Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Soon They’ll Say: Forget Change, Be Young, Be Innocent

Soon They’ll Say: Forget Change, Be Young, Be Innocent 

By Kat Ulrike


In these latter days, when the guardians of the established order sense the rising pulse of discontent among the young, they offer counsel wrapped in the measured tones of paternal prudence. “To the youth,” they declare, “get mad. Protest. Fight for your rights. That is democracy. That is legal.” Yet the admonition invariably carries its stern reservation: the moment the young take up the gun and join an armed formation, they pass from the estate of citizen into that of combatant. They forfeit the protections of law and expose themselves to the full severity of RA 11479 and the Revised Penal Code. Change wrought through statute, according to them, preserves life. Change pursued through bullets consumes it. "Let not fellow Filipinos become the foe upon your chosen battlefield" as they say as to defend the status quo wrapped in the promise of the need for reform and change. "Suffer not the recruiters to turn your idealism into an instrument of destruction."

But beneath this seemingly balanced rhetoric lies a deeper and more insistent direction, one that grows clearer with each wave of unrest. The message, once its polite veneer is stripped away, edges steadily toward this: Soon they will say—"forget change altogether. Be young. Be innocent. Enjoy the permitted pleasures and fleeting freedoms of youth. Do not burden yourselves with the heavy architecture of power, injustice, and systemic transformation. Leave such grave matters to your elders, who have learned the wisdom of accommodation and the limits of what is possible." The progression is familiar and almost mechanical. First comes permission for contained protest. Then follows the warning against crossing into armed resistance- even unarmed ones. Finally arrives the quiet summons to abandon the pursuit of fundamental change and retreat into a cultivated, harmless innocence. 

It is a counsel as ancient as power itself, yet renewed in every generation of challenge. From positions of comfort and security, it is easy—almost costless—to condemn the rebel who lifts the rifle. One may discourse gravely upon the loss of legal safeguards under anti-terror legislation without ever descending into the conditions of poverty, landlessness, dynastic capture, and institutional decay that drive some among the young toward the uncertain path of the hills. In our time, the very idea of armed struggle is too often reduced to the flat category of “terrorism.” This simplification serves the convenience of narrative. It dismisses decades of peace negotiations between the government and the National Democratic Front—talks that at times produced agreements acknowledging profound socio-economic roots: ancient grievances of landlessness, the grinding poverty of the countryside, the capture of institutions by entrenched families, and resentments reaching back through martial law and earlier peasant risings. If every bearing of arms is forthwith branded terrorism, of what genuine use then are such negotiations? Why deliberate upon agrarian reform and political restructuring if the mere fact of prior rebellion strips away all context and nuance? 

That a faction should rise in arms against the prevailing order does not, of itself, constitute terrorism in the classical sense. Many movements now remembered as liberatory once included armed components precisely when lawful avenues appeared blocked or illusory. Terrorism directs violence chiefly against the innocent to sow widespread fear. Armed rebellion, however terrible its toll, often conceives itself as contesting the coercive machinery of the state amid conditions of deep asymmetry. To equate the two is to erase the moral and historical space for legitimate political violence in moments of systemic extremity, while conveniently overlooking the quieter structural and procedural violence through which the established order perpetuates itself. 

People inhabit an age of thoroughly asymmetric contest, wherein warfare has escaped the ordered lines and clear frontiers of earlier epochs. All has become irregular—including the domains of information and cognition. Traditional “civilised” warfare presupposed uniformed hosts and defined battlefields. Today, power contends through hybrid instruments: disinformation, economic pressure, legal manoeuvres (“lawfare”), and operations directed upon the mind itself. The state commands superior material force—police, army, courts, and channels of public voice—yet its opponents adapt with the limited weapons available to the weak. Warnings against the weaponisation of youthful idealism carry merit, yet they frequently pass lightly over the capacity of the system itself to weaponise legality, procedural delay, and selective moral outrage in the service of neutralisation. 

Information warfare and the struggle for cognition compound the difficulty. In this epoch, a mere particle of emotionally resonant falsehood—appealing directly to the passions of the street—often outweighs volumes of documented evidence. No matter how scrupulous the investigation or lucid the exposition of causes, a simple query—“Why were they there?”—or the invocation of quo warranto suffices in many quarters to eclipse inconvenient realities. Such rhetorical devices function as instruments in the larger cognitive battle, eroding confidence in institutions, evidence, and shared truth. Narratives that reduce complex insurgencies to undifferentiated terrorism, while portraying every state response as pure defence, operate squarely within this contested terrain. 

There are those who quote Gandhi: “Be the change you wish to see in the world.” There are those who quote Zig Ziglar: “Change begins with you, but it doesn’t start until you do!” These maxims are invoked with apparent sincerity by many who claim to recognise the idea of change. Yet in truth, such voices tend to diminish the fuller meaning of change in favour of a narrowed focus upon the self—not the human person embedded in community, history, and moral obligation, but the atomised individual, isolated and tasked solely with personal improvement. By reducing transformation to private self-cultivation, they subtly deflect attention from the structures of power, inequality, and institutional failure that demand collective confrontation. Personal responsibility is real and necessary, but when it is elevated as the sole theatre of change, it becomes a sedative that leaves the larger edifice untouched. 

Those who urge the young to render their anger “constructive rather than destructive” would do well to recall deeper currents of thought that have animated humanity across ages and civilizations. Karl Marx demonstrated how the ruling ideas of an age are largely the ideas of its ruling class. When power itself delineates the permissible limits of protest and brands every fundamental challenge as criminality, it shields its privileges beneath the cloak of impartial law. What presents itself as neutral legality is often the crystallized will of the dominant class, shaped to preserve existing relations of power. The law, in such hands, does not merely regulate conduct; it defines the very boundaries of legitimate grievance. Any demand that strikes at the roots — land reform, dismantling of dynastic control, genuine redistribution of opportunity — is swiftly recast as subversion, sedition, or terrorism. Thus the powerful maintain the appearance of order while insulating themselves from meaningful accountability.

The great sacred traditions of mankind likewise bear witness to a higher standard. The Bible thunders against unjust decrees and the oppression of the vulnerable: “Woe to those who make unjust laws, to those who issue oppressive decrees, to deprive the poor of their rights and withhold justice from the oppressed” (Isaiah 10:1-2). It commands the faithful to “learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression” (Isaiah 1:17) and declares that “righteousness and justice are the foundation of [God’s] throne” (Psalm 89:14). The apostles themselves affirmed, “We must obey God rather than men” when earthly authority conflicted with divine command. The Quran repeatedly enjoins justice as a divine imperative: “O you who have believed, be persistently standing firm in justice, witnesses for Allah, even if it be against yourselves or parents and relatives” (Quran 4:135). It condemns oppression in the strongest terms, declaring that Allah does not love the oppressors and that the world itself cannot long endure under zulm (injustice), for “Allah commands justice and excellent conduct” (Quran 16:90). Even the Vedic tradition and broader Eastern philosophies conceive of Dharma not as mechanical obedience to statute but as alignment with a higher moral and cosmic order — the eternal law of truth, duty, righteousness, and harmony that sustains the universe. When rulers and systems depart grievously from this righteousness—sustaining mass deprivation through corruption, exclusion, and entrenched inequality—the obligation to restore equilibrium may transcend the letter of enacted law. In such moments, conscience, informed by transcendent principle, stands in judgment over mere positive law. 

Even the urge to study, to investigate, to seek understanding becomes itself an act of rebellion unless it is carefully confined within the parameters of legality approved by the order. Yet reality has a stubborn way of escaping such parameters. Honest investigation and rigorous study, when pursued without fear or favour, lead inexorably to conclusions that reform is not merely desirable but inevitable. The deeper one probes into the actual conditions of landlessness, corruption, dynastic dominance, and blocked opportunity, the more apparent it becomes that cosmetic adjustments will not suffice. But here arises the further difficulty: is reform itself permitted only within the narrow parameters imposed by the existing order? When change is reduced to superficial measures — token programs, rhetorical concessions, or temporary palliatives — it serves merely as a cosmetic intent meant to appease a growing angry populace, including the youth who stand ready to turn every tool into a weapon when all other avenues appear sealed. 
As Mao Zedong observed with characteristic directness: “To take such an attitude is to seek truth from facts. ‘Facts’ are all the things that exist objectively, ‘truth’ means their internal relations, that is, the laws governing them, and ‘to seek’ means to study. We should proceed from the actual conditions inside and outside the country… and derive from them, as our guide to action, laws that are inherent in them and not imaginary… We must rely not on subjective imagination, not on momentary enthusiasm, not on lifeless books, but on facts that exist objectively.” 
He even further warned against superficial thinking such as "book worship": “You can’t solve a problem? Well, get down and investigate the present facts and its past history! When you have investigated the problem thoroughly, you will know how to solve it. Conclusions invariably come after investigation, and not before. Only a blockhead cudgels his brains on his own, or together with a group, to ‘find a solution’ or ‘evolve an idea’ without making any investigation. It must be stressed that this cannot possibly lead to any effective solution or any good idea.”

