Thursday, 2 April 2026

Not by Numbers Alone: On Revolutions, Sacrifice, and the Measure of a People

Not by Numbers Alone: On Revolutions, Sacrifice, 
and the Measure of a People


There is a certain clarity—almost seductive in its simplicity—in the proposition advanced by Nikka Gaddi in her recent post: 

If a revolutionary movement is small and the masses still idolize the same fascist leaders and set of elites, that movement isn’t just fighting the state, it’s fighting the people.” 

“And winning a war against the people you intend to save is a recipe for a short-lived, bloody reign that the majority can easily take back.” 

“It requires humility to know that just like with voting not changing much, so are the same strategies of the left that may no longer work after more than half a century. Insanity, as they say, is doing the same thing over and over again while expecting different results.” 

“This applies to any movement or party too, that continues to isolate itself, antagonize the people they need to work with, and puts itself as the only key to all progress.” 

“It no longer should be about sacrifice for sacrifice sake, nor for more martyrs to display. It should be—for any group that advances the interests of the majority—about majority victory, power, and permanent change.” 

“You do not just die for people. You win for them.”

 At first reading, the argument carries the ring of prudence. It appeals to reason, to restraint, to a politics that privileges victory over valor. It cautions against the tragic spectacle of movements that mistake martyrdom for mass support, and sacrifice for strategy. It is, in many respects, a necessary warning. 

And yet, taken as doctrine, it risks becoming something else entirely: a narrowing of historical understanding, and a quiet indictment of those who, in the earliest hours of struggle, stood when few others would. 

For revolutions—like nations themselves—are not born in unanimity. They are conceived in dissent, nurtured in adversity, and carried forward by those who first perceive what others have yet to see.  

The Minority That Moves History 

It is a convenient fiction—comforting, even reassuring—to imagine that great transformations begin with the majority already assembled, conscious of its cause, and united in purpose. Such a view flatters our desire for order. It suggests that history moves only when consensus is achieved, that change waits politely for numbers to align. 

History offers no such comfort. When the EDSA People Power Revolution filled the long artery of Epifanio de los Santos Avenue with millions, it appeared, in that fleeting and luminous moment, as though the nation had spoken in one voice. The image—rosaries raised, tanks halted, a dictator unseated—has since been canonized as a triumph of unity. 

But that chorus was not spontaneous. It did not emerge, fully formed, from a single week in February. 

It was the culmination of years—indeed, decades—of resistance, dissent, and sacrifice. It was built in the quiet accumulation of grievances, in the courage of those who spoke when speech was costly, and in the endurance of those who organized when organization was dangerous. 

Before the crowds, there were the few. Before the multitudes, there were names whispered in prison cells, in underground meetings, in fields and factories where discontent first took root. There were student leaders, labor organizers, priests and nuns, journalists and unknown citizens—many of whom did not live to see February 1986. They were dismissed, detained, exiled, or disappeared. 

To call them “human sacrifice” in the pejorative sense is to misunderstand both their agency and their role. 

They did not die because they were abandoned by the people; they died because they were ahead of them. 

As Jose Rizal once wrote, “There are no tyrants where there are no slaves.” It was not a rebuke of the people, but a recognition of the long work required to awaken them. And awakening, as history shows, is seldom simultaneous. It comes in waves—first to a few, then to many, and finally, if conditions permit, to the nation. 

The same may be said of La Liga Filipina and, later, the Katipunan. When the Cry of Pugad Lawin was raised, the Katipunan did not command the allegiance of the entire archipelago. It was, by any numerical measure, a minority movement—small, hunted, uncertain of success. 

Yet it was a minority that articulated a national aspiration before the nation itself had fully awakened to it. 

Andres Bonifacio captured this paradox in spirit when he invoked the moral duty to act even when the outcome was uncertain. In the Kartilya ng Katipunan, the revolution was not framed as a popular pastime, but as a necessity grounded in dignity, that Love of country, in other words, is proven in action—not in the assurance of numbers. 

One could traverse continents and centuries and arrive at the same conclusion. 

The American revolutionaries who challenged the British Crown did not begin as a majority; they were, at the outset, a faction among many—contending not only with imperial power but with loyalists who remained attached to it. The early actors of the French Revolution did not represent a unified France, but a volatile convergence of classes whose grievances had yet to cohere into a single will. 

And in the mountains of Cuba, the small band that accompanied Fidel Castro in the Sierra Maestra was, by any rational calculation, insufficient to topple a regime. Yet, as Castro himself would later reflect, “A revolution is not a bed of roses. A revolution is a struggle between the future and the past.” That struggle, at its inception, is rarely decided by numbers alone. 

Even Vladimir Lenin—often invoked in discussions of revolutionary timing—warned against both impatience and passivity. “There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen,” he observed. The implication is clear: history does not advance in linear proportion to the size of a crowd. It moves when conditions, leadership, and consciousness converge—often after long periods when only a minority perceives the direction of change. 

This is not to deny the importance of the majority. No transformation endures without it. But the majority, as history repeatedly demonstrates, is not the point of departure. It is the point of arrival. 

Between those two points lies the difficult, often perilous work of those who move ahead—those who organize before it is safe, who speak before it is popular, and who act before it is certain. 

Antonio Gramsci, writing from a prison cell, offered perhaps the most sober articulation of this condition: “The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.” It is within this interregnum that minorities act—not because they command the majority, but because they recognize that the old order has already begun to decay. 

Thus, to dismiss early actors of struggle as mere “human sacrifice” is to risk erasing the very beginnings of change. It is to impose, retroactively, the comfort of numbers on moments that were defined precisely by their absence. 

History, it seems, is not moved by numbers alone. It is moved by those who, in the absence of numbers, chose to begin. 

On Sacrifice and Strategy 

This is not to romanticize sacrifice, nor to elevate martyrdom as an end in itself. Ms. Gaddi is correct to warn against a politics that confuses suffering with success. A movement that seeks only to produce martyrs will, in time, produce only graves—and worse, it risks mistaking moral theater for material change. 

History is littered with causes that burned brightly in rhetoric but collapsed in reality, precisely because they failed to convert sacrifice into strategy. 

But there is a distinction—one that must be preserved with care, and with intellectual honesty—between sacrifice as spectacle and sacrifice as consequence. 

The former is indulgent, even dangerous: it treats loss as validation, suffering as proof of righteousness, and death as an argument in itself. The latter is something altogether different. It is the byproduct of struggle in conditions where the cost of inaction has already become intolerable. 

In societies where structures of power are deeply entrenched—where imperial dependencies shape the contours of the economy, where feudal relations continue to bind the countryside, and where bureaucratic capital transforms public office into private enterprise—conflict is not chosen lightly. It is rarely the first option. It is, more often than not, the final recourse. 

Those who take the first steps into open struggle do so not because they are indifferent to survival, but because survival, under such conditions, has already been rendered uncertain, conditional, or degraded. 

As Frantz Fanon observed in another context of decolonization, “The oppressed, having nothing to lose, are ready to risk everything.” This is not a celebration of violence, but a diagnosis of a condition—one in which the existing order has foreclosed peaceful avenues for redress, leaving confrontation as the remaining language of change. 

To reduce such decisions to mere “adventurism,” particularly in the absence of an immediately visible critical mass, is to overlook the long and patient work that precedes any decisive moment. 

For revolutions are not singular events. They are processes—protracted, uneven, and often invisible in their early stages. 

They unfold in layers. They involve the slow expansion and consolidation of a mass base, the painstaking organization of communities, and the cultivation of trust in places where trust has long been eroded. They require not only mobilization, but education; not only resistance, but reconstruction. 
And perhaps most crucially, they demand the transformation of consciousness itself. 

One might call it, without excess, a cultural revolution—not in the narrow or doctrinaire sense, but as a broad and necessary reorientation of thought: the breaking of inherited habits of submission, the unlearning of colonial deference, the interrogation of what has long been normalized, and the reimagining of what is possible. 

Paulo Freire, writing on liberation, framed this transformation with clarity: “The oppressed must be their own example in the struggle for their redemption.” Consciousness, in this sense, is not bestowed; it is developed through participation, through dialogue, through struggle itself. 

It follows, then, that the emergence of a committed minority is not an aberration—it is a structural feature of historical change. 

Antonio Gramsci described this dynamic in terms of intellectual and moral leadership. In every society, there are those who come earlier to an understanding of its contradictions, who begin the work of articulating them, and who seek to organize others around that understanding. These are not figures detached from the people; they are drawn from them, shaped by the same conditions, but differentiated by timing, by clarity, or by circumstance. 

