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.  

Carnations and Contradictions: April 25 and the Unfinished Revolution

Carnations and Contradictions: 
April 25 and the Unfinished Revolution


On April 25, 1974, a sequence of events unfolded in Portugal that would reverberate across the late twentieth century as one of the last great revolutionary ruptures in Western Europe. Known to history as the Carnation Revolution, this moment marked not merely the overthrow of an authoritarian regime, but the sudden and dramatic opening of a revolutionary situation in which the social, economic, and political foundations of the state were contested from below. What began as a military coup executed by the Armed Forces Movement rapidly transcended its initial parameters, becoming a mass upheaval that exposed the contradictions of Portuguese capitalism, fractured the apparatus of state power, and raised—if only briefly—the question of socialist transformation. 

To situate April 25 within its proper historical frame, one must return to the long durée of the Estado Novo, established under António de Oliveira Salazar and continued by his successor Marcelo Caetano. This regime, often described as corporatist-authoritarian, was in fact a rigid system of class domination that fused bureaucratic control with ideological conservatism. It sought to regulate labor through state-sponsored syndicates, suppress dissent through an extensive surveillance apparatus, and maintain social hierarchy under the guise of national unity. Salazar’s oft-cited assertion—“We do not discuss God and virtue; we accept them”—captures the epistemological closure of the regime, a political order that rejected contestation in favor of imposed consensus (Salazar, as cited in Wiarda, 1977). 

Yet beneath this façade of stability lay structural fragilities. The Portuguese economy, though experiencing periods of growth in the 1960s, remained dependent on low wages, limited industrial diversification, and the outflow of labor through emigration. As scholars have noted, this so-called “economic miracle” was sustained by what can only be described as systemic underdevelopment—an accumulation model that privileged industrial-financial conglomerates while marginalizing the working population (Maxwell, 1995). The concentration of wealth in elite families such as the Mellos and Espírito Santo group underscored the oligarchic character of the regime. 

The most acute contradiction, however, emerged in the form of colonial war. Beginning in 1961, Portugal engaged in prolonged military conflicts in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau. Unlike other European powers that transitioned toward indirect forms of imperial influence, Portugal persisted in direct colonial domination, deploying military force against national liberation movements. This decision was not merely ideological but structural: Portuguese capitalism, lacking the flexibility of its counterparts, depended on colonial extraction to sustain itself. As Amílcar Cabral incisively observed, “Portugal is not a colonial power like the others; it is a colony of its colonies” (Cabral, 1973). The wars thus became both a material drain and a political crisis, exposing the limits of the regime’s capacity to reproduce itself. 

It was within this context that the Armed Forces Movement emerged. Composed largely of mid-ranking officers—captains and majors drawn from petty-bourgeois and working-class backgrounds—the Movement was initially motivated by professional grievances. The promulgation of Decree Law 353/73, which allowed militia officers to bypass career ranks, catalyzed dissatisfaction within the officer corps. Yet as historical analysis suggests, such grievances served as an entry point into broader political consciousness. The lived experience of colonial warfare—its brutality, futility, and human cost—transformed technical discontent into systemic critique. 

Here, the role of the Portuguese Communist Party assumes critical importance. Operating clandestinely under conditions of repression, the Party had developed extensive networks within labor unions, student movements, and segments of the military. Under the leadership of Álvaro Cunhal, the PCP pursued a strategy that linked immediate grievances to structural analysis, reframing the colonial war as an imperialist project contrary to the interests of the Portuguese people. Cunhal’s formulation—that the war was “not a national cause but a war against the people”—articulated a shift from nationalist to class-based interpretation (Cunhal, 1976). 

The events of April 25 itself were meticulously coordinated. The signal for the coup—the broadcast of the banned song “Grândola, Vila Morena”—marked the commencement of military operations aimed at seizing strategic points in Lisbon. The efficiency of the operation reflected both planning and the erosion of regime loyalty within the armed forces. Yet the decisive transformation of the coup into a revolution occurred not within barracks but in the streets. Defying instructions to remain indoors, thousands of civilians mobilized, converging upon sites of power and confronting the remnants of the regime. 

The symbolic act of placing carnations in soldiers’ rifles has entered the historical imagination as a gesture of peace. However, its deeper significance lies in the dissolution of the boundary between military and civilian spheres. In theoretical terms, this moment represents a fracture within the coercive apparatus of the state. As Vladimir Lenin argued, the stability of any state depends upon the cohesion of its repressive organs; when these organs fragment, the conditions for revolutionary transformation emerge (Lenin, 1917). The fraternization observed in Lisbon thus marked not merely a symbolic reconciliation but a structural rupture. 

The aftermath of April 25 gave rise to the Processo Revolucionário Em Curso, a protracted period characterized by intense class struggle and institutional instability. The collapse of the dictatorship created a vacuum in which competing forms of power coexisted. On one hand, provisional governments sought to establish a framework for liberal democracy. On the other, grassroots organizations—workers’ commissions, neighborhood assemblies, and peasant collectives—asserted direct control over economic and social life. 

This phenomenon, often described as “dual power,” reflects a classical revolutionary situation in which the legitimacy of the state is contested by emergent forms of popular authority (Lenin, 1917). Across industrial sectors, workers occupied factories, removed management, and instituted collective decision-making structures. In rural areas, particularly in the Alentejo, land occupations dismantled the latifundia system, redistributing agricultural production under cooperative models. These developments were not centrally orchestrated but arose from the spontaneous initiative of the masses, demonstrating what Marxist theory identifies as the creative capacity of the working class in revolutionary conditions. 

The state, responding to these pressures, enacted a series of nationalizations in 1975, encompassing banking, insurance, and key industries. While these measures aligned partially with the programmatic objectives of the PCP, they also exceeded them, indicating the extent to which mass mobilization drove policy beyond institutional frameworks. As one observer noted, the revolution “moved faster than any party could anticipate” (Maxwell, 1995). 

Nevertheless, the revolutionary process was neither uncontested nor unidirectional. Conservative forces, both domestic and international, mobilized to contain the upheaval. NATO and Western governments viewed developments in Portugal with concern, given its strategic position. Internally, right-wing groups engaged in acts of sabotage and political violence, seeking to destabilize the revolutionary movement. 

Within the revolutionary camp, strategic divergences emerged. The PCP emphasized a gradualist approach, advocating alliances with progressive military elements and cautioning against premature confrontation. In contrast, far-left groups prioritized the expansion of autonomous workers’ power, often criticizing the Party’s institutional orientation. This tension between organizational discipline and grassroots spontaneity became a defining feature of the period. 