Once, Friedrich Engels captured something of the radical edge that disturbs the comfortable in his poetic commentary upon Max Stirner during the time of Die Freien: 

"Look at Stirner, look at him, the peaceful enemy of all constraint.
For the moment, he is still drinking beer,
Soon he will be drinking blood as though it were water.
When others cry savagely “down with the kings”
Stirner immediately supplements “down with the laws also.”
Stirner full of dignity proclaims;
You bend your willpower and you dare to call yourselves free.
You become accustomed to slavery
Down with dogmatism, down with law."

Engels’ lines, sharp with irony, anticipate the discomfort felt by those who today counsel the youth to remain strictly within legal bounds—and who may soon counsel them to abandon the pursuit of change itself. 

Why do they speak in this manner? Are they haunted by the spectres of future Andreas Baaders, Ulrike Meinhofs, and Gudrun Ensslins—those figures of the West German Red Army Faction who, emerging from the student movements of a prosperous yet spiritually restless society, turned toward militant action against what they perceived as a hollow, imperialist order? The Philippines is not West Germany, with its distinct history, culture, and circumstances. Yet the underlying dynamic bears troubling resemblance: when a system blocks meaningful avenues for transformation while breeding frustration among the idealistic young, it may engender conditions that prove disruptive rather than orderly by nature. Everything becomes an option. Those who seek to impose limits upon dissent often strive to diminish the uncomfortable truth that the system itself creates the very conditions it later deems “necessary” to suppress. In such a climate, the book and the pen become the gun itself—tools of critique and mobilisation that the powerful fear no less than armed bands, for ideas, once kindled, possess their own inexorable force. 

In the end, every instrument stands capable of weaponisation, for every tool may be turned to martial purpose. The state itself may transmute peace into “peacefare”—employing negotiations, ceasefires, and dialogues less to address root afflictions than to intimidate, fragment, or delegitimise those who press for profound and systemic alteration, even when such alteration strikes at the foundations of the order. The pen, and in this electronic age the smartphone, may wield force comparable to the rifle, shaping perceptions and marshalling multitudes across the ether. 

Ernst Jünger, the chronicler of storm and steel, understood the magnetic pull that danger and the extraordinary exert upon a generation raised in security. “Grown up in an age of security,” he wrote of his own comrades, “we shared a yearning for danger, for the experience of the extraordinary. We were enraptured by war.” In our own context, such yearning does not always seek conflict for its own sake, but it reveals a profound dissatisfaction with a world that offers only managed dissent and domesticated dreams. 

Oswald Spengler, in his sombre morphology of civilizations, saw late-stage societies as places where “eternal youths” reappear—immature yet fervent, hostile to established forms of state, property, and rank, clinging to theories and badges while the deeper cultural fire dims. In the winter of a civilization, he suggested, instinct and elemental forces reassert themselves against the reign of abstract reason and financial power. The call to “be young and innocent” may thus serve as a sedative precisely when the social order senses its own senescence and fears the disruptive vitality that authentic change demands. 

Genuine maturity does not require the young to surrender their idealism upon securing their first wage. It demands instead that the republic confront why such idealism so frequently collides with the necessities of survival. It requires those who hold authority to treat radical discontent not merely as a security disturbance to be suppressed under anti-terror statutes, but as a symptom of failings that reform through law alone has too often proven insufficient to remedy. 

The youth would do well to guard against both the romanticisation of the gun and the seductive call to cultivated innocence. They should maintain equal vigilance against homilies upon the sanctity of law and democracy issuing from those who preside over, or draw sustenance from, a system that too frequently renders both terms ironic. In this era of cognitive and asymmetric strife, wherein narratives command legitimacy no less than projectiles, the true labour is not to instruct the young to cease being angry, nor to urge them toward a false and convenient innocence. 

It is to confront, with unflinching honesty and without instinctive recourse to criminalisation, the reasons why so many among them still discover such potent cause for anger—and why the established order fears that anger when it refuses to remain merely youthful and contained. 

The path forward cannot rest upon incantations of legality alone, nor upon any glorification of violence. It demands the honest recognition that peace negotiations have persisted precisely because armed struggle, however grievous its cost, has repeatedly compelled attention to grievances that decorous reform has often contrived to evade. It calls for a reformation of the social order so thorough that recourse to bullets loses its desperate appeal—not through the expansive application of terrorism statutes that swallow dissent, but through the concrete delivery of justice, opportunity, and accountability sufficient to render idealism and daily existence no longer mortal antagonists. 

Until that day arrives, the evolving counsel—“get mad, but only legally…" soon, "forget change, be young, be innocent”—will strike many as little more than sophisticated counsel to accept the world as it is, rather than labour to remake it as conscience and necessity demand. History records that when legal avenues harden into instruments of preservation rather than renewal, certain souls will inevitably seek other means. To understand that sombre dynamic, without thereby extenuating its human price, remains the beginning of wiser statesmanship.        

The Moral Language of Order: From Tetzel to Beruf to Capital— and the Long Accommodation of Faith

The Moral Language of Order: 
From Tetzel to Beruf to Capital—
and the Long Accommodation of Faith 


There is a persistent claim, repeated with remarkable consistency across more than a century of ecclesiastical writing, that the Church stands as the moral guardian of the poor—a moderating force between capital and labor, a voice that tempers economic life with the language of dignity, justice, and the common good. From Rerum Novarum (1891) onward, this claim has been articulated with urgency and pastoral concern. “The misery and wretchedness pressing so unjustly on the majority of the working class,” wrote Pope Leo XIII, “must be remedied by a remedy that is suitable and proportionate to the evil.” The encyclical painted a vivid picture of industrial society’s ills: workers “surrendered, isolated and helpless, to the hard-heartedness of employers and the greed of unchecked competition,” while “a small number of very rich men” laid upon the masses “a yoke little better than that of slavery itself.” 

Leo XIII appeared genuinely sympathetic to the plight of the industrial proletariat. He condemned the inhumanity of many employers who “hardly care for them outside the profit their labor brings” and criticized the reduction of labor to a mere commodity in the new capitalist order. He advocated for just wages sufficient to support a family, the right of workers to form associations, and the moral obligations of the wealthy. Yet within that same foundational text lies the counterweight that has defined—and, critics argue, constrained—the entire trajectory of Catholic social teaching: “The right of private property must be held sacred and inviolable.” Leo warned that socialists, “working on the poor man’s envy of the rich, are striving to do away with private property,” and insisted that such abolition would ultimately harm the very workers it purported to help. 

The problem with Leo XIII’s approach, despite his recognition of the workers’ suffering and apparent sympathy, is that his failure to draw a sufficiently sharp distinction between personal property (goods necessary for individual and family dignity, security, and basic autonomy) and private property in the means of production or large-scale productive capital creates an unjust conclusion. The encyclical reads less as a balanced critique of emerging industrial capitalism and more as an effort to consciencize it—to moralize and humanize its operations through appeals to virtue, charity, and paternalistic duty—while directing its strongest fire against socialism. This asymmetry reflects a deeper impulse: an attempt to revert to feudal-like relations that claim to be personal, organic, and reciprocal in character rather than coldly transactional and impersonal as in modern market capitalism. In the feudal ideal, the lord and serf (or master and worker) were bound in a web of mutual obligations, status, and moral duties within a hierarchical order supposedly blessed by God and nature. Leo’s vision, while addressing new realities, often romanticizes such personal bonds of duty and loyalty over confronting the structural logic of wage labor, capital accumulation, and profit maximization that define industrial relations. 

Just imagine: traditionalists and distributists idealize the “blacksmith’s shop in a time when factories are assembling things out of steel.” They romanticize the independent artisan, the small workshop where skill, family, and community intertwine in personal, face-to-face relations. They idealize the general store in an age when supermarkets thrive, with their vast supply chains, economies of scale, and impersonal efficiency. Capitalists, too, sometimes romanticize this lost world of small-scale enterprise—even as the factory and the supermarket ruthlessly kill the blacksmith’s shop and the general store through superior productivity, lower prices, and relentless competition. The nostalgia for pre-industrial economic forms reveals a shared discomfort with modernity’s impersonal forces, yet it rarely confronts the hard economic reality that these small-scale models were largely displaced not by conspiracy but by technological and organizational superiority that delivered greater material abundance, however unevenly distributed. 