In this sense, the “minority” at the forefront is not separate from the people. It is, rather, an advanced section of it—those who have come earlier to a recognition that others will, in time, share. 

To demand that such a minority wait for the full alignment of the majority before acting is to misunderstand both politics and history. For the process of winning the majority is itself inseparable from action. It is through engagement—through organizing, through resistance, through visible challenge—that latent discontent is transformed into conscious participation. 

Even Vladimir Lenin, often caricatured as an advocate of sudden upheaval, emphasized the importance of preparation: the building of organizations, the study of conditions, the identification of allies, and the careful timing of decisive moves. The “seizure of the moment,” as it is sometimes called, is not an act of impulse—it is the culmination of groundwork laid over years, even decades. 

Thus, what appears from the outside as a premature or isolated action may, from within, be understood as the visible crest of a much longer wave. 

None of this absolves movements of the responsibility to assess their strength, to avoid futile confrontations, or to guard against the temptation of substituting will for capacity. Strategy matters. Sustainability matters. The lives involved are not abstractions. 

But neither does it justify a framework that dismisses early struggle simply because it does not yet command the majority. 

For if one follows that logic to its conclusion, no movement would ever begin. 

There would be no first step, no initial organization, no early dissent—only a perpetual waiting for a majority that has not yet been given reason, or opportunity, to cohere. 

The task, then, is not to reject sacrifice outright, nor to glorify it uncritically, but to situate it within a broader strategic horizon. 

Sacrifice, when it occurs, must serve a purpose beyond itself: to expose injustice, to inspire participation, to expand the base, to hasten the maturation of conditions. It must be linked—consciously and deliberately—to the work of building, organizing, and ultimately winning. 

Otherwise, it risks becoming what Ms. Gaddi rightly warns against: an end in itself, rather than a means toward transformation. 

In the final analysis, the question is not whether sacrifice exists—it inevitably does—but whether it is anchored in a strategy capable of converting loss into progress, and courage into collective power. 

For only then does sacrifice cease to be an isolated act of suffering, and become part of a larger movement toward change. 

Between Moral Clarity and Political Prudence 

What, then, are we to make of Ms. Gaddi’s admonition that movements must not isolate themselves, must not antagonize the very people they seek to serve, and must not presume themselves the sole arbiters of progress? 

On this, there is much to agree with—indeed, more than disagreement might first suggest. 

For any movement that loses the capacity to listen—to adapt, to correct, to broaden its appeal—risks not only irrelevance, but a deeper failure: the quiet severing of its connection to the very society it claims to transform. A cause that ceases to hear the people will, in time, cease to speak for them. It may retain its language, its slogans, even its internal coherence—but it will speak into an echo chamber of its own making. 

Dogmatism, in this sense, is as dangerous as adventurism. 

If adventurism risks outrunning the people—mistaking will for capacity—dogmatism risks abandoning them altogether, clinging to formulas that no longer correspond to lived reality. Both are, in their own ways, failures of judgment. Both substitute rigidity for responsiveness. And both, ultimately, estrange movements from the ground on which they must stand. 

A politics that alienates the masses cannot, in the end, claim to represent them. It may command devotion within its ranks, but it will fail to command legitimacy beyond them. 

Yet it is equally true that a politics reduced to the calculus of immediate popularity cannot claim fidelity to history either. 

For popularity is not always a reliable measure of truth, nor is it a dependable guide to justice. There are moments—quiet at first, then increasingly unavoidable—when prevailing opinion lags behind moral necessity. In such moments, to follow the majority uncritically is not prudence; it is abdication. 

As Martin Luther King Jr. reminded his contemporaries, “The time is always right to do what is right.” His movement did not begin with majority approval. It confronted indifference, resistance, even hostility—not only from those in power, but from segments of the public who had yet to be persuaded. And yet, it was precisely through disciplined confrontation and moral clarity that public opinion began, gradually but decisively, to shift. 

Leadership, therefore, cannot be confined to mirroring what is already accepted. It must, at times, move ahead of consensus—articulating what is not yet widely recognized, and sustaining that position long enough for others to see its necessity. 

This is not a license for arrogance, nor an invitation for any group to proclaim itself the sole bearer of truth. The history of movements is also a history of excess—of those who, convinced of their own correctness, ceased to listen, ceased to adapt, and in doing so, lost both the people and the future they sought to shape. 

The balance, then, is delicate—and indispensable. 

It requires a form of leadership that is at once firm and receptive: firm in its convictions, yet receptive to correction; clear in its direction, yet open to recalibration. It demands the ability to distinguish between principled disagreement and mere opposition, between necessary tension and avoidable alienation. 

Antonio Gramsci described this balance in terms of hegemony—not domination, but leadership grounded in consent. The task is not merely to assert, but to persuade; not merely to lead, but to build a shared understanding. “The challenge of modernity,” in his broad framework, is to transform what begins as the conviction of a few into the common sense of many. 

Thus, the question is not whether movements should align with the majority, nor whether they should act independently of it. 

The question is how one becomes the other. 

The minority, when grounded in real conditions and guided by a coherent strategy, initiates. It identifies contradictions, organizes responses, and gives language to what others may only feel but cannot yet articulate. It takes the first risks, absorbs the first costs, and often endures the first isolation. 

But it cannot remain a minority indefinitely without risking irrelevance or exhaustion. 

The majority, once engaged, sustains. It provides the depth, the resilience, and the legitimacy necessary for any transformation to endure. But it does not emerge spontaneously, nor does it arrive fully formed. It must be cultivated—through dialogue, through organization, through visible engagement with the issues that shape everyday life. 

Between them lies a dynamic relationship—sometimes harmonious, often strained, but always essential. 

To collapse this relationship into a single demand—whether for immediate majority approval or for unilateral minority action—is to misunderstand the nature of political change. One risks paralysis; the other risks isolation. 

The more difficult path, and the more faithful to history, is to hold both in tension: to act with moral clarity while exercising political prudence; to move ahead when necessary, but never so far as to lose sight of those who must eventually walk the same path. 

For in the end, a movement is judged not only by the correctness of its ideas, nor solely by the breadth of its support, but by its capacity to bring the two into alignment—so that what begins as the conviction of a few becomes, in time, the shared purpose of many. 

Winning, and for Whom?

“You do not just die for people. You win for them.”

 It is a line that deserves to be taken seriously—precisely because it speaks to an enduring tension within all movements: the relationship between sacrifice and success, between moral witness and material victory. 

For victory—real, substantive, and enduring—must indeed be the aim of any movement that claims to advance the interests of the majority. Not symbolic victories, nor fleeting moments of visibility, but transformations that alter the conditions of life: that redistribute power, secure dignity, and endure beyond the fervor of the moment. 

But victory is not secured by decree. It is not summoned by rhetoric alone, nor guaranteed by the justice of a cause. It is built—often slowly, often unevenly—on the foundations laid by those who labored when success seemed distant, uncertain, even improbable. It is constructed in increments: through organization, through persuasion, through setbacks endured and lessons absorbed. 

In this sense, to win for the people is not simply to arrive at triumph. It is to understand the long road that leads there. 

To win for the people is to recognize that the path to victory may pass through periods when the people themselves are not yet fully mobilized; when the vanguard is small; when the risks are great and the rewards uncertain. It is to accept that history rarely grants clarity at the outset—that those who begin must do so without the reassurance of numbers, without the comfort of inevitability. 

As Nelson Mandela reflected after decades of struggle, “It always seems impossible until it is done.” The impossibility he described was not merely tactical—it was perceptual. Before victory, even the just cause appears marginal, its proponents few, its prospects dim. 

And yet, it is precisely in those moments that the work begins. 

To win for the people, therefore, is not to dismiss sacrifice, but to situate it properly—not as an end, nor as a spectacle, but as part of a broader trajectory toward change. Sacrifice, when it occurs, must be linked to strategy, to growth, to the gradual expansion of participation. Otherwise, it risks becoming detached from purpose, a gesture unmoored from outcome. 

Mahatma Gandhi, in a different mode of struggle, captured this relationship between means and ends: “The means are the ends in the making.” Victory, in this sense, is not an abrupt departure from the process that precedes it; it is the culmination of that process, shaped by the discipline, the methods, and the principles employed along the way. 

It is also to accept that history does not unfold in neat majorities. 

It unfolds in uneven, often painful progressions—marked by advances and reversals, by moments of clarity followed by periods of doubt. The majority, when it finally coalesces, does so not in a single instant, but through accumulation: of experience, of persuasion, of visible proof that change is both necessary and possible. 

Thus, the demand to “win” cannot be reduced to a simple imperative. It must be understood in its full complexity. 

For what does it mean to win, and for whom? 