The attempted coup of March 11, 1975, led by António de Spínola, represented a critical juncture. Its failure, due in part to mass mobilization, temporarily strengthened revolutionary forces. However, the subsequent months revealed the fragility of the process. The events of November 25, 1975, in which moderate military elements reasserted control, marked the effective end of the revolutionary phase. The dismantling of radical structures and the consolidation of parliamentary democracy signaled a reconfiguration rather than a complete rupture of state power. 

In the years that followed, Portugal underwent political stabilization and economic integration into the European Economic Community. While these developments are often framed as successes, they also entailed the rollback of many revolutionary gains. Land reforms were reversed, nationalized industries restructured, and grassroots institutions dissolved or marginalized. The revolutionary potential of April 25 was thus contained within the parameters of a reconstituted capitalist order. 

Yet the historical significance of the Carnation Revolution cannot be reduced to its outcome. It remains a critical case study in the dynamics of revolutionary change within advanced capitalist societies. It demonstrates the centrality of the armed forces as both instrument and potential site of rupture. It underscores the importance of political organization, particularly the role of parties capable of articulating and sustaining mass movements. At the same time, it reveals the limitations of strategies that seek to mediate between revolutionary transformation and institutional continuity. 

As Álvaro Cunhal later reflected, “the revolution was not defeated in its essence; it was interrupted in its development” (Cunhal, 1976). This characterization invites a reconsideration of April 25 not as a closed chapter but as an open question—an episode whose lessons remain relevant for contemporary struggles. 

In the final analysis, the Carnation Revolution stands as both achievement and warning. It affirms the capacity of collective action to dismantle entrenched systems of domination, while simultaneously illustrating the complexities of sustaining revolutionary momentum in the face of internal divisions and external pressures. The carnations placed in rifle barrels symbolized a moment of unity and possibility; their fading reminds us that such moments are contingent, requiring not only courage but continuity. 

***

References (APA Style) 

Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A report on the banality of evil. Viking Press.
Cabral, A. (1973). Return to the source: Selected speeches. Monthly Review Press.
Cunhal, Á. (1976). The Portuguese revolution: Past and future. Editions Avante.
Lenin, V. I. (1917). State and revolution. Progress Publishers.
Maxwell, K. (1995). The making of Portuguese democracy. Cambridge University Press.
Wiarda, H. J. (1977). Corporatism and development: The Portuguese experience. University of Massachusetts Press.

Friday, 24 April 2026

"The Dead Are Not Your Labels"

"The Dead Are Not Your Labels"


It was, to the careful observer of public life, a familiar sequence—one that had unfolded in different forms across decades, under different administrations, and with different names, but always with the same underlying pattern. A death in the countryside. A statement from the military. A classification, swift and categorical. And then, in the uneasy silence that followed, a second struggle: not over territory, but over truth. 

The killing of Alyssa Alano, a student leader from University of the Philippines Diliman, in a military operation in Negros Occidental, belongs to this pattern. She was one of nineteen individuals reported killed in what the Armed Forces of the Philippines described as a counter-insurgency operation. The official line was immediate and unambiguous: those who died were members of a “Communist Terrorist Group.” It was a classification that, once issued, sought to close the matter before it could even be opened. 

Yet even before the machinery of official narrative had fully settled into place, there were already fractures. Accounts began to emerge—tentative at first, then more insistent—suggesting that among the dead were civilians: individuals who had come not to wage war, but to observe, to document, to understand. Among them, Alyssa Alano, a political science student, and RJ Ledesma, identified as a community journalist. They had reportedly been in Negros for community integration—research, immersion, engagement with agricultural communities whose lives remain largely invisible to the centers of power. 

It is here that the story refuses to remain procedural. Because the event did not end with the deaths. It extended, disturbingly, into the reaction that followed. 

When the news broke, one might have expected grief. One might have expected the quiet, familiar heaviness that accompanies the loss of young lives—the instinctive turning toward empathy, toward questions, toward the human dimension of tragedy. For a name to travel beyond its immediate circle, it must have mattered. There must have been people who loved her, who knew her not as a headline but as a presence. 

Instead, what emerged in the digital public square was something else entirely: not silence, not solemnity, but spectacle. Thousands—tens of thousands—of reactions expressing laughter. Not metaphorical laughter, but literal, measurable, visible reactions that translated death into something approaching entertainment. 

To an earlier political vocabulary—one forged in the disciplined seriousness of the 1980s—this would not have been dismissed as mere online behavior. It would have been recognized as a symptom: a coarsening of civic sensibility, a corrosion of moral reflex, a public culture increasingly detached from the weight of human consequence. 

For what does it reveal when death becomes an occasion for mockery? What does it say of a political environment when the instinct is not to question, not to mourn, but to dismiss—to reduce a life to a label, and that label to a justification? 

The questions are not rhetorical. They are diagnostic of a deeper condition. 

Because even as the official position of the Philippine Army stands, it does not stand uncontested. Counter-claims have circulated, including statements attributed to the Communist Party of the Philippines asserting that Alyssa Alano and RJ Ledesma were civilians, not members of the New People’s Army. Independent verification remains essential—indeed, indispensable. But the existence of competing narratives alone demands scrutiny. In a functioning democracy, official declarations do not conclude inquiry; they initiate it. 

And yet, beyond the contest of facts lies a more troubling elasticity in the use of language itself. 

It may well be true that certain areas of the country are described by authorities as “rebel-infested.” It may be the case that armed insurgents operate within these spaces, and that the state, in its security framework, designates them as terrorists. This is the vocabulary of conflict, and it has long been embedded in the lexicon of governance. 

But what follows from this vocabulary has become dangerously expansive. 

For when individuals who enter these areas—not with arms, but with notebooks; not with rifles, but with questions—are reflexively treated as extensions of insurgency, the language collapses into absurdity. The student conducting research becomes suspect. The journalist documenting rural conditions becomes a target of insinuation. The citizen engaging with marginalized communities becomes, by proximity alone, a presumed adversary. 

What then remains of civic engagement? 

If immersion is interpreted as subversion, if research is recast as rebellion, if solidarity is equated with terrorism, then the space for legitimate participation narrows to the point of suffocation. One is compelled to ask, with increasing urgency: what is left for those who seek to understand the conditions that give rise to conflict? 

Indeed, such reasoning does not strengthen the credibility of the system—it undermines it. It invites ridicule, not respect. For what follows logically from such a posture? That those engaged in rural reconstruction are to be labeled rebels for contradicting official narratives? That those who fail to “coordinate with authorities”—in contexts where trust is neither neutral nor assured—are automatically suspect? 

This is not a sign of institutional confidence. It is a symptom of institutional anxiety. 