Catholic social thought has long sought an alternative in distributism, most famously articulated by G.K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. Distributism advocates that productive assets should be widely owned by individuals, families, and cooperatives rather than concentrated in the hands of the state (as in socialism) or in a few large corporations (as in corporate capitalism). It envisions a society of widespread property ownership, small workshops, family farms, and guilds restored to something resembling their medieval vitality. “The problem with capitalism is not that there are too many capitalists,” Chesterton quipped, “but too few.” Belloc warned in The Servile State that both capitalism and socialism tend toward concentrated power, ultimately reducing the majority to servile dependence. 

Yet in practice, distributism itself functions as a form of socialism—socializing private property in favor of the community, even if that community is conceived in terms of the person and the family. By insisting that ownership of productive assets must be widely diffused through moral pressure, legal reform, or communal norms, it effectively subordinates individual title to productive capital to a collective vision of the common good. The distinction between personal and private property collapses once more: what begins as a defense of the family workshop quickly becomes a call to restrain or redistribute large-scale capital accumulation. This creates an internal contradiction. While distributism loudly rejects both state socialism and corporate capitalism, its mechanisms for achieving wide ownership often require significant intervention that blurs into socialization of the means of production under another name. 

It is not surprising, then, that despite this rhetorical promotion of distributism and the frequent quoting of Chesterton and Belloc, the dominant trajectory has been eventual accommodationism toward capitalism—and even toward neoliberalism and globalization. In practice, the lofty ideal of uplifting the poor through widespread property ownership gives way to addressing their condition primarily as a matter of morals. Yes, the encyclicals and Catholic commentary continue to cite Chesterton’s wit and Belloc’s warnings against the servile state. Yet in lived reality and pastoral emphasis, the tradition increasingly looks toward Max Weber’s disciplined vocation and Johann Tetzel’s transactional logic refracted through modern forms. Spiritual discipline in one’s calling is expected to yield signs of favor; moral formation and personal responsibility become the primary remedies for poverty; charity and ethical consumerism soften the edges of global markets without challenging their core logic. The blacksmith’s shop and the general store remain romantic ideals, but the supermarket and the factory define the actual terrain in which the Church operates. 

The Gradual Shift from Structural Critique to Moral Formation 

The deeper transformation within Catholic social thought has been less a matter of explicit doctrinal revision than a subtle yet profound change in interpretive emphasis and pastoral application. What began in the pioneering social encyclicals as a relatively robust engagement with structural realities—questions of wages and just remuneration, hazardous working conditions, the power imbalance between labor and capital, and the equitable distribution of productive property—has, in much of the Church’s lived teaching, preaching, and catechesis, gradually shaded into a predominantly moral pedagogy. Economic life is now addressed primarily through the cultivation of personal virtues: diligence in one’s duties, personal responsibility for one’s family, thrift and prudent stewardship of resources, honesty in contracts, and faithful acceptance of one’s station in life. Structural critique has not disappeared entirely, but it has been increasingly subordinated to the language of individual conversion, ethical conduct, and interior formation. Economic questions are thereby reframed less as challenges requiring systemic reconfiguration and more as occasions for personal moral growth and sanctification. 

This interpretive shift did not emerge in a vacuum. Its historical roots reach back to the late medieval Church and extend through the spiritual revolution of the Protestant Reformation. Even before the Reformation, the figure of Johann Tetzel exemplified a transactional approach to grace. His infamous promotion of indulgences—“As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory springs”—captured a worldview in which invisible spiritual realities could be rendered tangible and even quantifiable through material exchange. Salvation and relief from punishment were presented as commodities that could be secured through a measurable transaction. The Reformation rightly rebelled against this abuse as a corruption of the Gospel. Yet it did not entirely eliminate the underlying human impulse to align spiritual assurance with concrete, measurable worldly action. Instead, it transformed and internalized the mechanism. 

Martin Luther played a pivotal role by dramatically expanding and democratizing the meaning of the German word Beruf—vocation or calling. In medieval Catholicism, the term was largely reserved for the higher, contemplative life of monks, nuns, and clergy. Luther upended this hierarchy. He insisted that every legitimate worldly occupation could be a divine calling. “The maid who sweeps her kitchen is doing the will of God just as much as the monk who prays,” he famously declared. “Every occupation has its own honor before God. Ordinary work is a divine vocation or calling. In our daily work no matter how important or mundane we serve God by serving the neighbor and we also participate in God’s on-going providence for the human race.” 

This was a liberating affirmation of everyday life. Yet where Tetzel had offered coins for spiritual benefit, Luther and his successors emphasized disciplined conduct and faithful labor in one’s Beruf as the new path to moral standing and assurance before God. The transactional logic evolved: instead of purchasing grace through indulgences, believers now demonstrated faithfulness through ascetic diligence and productivity in their calling. As Luther emphasized in his reading of 1 Corinthians 7:20 (“Each one should remain in the condition in which he was called”), the emphasis fell on contentment and diligent performance within one’s given role rather than on questioning or transforming the broader social and economic structures that defined those roles. 

This Reformation legacy found its most influential sociological analysis in Max Weber’s classic work, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Weber traced how the Protestant—especially Calvinist and Puritan—understanding of vocation contributed to the cultural and psychological foundations of modern capitalism. In the intense atmosphere of predestination anxiety, believers sought signs of divine election not primarily through sacramental assurance but through the visible fruits of a disciplined, ascetic life lived in one’s calling. “Labour must, on the contrary, be performed as if it were an absolute end in itself, a calling,” Weber observed. Tireless, methodical work became the outward expression of inner faith and a means of attaining “self-assurance” regarding one’s state of grace. Worldly success, while never taken as certain proof of salvation, functioned as a powerful psychological indicator of divine favor. Ascetic restraint in consumption, combined with relentless productivity and rational organization of life, generated capital accumulation. “The earning of money within the modern economic order is, so long as it is done legally, the result and the expression of virtue and proficiency in a calling,” Weber noted. Over generations, this religious impulse secularized. The “Puritans wanted to be men of the calling—we, on the other hand, must be,” he remarked wryly, capturing how an originally spiritual discipline had hardened into the iron cage of modern rationalized economic life. 

If one may connect Tetzel and Weber evenly, the parallel becomes striking. Tetzel reminds us of those who impose zakat or charity through mandatory tithing — a system in which spiritual merit or communal obligation is tied directly to a financial contribution extracted from the faithful. Weber, by contrast, creates the deeper conditions necessary to induce people to work diligently enough to generate the surplus required for such tithing or charitable giving. In this religious economy, Tetzel offers immediate transactional assurance through payment, while Weber engineers a cultural and psychological framework in which disciplined labor itself becomes the engine that sustains both personal prosperity and the flow of tithes. People tithe out of spiritual reasons — out of a desire for divine favor, fear of judgment, or hope of heavenly reward. They work hard precisely to have enough to tithe generously. Again, Tetzel promised a soul released from purgatory through the ringing of a coin, while Weber posits that the “calling” to work diligently, reinvest profits rather than consume them, and view worldly success as a sign of salvation transformed labor itself into a religious duty. What was once an external transaction (coin for grace) became an internalized discipline: ascetic productivity as evidence of election, with tithing serving as both fruit and further confirmation of one’s standing before God. 

Contemporary religious discourse, both Protestant and Catholic, continues to echo these patterns, often in softened or adapted forms. In prosperity theology, particularly within charismatic and Pentecostal circles, material wealth and success are presented quite explicitly as tangible signs of God’s favor and faithful stewardship. Even outside such overt frameworks, in more moderate evangelical or Catholic pastoral settings, economic outcomes are frequently moralized: persistent diligence and virtuous living are expected to bear fruit, while chronic poverty or failure can subtly be read as a shortfall in personal responsibility, faith, or spiritual discipline. When faith is decoupled from sustained structural critique—when the focus remains overwhelmingly on forming diligent, thrifty, and responsible individuals rather than on reordering concentrations of productive capital or challenging systemic barriers—the religious impulse risks functioning as a sophisticated investment logic. Spiritual discipline is cultivated in the hope of orderly success; success serves as reassurance or validation; validation, in turn, legitimates participation in the prevailing economic order rather than its fundamental transformation. In this light, the neo-Tetzelite pattern persists in subtler guise: assurance is no longer bought with coins, but indicated through moral conduct, vocational fidelity, tithing, and visible economic fruit. 

Within Catholicism, this shift has been especially evident in the gap between the structural ambitions of the encyclicals and their practical reception. While Rerum Novarum and later documents such as Quadragesimo Anno or Laborem Exercens engaged questions of wages, the priority of labor over capital, and the social mortgage on private property, much pastoral application has emphasized personal virtues and vocational fidelity. The language of “vocation” or “talents” invites reflection on meaning, divine purpose, and individual stewardship, which can elevate the worker’s dignity. Yet when it displaces the harsher language of “employment,” “wages,” and “power relations,” structural questions—concentrations of ownership, the displacement of small artisans and general stores by factories and supermarkets, or the dynamics of globalization—tend to recede. Poverty becomes less a systemic injustice demanding bold redistribution or widespread ownership (as distributism rhetorically champions) and more a context for personal growth, charitable response, or spiritual purification. Inequality appears increasingly as a providential distribution of differing gifts and stations rather than a failure of social architecture. 

