation.

A better gratitude therefore refuses two temptations. The first is bitterness without construction, which remembers injury but does not build. The second is gratitude without judgment, which remembers benefits but excuses domination. The educated Filipino must reject both. He must remember clearly and build seriously. He must condemn what deserves condemnation, retain what can be made useful, repair what is damaged, democratize what was exclusive, and create what the inherited system failed to provide.

This is the gratitude of nation-builders. It does not ask the Filipino to be content that he was fed. It asks why hunger remains so powerful. It does not ask him to be content that he was schooled. It asks what kind of consciousness schooling produced. It does not ask him to be content that he found work. It asks whether work is dignified. It does not ask him to be content that institutions exist. It asks whether they serve the people. It does not ask him to be content that the country survived. It asks what the country must become.

In the end, gratitude must be rescued from those who use it as a command to kneel. Proper gratitude is not quietism. It is memory in action. It is the recognition that one has received much from the sacrifices of others, and that this debt cannot be repaid by silence. It can only be repaid by service, judgment, courage, and the effort to build a country where future generations need not mistake survival for justice or education for escape.

Conclusion: The Unfinished Question

Constantino remains difficult because he asks a question that many would rather avoid: "what kind of education does a free people require?" It is a simple question only on the surface. Beneath it lies the whole argument over colonial inheritance, national consciousness, labor, language, history, work, family, and the purpose of schooling itself. It asks whether education exists merely to help the individual survive within the present order, or whether it should also prepare him to understand and transform that order. It asks whether the Filipino is being trained to enter the world as it is, or educated to participate in making the world more just.

The easy answer is employability. It is easy because it speaks to immediate fear. Families need income. Students need work. Parents need assurance that sacrifice will not be wasted. A degree must lead somewhere. In a country where insecurity is ordinary, employability appears not as an ideology but as common sense. But employability cannot be the whole answer. A people may become employable and remain dependent. A nation may export talent and remain weak. A graduate may earn a salary and remain unable to ask why the economy that trained him cannot dignify him at home.

The easy answer is values. It is easy because it sounds morally unassailable. Who can be against honesty, discipline, responsibility, compassion, sacrifice, and respect? But values without history become manners. They teach people how to behave without teaching them how society was built, who benefited, who suffered, who resisted, and what remains unfinished. Values without historical consciousness produce citizens who may be polite before power but unable to judge power. They produce obedience and call it moral formation.

The easy answer is gratitude. It is easy because gratitude is a virtue in ordinary life. A person should be grateful to parents, teachers, workers, taxpayers, farmers, and communities whose labor makes survival and education possible. But gratitude becomes dangerous when it is directed toward domination. A nation should not be taught to thank colonization because colonization left tools behind. It should not be taught to thank exploitation because exploitation came with wages. It should not be taught to thank miseducation because miseducation produced credentials. Gratitude must become responsibility, not submission.

The easy answer is English. It is easy because English has market value, institutional power, and global usefulness. It can open doors to law, commerce, science, migration, diplomacy, and professional advancement. But language must not become self-contempt. The Filipino may use English without treating it as proof of intelligence or superiority. He may enter the world through English without abandoning the dignity of his own languages. A free people can be multilingual without being mentally subordinate.

The easy answer is discipline. It is easy because no serious society can survive without discipline. But discipline must not become silence. It must not become the discipline of the underpaid worker who cannot speak, the student who cannot question, the citizen who cannot criticize, or the nation that cannot imagine beyond dependency. True discipline is not obedience to inherited limits. It is the strength required to build, organize, study, judge, and serve.

The easy answer is “whatever gets a job.” It is easy because the job is real, the bill is real, the tuition is real, the family’s anxiety is real. But a nation cannot allow the labor market to become the supreme philosopher of education. If schooling is reduced to whatever hires, then the human being is reduced to whatever the market can use. The citizen becomes talent. Labor becomes a cost. History becomes decoration. Passion becomes childishness. Nation-building becomes a luxury postponed until after survival — and survival never ends.

The easy answer is “whatever puts food on the table.” It is easy because hunger is not theoretical. But the presence of food cannot be the final proof of justice. A plantation may feed. A prison may feed. A colonial school may train. A low-wage economy may keep people alive. Survival is necessary, but survival is not freedom. A serious nation must ask not only whether there is food on the table, but who owns the table, who built it, who serves it, who eats first, who eats last, and who is told to be grateful for crumbs.

A nation cannot live forever on easy answers. Easy answers may comfort families, satisfy employers, reassure institutions, and quiet public debate, but they cannot build a free people. They explain how to endure, but not how to transform. They help the individual adjust, but they do not ask whether adjustment has become a cage. They produce graduates, but not necessarily citizens. They produce skills, but not necessarily judgment. They produce order, but not necessarily justice.

An education worthy of a free people must teach skill, but not skill alone. It must produce engineers, nurses, teachers, lawyers, accountants, programmers, managers, farmers, technicians, artists, writers, and public servants who know not only how to work, but why their work matters to the country. Skill without consciousness may serve any master. Competence without national purpose may strengthen dependency. Efficiency without justice may make exploitation smoother.

It must teach values, but not values without history. Values must be rooted in memory. Honesty must confront official lies. Courage must remember those who resisted domination. Discipline must distinguish public service from servility. Respect must include respect for the people, not only for authority. Gratitude must be directed toward those who labored and sacrificed, not toward the forces that constrained them. Patriotism must be more than ceremony; it must become responsibility.