And in this climate, another layer emerges—one that speaks to the nature of contemporary discourse. There are those who appear to weaponize tragedy itself, engaging in what can only be described as performative provocation. They inflame, distort, and simplify—not in pursuit of truth, but in pursuit of reaction. One might say, bluntly, that they “ragebait”—constructing narratives designed less to inform than to provoke, less to clarify than to entrench. 

Within this framework, individuals like Alyssa and RJ are stripped of context and recast as symbols—dismissed with shorthand labels such as “woke,” “radical,” or “sympathizer.” These are not analytical categories. They are rhetorical devices, deployed to collapse nuance into caricature. 

This is not discourse. It is theater. And like all theater, it depends on an audience willing to suspend critical judgment in favor of emotional alignment. The thousands of reactions, the repetition of unverified claims, the reflexive dismissal of complexity—these are not passive responses. They are active participation in the construction of a narrative that privileges convenience over truth. 

Meanwhile, the countryside—long burdened by structural inequities, by landlordism, by uneven development—becomes not a subject of serious inquiry, but a backdrop for ideological projection. Its realities are flattened, its voices mediated, its complexities reduced to binaries that serve the needs of competing narratives rather than the demands of understanding. 

But reality resists simplification. For beneath the language of insurgency lies a history of unresolved questions—land distribution, economic marginalization, the persistent absence of inclusive development. These are not justifications for violence. They are explanations for its endurance. To ignore them is not to resolve conflict, but to perpetuate it under different terms. 

Thus, when individuals enter these spaces—when they seek to study, to document, to engage—they are not inherently subversive. They are, in many cases, attempting to bridge a gap that policy alone has failed to close: the distance between center and periphery, between decision-making and lived experience. 

To treat such efforts as grounds for suspicion is to close off one of the few remaining avenues for meaningful understanding. 

The assertion must therefore be made, clearly and without evasion: if Alyssa Alano and RJ Ledesma were indeed civilians—unarmed, engaged in research or community work—then they were not legitimate targets. If this is the case, then their deaths demand explanation, not rationalization. 

And explanation, in a republic, must lead to accountability. But accountability is not solely an institutional obligation. It is also a civic one. 

For when citizens accept labels without evidence, when they reproduce narratives without verification, they become participants in the erosion of democratic norms. The label “NPA” becomes, in this context, not merely descriptive but performative—a linguistic shortcut that transforms suspicion into certainty and certainty into justification. 

This is not justice. It is convenience masquerading as conviction. And it is precisely this convenience that must be resisted. 

Because the cost is cumulative. It does not end with one incident. It establishes a pattern—a reflexive mode of thinking that can be invoked again and again, each time with less resistance, each time with greater consequence. 

The reaction to Alyssa’s death—the laughter, the dismissal, the casual invocation of labels—thus reflects not only a moment, but a condition: a political culture in which the demands of conscience are increasingly subordinated to the comforts of alignment. 

The questions must therefore be asked—not once, but persistently: Why is it easier to believe than to verify? Why is it easier to condemn than to question? Why is it easier to mock than to mourn? 

These are not questions of ideology. They are questions of citizenship. 

For a citizenry that ceases to question ceases, in effect, to govern. It relinquishes its role, ceding authority to those who speak with certainty but are not always constrained by accountability. 

It is in this context that the call for investigation acquires urgency—not as a procedural formality, but as a democratic imperative. The events in Negros Occidental must be examined thoroughly, independently, and transparently. The identities of the dead must be established with care. The circumstances of the operation must be reconstructed with precision. Responsibility, where it exists, must be assigned. 

Beyond this, however, lies a larger task—one that intersects not only with governance, but with the economic and structural dimensions of national life. 

For conflict in the countryside is not merely a security issue. It is an economic one. It reflects disparities in land ownership, in access to capital, in the distribution of opportunity. It reflects a development model that has, in many respects, privileged urban growth while leaving rural communities to navigate conditions of persistent vulnerability. 

From a business perspective, this is not incidental. It is foundational. 

A country that cannot stabilize its rural economy cannot fully unlock its national potential. Investment hesitates in regions marked by conflict. Infrastructure development stalls where insecurity persists. Human capital is constrained when communities remain marginalized. The cost is not only borne in lives lost, but in opportunities foregone. 

Thus, the call for peace must be understood not merely as a moral imperative, but as an economic necessity. 

Peace, in its fullest sense, is not the absence of armed confrontation. It is the presence of conditions that make conflict unnecessary: equitable growth, inclusive policies, meaningful participation in the economic life of the nation. 

To Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the appeal is therefore both political and economic: to exercise restraint in the use of force, to reassess the human and institutional costs of sustained military offensives, and to empower the civilian apparatus of government to pursue negotiations that address not only the manifestations of conflict, but its roots. 

This is not a call for capitulation. It is a call for strategy. 

Because in the long term, stability cannot be secured through force alone. It must be built through legitimacy, through trust, through policies that address the structural conditions of discontent. 

In the final analysis, the story of Alyssa Alano and RJ Ledesma is not only about two individuals. It is about a society confronted with its own reflection—about what it chooses to believe, what it chooses to ignore, and how it chooses to respond when confronted with the irreversible fact of death. 

Justice, in this context, is not abstract. It is concrete. It demands evidence, inquiry, accountability. 

It also demands memory. 

For to forget—or to remember incorrectly—is to allow the cycle to continue. To allow labels to replace lives. To allow laughter to replace lament. 

And so the demand must be stated, not as rhetoric, but as obligation: 

Justice for Alyssa. Justice for RJ. Not as slogans, but as standards. Not as noise, but as principle. Not as fleeting outrage, but as enduring commitment. 

For if there is any minimum owed to the dead, it is this: that they are not misrepresented in death. 

And if there is any minimum owed to the living, it is this: that truth—however inconvenient, however contested—is not surrendered to the ease of narrative or the comfort of indifference. 

After a Victory: An Inevitable Counterattack

After a Victory: An Inevitable Counterattack


In Quezon City, the strike at Kowloon House has ended, but the struggle it revealed has only begun to take clearer shape. 

For a brief moment, the sequence appeared familiar, almost reassuring in its symmetry. Workers organized, struck, and negotiated. Management resisted, calculated, and conceded—partially. A settlement was reached with the assistance of the National Conciliation and Mediation Board. A ₱20 wage increase was secured, higher than the earlier ₱13 offer, though still below the ₱25 that workers had pressed for in the final stages of bargaining. 

It was not a decisive victory, bur rather a compromise between workers and management. But it was, undeniably, a victory for the workers to retain their jobs and to retain the provisions of the agreement. 

And in the history of labor relations—whether in the Philippines or elsewhere—such victories rarely stand unchallenged. 

The Structure of Response 

What followed the strike has begun to outline a pattern that observers of labor history would recognize immediately. 