This moralization aligns comfortably with the romantic idealization of pre-industrial forms—the blacksmith’s shop, the family workshop, the general store—while accommodating the actual dominance of large-scale capital. It allows the Church to critique excesses without confronting the impersonal, transactional logic that has rendered those older models economically obsolete. In the end, the gradual shift from structural critique to moral formation, mediated through the evolution from Tetzel’s coins to Luther’s Beruf and Weber’s Protestant ethic, has helped preserve the Church’s moral authority and spiritual mission. However, it has also facilitated a long-term accommodation to the very capitalist order that the earliest social encyclicals sought to temper, turning what began as a call for social justice into a refined pedagogy of personal virtue within an increasingly globalized and neoliberal framework. 

The Collapsed Distinction: Personal Property versus Private Capital 

A central and recurring complication in this tradition is the distinction—clear enough in principle, yet frequently blurred or collapsed in practice—between personal property (goods necessary for individual and family dignity, security, and basic autonomy) and private property in the means of production, large-scale capital, or productive assets. Catholic teaching has long affirmed the former as a natural right rooted in human nature and the need for stable family life. The latter, however, is legitimate only conditionally, always subordinated to the universal destination of goods—the foundational principle that the earth’s resources are destined by God for the benefit of all humanity, not merely for the enrichment of owners. 

Pius XI developed this with particular clarity in Quadragesimo Anno, speaking of the “twofold character of ownership,” individual and social. Later popes, including John Paul II, would speak explicitly of a “social mortgage” on private property. The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church reinforces that the Christian tradition “has never recognized the right to private property as absolute and untouchable,” but always situates it within the prior right to common use. 

Yet in Rerum Novarum, despite Leo XIII’s sympathetic diagnosis of workers’ misery, this distinction is not drawn with sufficient rigor. The encyclical defends “the right of private property” in sweeping terms as “sacred and inviolable,” grounding it in natural law, human reason, and the capacity to plan for the future—qualities that distinguish man from animals. Savings from wages invested in land or tools are treated as extensions of the worker’s just compensation. While Leo acknowledges that the earth was given to all humanity in common and that property has a social dimension (“the right of property is distinct from its use”), the overall thrust equates the defense of modest family holdings with the broader protection of productive capital. This blurring leads to an unjust conclusion: the moral energy spent consciencizing employers and urging workers toward thrift and virtue outweighs any call for redistributive mechanisms or challenges to concentrated ownership. The encyclical thus appears more intent on reforming capitalism’s spirit—instilling Christian morals, paternalistic duties, and just wages—than on fundamentally questioning its structures. In this sense, it seeks to restore something akin to feudal personal relations: hierarchical yet reciprocal, marked by mutual obligations of protection and loyalty rather than impersonal market transactions. The ideal worker is not a rights-bearing agent in class conflict but a dutiful participant in an organic social body, bound by Christian charity and station. 

In practice, however, this nuanced distinction has often collapsed under the pressures of rhetoric and real-world application. The defense of a modest family home or personal possessions merges rhetorically and politically with the defense of vast corporate holdings, speculative capital, or multinational enterprises. What begins as a qualified, conditional legitimacy for productive private property hardens, in many interpretations, into something approaching an absolute. This blurring reinforces practical accommodation to the dominant economic system rather than sustained challenge to its concentrations of ownership and power. 

Internal Catholic Tensions, Confusion, and Traditionalist Critiques 

These doctrinal and practical tensions expose a deep internal diversity—and at times outright confusion—within Catholic thought on social doctrine. For over a century, the Church has produced a substantial body of teaching on economic life, yet the ecclesiastical establishment has struggled to produce a clear, consistent, and authoritative interpretation of what “social doctrine” actually demands in concrete economic and political life. Principles such as the universal destination of goods, the social mortgage on private property, the priority of labor over capital, and the common good are frequently affirmed in documents, but their translation into specific policies on wages, ownership structures, agrarian reform, or responses to globalization remains contested and often deliberately vague. This ambiguity has serious consequences. Worse, it has prompted some voices adhering strongly to tradition to dismiss the very idea of a distinct “social doctrine” as a modernist travesty—an innovation alien to the perennial teaching of the Church, contaminated by dangerous engagement with liberal modernity and risking the dilution of the Church’s supernatural mission into mere sociology or politics. 

It is not surprising that many traditionalists stress simply moral matters. In their view, “social teaching” should be understood not as a call to examine employment as a structural reality of power, class relations, and unequal distribution of productive assets, but as simply vocation — a matter of personal sanctification within one’s God-given station. The Beatitudes or any of Christ’s words, they insist, are fundamentally spiritual matters, and any temporal issues must be strictly subordinated to spiritual belief and the salvation of souls. In practice, this approach has become too accommodating to capitalism, or even fossilised as a defense of feudal-like hierarchies. As noted earlier, it forms a neo-Tetzelite view refracted through a Protestant Weberian lens: where indulgences once offered transactional assurance through coin, disciplined vocation and moral conduct now offer a subtler assurance through productivity, success, orderly participation in the existing economic order, and generous tithing. Spiritual discipline is rewarded with material signs of favor, while systemic critique is sidelined as secondary or even dangerous to the soul’s primary concern. The result is a faith that consoles the individual within the system rather than challenging the system itself. 

It is not surprising, though, that traditionalists may clamor for feudalism as an ideal social order akin to the great chain of being — a divinely ordained, organic hierarchy in which every station from king to peasant reflects cosmic and sacred order and resists the disruptive forces of modernity, egalitarianism, and democratic leveling. Thinkers in this current often look back nostalgically to medieval Christendom, where society was imagined as an integrated body with each member fulfilling a fixed role under the kingship of Christ. They decry social doctrine as a liberal intrusion that threatens this harmonious vision inherited from Christendom. Some prove too accommodating toward capitalism as well, especially its neoliberal and globalized forms, opposing agrarian reform, land redistribution, or strong sustainability measures on the basis of a strong dominionist reading of Genesis 1 (“Be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it”). In this interpretation, human dominion over creation justifies aggressive development of resources and resists environmental or redistributive restraints that might limit private initiative or economic growth. 

Outside Catholicism, strikingly parallel impulses have appeared in Protestant evangelical circles. James G. Watt, U.S. Secretary of the Interior from 1981 to 1983 under President Ronald Reagan, embodied a stewardship philosophy heavily shaped by dominionist thought. He advocated the vigorous development of natural resources for human benefit, often clashing with environmentalists. In congressional testimony, he stated that resources must be managed wisely for future generations, acknowledging uncertainty about when the Lord might return. An apocryphal and more extreme quotation attributed to him — “After the last tree is felled, Christ will come back” — captured the public perception of this theology, even if Watt denied the precise wording. 

Traditionalist Catholic critics, often drawing from pre-conciliar sensibilities or integralist perspectives, argue that the Church’s primary and unchanging task is the salvation of souls and the public ordering of society under the Social Kingship of Christ the King. They regard the social encyclicals from Rerum Novarum onward as contingent pastoral responses to the specific crises of industrialization rather than organic developments of immutable doctrine. In their eyes, the heavy emphasis on subsidiarity, solidarity, dialogue with the modern world, and detailed socio-economic analysis risks conceding too much to liberalism and diluting the Church’s transcendent authority. Some see clear echoes of the modernist crisis condemned by Pope St. Pius X in Pascendi Dominici Gregis (1907), which warned against reducing faith to immanent social concerns. For these voices, the heavy moralization of social issues — reducing them to calls for personal holiness, charity, diligent work, and ethical behavior within the existing order — serves as a safe, depoliticized middle ground. It permits the Church to speak on economic questions without alienating property owners, challenging concentrations of capital, or appearing to endorse radical restructuring. Economic injustice is thereby treated primarily through the lens of individual virtue and conversion rather than sustained analysis of ownership patterns, capital concentration, or class dynamics. The outcome is a social doctrine that retains significant moral authority but often lacks transformative political or economic force. 

At the progressive end of the spectrum, liberation theology has attempted to restore structural bite to Catholic social thought. Gustavo Gutiérrez, one of its foundational figures, argued that authentic theology must emerge from the “preferential option for the poor” and concrete historical praxis. He distinguished three interrelated senses of poverty: material deprivation (an evil that God opposes), spiritual poverty (humility and openness before God), and active solidarity with the oppressed in protest against unjust structures. “The poor person does not exist as an inescapable fact of destiny,” Gutiérrez wrote. “His or her existence is not politically neutral, and it is not ethically innocent. The poor are a by-product of the system in which we live and for which we are responsible.” For Gutiérrez and others, true liberation involves not only spiritual conversion but concrete historical action aimed at transforming sinful social structures. 

