A ‘psycho’ for president?
>> Monday, November 9, 2015
March L.
Fianza
BAGUIO CITY
-- Once in a blue moon, we come across people locked inside their dreams. In
2010, I asked a friend: “Pare, are you running this election?” His answer
was: “Hanak py nga agu-uyong padli” (I am not yet crazy). That same
year, I was having small talk with the guards of the Commission on Elections
office in Baguio when an unassuming guy walked by saying he was going to file
his COC for Baguio congressman. Curious, I walked behind him to the Baguio
receiving table and watched him submit his COC.
Some Comelec personnel who were aware of the unusual situation were now
amused and became nosy as we listened to his dialog with another COC filer, who
incidentally was another “psycho” who wanted to grab the mayor’s seat. He
said,“brod, parehas pala tayong independent. Ako alam ko mananalo tayo” (brod,
so we are both independent candidates. I know we will win).
I inspected the man’s COC and saw how competent he was in filling up the
form. There was nothing wrong with it except that he was not nominated by any
political party. I caught up with him and introduced myself as a newsman and he
gladly opened up for an interview. He claimed he is an artist, a scientist and
an inventor. He told me he had invented a five-stringed guitar with the sound
of a flute.
I wanted to find out if he was aware of the situation in Baguio. His
answer: traffic jams and garbage. He continued on saying government should
“look for parking spaces around mountains outside the city. Tourists are the
ones who cause traffic, and if there are parking spaces outside, they can park
there so that their cars will no longer enter the city.
On the garbage issue, he said that as a scientist he knew that once a
biodegradable material touches the ground, it starts to decompose and turns
into soil. He said there is no longer the need for an open pit. Before we
parted, he asked if I was going to vote for him. I was not prepared to answer
his question but I smiled and nodded as a form of response.
Presidents we will never have
Aside from four leading contenders in the race for Malacanang that
includes senators Miriam Defensor Santiago and Grace Poe, interior and local
government Sec. Manuel Roxas II, and Vice President Jojo Binay, (not necessarily
winning in that order); the weird and strange to the outrageous with a total of
126 filed their candidacies for president in festive mood at the Comelec
central office in Intramuros, Manila. A record breaker since 2010 where only
110 hopefuls filed their certificates.
Comelec announced the final list of candidates who filed their
certificates of candidacy (COCs) from October 12 to October 16 with 130 running
for president, 19 for vice president, and 172 for senator. On social media, the
Comelec said, this only shows the kind of democracy we have in the Philippines.
Also, that we benefit from a law with loose requirements for the highest
position in the land.
The Philippine Constitution states: “No person may be elected President
unless he is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines, a registered voter,
able to read and write, at least 40 years of age on the day of the election,
and a resident of the Philippines for at least 10 years immediately preceding
such election.”
Lawmakers belonging to the reform bloc in congress, including Sen.
Miriam, want stricter requirements for a presidential candidate, senator,
congressman and governor such as graduating or attending college for at least
four years but the proposals were shelved.
Elusive dreamers.
In last month’s week-long “fiesta” at the Comelec, presidential
candidate Romeo John Ygonia of Baguio who calls himself “Archangel Lucifer”
claims his candidacy is backed by Jesus Christ and was chosen by his master to
lead the Philippines. Meanwhile, farmer Alfredo Tindugan declared that as
president he would push for a “divine government”.
Another bet said he will legalize the four seasons of winter, spring,
summer, and fall in tropical Philippines, while Romeo Plasquita, a retired
policeman said he filed his COC because he will push for retired policemen’s
benefits since he has not received his retirement money and government pension
even after leaving the service five years ago. He will push for
“tuwid na daan para sa PNP” to fight corruption in the PNP.
Pierre Pardo, a volunteer feeder for street children said her
administration will focus on education, health, and home improvement while
presidential candidate Rodrigo Lapitan castigated
PNoy’s “daang matuwid” saying hundreds of poor streetchildren sleep on
roadsides and do not have food, light, water and comfort rooms.
PMA graduate Class ’79 and book author Rodolfo Indoctivo who filed his
COC for president explained no president past and present has identified the
actual problems of the country today and has recommended solutions, while
chemical engineer and senatorial aspirant Victor Quijano declared his platform
to introduce a federal system of government in the Philippines where a
devolution of powers would take place, leaving the national government
responsible for national security and foreign policy.
Like anybody who wants a better future for this country, these are
persons locked inside their elusive dreams. People call them
“insane, adasayadna, psycho,” but to many, they are competent and know
what they are talking about. There are people who want to lead us, but they are
not what we fight for during elections.
They represent the best Presidents, vice presidents, senators,
congressmen, governors, vice governors, board members, mayors, and councilors
that the Philippines will never have. While most voters do not take them
seriously, some of the so-called “nuisance” candidates have platforms that
actually make sense. Now will the real sane candidate please stand up to be
recognized?
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