Within days of the agreement, labor groups reported that more than 80 workers faced dismissal following the planned closure of a noodle house and dimsum counter under a related management entity. The development, coming in the immediate aftermath of a settlement that included a “no retaliatory action” clause, has raised questions that go beyond contract interpretation. 

It suggests a structural response. In the vocabulary of industrial relations, this response often arrives in the language of necessity: restructuring, cost rationalization, consolidation. The terminology is technical, but the effect is direct. Gains secured by labor are offset—if not reversed—through managerial decisions that reconfigure the workforce. 

That the Kowloon dispute has moved from wage negotiations to job security in a matter of days is not incidental. It is illustrative. 

Wages in an era of diminishing value 

The strike itself was rooted in a straightforward demand: higher wages. 

Workers affiliated with the Genuine Labor Organization of Workers in Hotel, Restaurant, and Allied Industries had initially sought a ₱50 daily increase, later lowering this to ₱35 in negotiations with Katipunan Food Services Inc.. Management’s ₱13 offer proved insufficient, and the dispute escalated into a six-day strike. 

The eventual ₱20 increase must be understood not in isolation but in context. It is an increment layered onto a wage structure that has struggled to keep pace with the cost of living. 

In Metro Manila, where prices for transportation, food, and housing have steadily risen, the real value of wages has eroded. Even mandated adjustments—such as those under Wage Order No. NCR-26—have not fully bridged the gap between nominal earnings and actual purchasing power. 

The workers’ claim that as much as ₱108 in daily wage adjustments had gone unfulfilled underscores the cumulative nature of this erosion. The strike, in this sense, was not only about immediate gains but about recovering lost ground. 

Management and the Economics of Constraint 

Management’s position reflects a different, though equally real, set of pressures. 

Rising energy costs, linked to global oil markets, have increased production expenses. Supply chains have become more volatile. Consumer demand has shown signs of fluctuation. 

“The global oil crisis has severely crippled operations, causing production costs to soar while customer volume drops,” management counsel has said. 

The company has also emphasized the benefits provided to workers—bonuses, paid leave, health coverage—as part of its overall compensation structure. 

From this perspective, wage increases are not merely a question of fairness but of sustainability. Each adjustment must be absorbed within a financial model already under strain. 

And yet, labor representatives have pointed to reported figures suggesting substantial daily income, raising questions about the distribution of resources. The company has not publicly confirmed those figures. 

The tension, then, is not simply between labor and capital, but between competing narratives of constraint. 

The Counterattack as the Management's Strategy 

If the strike represents an assertion of labor’s collective power, the subsequent layoffs represent a recalibration by management. 

This is not an isolated phenomenon. In many labor disputes, particularly those that result in concessions, management responses take the form of structural adjustments—closures, retrenchments, reassignments—that serve to reassert control. 

The inclusion of a “no retaliatory action” clause in the settlement was intended to prevent such outcomes. That its scope is now being tested highlights the limits of contractual safeguards when confronted with broader managerial discretion. 

The layoffs, if confirmed and sustained, would signal not only a business decision but a strategic one: a redefinition of the terms under which labor’s gains are recognized. 

The Digital Dimension of Labor 

The Kowloon dispute has also revealed a transformation in the terrain of labor struggle. 

Where earlier movements relied on physical mobilization—pickets, pamphlets, assemblies—today’s disputes unfold simultaneously in digital space. Workers and their allies have used social media to amplify their demands, shape public perception, and exert pressure beyond the immediate workplace. 

Allen Gumiran described the campaign as “one of the most explicit na infowar campaigns that the natdems ran, hopefully they will make it a regular fare.” 

“Protests are larping except if you win,” he observed. “In the past, protests were inevitably accompanied by handing out flyers. Now that the internet has compressed the rail, post, and telegraph into one, many still want to fight the struggle as if we are living in 1966.” 

“The digital info war is comparable to drones yeeting tanks and IFVs.” 

The analogy is stark, but its implication is clear: information has become an instrument of struggle, and visibility a form of leverage. 

A Pattern that's Recognized 

For labor leaders, the sequence of events has not come as a surprise. 

Elmer Labog of Kilusang Mayo Uno described the aftermath in terms that captured both frustration and recognition: “It is truly frustrating to deal with this family. The generation we dealt with in the Kowloon company. The victory we achieved in the strike, which we celebrated together that night, was doused with cold water because the next day, every worker was deprived of their livelihood.” 

The statement, translated from the original, reflects not only an immediate reaction but an understanding of pattern—of victory followed by reversal, of concession followed by countermeasure. 

The Necessity of Continuity 

If the counterattack is structural, then the response must be as well. 

The return to institutions—the appeal to the National Conciliation and Mediation Board, the invocation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement—is an essential step. But it is not, in itself, sufficient. 

What the Kowloon case suggests is the need for continuity in organization and action. The strike cannot be treated as a discrete event, concluded with the signing of an agreement. It must be understood as part of an ongoing process, one that extends into the enforcement of terms, the defense of gains, and the anticipation of responses. 

In this sense, the struggle moves beyond the picket line into a broader field—legal, economic, and informational. 

An Unresolved Question 

The events at Kowloon House raise a question that resonates beyond a single workplace. 

Can labor secure gains that endure, or will each advance be met with a corresponding retreat? Can agreements translate into stability, or will they remain provisional, subject to reinterpretation and revision? 

The answer is not yet clear. But what is clear is that the strike has revealed more than it resolved. It has exposed the interplay of wages and costs, of power and response, of action and counteraction. 

In the kitchens where work has resumed, the immediate conflict has passed. But the conditions that produced it remain. 

And as history suggests, they will produce it again—unless the balance that defines them is, at last, fundamentally altered. 

Monday, 20 April 2026

More than a Gain: Defend the Achievement, Expect the Counterattack

More than a Gain: Defend the Achievement, 
Expect the Counterattack

Notes after the recent worker's strike in Kowloon House restaurant


There are labor disputes that remain confined within the narrow corridors of negotiation, resolved through technical adjustments that leave little trace beyond the parties involved. And then there are those that escape such containment—episodes that, in their unfolding, illuminate not only the internal workings of a single enterprise but also the broader condition of labor in a particular moment of economic and political life. The recent strike involving workers at Kowloon House belongs to this latter category. It is, at its surface, a dispute over wages—modest wages at that—but in its progression, it has revealed deeper questions about obligation, sustainability, perception, and the continuing tension between growth and distribution. 

The dispute began, as many do, with a number. Not a large one. Not a figure that would disrupt corporate projections or unsettle investors. ₱25. In the abstract, it is negligible. In the lived economy of a worker, it is not. It does not purchase comfort, but it can forestall deprivation. It does not transform a household budget, but it can prevent its collapse. To understand the strike, one must begin with this dual character of the number—insignificant in one ledger, consequential in another. 