Liberation theologians frequently drew upon structural analysis, including elements of Marxist dependency theory and class analysis, to argue that genuine justice requires more than moral exhortation or incremental reform within existing property regimes. This approach provoked sharp official responses. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, under Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI), issued critiques warning against the reduction of salvation to political or economic liberation, the conflation of the biblical “poor” with Marx’s proletariat, and the importation of class struggle in ways that undermined Christian reconciliation and the Church’s transcendent mission. John Paul II affirmed the preferential option for the poor but insisted that liberation must be integral — spiritual, moral, and cultural — and must reject violence or ideological reductionism. 

Earlier Catholic thinkers navigated these waters with different emphases. Jacques Maritain sought to integrate Thomistic personalism with modern democracy and human rights while resisting both totalitarian collectivism and atomizing individualism. John Courtney Murray contributed significantly to the development of religious freedom and the Church’s constructive engagement with pluralistic societies at Vatican II. These diverse currents illustrate the ongoing, unresolved Catholic effort to chart a difficult path between uncritical traditionalism, liberal accommodation, and radical structural critique. 

Pius XI’s metaphor of steering between the “twin rocks of shipwreck” remains an enduring and instructive image: the Church must critique both the dehumanizing tendencies of socialism and the atomizing, exploitative excesses of capitalism, proposing instead a social order oriented toward the human person made in the image of God. Yet the persistent lack of a single, unified, and authoritative interpretation — combined with the selective emphasis on moral formation over structural analysis — has left Catholic social doctrine vulnerable to fragmentation, ideological capture, and inconsistent application. Leo XIII’s original framing in Rerum Novarum, with its insufficiently sharp distinction between personal and private property, set a tone that subsequent teaching has struggled to clarify or transcend. In this atmosphere of ambiguity, the romantic ideals of distributism (widespread ownership of productive assets through families and cooperatives) are frequently quoted — invoking Chesterton and Belloc — yet rarely translated into effective practice against the realities of factories, supermarkets, neoliberal globalization, and concentrated capital. The result is a tradition that speaks powerfully of justice and the common good while, in practice, often defaulting to moral exhortation and pragmatic accommodation. 

The Enduring Paradox: Moral Language within Accommodation 

The social encyclicals contain profound and lasting insights that continue to resonate. They affirm that work possesses a subjective dimension that transcends its mere objective economic output — the worker is not simply a factor of production but a person created in the image of God whose labor should affirm his dignity. They insist that labor holds priority over capital; that economies exist to serve persons, not the reverse; and that private property, while legitimate, carries a social mortgage and must remain subordinate to the universal destination of goods. These documents represent a genuine, often courageous attempt to subordinate economic life to moral purpose, human dignity, solidarity, subsidiarity, and the common good. From Leo XIII’s condemnation of the “yoke little better than that of slavery itself” imposed on workers, through Pius XI’s warning against the “twin rocks of shipwreck,” to John Paul II’s defense of the priority of labor, the tradition has offered a rich moral vocabulary with which to critique both socialist collectivism and unchecked capitalist individualism. 

Yet in practice these insights are too often honored through selective citation and rhetorical affirmation rather than enacted as binding guides for structural change. Encyclicals and the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church are frequently quoted in homilies, conferences, and official statements, but they function more as lofty pastoral principles than as concrete blueprints capable of reshaping economies, challenging entrenched concentrations of productive capital, or guiding policy on wages, land reform, or globalization. The gap between aspiration and implementation is wide. Distributist ideals — the widespread ownership of productive assets by families, small workshops, and cooperatives, so eloquently championed by Chesterton and Belloc — remain largely aspirational, romanticized in theory while the realities of factories, supermarkets, global supply chains, and neoliberal consolidation continue to dominate in practice. The blacksmith’s shop and the general store are fondly remembered, yet the economic forces that rendered them obsolete are rarely confronted head-on. 

This dynamic produces a persistent and deeply revealing paradox at the heart of the tradition. A Church that has repeatedly critiqued the anthropological and social failings of both capitalism and socialism has, in historical practice, operated far more comfortably within the frameworks of the former while maintaining a categorical doctrinal rejection of the latter. It condemns key elements of liberal individualism — its reduction of the person to an autonomous economic actor, its prioritization of profit over the common good, its tendency toward atomization — in theory, yet accommodates its markets, property regimes, incentive structures, and globalized logic in practice. It insists upon moral limits and the claims of justice, yet frequently accepts — with a mixture of resignation, prudence, and pastoral realism — the structural realities that continue to generate the very ills it decries: widening inequality, the displacement of small producers, the dominance of large-scale capital, and the transformation of labor into a disposable commodity. Depoliticization has often followed as a natural consequence. The Church speaks with moral force about justice, human dignity, and the preferential option for the poor, yet increasingly hesitates when direct confrontation with economic power, calls for significant redistribution, or challenges to existing ownership patterns become necessary. It prefers instead the safer, more controllable terrain of ethical exhortation, charitable initiative, personal conversion, and the promotion of virtue within the given system. 

Liberation theology’s continued relevance, whatever its theological and practical shortcomings, lies precisely in its insistence that authentic justice cannot be reduced to moral language or incremental personal reform alone. It demands the naming and transformation of “sinful structures” — systems of dependency, exploitation, and concentrated power that systematically produce poverty. Whether or not one accepts its borrowings from Marxist analysis or its sometimes reductionist tendencies, liberation theology highlights what can be lost when social teaching drifts too far toward individualized virtue ethics detached from serious power analysis. In the absence of such structural engagement, the Church’s social doctrine risks becoming a sophisticated form of consolation rather than a catalyst for meaningful change. 

From Tetzel’s coins — the crude but transparent transaction that promised spiritual assurance through material payment — to Luther’s Beruf, which sanctified everyday labor as a divine calling, to Weber’s Protestant ethic, which turned disciplined productivity and reinvestment into signs of divine favor, to modern prosperity motifs and dominionist stewardship, and from the high aspirations of the social encyclicals — particularly Leo XIII’s attempt to consciencize capitalism under the guise of moral order and paternalistic duty — to their selective interpretation in lived Catholic life, a recurring pattern emerges across the centuries. Faith sets out to guide and sanctify the world of economy and power. Yet in the long process of engagement and accommodation, it frequently learns, adapts to, and ultimately speaks the world’s own language of order, productivity, measured reform, pragmatic coexistence, and incremental moral improvement more fluently than it challenges or transcends that world’s deepest structural logic. 

The Church speaks powerfully of justice, yet operates within frameworks of pragmatic accommodation. 

It defends the dignity of every human person, yet preserves — or at least coexists with — hierarchies of ownership, opportunity, and power that echo older feudal forms of personal dependence while efficiently serving modern impersonal capital. 

It critiques excess and exploitation, yet sustains, or at least declines to fundamentally disrupt, the mechanisms — factories, supermarkets, globalized supply chains, and concentrated financial capital — that reliably reproduce both unprecedented abundance and persistent disparity. 

What began in the late nineteenth century as a bold prophetic correction to the “new things” (rerum novarum) of industrial modernity has, in significant measure, settled into a long coexistence. The central question that endures is not merely whether Christian faith possesses the intellectual and spiritual resources to speak truthfully and critically to the world of capital, labor, and property. It is whether, in learning to inhabit that world responsibly and pastorally across generations, the tradition has gradually begun to speak its language of order and incremental moral improvement more readily than it challenges its deepest structural logic — especially when the initial framing, as in Rerum Novarum, already tilted toward accommodation by insufficiently distinguishing the personal from the productive in property, and by romanticizing reciprocal feudal-style relations in an age of impersonal market transactions. 

The unresolved tension remains acute: between personal conversion and structural transformation; between the legitimate claims of private property and its inescapable social mortgage; between the priority of spiritual formation and the demands of temporal justice; between the romantic ideal of the blacksmith’s shop and the overwhelming reality of the factory; between quoting Chesterton and Belloc on distributism and the practical accommodation to neoliberal globalization. This tension persists not because the Catholic tradition lacks intellectual or spiritual resources, but because faithful engagement with history inevitably involves difficult, contingent discernments amid imperfect conditions and competing goods. Living in time always requires prudence, yet prudence can shade into resignation. 

