I was afraid to go to Edsa and join untold numbers to say by their very presence, “Goodbye, President Ferdinand Edralin Marcos, we don’t love you anymore!” I thought it was unsafe.
(Edsa image stuartexchange.org)
But I kept listening to the radio, and on Thursday, when I
thought the tide was turning in favor of Mr Marcos, I decided to and did go
Friday, 25 February, walking from Guadalupe Bridge to the government station
Channel 4 where they were inviting people to speak out.
Already a much-accomplished and known Writer and Editor in
Agriculture and Forestry, and with firsthand and second-hand knowledge of how
loggers have been cutting down trees beyond our forests’ natural power to
replenish themselves, depriving future generations of heritage species and
spaces – I did not volunteer to speak out. I had been a rebel in writing,
but hardly in speaking.
So,
People Power overthrew the Marcos Dictatorship – that was all. After 36 years, 26 Feb 1986-26 Feb 2022, poor farmers
are still poor. We have failed our own farmers!
The son of a not-poor-not-rich farmer and an Agriculturist
(UP '65), I always have had the agrarian welfare in mind. And so, as since 1975
a self-styled one-man band communicator for village development – writer,
editor, layout artist, desktop publisher, blogger – I must blame my lack of
imagination for not having contributed to the liberation of the Filipino farmer
from poverty.
Looking at the agrarian situations before and after People
Power, I see that they are exactly the same:
Post-Edsa, we have not
emancipated the tillers of the soil from the slavery of “Land Tenure” – The self-limiting
creed that each farmer must have the title to the piece of land he is tilling
in order to prosper.
(“Bloom” image from me.me)
Thank God, on Tuesday, 06 Aug 2019, from a poor family in
Ilocos Sur William Dar was appointed
as Secretary of Agriculture. Before that, he presented in his Manila Times column of 13 Jun 2019, “The
‘New Thinking’ For Agriculture” (manilatimes.net).
The way I see it, Mr Dar purposely excluded land tenure and instead included farm consolidation, farmers’ groupings,
cooperatives – and agri-entrepreneurship.
As Philippine history has shown since People Power, our farmers remain enslaved
by their limited business-mindedness. We have failed them!
For the good of the farmers, in the manner of The Ten Commandments as it were, The New
Thinking included The Eight Paradigms:
I have conceptualized
eight paradigms to level up the country’s agriculture sector: modernization
must continue; industrialization of agriculture is key; promotion of exports is
a necessity; consolidation of small- and medium-sized farms; roadmap
development would be crucial; infrastructure development would be critical;
higher budget and investment for Philippine agriculture (are required); and
legislative support is needed.
I say
the behavior of farmers and their leaders will be in tune with the Spirit of
Edsa 1986 when they abandon their old thinking of land ownership as a
prerequisite for promotion to prosperity. Otherwise, we pity them because they
themselves are only deceiving themselves!@517
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