Yet even this ₱25 was not the original point of contention. The workers’ claim was anchored in a higher figure—₱108 in cumulative daily wage adjustments—derived from what they assert was a failure to implement provisions of a 2021 Collective Bargaining Agreement and to comply with existing wage orders. Over the course of negotiation, that figure diminished. From ₱108 it fell to ₱55, then to ₱35, and finally to ₱25. At each stage, the workers yielded ground. At each stage, the expectation was that management would meet them within that narrowing space. Instead, the response settled at ₱13, later extended, with visible reluctance, to ₱18. 

The persistence of disagreement despite the shrinking of demands suggests that the dispute was not merely about the magnitude of the increase. It was about the nature of the obligation. If the workers’ claim is understood as rooted in an existing agreement, then the question becomes not how much can be afforded, but whether what has already been agreed upon will be honored. In this sense, the dispute moved from the realm of negotiation into the realm of compliance. 

Management’s position, articulated through its legal counsel, drew upon a structured and familiar narrative. The company, it was said, stood at a “critical crossroads,” confronted by rising costs and declining demand. The global oil situation was cited as a factor increasing production expenses. Franchisees, who reportedly account for a significant portion of the company’s revenue, were said to be withdrawing support. The strike itself was characterized as premature, disruptive, and damaging. “Right now, 5,000 siopaos are about to spoil because they are not letting us in,” counsel Perlito Campanilla remarked, invoking a vivid image of loss. Within this framework, the ₱13 increase was presented as the limit of sustainability. “The ₱13 a day salary increase is the only amount sustainable for us to offer,” he stated, adding that the company was attempting to “cut corners” to reach ₱18. 

There is a coherence to this argument. Businesses do operate under constraints. Costs rise, markets fluctuate, and decisions must be made within finite margins. The invocation of sustainability reflects a legitimate concern with continuity. Yet the application of this concept in the present case invites scrutiny. Sustainability, as presented, functions primarily as a ceiling on labor compensation. It defines what cannot be given, but leaves unexamined how resources are distributed within the enterprise. It constrains wages, but does not interrogate profits. 

The scale of operations provides a necessary context. Kowloon House is not a marginal entity. With a network of outlets and a production system capable of generating thousands of units daily, it occupies a stable position within its sector. Reports of daily revenues reaching hundreds of thousands of pesos—whether exact or approximate—reinforce the perception of operational capacity. Against this backdrop, the assertion that a ₱25 increase is unsustainable raises a broader question: whether the issue is truly one of capacity, or one of priority. 

The counsel’s defense extended further, highlighting the range of benefits provided to employees. Vacation leave, sick leave convertible to cash, birthday incentives, bonuses, health maintenance coverage, early retirement options—these were enumerated as evidence of the company’s commitment to its workforce. These benefits, it was argued, are comparable to those offered by multinational corporations. The implication is that the overall compensation package should be viewed as adequate, even generous. 

There is merit in considering total compensation. Benefits do contribute to employee welfare. However, their presence does not negate the obligation to implement agreed wage adjustments. Nor does it address the issue of wage progression. Workers with long tenures, some exceeding a decade, have reportedly experienced stagnation or even reduction in real earnings when adjusted for inflation. In such cases, benefits can mitigate risk, but they do not substitute for fair and consistent wage growth. 

More importantly, the framing of benefits as evidence of generosity introduces a subtle shift in the discourse. It moves the conversation from obligation to benevolence. It suggests that compliance with agreed terms is secondary to the provision of discretionary advantages. For workers asserting a contractual right, this shift is not merely rhetorical; it is substantive. 

It is in this context that a more critical interpretation emerges—one that sees management’s public posture not only as a defense, but as a form of positioning. It is not surprising that such statements may be perceived as part of a broader public relations effort. In disputes that unfold under public scrutiny, the framing of the narrative becomes as important as the negotiation itself. By emphasizing constraints, highlighting benefits, and portraying the strike as disruptive, management seeks to align public perception with its position. 

This perception is reinforced by the broader environment in which labor disputes now occur. The discourse surrounding unions has, in recent years, acquired a sharper tone. Phrases such as “unions ruin businesses” circulate with increasing frequency. In more extreme instances, labor organizing is framed as subversive, as a threat to industrial peace. In such a climate, even legitimate demands—grounded in agreements and moderated through negotiation—risk being recast as destabilizing. 

The Kowloon dispute must be understood within this context. The workers’ demands were neither radical nor excessive. They were anchored in an existing agreement and reduced through negotiation. Yet the framing of the dispute—both implicitly and explicitly—placed the burden of justification on the workers. Their insistence on compliance was presented, in some quarters, as a potential threat to stability. 

This inversion of perspective is instructive. It suggests that the threshold for acceptable labor action has shifted. Where once the failure to honor agreements might have been the primary concern, the focus now often rests on the disruption caused by workers seeking to enforce those agreements. 

The strike itself, lasting six days, brought these tensions into relief. Production was halted. Orders went unserved. Franchise relationships were strained. These are real consequences, and they underscore the costs associated with industrial action. But the strike also performed a function that cannot be reduced to cost. It made visible the dependency of the enterprise on labor. It demonstrated that production is not an autonomous process, but one sustained by human effort. 

The image of spoiling siopao, offered as evidence of loss, can also be read as an unintended admission. It reveals how quickly operations falter in the absence of labor. It underscores the centrality of workers to the enterprise’s functioning. In this sense, the strike did not create vulnerability; it exposed it. 

The resolution of the dispute, reached through mediation, reflects both concession and compromise. Workers secured a ₱20 daily increase, the reopening of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, and the restoration of service charge benefits through a staggered scheme. The outcome did not fully meet the original claims, but it marked a shift from resistance to accommodation. It demonstrated that even under pressure, management can be compelled to adjust its position. 

The reopening of the CBA is particularly significant. Collective agreements are the institutional expression of negotiated rights. When they are not implemented, their legitimacy is undermined. By forcing the company back to the table, the workers reasserted the binding nature of these agreements. They did not merely secure an increment; they restored a process. 

From a business perspective, the episode offers several lessons. The cost of prolonged conflict can exceed the cost of earlier compliance. Disruptions to production, damage to reputation, and strain on partnerships carry implications that extend beyond immediate financial calculations. The credibility of management commitments is central to maintaining stable labor relations. Where there is a perception of non-compliance, the risk of escalation increases. 