The long arc from Tetzel to the present reveals both the Church’s enduring witness to the transcendent dignity of the human person and the inherent limits of moral language when it becomes detached from the willingness to pursue transformative action. In the end, the moral language of order risks becoming little more than the language of accommodation unless it is constantly recalled to the radical demands of the Gospel — to the concrete suffering of the poor, to the prophetic critique of unjust structures, and to the insistence that the goods of creation are destined for all. Only then can the Church move beyond a contained moral critique and offer not merely consolation within the existing order, but a genuine vision for its renewal in the service of human flourishing and the glory of God. 

To the Youth: Get Mad, But Only in Approved Ways – A Critique of Managed Dissent

To the Youth: Get Mad, But Only in Approved Ways 
– A Critique of Managed Dissent

 or: "A Reflection Upon Certain Admonitions Directed to the Youth" 

By Maurice Montojo 


In these troubled times, when the voices of elders and men of affairs rise to counsel the young, one encounters declarations cast in the language of prudence and civic duty. “To the youth,” they proclaim, “get mad. Protest. Fight for your rights. That is democracy. That is legal. But the moment you take up the gun and join an armed band, you cross from the estate of citizen to that of combatant. You forfeit the protections of law and stand exposed to the full rigour of RA 11479 and the Revised Penal Code. Change wrought through statute preserves life. Change pursued through bullets consumes it. Make not your fellow Filipinos the enemies upon your battlefield. Suffer not the recruiters to turn your idealism into an instrument of war.” 

Thus speaks the voice of established order. It carries the measured cadence of responsibility, the sober warning of one who claims to stand guard over the republic’s peace. Yet he who reads with care discerns beneath the surface a familiar and ancient condescension: Be wroth if you will, but remain within the bounds we have inscribed. Let your anger expend itself in permitted marches and resolutions that disturb no deeper foundations. Leave the grave matters of statecraft and power to those who have grown gray in their exercise. Secure first your daily bread, pay your tribute to the treasury, and only then presume to question the very edifice that has denied many their just portion of opportunity and justice. This is not counsel born of pure neutrality; it is the idiom of managed consent, wherein dissent is indulged only whilst it remains spectacle—colourful, noisy, yet powerless to reorder the actual levers of dominion. 

It is a simple matter, and one costing little, for men sheltered behind gates and guarded by the machinery of state to condemn the rebel who lifts the rifle. From such vantage, one may discourse gravely upon the forfeiture of legal safeguards under the Anti-Terrorism Act, whose broad phrasing has stirred unease among many observers for its capacity to cast a chill upon protest and organised grievance. The statute, while professing to exempt advocacy and mass action unaccompanied by intent of grave harm, has been criticised for the ease with which its provisions may be stretched when conjoined with practices of labelling and the older statutes against rebellion. 

In this present day, the very notion of armed struggle is too often collapsed into the single category of “terrorism,” a reduction that serves the convenience of narrative. Long years of peace negotiations between the Government of the Republic and the National Democratic Front—representing the Communist Party and its armed force, the New People’s Army—have spanned more than forty rounds across several administrations. Agreements such as the Hague Joint Declaration and the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law emerged from these labours. They testified to the recognition that the conflict springs from profound roots: the ancient curse of landlessness, the grinding poverty that stalks the countryside, the capture of institutions by entrenched families, and grievances reaching back through martial law and earlier peasant risings. If every bearing of arms is forthwith branded terrorism, of what use then are such negotiations? Why convene panels to deliberate agrarian reform, social justice, and political restructuring if the mere fact of prior resort to arms strips all context and nuance, rendering dialogue a mere formality before condemnation? 

That a faction should take arms against the prevailing order does not, of itself, stamp the act as terrorism in the classical understanding. History furnishes many instances—anti-colonial struggles, resistances against tyranny—wherein armed components arose precisely when avenues of peaceful redress appeared sealed or illusory. Terrorism, properly conceived, directs violence against the innocent to sow widespread terror for political ends. Armed rebellion, however savage its episodes, frequently conceives itself as contesting the armed apparatus of the state amid conditions of profound asymmetry. To equate the two is to erase the moral and historical space for legitimate political violence when systemic failure becomes intolerable, while conveniently overlooking the quieter, structural violences—procedural, economic, and institutional—that the established order may wield to perpetuate itself. 

The present age is one of asymmetric contest, wherein warfare no longer arrays itself in the ordered ranks and clear frontiers of earlier epochs. All has become irregular: the cognitive and informational spheres no less than the physical. Traditional “civilised” warfare presupposed uniformed hosts, defined battlefields, and conventions honoured in the breach or observance. Today, power contends through hybrid instruments—disinformation campaigns, economic strangulation, legal manoeuvres, and operations upon the mind itself. The state commands police, army, courts, and channels of public voice. Those in opposition adapt with the tactics of the weak, yet they too engage in the battle of narratives. The advisory cautions rightly against the weaponisation of youthful idealism by recruiters. Yet it passes lightly over the capacity of the system itself to weaponise legality, delay, and selective indignation in the service of neutralisation. 

Information warfare and the contest for cognition compound the difficulty. In an epoch when falsehoods masquerade as revealed truth, the smallest particle of resonant falsehood—appealing directly to the passions of the common man—often outweighs volumes of verified evidence. No matter how scrupulous the investigation, no matter how lucid the exposition of causes, a simple query—“Why were they present?”—or the invocation of quo warranto suffices in many quarters to eclipse inconvenient realities. Such devices function as instruments in the larger cognitive struggle, eroding confidence in evidence, institutions, and shared truth. Narratives that reduce complex insurgencies to undifferentiated terrorism, while portraying every state response as pure defence, operate squarely within this arena. 

Those who urge the young to render their anger “constructive rather than destructive” frequently overlook—or choose to set aside—deeper currents of thought and experience. Karl Marx observed that the dominant ideas of an age are, in large measure, the ideas of its dominant class. When power itself delineates the permissible limits of protest and brands every fundamental challenge as criminality, it shields its privileges beneath the cloak of impartial law. The ancient Vedas and the philosophical traditions of the East speak of Dharma not as slavish adherence to statute, but as alignment with a higher moral and cosmic order. When rulers and systems depart grievously from righteousness—sustaining mass deprivation through corruption, exclusion, and entrenched inequality—the obligation to restore equilibrium may transcend the letter of enacted law. 

Mao Zedong’s much-quoted assertion that “political power grows out of the barrel of a gun” is often repeated in truncated form, severed from its fuller context in his 1938 discourse on problems of war and strategy. The complete passage declares: “Every Communist must grasp the truth, ‘Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.’ Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party. Yet, having guns, we can create Party organizations… We can also create cadres, create schools, create culture, create mass movements. Everything in Yan’an has been created by having guns. All things grow out of the barrel of a gun…” 

Mao spoke from the concrete crucible of China’s revolution—warlords, foreign invasion, and a fractured state—arguing that armed capacity served as instrument for organisational survival and societal transformation. He insisted, however, upon the political authority’s supremacy over the military instrument; the gun was servant, never master. This fuller comprehension complicates easy repudiations. It acknowledges that contests for power may demand material force when institutions have been hollowed or captured, while simultaneously cautioning against the weapon’s emancipation from disciplined political direction—a caution pertinent to protracted struggles, including those witnessed in these islands, where the rigours of prolonged conflict have at times tested discipline and accountability. 

None of this renders the gun a romantic or preferable instrument. The armed conflict in the Philippines has exacted a fearful toll—tens of thousands of lives lost across decades, communities scarred, and generations brutalised on all sides. Idealism itself becomes weaponised, not by those who recruit in the hills as the order claims, but sometimes by  politicians who inflame youthful fervour for transient electoral advantage before discarding it. Rifles neither erect schools nor fill granaries; they seldom yield enduring justice absent a coherent political horizon. Yet to dismiss those who repair to the mountains as mere criminals or romantic fools is to evade the more arduous inquiry: Why do certain young souls, cognisant of the privations of guerrilla existence and the certainty of state reprisal, nonetheless perceive no tolerable future along the sanctioned paths? What alchemy of land hunger, dynastic politics, institutional decay, and thwarted aspirations propels such a choice? 

Exhortations to render anger constructive ring hollow when the permitted channels—elections tainted by patronage and machinery, tribunals sluggish in the service of the powerless, public discourse fragmented by algorithms and ownership—appear themselves captured or inadequate. The deeper intellectual evasion consists in pretending that the battlefield was not already delineated by structural violence long ere any youth shouldered a rifle: the quotidian violence of hunger, the denial of learning, killings outside judicial process that too rarely meet full reckoning, and an economy of power that concentrates dominion among a narrow circle of families. 

Genuine maturity does not demand that the young forsake idealism upon securing their first wage. It requires instead that the republic confront why such idealism collides so violently with the necessities of survival. It demands that those who hold authority regard radical discontent not merely as a security disturbance to be suppressed under anti-terror statutes, but as a symptom of failings that reform through law alone has too often proven insufficient to remedy. 