To win for the people is not merely to defeat an opponent. It is to ensure that what replaces the old order is more just, more inclusive, and more responsive than what came before. It is to avoid the tragedy—so often repeated in history—of victories that change rulers but not conditions, that replace one elite with another, that claim transformation but deliver continuity. 

In this sense, victory is not only an outcome; it is a responsibility. 

It demands that movements remain accountable not only to their ideals, but to the people in whose name those ideals are invoked. It requires vigilance against the very tendencies—exclusion, arrogance, detachment—that movements often arise to oppose. 

And it calls, above all, for a recognition of those who stood at the beginning. 

For any victory, when it comes, will be built upon the courage of those who acted when action was costly, when success was uncertain, and when recognition was far from guaranteed. They are not to be dismissed as relics of a less strategic time, nor reduced to symbols of excess or miscalculation. 

They are, rather, part of the foundation. 

To accord them respect is not to glorify sacrifice, but to acknowledge its place in the long arc of change—to recognize that without those who began, there would be nothing to complete. 

In the final measure, then, to win for the people is to hold together two imperatives that are often placed in opposition: the necessity of victory, and the reality of struggle. 

It is to understand that one cannot be achieved without the other. 

And it is to ensure that when victory is finally claimed, it is not only decisive, but deserving—rooted in the efforts of many, shaped by the sacrifices of some, and sustained, at last, by the will of the people themselves. 

Conclusion: Not by Numbers Alone 

The temptation, in this current time, is to seek certainty in metrics—to weigh legitimacy in percentages, to measure justice in polls, to equate numbers with truth. In an age of surveys, dashboards, and instant opinion, it is easy to believe that what can be counted is what ultimately counts. 

But politics—especially in its most transformative form—has never been reducible to arithmetic. 

Nations are not governed, nor are they remade, by numbers alone. 

They are shaped by conviction, by imagination, by sacrifice—yes, even by those whom history initially counts as few—and by the gradual, often arduous work of converting that conviction into a shared national purpose. They are formed in the tension between what is and what ought to be, between the present arrangement of power and the future that demands to be realized. 

To dismiss the early actors of struggle as mere “human sacrifice” is to risk erasing the very beginnings of change. It is to look upon the first steps of history with the comfort of hindsight, forgetting that those who took them did so without guarantees—without the assurance of numbers, without the promise of victory, and often without recognition. 

They acted not because success was certain, but because the alternative—silence, submission, or complicity—had become untenable. 

And yet, to ignore the necessity of majority support is to fall into an equal and opposite error. 

For no movement, however principled, can endure on conviction alone. Without the broad participation of the people—without their consent, their involvement, their ownership—no transformation can be sustained. What begins as a moment of rupture may quickly dissolve into fragility, vulnerable to reversal, contested by those who were never brought into its fold. 

Between these poles lies the difficult terrain of politics. 

It is a terrain marked by tension, not resolution; by movement, not stasis. It is where minorities strive to become majorities—not through imposition, but through persuasion; not through isolation, but through engagement. It is where sacrifice seeks its vindication not in remembrance alone, but in results—translated into institutions, into policies, into lived realities that endure beyond the moment of struggle. 

It is also where prudence tempers conviction, and conviction animates prudence. 

For without prudence, conviction risks becoming reckless—detached from conditions, indifferent to consequence. Without conviction, prudence risks becoming complacent—content to manage what is, rather than to transform it. 

The task of leadership, and of movements alike, is to navigate this terrain with both clarity and care: to recognize when to advance and when to consolidate; when to speak and when to listen; when to challenge the majority, and when to build it. 

For the measure of a movement is not only found in how many it begins with, but in how many it ultimately brings with it—and how deeply that support is rooted when it arrives. 

It is measured not only in moments of uprising, but in the durability of what follows: in whether the change achieved can withstand the tests of time, of opposition, of the inevitable pressures that attend power itself. 

In this sense, revolutions—like the nations they seek to remake—are not judged solely by how they start, but by how they endure. 

They are judged by whether the sacrifices that marked their beginnings are redeemed in the conditions that follow; by whether the promises that animated their struggle are realized in the lives of the people; and by whether the minority that once dared to begin has, in time, become a majority that chooses to sustain. 

For history does not ask only who stood at the front, nor how many stood at the beginning. 

It asks, in the end, what was built—and who was brought along.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

The Sword Beneath the Silence: On Peace, Power, and Necessary Struggle

The Sword Beneath the Silence: On Peace, Power, and Necessary Struggle


What is commonly called “peace” is, upon closer examination, a deeply contested idea—one that is too often reduced to something less than its full moral and political weight. 

In moments of crisis, the invocation of peace comes almost instinctively. It is voiced in official statements, repeated in institutional language, and echoed in public sentiment. It is a word that reassures. It promises stability, continuity, and the eventual easing of tension. It gestures toward a horizon in which disorder is contained and normalcy restored. Yet this very familiarity conceals an ambiguity that demands scrutiny. Is peace being understood as justice realized, or merely as silence maintained? Is it the outcome of a just order, or the careful management of unrest within an order that remains fundamentally unequal? 

Too often, it becomes the latter. 

Peace, in its diminished sense, operates as a language of containment. It calls for restraint not from the structures that produce inequality, but from those who suffer under them. It asks the aggrieved to wait, the marginalized to remain composed, and the discontented to temper their demands. It seeks not to resolve contradiction but to absorb it—to render it less visible, less audible, less disruptive. In this way, peace becomes less a moral achievement than a political strategy, one that preserves existing arrangements under the appearance of order. 

This reduction, however, is neither new nor sustainable. 

The deeper moral and theological tradition has long resisted such a narrowing of meaning. When Jesus Christ declares, “I came not to bring peace but a sword,” the statement unsettles any interpretation of peace that is detached from justice. It does not glorify violence; rather, it acknowledges the disruptive consequences of truth. Justice, when pursued seriously, does not leave the world unchanged. It exposes contradictions, unsettles hierarchies, and compels decision. The “sword” signifies division—not as an end in itself, but as the inevitable result of confronting what is wrong. 

From this perspective, peace cannot be understood as the absence of conflict. It must be understood as the resolution of conflict at its root. 

Herein lies the central paradox: societies profess a desire for peace, yet often resist the conditions required to establish it. They long for harmony, but hesitate before the transformations that harmony demands. They invoke unity, but recoil when unity requires the reordering of power, privilege, and access. They seek calm, but often only insofar as calm preserves the familiar. 

This paradox finds a particularly vivid expression in the Philippines, where the language of reassurance has accompanied a period marked by both visible and underlying pressures. Public discourse has emphasized stability, continuity, and managed transition—particularly in relation to rising living costs, questions of energy security, and the declaration of a national energy emergency under Ferdinand Marcos Jr.. The tone of governance has been calibrated to avoid alarm. The message has been clear: the situation is under control; there is no cause for panic. 

Yet beneath this composed exterior lies a more complex and layered reality. 

For many observers, the sources of unease extend beyond immediate economic concerns. They are rooted in structural conditions that have persisted across time and administrations. Allegations of bureaucratic corruption continue to challenge institutional credibility. The concentration of land ownership remains a defining feature of rural life, shaping both opportunity and exclusion. Labor conditions, particularly in sectors reliant on low-cost and flexible employment, reflect enduring disparities in the distribution of economic gains. 

In the countryside, disputes over land tenure and access to resources persist as a central axis of tension. The unresolved questions of agrarian reform, tenancy rights, and displacement are not merely policy matters; they are lived realities, experienced daily by communities whose livelihoods depend on access to land. The historical layering of these issues—colonial legacies, post-independence arrangements, and contemporary economic pressures—renders them resistant to simple solutions. 

Simultaneously, the extraction of natural resources has intensified debates over environmental stewardship and social equity. Large-scale mining operations, logging activities, and infrastructure development projects have generated both economic benefits and social costs. The environmental consequences—deforestation, soil degradation, flooding, and the disruption of ecosystems—have often been borne disproportionately by vulnerable populations. The resulting tension between development and sustainability remains unresolved. 

These dynamics contribute to a widening gap between official narratives of stability and the lived experiences of many citizens. The language of reassurance, while necessary for governance, encounters its limits when it appears disconnected from underlying conditions. A system may maintain order while leaving injustice unaddressed. It may project calm while accumulating pressure beneath the surface. 

This reveals a second, equally consequential illusion: that order is equivalent to peace. 

Order can be imposed. Peace must be constructed. 

The distinction is not merely semantic; it is structural. Order relies on compliance. Peace relies on legitimacy. Order can be achieved through enforcement. Peace requires consent grounded in justice. Where order exists without justice, it remains inherently fragile—susceptible to disruption when underlying tensions reach a threshold. 