At the same time, the outcome must be approached with caution. Gains achieved under pressure are not immune to subsequent erosion. Implementation becomes the critical phase. Delays, reinterpretations, or partial compliance can undermine the substance of the agreement. In this sense, the conclusion of the strike marks not an end, but a transition. 

The historical context adds further weight. The company’s experience in 2008, when workers were terminated following a strike over a wage increase, serves as a reminder that labor relations are shaped by precedent. Past actions inform present expectations. The recent dispute, while resolved, exists within this broader trajectory. 

For workers, the lesson is clear: gains must be defended. The unity that enabled the strike must be sustained in its aftermath. For management, the challenge is to move beyond defensive narratives and toward a more stable framework of engagement—one that recognizes the importance of trust as a component of operational continuity. 

The broader implications extend beyond a single enterprise. The Kowloon case illustrates the continuing relevance of collective bargaining in a labor market characterized by increasing precarity. It demonstrates that organized labor, even when limited in scope, can exert meaningful influence. It underscores the role of institutional mechanisms in facilitating resolution. 

At a more fundamental level, the dispute returns us to a simple question: not whether a company can afford to do more, but why it chooses not to. This is not a question that can be answered by financial statements alone. It is a question of priorities—of how value is distributed, of whose claims are recognized, of what is considered negotiable. 

In the end, the significance of the Kowloon strike lies not in the specific figure agreed upon, but in the process through which it was achieved. A ₱20 increase, in isolation, is modest. Within the context of a contested agreement, it represents a recalibration of expectations. It signals that commitments can be enforced, that narratives of inevitability can be challenged, and that collective action retains its force. 

But it is also a reminder that such gains are provisional. They exist within a dynamic relationship, subject to ongoing negotiation. The counterattack—whether overt or subtle—is always a possibility. To defend the achievement, therefore, is not merely to celebrate it, but to ensure its durability. 

More than a gain, this episode is a demonstration. And like all demonstrations born of conflict, it carries both instruction and warning. 

Between Drift and Design: A Business View of State, Market, and the Philippine Question

Between Drift and Design: A Business View of State, Market, 
and the Philippine Question


There are moments in the life of a nation when comparison ceases to be an exercise in vanity and becomes instead an instrument of reckoning. The Philippines today stands at such a moment. Across the waters of Southeast Asia, Vietnam advances with a steadiness that is neither accidental nor episodic, but cumulative—built layer upon layer through discipline, coherence, and a clarity of national purpose. The Philippines, by contrast, continues to move—indeed, it grows—but it does so in a manner that suggests motion without consolidation, expansion without transformation. 

This divergence is not reducible to a single policy failure, nor to the fortunes of any one administration. It is structural, historical, and, above all, philosophical. It arises from how each nation understands the relationship between the state, the market, and the destiny it seeks to pursue. 

For much of the post-war period, the Philippines operated under the assumption—shared by many developing economies—that openness to markets, encouragement of private enterprise, and integration into global trade would, in time, produce industrial maturity. This assumption was not without basis. It yielded a vibrant services sector, a resilient consumer economy, and a degree of flexibility that allowed the country to weather external shocks with relative stability. 

Yet over time, this model revealed its limitations. Growth, while consistent, remained shallow in its structural impact. It generated income, but not sufficient industrial depth. It sustained demand, but did not fundamentally expand productive capacity. The economy grew, but it did not transform. 

Vietnam, emerging from a vastly different historical trajectory, arrived at a different conclusion. 

Its reforms under Đổi Mới did not constitute a wholesale embrace of capitalism, but rather a recalibration of socialism. The Vietnamese state did not withdraw from the economy; it repositioned itself within it. It recognized the utility of markets, the necessity of capital, and the inevitability of global integration—but it refused to relinquish direction. The market was to serve the state’s developmental objectives, not define them. 

This distinction is critical to understanding the present divergence. 

In Vietnam, the private sector exists, and it is increasingly dynamic. Enterprises expand, foreign firms invest, and industrial zones proliferate. But this private sector does not exist in the Western sense of autonomy. It is not a sphere unto itself, governed solely by the imperatives of profit maximization. It is, rather, part of a broader social sector—embedded within a framework where the state retains primacy over direction, priorities, and long-term outcomes. 

This is the essence of what Vietnam calls its socialist market economy. Capital is welcomed, but it is not sovereign. Investment is encouraged, but it is aligned. Enterprise is permitted to flourish, but within parameters that ensure its contribution to national objectives. The state acts not merely as regulator, but as architect—defining the contours within which economic activity takes place. 

Thus, the rise of firms such as VinFast cannot be understood as a spontaneous market phenomenon. It is the product of deliberate alignment between industrial policy, state support, and national ambition. Likewise, the technological expansion of Viettel into advanced sectors reflects a willingness to invest in capabilities that extend beyond immediate commercial return, toward long-term strategic positioning. 

This alignment extends beyond individual firms into the broader infrastructure that supports them. In Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi, urban rail systems are being developed not as isolated projects, but as integrated networks. The construction of Long Thanh International Airport reflects a scale of planning that anticipates demand rather than reacts to it. The proposed north–south high-speed railway is conceived as a unifying spine, binding the country’s economic geography into a coherent whole. 

These are not merely infrastructural achievements. They are expressions of a system in which planning is continuous, execution is prioritized, and coordination is sustained across time. 

In the Philippines, the situation is markedly different. The country possesses a capable and often innovative private sector. Its entrepreneurs are adaptive, its conglomerates are diversified, and its service industries—particularly in areas such as business process outsourcing—have achieved global competitiveness. Yet this vitality exists within a framework that lacks consistent alignment with national objectives. 

Policy, in the Philippine context, often assumes a suggestive rather than directive character. Plans are articulated, but they are not always enforced with continuity. Infrastructure projects are initiated, but their completion is frequently subject to delays, revisions, or changing priorities. The state, rather than acting as a central architect, becomes a mediator—balancing competing interests without always defining a clear direction. 

The result is a pattern of fragmentation. Roads are built, but not always connected into a seamless network. Rail systems are proposed, but implemented in segments that do not yet cohere into a comprehensive system. Airports are expanded, but often in response to congestion rather than as part of a long-term national aviation strategy. 

For business, this fragmentation translates into uncertainty. Capital, by its nature, seeks not only opportunity but predictability. It requires an environment where infrastructure supports operations, where policy provides continuity, and where the trajectory of development is sufficiently clear to justify long-term investment. Vietnam, increasingly, offers such an environment. The Philippines, despite its advantages, does so less consistently. 

This inconsistency is further reflected in the structure of the economy itself. The Philippines remains predominantly consumption-driven. Its growth is sustained by domestic demand, remittances from overseas workers, and a robust services sector. These are significant strengths, but they do not, in themselves, create the industrial base necessary for long-term transformation. 