In the final reckoning, every instrument stands capable of weaponisation, for every tool may be turned to martial purpose. The state itself may transmute peace into “peacefare”—employing negotiations, truces, and dialogues less to address root afflictions than to intimidate, fragment, or delegitimise those who press for profound and systemic alteration, even when such alteration strikes at the order’s foundations. The pen, and in this electronic age the smartphone, may wield force akin to the rifle-even accompanies it as necessarily, shaping perceptions and marshalling multitudes across the ether. 

The oft-repeated dictum that one cannot speak of peace whilst bearing arms possesses a beguiling moral clarity. Yet history records a more nuanced wisdom. In 1974, addressing the United Nations, Yasser Arafat declared: “Today I have come bearing an olive branch and a freedom fighter’s gun. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand.” He did not spurn peace; rather, he affirmed that the offer of peace must not disarm the oppressed while the architecture of domination endures intact. The gun and the olive branch together symbolise the twin necessities of resistance and diplomacy—pressure joined to negotiation—when either path pursued in isolation reveals its insufficiency. 

The people would do well to guard against simply "romanticising the rifle" and the miseries it multiplies. Yet they should maintain equal vigilance against homilies upon the sanctity of law and democracy issuing from those who preside over, or draw sustenance from, a system that too frequently renders both terms ironic. In this era of cognitive and asymmetric strife, wherein narratives command legitimacy no less than projectiles, the true labour is not merely to admonish the people, especially the young against anger. It is to confront, with honesty and without instinctive recourse to criminalisation, the reasons why so many among them still discover such potent cause for it. 

The way ahead cannot rest upon incantations of legality alone, nor upon any glorification of mere violence. It necessitates the frank admission that peace negotiations have persisted precisely because armed struggle, however grievous its cost, has repeatedly compelled attention to grievances that decorous reform has often contrived to evade. It calls for a reformation of the social order so thorough that recourse to bullets loses its desperate appeal—not through the expansive application of terrorism statutes to engulf all dissent, but through the concrete delivery of justice, opportunity, and accountability sufficient to render idealism and existence no longer mortal antagonists. 

Until that day arrives, counsel urging the young to “get mad, but only within legal bounds” will strike many as hollow rhetoric—mere sophistry to those whose daily reality whispers that the contest was never fairly joined. History teaches that when avenues of law calcify into instruments of conservation rather than renewal, certain souls will inevitably seek recourse elsewhere. To comprehend that sombre dynamic, without thereby extenuating its human price, marks the commencement of wiser statesmanship, not its evasion.   

Sunday, 26 April 2026

The Blood of Salamanca: Blood That Fertilizes the Soil of Conquest

The Blood of Salamanca: Blood That Fertilizes the Soil of Conquest 

By Maurice Montojo


Let them hate. Let the decadent scribes from the press, the comfortable reactionaries in their Manila salons, with their edgy voices pour out their contempt and their vulgar jests. Let the official communiqués twist the facts with the impudence of colossal lies, as that Austrian demagogue once noted in his manual of power: the greater the distortion, the more readily swallowed by those who cannot conceive such brazenness. None of this changes the iron dialectic of history. In the Philippine countryside—still semi-feudal, despotic, chained by landlord interests and the shadow of foreign capital—the situation has hardened into a necessariable condition. No “controlled” operation, no tactical maneuver by the Armed Forces of the Philippines, can avert the violent eruption that the objective contradictions of class and nation now impose. 

On April 19, in Barangay Salamanca, Toboso, Negros Occidental, the 79th Infantry Battalion carried out what they pompously label a “legitimate encounter.” Nineteen bodies fell: Red fighters of the New People’s Army together with unarmed civilians—journalists, student leaders, peasant organizers, overseas human rights workers, local residents, and even two children. The military speaks of neutralized communist terrorist groups, recovered arms, and a blow struck against the Northern Negros Front. Some commentators, with the safe cynicism of those who have never known hunger or the muzzle of a rifle, reduce the dead to “corned beef”—mangled flesh processed like cheap canned meat. 

But let the concrned look back with clear eyes, without the hypocrisy of selective outrage. Does this crude comparison include only the revolutionaries? When soldiers of the AFP themselves fall, torn apart by command-detonated explosives along patrol paths in the hills, are they too mere “corned beef”? The New People’s Army calls these devices what they truly are in the harsh arithmetic of asymmetric struggle: the people’s counterparts to aerial bombings. The establishment brands them “landmines” and screams “terrorism,” yet it forgets—or deliberately erases—that every ruling order in history has reserved for itself the monopoly of heavy destruction while condemning the improvised weapons of the oppressed. The state possesses jets, artillery, and foreign-backed logistics; the peasant in the mountains has only ingenuity and resolve. These explosives level, however imperfectly, a field long tilted by imperial superiority. 

True indeed that there are instances of being killed or maimed from those weapons meant against the opporessor, but, the willingness to apologise, even to punish itself, enough to rectify errors as necessary to gain back the lost trust of the people. But the order? Can they? Or again create another narrative enough to blame the revolution as intended to?- remember, years ago one scientist doing research work was killed in a crossfire, even called him a participant in the battlefield at first, and as the narrative failed, blamed him for not coordinating with authorities or worse being mockingly asked why was he there? In that sense, is seeking truth from facts a mistake in the first place? And if the fallen of Salamanca are reduced to canned meat in the jests of cowards, then consistency demands the same label for AFP casualties strewn across the same revolutionary terrain. Yet such symmetry is never granted. This selective gloating reveals the moral rot of a class that cheers state terror but recoils when the people answer in kind. 

What, then, is this so-called tactical defeat for the New People’s Army? The revolutionary forces, forged in their own long march—the winding path of advances and retreats, bitter defeats and hard-won victories—understand the deeper law: every drop of blood spilled in Salamanca or any other place fertilizes the soil. Whether armed combatants who fought to the last round or civilians swept into the fire of a militarized zone, the dead become seed. The countryside has not changed. Feudal exploitation persists. State terror grinds the peasant. Grinding poverty continues to drive men and women to take up arms. Far from extinguishing the flame, such operations pour gasoline upon it. The “enemy” studies its lessons, adapts its tactics, and multiplies. New Red fighters will emerge, tempered and hardened by the memory of Toboso. 

To those outside the direct combat—the investigators, the writers, the organizers who dare enter the militarized hinterland to study, document, and expose—the label “terrorist” or “subversive” is fastened with mechanical brutality. Why travel from the United States? Why conduct research in a “hot zone”? Why show concern for Filipino peasants? These questions are not concern; they are mockery disguised as prudence. The unarmed are deliberately conflated with combatants because the ruling order fears the truth they embody: the documentation of abuses, the organization of the dispossessed, the forging of international solidarity. Among the dead: a journalist, a student leader, peasant organizers, two children. These are not regrettable “collateral” but the logical consequence of a desperate regime that equates any inquiry into its despotism with insurgency itself.

The aftermath confirmed the method of reaction. Forced evacuations of local residents, cordoned zones, an information blackout to prevent independent media and human rights groups from interviewing witnesses or conducting genuine investigation. Days later, a military-organized entourage is permitted its staged “fact-finding mission”—a sham designed to manufacture an AFP-certified fiction of heroic operation, palatable to the man in the street. This is the classic technique of the old order: fabricate the narrative that sustains its power, downplay contradictions, and rely on the masses’ unwillingness to believe that anyone could distort truth so infamously.

Yet history does not yield to press releases or official body counts. The blood of the Toboso 19—whether from ten armed revolutionaries who honored their final stand or from civilians caught in the maelstrom—irrigates the revolutionary earth. It lays bare the bankruptcy of the comprador state: a regime forced to resort to indiscriminate killing to prop up feudal remnants in an age that cries out for genuine national and democratic transformation. The people’s war does not advance despite these losses; it advances through them. Every tactical setback becomes a strategic school. Every act of brutality recruits fresh cadres from the ranks of the oppressed.

The situation is necessariable. The contradictions between landlord and peasant, between the puppet state and the toiling masses, between foreign interests and national sovereignty, cannot be “managed” forever by repression. They must erupt. And when they erupt, the revolutionary forces—tempered in the crucible of mountain and plain—will drive forward toward the conquest of the state. The old order may trumpet its fleeting triumphs in Negros Occidental, but the future belongs to those who grasp that violence, when seized by the people against their exploiters, is no moral aberration but the historical midwife of a new order.

Let them hate. Let the reactionaries mock and the establishment lie. The revolution scorns their approval. It requires only the inexorable logic of conditions that render it not merely possible, but inevitable. The blood spilled nurtures the ground from which fresher, more resolute Red fighters will spring—until the feudal countryside is transformed and the state itself is conquered in the name of the nation and the people. 