This pattern is not confined to a single national context. It is observable across the contemporary global landscape. The ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine persists despite repeated calls for peace, underscoring the limits of diplomatic language in the absence of resolution. In the Middle East, tensions involving Israel and Iran illustrate how deeply embedded geopolitical and historical grievances can render peace provisional. Agreements are negotiated, ceasefires declared, yet the structural conditions of conflict remain largely intact. 

In such contexts, peace functions less as a resolution than as an interlude—a temporary suspension of conflict rather than its conclusion. 

The lesson that emerges is consistent: peace cannot endure where justice is indefinitely deferred. 

It is within this broader framework that the persistence of dissent, protest, and social unrest must be understood. These phenomena are often interpreted as disruptions of order. Yet they may also be read as expressions of unresolved contradiction—manifestations of a demand for transformation that has not been adequately addressed. 

The existence of laws, reforms, and formal mechanisms of redress does not, in itself, eliminate the conditions that give rise to tension. When such measures function as palliatives—alleviating symptoms without addressing root causes—they may provide temporary relief while leaving the underlying structure unchanged. 

Hence the recurrence of unrest even in systems that appear stable. 

At this juncture, a crucial distinction must be maintained. The recognition that peace requires transformation does not prescribe a singular or predetermined path. History demonstrates that while entrenched systems rarely reform without pressure, the forms that such pressure takes are decisive. They shape not only the process of change, but the character of what emerges thereafter. 

Unrestrained cycles of violence risk reproducing the very conditions they seek to overcome. They can entrench new hierarchies, legitimize further repression, and perpetuate instability. The challenge, therefore, is not merely to confront injustice, but to do so in ways that construct rather than replicate domination. 

It is here that enduring moral traditions offer guidance. The Benedictine principle of ora et labora—“pray and work,” associated with Saint Benedict of Nursia and Saint Scholastica—articulates a vision of integrated action. It rejects the separation of contemplation from engagement. Faith is not passive; it is enacted. It requires both reflection and labor—both the formation of conscience and the transformation of conditions. 

Similarly, the exhortations of Saint Catherine of Siena and Ignatius of Loyola emphasize disciplined, active commitment. To “set the world on fire” is not to destroy it, but to awaken it—to ignite a moral urgency that refuses complacency. It is a call to engage the world as it is, while working toward what it ought to be. 

These traditions converge on a dual understanding of struggle: internal and external, spiritual and temporal. The transformation of society is inseparable from the transformation of the individual. Without moral grounding, efforts at structural change risk devolving into mere contests for power. Without structural engagement, moral conviction risks becoming abstract and ineffective. 

From this perspective, peace acquires a more demanding and substantive definition. 

Peace is not silence. Peace is not the suppression of dissent. Peace is not the preservation of order at any cost. 

Peace is the durable realization of justice. 

It is a condition in which grievances are not merely managed but resolved; in which institutions are not only stable but legitimate; in which power is exercised with accountability rather than impunity. It is a state in which the structures that produce inequality are addressed, not obscured. 

To pursue such peace is to accept that tension is not an anomaly, but a phase. That conflict, when oriented toward resolution, may be a necessary step in the process of transformation. That discomfort may precede renewal. 

The Philippines, like many societies, stands within this tension—between reassurance and reality, between order and justice, between calm and underlying pressure. It is neither in collapse nor in equilibrium. It is, rather, in transition. 

In such a moment, the language of peace must be used with precision and honesty. To invoke peace without addressing its conditions is to risk reducing it to rhetoric. To call for calm without confronting injustice is to defer, rather than resolve, the sources of instability. 

A peace that is merely declared remains fragile. A peace that is constructed—through accountability, equity, and reform—holds the possibility of endurance. 

Until such construction is undertaken, the tension persists—not as a sign of failure, but as an indication that the work of transformation remains unfinished. 

And it is within that tension—unresolved, insistent, and often uncomfortable—that the demand for a truer peace continues to assert itself, resisting silence and insisting, instead, on justice.   

Raise the Palms, Raise the Fists: A Palm Sunday Reflection in an Age of War

Raise the Palms, Raise the Fists:
A Palm Sunday Reflection in an Age of War


There is, every year, a peculiar tension that accompanies Palm Sunday—a tension not easily resolved, nor meant to be. It is a day that begins in procession and ends in foreboding; a liturgy that opens with palms raised in jubilation and closes under the shadow of the cross. In the narrative of the Gospels, the same crowds that cry “Hosanna!” will soon fall silent, or worse, turn their voices toward condemnation. 

The occasion, as recounted in Gospel of Luke 19:28–44, presents the image of Jesus entering Jerusalem not as a conqueror but as a servant—mounted on a donkey, not a war horse. It is a deliberate contrast, a subversion of expectation. The people, weary of occupation and longing for deliverance, greet him as one who might restore power, sovereignty, and triumph. Yet the moment turns. The same passage records that he wept over the city, lamenting: “If you, even you, had only recognized on this day the things that make for peace!” (Luke 19:42). 

In this, the ancient scene begins to resemble the modern condition. 

For Palm Sunday is not merely a recollection; it is a mirror. It reflects the enduring human temptation to confuse redemption with domination, salvation with conquest. The crowds then, as now, desired a political Messiah—one who would overthrow, reclaim, and rule. They longed for victory, not vulnerability; for power, not peace. 

And yet, the figure at the center of the procession resists such appropriation. 

From the Sermon on the Mount, recorded in Gospel of Matthew 5:9, comes the enduring admonition: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God.” It is not a sentimental utterance. It is a summons—a definition of identity bound inseparably with responsibility. It is also, in times of war, an indictment. 

For there are moments in history when nations, cloaked in righteousness, drift toward violence while invoking the language of faith. Leaders, invoking divine sanction, bend scripture to the service of policy. Patriotism is fused with piety; war is baptized as necessity. 

Against this, a different voice has been raised. As Pope Leo XIV is quoted as saying: 

“God rejects the prayers of leaders who start wars. Their prayers do not rise beyond the ceilings of their palaces; they become trapped in the smoke of the bombs they themselves unleash.” 

Such words recall an older prophetic tradition—one that does not comfort power but confronts it. 

For the Christ of Palm Sunday cannot be easily enlisted into the machinery of empire. His kingdom, as he declares in Gospel of John 18:36, “is not of this world.” And yet, neither is it detached from it. It intrudes, disrupts, and unsettles. It calls for the love of enemies (Matthew 5:44), even as it warns of the consequences of violence: “All who take the sword will perish by the sword” (Matthew 26:52). 

There is, to be sure, an apparent paradox. The same Christ who speaks of peace also declares, in Gospel of Matthew 10:34, that he has come not to bring peace but a sword. The tension is not accidental. It reflects the cost of truth in a divided world—the sword not of conquest, but of division between justice and injustice, between the kingdom of God and the kingdoms of men. 

Thus, Palm Sunday becomes not merely a liturgical threshold into the Passion, but a political and moral reckoning. 

For in every age, the question returns: where does loyalty lie? Is it with the state—however flawed, however corrupt—simply because it commands allegiance? Or is it with a higher conception of justice, one that often stands in judgment over earthly authority? 

History offers no shortage of examples where this tension becomes acute. Societies, even those professing righteousness, fall into corruption. Systems meant to serve the common good are bent toward private gain. And in such moments, the invocation of God becomes not a call to repentance, but a shield against accountability. 

It is precisely here that the Palm Sunday narrative speaks with renewed urgency. 

For the one who enters Jerusalem does so not with legions, but with lament. He weeps—not only for what is, but for what might have been. He embodies a kingship that refuses coercion, a power that is revealed in surrender. 

And in this refusal lies the scandal. 

For it denies the world its preferred grammar of force. It challenges the assumption that justice must be imposed by violence, that order must be secured by domination. It proposes, instead, a kingdom built on love, humility, and solidarity with the oppressed. 

The implications are not abstract. 

“Do not waste your breath on prayers, nor profane temples with your ceremonial uniforms in search of a blessing that will never come. As long as even a single child is crying beneath the rubble because of them, every ‘Amen’ they utter will be a blasphemy.” Again said Pope Leo XIV. 

Such a statement cuts through the pieties of power. It insists that faith divorced from justice is not merely insufficient—it is profane. 

In this light, the figures so often reduced to abstractions are restored to their humanity. The refugee child is not an enemy. The grieving mother across a border is not expendable. Even the one labeled a dissident or a martyr cannot be so easily dismissed as “against the law” when the law itself has been corrupted. 