Vietnam, by contrast, has oriented its growth toward production and export. It has positioned itself as a manufacturing hub, attracting investment in sectors ranging from electronics to automotive assembly. Its ambition is not merely to participate in global supply chains, but to move upward within them—to capture greater value, to develop technological capability, and to reduce dependence on external inputs. 

This ambition is supported by policy coherence. Industrial zones are developed in conjunction with infrastructure. Education and training are aligned with industrial needs. Investment incentives are structured to attract sectors deemed strategic. The private sector, both domestic and foreign, operates within a framework that channels its activity toward national priorities. 

In the Philippines, such alignment is less evident. Industrial policy exists, but it is often fragmented. Education and training systems do not always correspond to the needs of emerging industries. Investment incentives are provided, but without a consistently articulated long-term industrial strategy. The private sector operates with considerable autonomy, but this autonomy is not always matched by alignment with national objectives. 

This brings everyone to a deeper issue—the question of sovereignty. 

The Philippines has long articulated a position of non-alignment, seeking to maintain flexibility in its external relations. Yet in practice, its economic and strategic decisions often reflect a sensitivity to external pressures that complicates this aspiration. 

The necessity, at times, to consider the approval of external powers in matters such as energy procurement raises questions about the extent of economic autonomy. Sovereignty, in its fullest sense, implies the capacity to make decisions based on national interest without undue external constraint. When such decisions are conditioned by external considerations, the coherence of national policy is inevitably affected. 

Vietnam, while equally engaged in global trade and diplomacy, appears to navigate this terrain with a different calculus. It engages broadly, but it does so within a framework that prioritizes its own developmental agenda. Its openness is strategic rather than absolute, its engagements calibrated rather than deferential. 

This difference, again, reflects a deeper coherence. Vietnam’s system—rooted in its socialist orientation—places the state at the center of economic direction. The private sector, while vibrant, is integrated into this framework. Capital is not allowed to define the trajectory of development; it is directed toward it. 

In the Philippines, the balance is less defined. The market operates with greater autonomy, and the state, while active, does not always assert a consistent directional role. The result is a system that is flexible, but also diffuse—capable of growth, but less capable of transformation. 

This is not to suggest that the Philippine model is without merit. Its openness, its democratic institutions, and its entrepreneurial culture are significant assets. But these assets require alignment if they are to produce sustained advancement. 

The lesson from Vietnam is not that one system should be replicated in its entirety. Historical, political, and cultural contexts differ, and models cannot be transplanted wholesale. The lesson, rather, is that coherence matters—that the alignment of policy, infrastructure, and economic activity toward a common objective is the defining characteristic of successful development. 

For the Philippines, the challenge is therefore not merely to grow, but to transform. 

This transformation requires a reexamination of the role of the state—not as a passive facilitator, but as an active architect of development. It requires the articulation of a clear industrial strategy that identifies priority sectors and aligns incentives, infrastructure, and education toward their advancement. It requires the strengthening of institutions to ensure that policies, once adopted, are implemented with consistency. 

It also requires a recalibration of the relationship between the state and the private sector. 

The private sector must remain dynamic and innovative, but it must also be engaged as a partner in national development. Its activities should be aligned, where possible, with long-term objectives that extend beyond immediate profitability. This does not imply subordination in the strict sense, but it does imply coordination—an understanding that individual enterprise operates within a broader national context. 

Above all, it requires a restoration of seriousness. Development is not achieved through announcements, nor through isolated projects. It is the product of sustained effort, of policies carried through across administrations, of institutions that enforce continuity even as leadership changes. 

For decades, the Philippines has demonstrated the capacity to begin. The task now is to demonstrate the capacity to continue. 

The divergence with Vietnam, pronounced as it is, should not be viewed with resignation, but with clarity. It is a reminder that growth without direction leads to stagnation, that openness without alignment leads to fragmentation, and that ambition without discipline leads to disappointment. 

Nations, in the end, are not judged by their potential, but by their performance over time. 

And the distance between drift and design—the space within which the Philippines now finds itself—is not insurmountable. But it is narrowing. 

To close it will require more than incremental reform. It will require a deliberate choice: to move from a politics of signals to a politics of structure, from an economy of consumption to an economy of production, and from a posture of accommodation to one of coherent self-determination. 

For in the final analysis, the question is not whether the Philippines can compete. 

It is whether it is prepared to decide how. 

Friday, 10 April 2026

“Love the Country, Not the System": Valor, Sovereignty, and the Discipline of Reality

“Love the Country, Not the System": Valor, Sovereignty, 
and the Discipline of Reality


There is a certain rhetorical inheritance that attends national commemorations, particularly those anchored in war and sacrifice. It is a language at once elevated and restrained, designed to bind memory with legitimacy, to reconcile grief with continuity. On Araw ng Kagitingan, as ceremonies unfold at Mount Samat National Shrine, this inheritance is once more invoked—carefully, almost instinctively. The fall of Bataan and Corregidor is remembered not only as historical fact, but as moral resource. The suffering of those who endured the Bataan Death March is recalled as both warning and inspiration. 

Yet the persistence of this language, while necessary, is not without complication. For memory, when institutionalized, acquires a dual function. It preserves, but it also legitimizes. It reminds, but it can also reassure. And in reassuring, it risks deflecting the more difficult task: that of subjecting the present to the same severity of judgment that we apply to the past. 

The official discourse this year illustrates this tension with particular clarity. Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr., speaking in the cadence of administrative responsibility, observed that honoring the country’s war heroes must extend “beyond remembrance” and be translated into programs that improve their welfare. Elsewhere in his remarks, he emphasized the enduring values of courage, dignity, and love of country, while acknowledging that global conflicts continue to affect the Philippines, even at a distance. 

Taken at face value, this is a coherent position. It reflects an understanding that remembrance must be operationalized—that the state must demonstrate fidelity to its past through measurable commitments in the present. Healthcare access, pension systems, and educational assistance for veterans and their families are not symbolic gestures; they are concrete obligations. In this sense, the President’s remarks align with a conception of governance that treats history as mandate rather than ornament. 

And yet, it is precisely at this point that the analysis must deepen. 

For the translation of valor into policy, while commendable, also imposes limits. It situates a profoundly disruptive historical experience within the manageable parameters of administration. It renders courage legible in terms of deliverables. In doing so, it risks attenuating the critical force of that experience—the capacity of Bataan, not merely to be remembered, but to interrogate the conditions under which the nation continues to operate. 

The President’s acknowledgment that the Philippines is “not untouched” by global tensions is, in itself, uncontroversial. The impact of geopolitical conflict on oil prices, trade flows, and economic stability is well established. But the formulation, while accurate, remains descriptive rather than analytical. It identifies exposure without fully engaging its structural basis. 