It must teach language, but not language as self-contempt. It must teach English and other useful languages without making the Filipino ashamed of his own speech. It must teach global communication without producing local estrangement. It must teach students to speak to the world without losing the ability to speak with their own people. Language should enlarge the Filipino, not divide him from the nation he is supposed to serve.

It must teach work, but not work as servility. Work must be understood as dignity, skill, discipline, creativity, and contribution. But it must also be understood as labor with a price, rights, and collective meaning. The worker is not merely talent seeking opportunity. He is a human being whose time, body, intelligence, and effort produce value. A country that praises work while cheapening labor does not honor work. It merely decorates exploitation.

It must teach gratitude, but not gratitude to domination. It must teach the student to be grateful to parents, teachers, workers, farmers, taxpayers, public servants, writers, organizers, and generations who made education possible. But it must also teach him that gratitude must never be used to silence judgment. To be grateful is not to kneel. To be grateful is to recognize debt and turn that debt into service.

It must teach practicality, but not practicality as surrender. A free people must be practical enough to build roads, run institutions, create industries, manage resources, provide jobs, and feed families. But practicality must not mean the acceptance of dependency as destiny. It must not mean choosing the safest path because the nation has forgotten how to imagine larger ones. True practicality asks what must be done to make dignity ordinary.

It must teach survival, but not survival as the highest dream of a people. Survival is the beginning, not the endpoint. A people that only survives remains vulnerable to every system that can offer food in exchange for silence. Education must teach people how to live, but also why living must be more than endurance. It must prepare them to build a nation in which survival is not constantly treated as a miracle.

The real issue, then, is not whether the Filipino should be grateful for what exists. The issue is whether he has been educated enough to ask why it exists, whom it serves, what it costs, what it conceals, and how it must be changed. This is the question that separates education from miseducation. Miseducation teaches the person to accept the existing order as the horizon of possibility. Education teaches him that the existing order is historical, human-made, and therefore open to judgment.

That is why the misinterpretation of "The Miseducation of the Filipino" is not a small academic error. It is the continuation of miseducation by other means. It shows that the colonized mind can defend its own conditioning and call that defense morality. It shows that a person can be schooled, fluent, employable, polished, and respectable while still unable to distinguish between benefit and benevolence, training and education, survival and justice, inheritance and reverence, gratitude and submission.

In a time of national upsurge, that defense will grow louder. It will speak of order because order is easier than justice. It will speak of values because values can be made safer than history. It will speak of practicality because practicality can be used to shrink imagination. It will speak of gratitude because gratitude can be turned into silence. It will accuse historical criticism of bitterness. It will accuse nationalism of backwardness. It will accuse the questioning citizen of ingratitude. It will accuse the young of idealism because the young still ask questions the old have learned to avoid.

But the answer must remain firm.

To condemn colonization is not to deny that some useful things were inherited. A people may inherit tools without thanking domination. They may use language, law, schools, roads, and institutions while still judging the power that shaped them. Use is not worship. Inheritance is not reverence.

To study history is not to go backward. It is to understand how the present was made. A country without memory becomes easy to manage because it cannot identify the sources of its own condition. History is not a retreat from the future. It is preparation for building one.

To decolonize is not to become primitive. It is to audit inherited systems, transform what can serve the people, discard what reproduces dependency, and recover the confidence to think from one’s own ground. Decolonization is not nostalgia. It is due diligence for sovereignty.

To criticize miseducation is not to despise education. It is to demand an education worthy of a free people. It is to insist that schools produce citizens, not merely employees; judgment, not merely competence; memory, not merely manners; public responsibility, not merely private advancement.

To ask for justice is not to reject gratitude. It is to direct gratitude properly — toward the people whose labor makes the nation possible, not toward systems that profit from silence. True gratitude does not end in submission. It becomes service.

To become human is not less practical than getting a job. Work matters, but the human being is more than employability. A society that teaches its young only how to be hired will eventually forget how to be free.

To build a nation is not nostalgia. It is the work that begins when a people refuse to mistake survival for destiny. It is the work of transforming inherited institutions into instruments of dignity. It is the work of making education answer not only the market, but the country. It is the work of producing not merely talent, but citizens; not merely professionals, but builders; not merely grateful beneficiaries, but responsible Filipinos.

This is the work education was supposed to begin.

 ***

References

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Constantino, R. (1970). The mis-education of the Filipino. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 1(1), 20–36. https://doi.org/10.1080/00472337085390031

Constantino, R. (n.d.). The miseducation of the Filipino. Retrieved from https://eaop.ucsd.edu/198/group-identity/THE%20MISEDUCATION%20OF%20THE%20FILIPINO.pdf

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Additional References for Labor, Education, and Development Framing:

Braverman, H. (1974). Labor and monopoly capital: The degradation of work in the twentieth century. Monthly Review Press.

Commission on Higher Education. (n.d.). General education curriculum. Retrieved from https://ched.gov.ph/

International Labour Organization. (n.d.). Decent work. Retrieved from https://www.ilo.org/global/topics/decent-work/lang--en/index.htm

National Historical Commission of the Philippines. (n.d.). Resources on Philippine history and nationalism. Retrieved from https://nhcp.gov.ph/

Standing, G. (2011). The precariat: The new dangerous class. Bloomsbury Academic.

World Bank. (2018). The changing wealth of nations 2018: Building a sustainable future. World Bank. https://doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1046-6