To follow Christ, then, is not to retreat from the world, but to inhabit it differently. It is to make peace where the world makes war; to love where the world teaches hatred; to resist the seduction of vengeance even when it is cloaked in the language of justice. 

Palm Sunday, in the end, offers no easy resolution. 

It begins with raised palms—symbols of hope, of welcome, of fragile expectation. But it also gestures, implicitly, toward raised fists—not of blind revolt, but of moral resistance against injustice. Between these two gestures lies the path of the Passion: costly, misunderstood, and yet, for those who believe, the only road that leads beyond the cycles of violence. 

The crowd once cried, “Hosanna! Save us!” 

The question remains whether it recognized—and whether we recognize still—the kind of salvation being offered. 

Saturday, 28 March 2026

Between the Market and the State: A Nation Caught in Its Own Contradictions

Between the Market and the State: A Nation Caught in Its Own Contradictions


There are moments in a nation’s economic life when the language of policy begins to sound less like guidance and more like resignation. In the Philippines today, one hears it in the quiet refrain of both officials and analysts: there is no easy solution. The economy, it seems, has settled uneasily between two poles—an assertive private sector driven by profit and a cautious state wary of its own limitations.

To say that the Philippine economy is “caught between a rock and a hard place” is not merely rhetorical flourish. It is a description of lived reality. On one hand, there is the persistent perception—often validated in times of crisis—that private corporations, left to their own devices, will prioritize margins over public welfare. On the other, there is the equally entrenched belief, grounded in decades of experience, that government intervention—particularly in the direct management of enterprises—breeds inefficiency, politicization, and waste.

This tension is not new. But it has become sharper, more visible, and more consequential in an era defined by volatility: rising fuel prices, fragile supply chains, and a public increasingly distrustful of both market actors and state institutions.


The Familiar Argument: Efficiency Versus Control

Recent discussions surrounding the prospect of government involvement in Petron Corporation have once again brought this enduring dilemma into sharp focus. The lines are quickly drawn, and the responses—particularly from market analysts and financial institutions—arrive with a certain predictability. Speaking with the calm authority of orthodoxy, they warn against intervention, invoking principles that have long governed the relationship between state and market.

“A government takeover of Petron is not necessary. The better policy is to allow the company to continue as a well-managed publicly listed company so that it can serve customers more efficiently,” said Juan Paolo Colet of China Bank Capital Corp..

The argument is, in many respects, familiar—almost reflexive in its articulation. Efficiency resides in private hands; distortion follows state entry. The private firm, disciplined by competition and accountable to shareholders, is presumed to allocate resources more effectively than any bureaucratic apparatus. By contrast, the state, burdened by competing interests and insulated from market pressures, is seen as prone to inefficiency, misallocation, and delay.

Concerns about fuel pricing, Colet added, may instead be addressed through “moral suasion or regulation”—a phrase that, in its understated confidence, assumes both the willingness of firms to comply and the capacity of regulators to enforce. It is a formulation that reflects a particular vision of the state: not as an active participant in the market, but as a referee—present, but restrained; influential, but ultimately deferential to market dynamics.

Peter U of University of Asia and the Pacific sharpened the point further, grounding the argument in the mechanics of competition itself:

“If the oil industry has sufficient competitors, competition will pressure prices down. The only way to sell cheaper would be to sell at a loss. If it’s a government corporation, who picks up the tab? Taxpayers,” he said. “It would also be unfair competition for the private oil companies who may not have the deep pockets the government has. It would discourage new entrants and ironically reduce competition in the future.”

Here, the logic becomes more explicit. Price reductions, in this framework, are not the result of policy but of market structure. To intervene directly—particularly through state ownership—is to risk distorting that structure, introducing an actor whose capacity to absorb losses exceeds that of private competitors. The consequence, paradoxically, may not be greater competition, but less: new entrants deterred, existing firms crowded out, and the market rendered more fragile in the long term.

April Lee-Tan of COL Financial echoed the historical basis of this position, situating the debate within the trajectory of past reforms:

“The government privatized Petron in the 1990s, recognizing that the company would operate more efficiently in private hands. The government has a poor track record of managing businesses in general. Besides, acquiring a majority stake in Petron’s market capitalization would strain the national budget.”

This appeal to history is not incidental. It reflects a broader narrative in Philippine economic policy—one in which privatization is framed as a corrective to the inefficiencies of state ownership. The implication is clear: to reverse course is not merely to adopt a different policy, but to revisit a chapter that many believe was settled by experience.

Yet perhaps the most provocative articulation came from Astro del Castillo, whose remarks extend beyond the immediate question of corporate governance and into the realm of political judgment itself:

“Much more, he is better qualified to run a country, given his group’s accomplishments and government’s history and well-documented failures in managing state-owned corporations.”

The reference, unmistakably, is to Ramon Ang of San Miguel Corporation—a figure whose leadership in the private sector is here contrasted, implicitly and explicitly, with the perceived shortcomings of public administration. It is a statement that collapses the distinction between corporate management and statecraft, suggesting that the competencies required for one may, in certain respects, exceed those demonstrated in the other.

And beneath these statements—beneath their technical language, their measured tone, and their invocation of economic principles—lies a deeper premise, rarely stated outright but consistently implied: that shareholder profits matter above all else. This is, after all, the natural posture of bankers and “economists” operating within a framework where efficiency is defined by returns, and stability by investor confidence. In such a framework, the firm’s primary obligation is not to the public as such, but to its investors; not to equity, but to performance.

It is therefore no surprise that they would gravitate toward a particular vision of the state—a fencesitter, positioned at the margins of the market. A state that regulates, but does not direct; that observes, but does not intervene decisively; that invokes oversight in principle, yet often defers in practice to the self-correcting mechanisms of the market.

Armed with this posture is a familiar dictum, repeated with the authority of doctrine: “there’s no free lunch.” Oftentimes, this is paired—explicitly or by implication—with another assertion no less absolute in its framing: that “There Is No Alternative” except the diktat of the market.

Taken together, these phrases do more than describe economic constraints; they establish the boundaries of permissible thought. They transform what ought to be a field of policy debate into a narrow corridor of acceptable conclusions. Intervention becomes suspect not because it has been examined and found wanting, but because it is presumed, from the outset, to violate the natural order of things.

Within this framework, the market is not merely a mechanism—it is elevated into an inevitability.

The dictum of “no free lunch” serves as a constant reminder of cost, of trade-offs, of the impossibility of escaping economic reality. Yet when paired with the insistence that there is no alternative, it begins to function less as caution and more as closure. It forecloses inquiry. It reduces policy imagination to a binary: comply with market logic, or risk inefficiency, distortion, and collapse.

In this sense, the language of restraint subtly becomes the language of resignation.

For if there is truly no alternative, then the role of governance is reduced to management at the margins—to regulation without direction, to oversight without intervention. The state becomes, at best, a stabilizer of outcomes it does not shape, and at worst, a spectator to forces it is unwilling—or unable—to influence.

Such a posture may offer the comfort of consistency. It reassures markets, signals predictability, and aligns with the expectations of investors. But it also raises a deeper question: whether the invocation of inevitability reflects economic necessity—or intellectual surrender.

For history suggests that alternatives have always existed, even if they were contested, imperfect, or costly. The challenge, then, is not the absence of alternatives, but the willingness to consider them—and to bear the responsibility that comes with choosing among them.

And it is precisely this tension—between efficiency and control, between orthodoxy and possibility—that continues to define the debate.


The Counterpoint: Markets Without Restraint

Yet to accept these arguments uncritically is to ignore the other half of the equation. For while the state may falter under the weight of its own inefficiencies, the market, left to its own devices, is not inherently benevolent. It does not operate according to the imperatives of equity or social stability, but according to the calculus of return. In ordinary times, this logic may produce efficiencies—lower costs, innovation, responsiveness. But in moments of strain, its character changes.

In times of crisis—when oil prices surge, when supply lines tighten, when uncertainty ripples across global markets—the discipline of competition can give way to the imperative of preservation. Firms hedge, margins expand, and risk is transferred downstream. What the consumer encounters is no longer the subtle balancing act of supply and demand, but the blunt force of price transmission.

Costs rise—and they rise quickly. To the household, to the commuter, to the small enterprise, the experience is immediate and unforgiving. Transport fares inch upward, food prices follow, electricity bills swell. The language of market efficiency offers little comfort in the face of such realities. What is felt instead is something more visceral: the sense that, in moments of vulnerability, the system does not cushion—but amplifies.

It is in this context that the familiar accusation emerges: that corporations “get greedy,” that they capitalize on volatility rather than absorb it.