Saturday, 25 April 2026

Of Red Carnations, Yellow Ribbons, and Rosaries: Notes on Two Revolutions, Their Echoes, and the Burden of What Followed

Of Red Carnations, Yellow Ribbons, and Rosaries:
Notes on Two Revolutions, Their Echoes, and the Burden of What Followed


There are moments in the life of nations when the accumulated weight of history yields not by gradual reform but through rupture—moments when the logic of continuity falters and the question of power is no longer abstract but immediate. Such moments do not emerge from sentiment alone; they are the product of contradictions long embedded within the structure of society—contradictions economic, political, and moral—which, when intensified beyond accommodation, compel a break. These breaks, however, do not carry within themselves their own resolution. They merely open a field of possibility. What follows depends not on the drama of the rupture but on the direction taken thereafter.

On April 25, 1974, in Lisbon, the Carnation Revolution represented such a rupture. The Estado Novo, shaped by António de Oliveira Salazar and sustained by Marcelo Caetano, had long rested on an uneasy equilibrium: a controlled political order, limited economic modernization, and a stubborn insistence on maintaining an imperial presence in Africa. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, this equilibrium had broken down. The colonial wars in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau had become not only militarily untenable but politically corrosive. The war did not simply drain resources; it undermined the ideological coherence of the regime itself.

It was within this context that the Armed Forces Movement emerged—a formation of officers who, having borne the burdens of the colonial wars, recognized the unsustainability of the system they served. Yet even here, one must be precise. The initial intervention of the MFA was not conceived as a social revolution but as a corrective—a removal of a regime that had lost its capacity to govern effectively. What transformed this intervention into a revolution was not its design but its reception. Civilians entered the streets, not as passive observers but as active participants. The symbolic act of placing carnations in the barrels of rifles did more than soften the image of the uprising; it marked the moment when the coercive apparatus of the state ceased to function as intended. The state, confronted with the refusal of its own agents to act decisively, revealed its fragility.

Yet to speak of April 25 as an event is insufficient. Its significance lies in what followed. The Processo Revolucionário Em Curso that unfolded in its aftermath transformed rupture into process. Political authority became diffuse, contested across multiple sites. Workers organized commissions within factories, asserting control over production and challenging managerial authority. In the agrarian south, landless laborers dismantled the latifundia system, redistributing land and reorganizing agricultural production. The state itself became an arena of struggle, with competing factions within the military and civilian leadership articulating divergent visions of the future.

This insistence on process—on the unfolding of contradiction rather than its immediate resolution—distinguishes the Portuguese experience. It was a revolution that did not seek closure but confrontation, that allowed the question of power to remain open. It is for this reason that the phrase “25 de Abril Sempre” continues to carry weight: it invokes not merely a memory but a commitment to an unfinished project.

Twelve years later, in the Philippines, another rupture occurred along Epifanio de los Santos Avenue. The People Power Revolution has since been enshrined as a defining moment in Philippine political history. The dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos, sustained through martial law, patronage, and the selective use of coercion, collapsed in the face of mass mobilization. As in Lisbon, the armed forces hesitated. Soldiers refused to fire upon civilians. The presence of unarmed citizens—many bearing rosaries, invoking faith rather than force—altered the dynamics of confrontation.

At the level of form, the parallels are evident. Both revolutions demonstrated the vulnerability of regimes when their coercive apparatus falters. Both revealed the capacity of collective action to disrupt entrenched systems of power. Yet it is in the aftermath that the divergence becomes most pronounced.

Whereas the Portuguese experience extended itself into a prolonged process of transformation, the Philippine experience appeared to compress itself into a moment of resolution. The objective of EDSA was clear: the removal of a regime and the restoration of democratic institutions. Once achieved, the momentum of the uprising shifted toward stabilization. Under Corazon Aquino, the emphasis was placed on constitutional reform, culminating in the 1987 Constitution. This document restored civil liberties, reestablished institutional checks, and signaled a return to democratic governance.

Yet this return also marked a limit. For while the political superstructure was reconstituted, the underlying socioeconomic structures remained largely intact. The agrarian question—central to the country’s historical contradictions—was addressed only partially. Patterns of land ownership persisted. Economic inequality, though recognized, was not fundamentally altered. The structures of oligarchic influence that had sustained the previous regime were reconfigured but not dismantled.

It is in this context that the post-EDSA experience must be understood. The immediate aftermath of 1986 produced not a consolidated transformation but a vacuum—an absence between expectation and realization. Into this vacuum entered the language of the “spirit of EDSA,” invoked by media institutions, policy advocates, and various sectors as a means of asserting continuity. This spirit was presented as enduring, as a moral and political inheritance that continued to guide the nation.

Yet such invocations raise a critical question: can a spirit persist in the absence of structural change?

For even as the rhetoric of EDSA was sustained, the material conditions that had given rise to the uprising remained. Movements advocating for land reform, labor rights, and national sovereignty encountered resistance. In certain cases, these movements were delegitimized, their concerns dismissed as disruptive or subversive. The language used—branding dissenters as extremists, as threats to order—served to marginalize rather than engage.

This dynamic suggests a tension between the ideals articulated during the uprising and the practices that followed. If EDSA represented a collective assertion against injustice, then the subsequent marginalization of demands for structural reform indicates a narrowing of its scope.

The economic trajectory of the Philippines further complicates this picture. In the decades following EDSA, the country increasingly aligned with global neoliberal frameworks. Policies of liberalization, privatization, and market integration were pursued as strategies for development. While these policies contributed to certain forms of growth, they also reinforced existing inequalities and introduced new forms of dependency. The concentration of wealth persisted, and the structural conditions underlying poverty remained largely unchanged.

One must therefore ask whether this trajectory represents a continuation of the spirit of EDSA or a departure from it. If the uprising was, in part, a response to systemic inequities, then the persistence of those inequities raises questions about the extent to which its transformative potential was realized.

The contrast with Portugal becomes particularly instructive when examining the role of counter-movements. In Portugal, reactionary forces emerged in the aftermath of the revolution, including groups such as the Movimento Democrático de Libertação de Portugal, Movimento Maria Da Fonte, Comandos Operacionais de Defesa da Civilização Ocidental, and the Exército de Libertação de Portugal. These groups sought to reverse the gains of the revolutionary process. However, their efforts were largely contained within the broader dynamics of the revolution. The attempted coup of March 1975 failed, and the subsequent consolidation of authority occurred within a relatively defined timeframe.

In the Philippines, by contrast, the post-EDSA period was marked by a series of coup attempts that extended over several years. Military factions such as the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM), the Soldiers of the Filipino People (SFP), the so-called "Nationalist Army of the Philippines" (NAP), and the Young Officers Union repeatedly challenged the authority of the civilian government. These groups framed their actions in terms of reform and national interest, yet their interventions contributed to a prolonged period of instability.

Unlike Portugal, where counter-movements were addressed within a compressed revolutionary timeframe, the Philippine experience required sustained engagement with internal challenges. This prolonged instability reflects the incomplete nature of the transition, suggesting that the rupture of 1986 did not fully resolve the contradictions that had given rise to it.

It is in this light that contemporary developments must be considered. The return of Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to Malacañang Palace, alongside figures such as Sara Duterte, invites reflection on the durability of the post-EDSA order. It raises questions about the extent to which the transformations of 1986 were institutionalized and whether the conditions that produced the uprising have been adequately addressed.

The persistence of inequality, the marginalization of dissent, and the reemergence of political dynasties suggest that the work initiated in 1986 remains incomplete. The invocation of the “spirit of EDSA” thus risks becoming a substitute for substantive engagement with these issues—a rhetorical device that obscures rather than clarifies.

Pardon this writer for returning, perhaps insistently, to comparison. It is not intended as a definitive judgment but as a means of illuminating trajectories. The Portuguese experience, encapsulated in the enduring phrase “25 de Abril Sempre,” continues to evoke a commitment to transformation, even as its outcomes have been moderated. The Philippine experience, by contrast, often treats EDSA as a concluded chapter, emphasizing restoration over continuation.

In the final analysis, the relationship between the Carnation Revolution and EDSA is not one of direct causation but of historical resonance. Both demonstrate the capacity of collective action to disrupt entrenched systems of power. Both reveal the contingency of authority when confronted by unified resistance. Yet they also illustrate the divergent paths that such moments can take—one extending into a process of transformation, the other resolving into a restoration of order.

The enduring question, therefore, is not whether one inspired the other, but what each reveals about the possibilities and limits of revolutionary change. For if the spirit of any revolution is to endure, it must be grounded not only in memory but in the ongoing effort to align political institutions with social realities.

Red Carnations in Lisbon. Yellow Ribbons and Rosaries in Manila. Between them lies not a simple narrative of inspiration, but a complex dialogue—one that continues to unfold, and whose conclusions remain, even now, unsettled.