For the Philippines does not merely experience external pressures; it is positioned within a system that conditions its responses. Its economic model, its security arrangements, and its diplomatic posture are shaped by long-standing relationships, including those formalized under instruments such as the Mutual Defense Treaty. These relationships provide strategic benefits, but they also introduce asymmetries—of influence, of capacity, of decision-making latitude. 

It is within this context that the notion of interdependence must be examined with greater precision. Interdependence, in its ideal form, implies reciprocity. In practice, it often coexists with imbalance. When a state’s room for maneuver is constrained by its reliance on external systems—whether for security, capital, or market access—the distinction between partnership and dependency becomes less clear. 

Thus, the question arises not as polemic, but as inquiry: is the Philippine state exercising sovereignty in a substantive sense, or is it operating within a framework of negotiated dependence—what might be described, without rhetorical excess, as a form of mendicancy articulated in the language of cooperation? 

This question does not negate the value of alliances. It does, however, challenge the sufficiency of the narratives that accompany them. 

A parallel but distinct formulation is offered by Sara Duterte, whose remarks foreground sovereignty in more explicit terms. In asserting that foreign interference in the country’s justice system constitutes a challenge to the freedom fought for in Bataan, and in emphasizing the Philippines’ capacity to govern itself through its own institutions, she articulates a position that resonates with a long-standing post-colonial sensibility. 

At one level, this is a defensible stance. Sovereignty, as a principle, presupposes jurisdictional integrity. The ability of a state to enforce its own laws, through its own courts, is central to its legitimacy. The historical experience of external domination lends weight to any argument that seeks to guard against its recurrence. 

But here again, the invocation of principle requires clarification. 

Sovereignty is not an abstract possession. It is a practice. It is realized not only in the exclusion of external actors, but in the internal consistency of institutions. A judicial system that is formally autonomous but substantively compromised does not fully embody sovereignty. Nor does a political environment in which the exercise of power is unevenly constrained. 

In this light, the rejection of institutions such as the International Criminal Court cannot be assessed solely in terms of national pride. It must also be evaluated in relation to the capacity of domestic institutions to perform their functions credibly. Where that capacity is in question, the invocation of sovereignty risks becoming defensive rather than substantive. 

Moreover, the personalization of this issue—its association with particular figures whose records are subject to significant controversy—introduces an additional layer of complexity. When sovereignty is framed in a manner that appears to protect individuals rather than institutions, the distinction between national dignity and political expedience becomes blurred. 

The question, therefore, must be posed with some rigor: what is being defended under the rubric of sovereignty—the autonomy of the state as an institutional entity, or the insulation of specific actors from accountability? 

This is not a rhetorical flourish. It is a necessary clarification. 

Taken together, the positions articulated by the President and the Vice President illustrate a broader pattern in contemporary political discourse. Both draw upon the moral authority of history. Both seek to align present policy with past sacrifice. Both employ the language of valor as a means of establishing continuity. 

Yet both, in their respective emphases, leave certain dimensions underexamined. 

The administrative translation of valor into welfare programs, while necessary, does not address the structural conditions that continue to shape inequality and vulnerability. The assertion of sovereignty, while legitimate, does not fully engage with the requirements of institutional credibility and accountability. 

Beyond these official formulations lies a more complex and less accommodating reality. 

The Philippine economy, while exhibiting growth in certain sectors, remains characterized by disparities—regional, sectoral, and social. Access to resources, opportunities, and services is unevenly distributed. The persistence of these disparities suggests that development, while real, is not uniformly experienced. 

At the same time, the country’s integration into the global system exposes it to external shocks. Fluctuations in commodity prices, shifts in geopolitical alignments, and changes in international financial conditions all have domestic consequences. This exposure is not inherently negative, but it does impose constraints that must be acknowledged. 

There are analytical frameworks—some more critical than others—that interpret these conditions as indicative of a deeper structural imbalance. They emphasize the role of external influence, the concentration of internal power, and the reproduction of inequality through institutional arrangements. While such frameworks may vary in their conclusions, they converge on a central point: that the present configuration of the Philippine state and economy is not neutral. 

Whether one accepts the entirety of these critiques or not, their existence underscores the need for a more rigorous engagement with reality. 

It is in this context that the memory of Bataan must be situated—not as a symbolic resource to be deployed, but as a historical reference point that imposes intellectual discipline. 

The defenders of Bataan operated under conditions of severe constraint. Their actions were shaped by material limitations, strategic disadvantages, and the immediate pressures of survival. Their courage did not alter the structural imbalance they faced; it defined their response to it. 

This distinction is critical. 

For it suggests that valor is not the negation of reality, but the capacity to confront it without evasion. 

Applied to the present, this implies that the invocation of valor must be accompanied by a willingness to examine the conditions that define contemporary Philippine life. It must allow for the possibility that existing arrangements—economic, political, and strategic—may require reassessment. 

To love the country, in this sense, is not to accept its system uncritically. It is to subject that system to continuous evaluation. 

It is to distinguish between the nation as a collective entity and the structures that govern it.
It is to recognize that loyalty to one does not necessitate unqualified support for the other. 

“Fight for freedom—not for their faces.” This formulation, stripped of rhetorical excess, points to a principle of political clarity. It rejects the personalization of authority. It affirms that legitimacy is derived not from identity, but from performance. 

In practical terms, this means that leadership must be assessed not by its invocation of history, but by its engagement with present realities. Policies must be evaluated in terms of their effectiveness, their equity, and their sustainability. Institutions must be examined for their integrity, their transparency, and their capacity to serve the public interest. 

These are not oppositional demands. They are constitutive of responsible citizenship. 

The observance of Araw ng Kagitingan, if it is to retain its significance, must encourage such demands rather than preclude them. It must serve as a point of reflection, not merely of affirmation. 

For the ultimate question is not whether the nation remembers its past, but whether it allows that past to inform its present in a substantive way. 

To do so requires a certain intellectual posture—one that is neither deferential nor dismissive, but analytical. It requires a recognition that history does not confer automatic legitimacy. It provides standards against which legitimacy must be measured. 

In this light, the exhortation to “never surrender” acquires a more precise meaning. It is not an injunction against compromise in all circumstances. It is a refusal to relinquish critical faculties—to abandon the capacity for judgment in the face of complexity. 

Not to surrender—to external domination, however framed.
Not to surrender—to internal arrangements that perpetuate inequality.
Not to surrender—to narratives that simplify what must be understood in full. 

The legacy of Bataan, properly understood, does not resolve these tensions. It illuminates them. 

And in that illumination lies its enduring relevance—not as reassurance, but as challenge.