Whether this perception is entirely accurate is, in some respects, beside the point. For perception, in political economy, is itself a force. It shapes public sentiment, informs collective judgment, and ultimately constrains policy. When the public comes to believe that markets operate without restraint, trust begins to erode—not only in firms, but in the broader system that allows them to operate as they do.

This erosion of trust has consequences. It fuels calls for intervention, for price controls, for strategic reserves, for the reassertion of state authority over critical sectors. It revives arguments once thought settled, and reopens debates that oscillate between ideology and necessity. In such moments, the idea of government control regains its appeal—not as a doctrinal position, but as a pragmatic response to perceived excess.

And yet, here the Filipino mind hesitates. For even as frustration with private actors intensifies, there remains an equally powerful reluctance to entrust such industries to the state. This hesitation is not born of abstract theory, nor of blind adherence to market orthodoxy. It is grounded in lived experience—in a historical memory that has, over time, accumulated into a kind of institutional instinct.

The catalogue is long, and it is familiar.

There is the inefficiency that turns urgency into delay; the bureaucratic layering that transforms decision-making into inertia; the politicization of appointments, where positions of technical significance are allocated not on the basis of competence but of connection. There are institutions that, in principle, exist to serve the public, yet in practice become conduits for private interest—only this time, operating within the machinery of the state itself.

In such an environment, intervention does not always correct market failure. It risks reproducing it—albeit in a different form.

Thus emerges a second paradox, no less striking than the first.

Even those who are critical of corporate behavior—who question pricing decisions, who decry the social consequences of profit-driven adjustments—find themselves conceding, however reluctantly, that Petron Corporation may be better left under the stewardship of San Miguel Corporation and figures such as Ramon Ang.

This concession is not necessarily an endorsement. It is, more often, an acknowledgment—quiet, pragmatic, and tinged with resignation—that the alternative may prove more uncertain, more politicized, and ultimately more damaging.

For in weighing the imperfections of the market against the risks of the state, the choice becomes less about ideals and more about probabilities.

Which system, flawed as it may be, is more likely to function with a degree of predictability? Which is more capable of responding within the timeframes demanded by crisis? Which is less susceptible, not to error—that is inevitable—but to capture, distortion, and the erosion of accountability?

These are not questions that yield easy answers.

But they reveal the deeper tension at the heart of the Philippine political economy: a dual mistrust, directed both at markets that may exploit and at institutions that may fail. It is within this tension that policy must operate—navigating not only the mechanics of supply and demand, but the perceptions, memories, and judgments that shape the public’s willingness to accept either.

In the end, the issue is not merely one of choosing between state and market. It is one of confronting the limitations of both—and of recognizing that, in moments of crisis, neither operates in a vacuum.

Each reflects, in its own way, the broader condition of governance itself.


The Question of Political Will—and Its Limits

At this juncture, the discourse returns, almost by instinct, to a familiar refrain: political will. It is invoked with a certain rhetorical ease—at once diagnosis and prescription, explanation and remedy—as though the mere summoning of intent were sufficient to overcome the dense web of structural constraints that define governance. It is a phrase that carries the weight of resolve, yet often escapes the burden of specificity. It promises movement without clarifying direction, authority without detailing mechanism.

For in practice, political will is less a solution than a beginning—a declaration that something must be done, without yet answering how, by whom, and through what institutional pathways such action might be sustained.

Thus, one must ask: political will—toward what, and exercised through whom?

For the question is not whether the state can act. It can. The state possesses, in principle, the authority to intervene, to regulate, to acquire, to direct. The deeper question lies elsewhere: how it acts, and more critically, who is entrusted to act on its behalf. If the government were to intervene decisively in the economy—whether in energy, infrastructure, or other strategic sectors—who would stand at the helm of such an enterprise?

Would it be a technocrat of proven competence, shaped by experience, disciplined by results, and guided by a clear understanding of both market dynamics and public responsibility? Or would it be a political appointee, whose primary qualification lies not in expertise but in proximity to power—whose tenure is secured not by performance, but by allegiance?

This distinction is not merely academic. It goes to the very core of institutional credibility.

For intervention, however well-intentioned, cannot succeed in the absence of trust. And trust, once eroded, is not easily restored. In many instances, the promise of decisive state action falters not because of a lack of authority, but because of a deficit of confidence—both within the institutions themselves and among the public they are meant to serve. Having witnessed cycles of reform and regression, of restructuring followed by relapse, the public approaches declarations of intervention with a cautious skepticism.

For too often, key economic institutions—state-owned enterprises, regulatory bodies, strategic agencies—have not functioned as instruments of coherent policy, but as arenas of political maneuvering. Decisions that ought to be guided by long-term national objectives are instead shaped by short-term imperatives: electoral advantage, factional accommodation, the maintenance of coalitions, or the quiet calculus of patronage.

What emerges, then, is a familiar pattern: the language of reform deployed within structures resistant to reform; the assertion of authority constrained by the realities of implementation.

The result is a paradox. The state is called upon to act decisively, yet its capacity to do so is undermined by the very structures through which it must operate.

It is in this light that comparisons with an earlier generation of public servants acquire a certain resonance—not as nostalgia, but as contrast. Figures such as Geronimo Velasco—however contested their legacies—represented a model of governance that sought, in its own way, to bridge the divide between public authority and private discipline.

They moved between sectors not as opportunists navigating opportunity, but as practitioners carrying with them a set of operational standards. They brought technical expertise, certainly, but also something less easily quantified: a managerial ethos grounded in discipline, accountability, and a recognition that public service demanded not less rigor than private enterprise—but more.

Their approach was neither rhetorical nor symbolic. It was, above all, functional.

They understood that governance, particularly in complex sectors such as energy, required more than policy pronouncements or ideological clarity. It demanded systems—of planning, execution, monitoring, and correction. It required the translation of national objectives into concrete programs, measurable outputs, and enforceable standards. It required the imposition of discipline—not only upon institutions, but upon the individuals who led them.

Such figures treated public office not as an extension of political patronage, but as a domain of responsibility—one that demanded competence, continuity, and a willingness to confront difficult trade-offs. For while the private sector answers to shareholders, the public sector answers to something more diffuse and more demanding: the nation, in all its complexity and contradiction.

And yet, it would be simplistic—if not misleading—to suggest that this earlier model can simply be restored.

The conditions that enabled it—political alignments, institutional coherence, even the scale of economic complexity—have since evolved. Today’s environment is marked by fragmentation: of mandates, of authority, of accountability. Globalized markets impose external pressures; domestic politics introduce internal constraints. The boundaries between public and private have become increasingly porous, giving rise to new forms of influence that are less visible, but no less consequential.

In such a landscape, the invocation of political will risks sounding less like resolve and more like abstraction.

For it assumes that intent alone can overcome structural limitations—that a sufficiently determined leadership can bypass the entrenched dynamics of bureaucracy, patronage, and market power. It assumes that the declaration of urgency is equivalent to the capacity for execution.

But political will, in isolation, is insufficient.

It must be anchored in institutions capable of translating intent into action. It must be supported by systems that reward competence, penalize failure, and insulate decision-making from undue influence. It must be sustained across electoral cycles, rather than dissipated with each transition of power. And it must be carried by individuals whose legitimacy derives not from political alignment, but from demonstrated expertise and professional integrity.

Absent these conditions, political will risks becoming performative—a language of resolve that signals action without necessarily producing it.

It becomes, in effect, a substitute for reform rather than its foundation.

Thus, the question is not whether the state should act. In moments of crisis, the expectation of action is inevitable, and perhaps necessary. The more difficult question is whether the state can act in a manner that commands confidence—whether it can intervene without reproducing the very inefficiencies it seeks to correct.

Not whether intervention is desirable, but whether it is feasible under existing institutional conditions.

For in the end, the limits of political will are not defined by the strength of intention alone, but by the structures within which that intention must operate. Authority may be declared, but capacity must be built. Resolve may be expressed, but credibility must be earned.

And it is within those structures—imperfect, contested, and often resistant to change—that the true test of governance lies.

Not in the rhetoric of will, but in the discipline of execution.


The Cycle of Policy: Nationalize, Privatize, Repeat

The Philippine experience reveals a pattern that borders not merely on repetition, but on institutional habit. Industries are nationalized in moments of urgency—when crisis demands control, when supply must be secured, when the language of sovereignty overtakes that of efficiency. Yet in periods of reform, often under the pressure of fiscal constraint or ideological shift, these same industries are privatized—returned to the market in the hope that discipline, competition, and capital will succeed where bureaucracy had faltered. And when the next disruption comes—when prices surge, when supply tightens, when the limits of market solutions become visible—the cycle begins anew.

It is a rhythm familiar to Philippine political economy: intervention followed by withdrawal, control followed by liberalization, assertion followed by reconsideration.

Petron Corporation itself stands as a testament to this oscillation. Once a state-owned enterprise, it was later privatized in recognition—both ideological and empirical—that efficiency, responsiveness, and capital access might be better secured in private hands. Today, it finds itself once again at the center of renewed debate, its ownership and role reconsidered in light of contemporary pressures.

What emerges from this cycle is not equilibrium, but uncertainty.

Policies shift with administrations; priorities are recalibrated with changing circumstances; institutional mandates expand and contract depending on the prevailing political and economic winds. The absence of continuity becomes, in effect, the only constant. Long-term planning is complicated by the possibility—indeed, the expectation—of reversal. Investments are weighed not only against market risk, but against policy volatility. And institutions, caught between competing models, struggle to define their purpose with clarity.

The result is a system perpetually in transition—never fully committed to one framework, yet unable to reconcile the strengths and weaknesses of both.

It is therefore not surprising that, within this environment, a certain disposition has taken root among both policymakers and the public. Citing a long catalogue of experience—corruption, mismanagement, politicized decision-making, and the recurring capture of institutions by vested interests—there are those who have come to prefer that private enterprise, even foreign-owned, manage sectors that might otherwise be considered strategic or essential.

This preference is not always ideological. It is often pragmatic, even reluctant.

For many, the question is no longer framed in terms of sovereignty alone, but in terms of reliability: which arrangement, however imperfect, is more likely to deliver consistent outcomes? Which is less susceptible to the distortions of patronage, delay, and administrative inefficiency?

In this context, a conceptual distinction begins to emerge—one that is not always formally articulated, but widely felt. There is a tendency to separate “utilities” from “services.” The former—water, electricity, fuel—are understood as essential, foundational, tied to the basic functioning of society and, by extension, to the authority of the state. The latter—distribution, logistics, retail—are seen as domains where private enterprise may operate with greater flexibility and efficiency.

Yet in practice, this distinction is neither clear nor stable.

Utilities themselves often rely on layers of service provision; services, in turn, shape access to essential goods. The boundary between the two becomes porous, negotiated rather than fixed. And within this ambiguity, the question of who should manage what—and under what terms—remains unsettled.

Thus, the cycle persists.

Nationalization promises control but risks inefficiency. Privatization promises efficiency but raises concerns of equity and accountability. Each model, in isolation, reveals its limits; each, in turn, invites correction by the other. Yet without a coherent framework that integrates the strengths of both—without institutions capable of sustaining policy beyond the tenure of any single administration—the movement between them becomes less a strategy than a reflex.

A system in motion, but not necessarily in progress.

In the end, what is revealed is not merely a policy dilemma, but a deeper condition: a state and a market, each incomplete on its own, engaged in an unresolved negotiation over authority, responsibility, and trust.

And until that negotiation yields a more stable settlement, the cycle—nationalize, privatize, repeat—will continue to define the contours of Philippine economic governance.


A Possible Middle Path: The Investment State?

It is within this context—between the excesses of unrestrained markets and the limitations of direct state control—that alternative approaches have begun to surface. These approaches do not seek to resolve the dilemma by choosing one side over the other, but by attempting, however imperfectly, to reconcile them. Among the most discussed is the concept of the “investment state”: a model in which government participates in the economy not as an operator of enterprises, but as a strategic investor.

In the Philippine case, mechanisms such as the Maharlika Investment Fund suggest precisely this direction. Under such a framework, state capital is mobilized and deployed with a view toward returns—financial, strategic, and developmental—rather than through direct managerial control of enterprises. The intention is to combine public purpose with financial discipline: to allow the state to share in the gains of economic activity while avoiding the operational inefficiencies that have historically plagued state-owned corporations.

It is, at least on paper, a reasonable compromise.

Rather than nationalizing industries outright, the state takes positions—equity stakes, strategic investments, co-financing arrangements—through which it can influence outcomes without assuming the full burden of management. Rather than withdrawing entirely in favor of market forces, it retains a presence—subtle, but potentially consequential—within sectors deemed critical to national development.

To some, this may appear as a form of gradual or partial nationalization: a model in which the state, by virtue of its capital, acquires not only a financial stake but a degree of influence—perhaps even the capacity, under certain conditions, to intervene, to guide, to regulate, and in moments of necessity, to assert control.

But such a model rests on a critical assumption—one that cannot be taken lightly.

That those entrusted with managing these investments are capable, disciplined, and insulated from the distortions of political interest.

For the success of an investment state does not depend solely on the structure of the fund, nor on the sophistication of its financial instruments. It depends, above all, on governance. It requires individuals who understand not only markets, but the broader responsibilities of stewarding public capital. It demands institutions that can balance risk and return, short-term performance and long-term national interest.

Let us be candid: the idea of an investment state carries with it immense responsibility.

For investing, at this scale, is not merely a financial exercise—it is a form of nation-building.

Capital allocation decisions shape industries, influence employment, determine infrastructure priorities, and, ultimately, affect the trajectory of economic development itself. To invest poorly is not simply to incur losses; it is to misdirect national potential. To invest wisely, on the other hand, is to create pathways for sustained growth, resilience, and strategic autonomy.

There are, of course, precedents.

Countries such as Singapore have demonstrated how sovereign investment vehicles—disciplined, professionally managed, and insulated from day-to-day political pressures—can serve as instruments of long-term national strategy. Through institutions like Temasek Holdings and GIC, the state has been able to deploy capital globally while maintaining a clear alignment between financial performance and national objectives.

But such examples are not easily replicated.

They are products of specific institutional cultures, governance frameworks, and political conditions that prioritize meritocracy, accountability, and continuity. To adopt the form without the substance—to establish funds without ensuring their insulation from political interference—is to risk creating structures that mirror the very inefficiencies they are meant to avoid.

And this brings the discussion back, inevitably, to the central issue: governance.

Without transparency, accountability, and a credible system of checks and balances, even the most well-designed investment frameworks risk degeneration. They may become vehicles not of national development, but of selective advantage—capital deployed not according to strategic necessity, but according to political convenience.

The danger, then, is not in the idea itself, but in its execution.

For an investment state, improperly governed, does not resolve the tension between state and market. It merely relocates it—embedding within financial structures the same vulnerabilities that have long characterized both public administration and market regulation.

Thus, while the investment state offers a compelling middle path—neither full control nor complete withdrawal—it is not a shortcut. It is, if anything, a more demanding model, requiring a higher standard of discipline, a deeper commitment to institutional integrity, and a clearer articulation of national priorities.

It promises flexibility, but demands responsibility.

And whether it succeeds or fails will depend not on the elegance of its design, but on the strength of the institutions—and the people—entrusted to carry it forward.


The Limits of Populism

In recent years, another response has gained renewed prominence: the appeal to strong leadership. It is a response rooted less in institutional reform than in the projection of authority—the belief that decisive political will, whether framed through populism or nationalism, can override both the excesses of the market and the inertia of the bureaucracy.

At its core lies a simple proposition: that the problem is not structure, but resolve. That what the state lacks is not capacity, but the courage to act. And that with sufficient determination—embodied in a singular figure or a tightly controlled executive—long-standing economic and administrative constraints can be swept aside.

It is an argument that resonates, particularly in moments of frustration.

For when institutions appear slow, fragmented, or compromised, the promise of decisiveness carries an undeniable appeal. It offers clarity where there is ambiguity, speed where there is delay, direction where there is drift. It replaces negotiation with command, process with proclamation, and complexity with the assurance of action.

Yet such approaches often conflate decisiveness with effectiveness.

They promise swift action, but rarely address the institutional foundations necessary for sustained reform. They privilege immediacy over continuity, visibility over durability. What emerges is not a reconfiguration of systems, but an intensification of executive control—an attempt to compel outcomes within structures that remain fundamentally unchanged.

This raises a more difficult question: did such movements—whether identified with Dutertismo or other localized variants of strongman politics—truly channel political will toward structural transformation? Or did they, in practice, redirect that will toward a narrower set of priorities, often aligned with what may be termed “pet agendas”?

The record suggests a more complicated answer.

While the language of transformation was often invoked, much of what was implemented bore the imprint of continuity. Programs were rebranded, accelerated, or repackaged, but rarely reimagined at their core. The emphasis was less on redesigning institutions than on driving existing mechanisms with greater force.

Consider, for instance, the much-cited “Build, Build, Build” program under Rodrigo Duterte. Presented as a cornerstone of national renewal, it was framed as an unprecedented push toward infrastructure development—a break from past inertia, a defining legacy of the administration.

And yet, upon closer examination, many of its flagship projects traced their origins to earlier administrations. Feasibility studies, financing arrangements, and even initial planning phases had often been laid out years prior. What changed was not always the substance of the projects themselves, but the scale of their promotion—their integration into a broader narrative of transformation, and their deployment as markers of political identity.

In this sense, the program functioned as both policy and performance.

It accelerated implementation in certain areas, certainly, but it also served as a vehicle for legacy-building—an attempt to consolidate disparate initiatives into a singular narrative of decisive governance. The line between state policy and political branding became, at times, difficult to distinguish.

This is not to deny that tangible outputs were produced. Roads were built, airports expanded, connectivity improved. But the deeper question remains: did such efforts alter the underlying institutional capacity of the state? Did they establish systems that could endure beyond the tenure of a single administration? Or did they depend, to a significant extent, on the momentum generated by centralized authority?

For without institutionalization, even the most visible achievements risk becoming episodic—advances tied to a particular moment, rather than embedded within a sustained framework of governance.

More broadly, the Philippine experience suggests that neither Dutertismo nor any other variant of strongman politics can, by sheer force of will, resolve the structural contradictions embedded within the economy.

For these contradictions are not merely political—they are systemic.

They are rooted in the configuration of institutions, the distribution of power, the incentives that shape decision-making, and the historical patterns that govern the relationship between state and market. They cannot be undone by proclamation, nor resolved through the concentration of authority alone.

Indeed, there is a risk that the reliance on strongman approaches may obscure these deeper issues. By framing problems as failures of will rather than of structure, it shifts attention away from the slow, often unglamorous work of institutional reform. It creates the impression that transformation is a matter of leadership style, rather than of systemic redesign.

In doing so, it offers a form of political immediacy—decisive, visible, and compelling—but one that may ultimately prove transient.

For when leadership changes, the structures remain. And if those structures have not been fundamentally strengthened, the cycle of inefficiency, fragmentation, and contestation resumes.

Thus, the limits of populism are not found in its capacity to mobilize or to command. These, it can do effectively, at least for a time. Its limits lie in its inability to substitute for institutions—to provide, through force of personality alone, the continuity, discipline, and accountability that complex governance requires.

In the end, political will—however forcefully expressed—cannot stand in place of institutional capacity.

And without that capacity, even the most decisive leadership risks becoming, in retrospect, a moment of motion without transformation.


Toward a More Coherent Framework

If there is a lesson to be drawn from the current debate, it is this: the choice between market and state is, in many ways, a false one. It is a dichotomy that simplifies what is, in reality, a far more intricate relationship—one shaped not by opposition alone, but by interdependence. The question is not whether one should prevail over the other, but how each may be situated within a coherent system that recognizes both their capacities and their limits.

What is required, therefore, is not another swing of the pendulum—from privatization to nationalization, from deregulation to control—but a recalibration of roles.

For the market, this means being allowed to function—indeed, to innovate, to allocate resources, to respond to signals—but within a framework that ensures fairness, competition, and accountability. Markets do not operate in a vacuum; they depend on rules, on enforcement, on a level field upon which actors compete. Without such conditions, competition can give way to concentration, efficiency to exploitation, and price signals to distortions that disadvantage the very consumers the system is meant to serve.

To “let the market work,” then, is not to withdraw the state, but to define the conditions under which the market may operate justly and effectively.

For the state, the challenge is of a different order. It must exercise oversight—but not merely in form, nor only in moments of crisis. Oversight must be continuous, competent, and credible. It requires regulators who understand the industries they supervise, institutions capable of acting with both independence and authority, and a culture of governance that prioritizes discipline over discretion.

The state must know when to intervene—and equally, when not to.

For intervention, when poorly designed or politically motivated, can be as damaging as inaction. Yet the absence of intervention, in the face of clear market failure, carries its own costs. The task, therefore, is not simply to act, but to act appropriately—to calibrate response according to circumstance, guided by principle rather than expediency.

Above all, institutions must be strengthened—not as instruments of ideology, nor as extensions of shifting political agendas, but as mechanisms of continuity.

For it is institutions, not personalities, that sustain policy across time.

Strong institutions provide the stability that markets require and the credibility that governance demands. They ensure that rules outlast administrations, that policies are implemented consistently, and that accountability is not contingent upon the preferences of those in power. They transform intent into practice, and aspiration into outcome.

Without such institutions, even the most well-conceived frameworks remain fragile—vulnerable to reversal, distortion, or neglect.

This is perhaps the central challenge confronting the Philippine political economy: not merely to decide between models, but to build the capacity to sustain them. To move beyond cycles of reform and regression, toward a system in which roles are clearly defined, responsibilities are consistently upheld, and outcomes are judged not by rhetoric, but by results.

Such a framework does not promise perfection. No system can eliminate tension between state and market, nor fully resolve the trade-offs inherent in economic governance. But it can provide something more valuable: coherence.

A coherence grounded in clarity of purpose, consistency of policy, and credibility of institutions.

In the end, the goal is not to choose between state and market, but to ensure that both operate within a structure that serves the broader public interest. A system in which the market generates value, the state safeguards equity, and institutions ensure that neither exceeds its proper bounds.

Only then can the cycle of reaction give way to a framework of intention—one that is not merely responsive to crisis, but resilient in the face of it.


Still, at the Crossroads

In the end, the Philippine economy’s predicament reflects a deeper uncertainty—one that extends beyond policy instruments and into the more fragile terrain of trust. It is not merely a question of whether to intervene or to liberalize, to regulate or to withdraw. It is a question of whether the institutions that make such choices can be relied upon to act consistently, competently, and in the public interest.

For beneath every debate on ownership, pricing, or regulation lies a more fundamental concern: confidence.

The analysts speak in the language of efficiency and fiscal limits. They caution against distortion, warn of budgetary strain, and emphasize the discipline imposed by markets. Their arguments are structured, coherent, and grounded in a particular vision of economic order—one in which stability is secured through restraint and credibility is measured in investor confidence.

The public, however, speaks in a different register.

It speaks of fairness, of burden, of survival. It experiences the economy not as a system of abstract incentives, but as a daily negotiation with rising costs, uncertain incomes, and the persistent sense that vulnerability is unevenly distributed. Where analysts see price signals, the public feels pressure. Where economists invoke equilibrium, households confront imbalance.

Between these two perspectives lies a widening gap—one that is not merely analytical, but experiential.

And in that gap, skepticism takes root.

It is a skepticism directed not only at markets, perceived to operate without sufficient regard for social consequence, but also at the state, whose interventions are often viewed through the lens of past failures—of inefficiency, politicization, and promises unfulfilled. It is a dual mistrust, reinforcing itself over time, shaping expectations, and constraining the range of acceptable solutions.

Thus, even well-intentioned proposals are received with hesitation. Market-led approaches are questioned for their equity; state-led interventions for their credibility. Each carries the weight of prior experience, and each is judged not only on its merits, but on the institutions tasked with its implementation.

To bridge this gap requires more than technical adjustment.

It requires a restoration of confidence—patient, deliberate, and sustained.

Confidence in markets, that they will operate within bounds that respect not only efficiency, but fairness. That competition will be real, not illusory; that gains will not be privatized while risks are socialized; that participation in the economy does not come at the expense of basic security.

And confidence in the state, that it can act with competence and integrity. That intervention, when undertaken, will be guided by principle rather than expediency; that oversight will be exercised consistently rather than selectively; that institutions will function not as instruments of shifting political interest, but as guardians of continuity and accountability.

Such confidence cannot be declared. It must be built—through performance, through transparency, through the steady accumulation of decisions that align intent with outcome.

Until then, the nation remains where it stands: between a rock and a hard place.

Not for lack of ideas. Indeed, the debate is rich with proposals, frameworks, and alternatives. Nor for lack of capacity, in the abstract. The Philippines possesses both human capital and institutional memory sufficient to navigate complex challenges.

What remains elusive is alignment.

Alignment between profit and purpose—so that economic activity generates not only returns, but broadly shared value. Alignment between authority and accountability—so that power, wherever it resides, is exercised within clear and enforceable bounds. Alignment between policy and practice—so that what is promised is, in time, delivered.

And above all, alignment between the state that governs and the people it is meant to serve.

For without this alignment, policy becomes fragmented, reform becomes cyclical, and progress becomes uneven. The system moves, but does not necessarily advance.

The crossroads, then, is not merely a moment of choice, but a test of coherence.

Whether the Philippines can move beyond oscillation—beyond the recurring tension between market and state—toward a framework that integrates both, grounded in institutions that command trust and deliver results.

It is a difficult path, requiring not only vision, but discipline. Not only will, but structure.

But it is the only path that leads beyond the crossroads—and toward a more stable and credible economic future.