By Lope Coles Robredillo, SThD
WHEN
 THE PHILIPPINE Ambassador to the Vatican presented her credentials to 
the Pope not so long ago, the Holy Father pointed out that “the struggle
 against poverty in the Philippines calls for honesty, integrity and 
unwavering fidelity to the principles of justice, especially on the part
 of those entrusted with positions of governance and public 
administration.”  Although the presidential spokesman opined that this 
was addressed to those who aspire for leadership in the coming 
elections, commentators took this as an indictment against the Arroyo 
administration for its failure to solve poverty, owing to the dearth of 
moral underpinnings in the exercise of governance.  However this is 
interpreted, there is no doubt that, if the Philippine society is really
 to be liberated from the shackles of misery, those in position of 
governance have to adhere to moral standards and principles.
           
 For how explain our transmogrification from the most progressive 
country in southeast Asia to almost the most sluggish one, our dubious 
honor of being the most corrupt nation in Asia, our inability to pay the
 ever burgeoning national debt of P4.221 trillion in 2008, our being the
 sick man in Asia, our being a nation of maids?  Of course, some observe
 that the causes of our misery are greed, corruption, poverty, 
profligacy, thievery, lack of job opportunities, wanton extravagance, 
insensitivity to the needs of the poor, etc.  Others would argue that 
western imperialism, bureaucrat capitalism and semi-feudalism have 
brought us to this quagmire.  But all this takes the symptom for the 
disease.  For the root of our misery lies in a higher plane; it 
consists in the dearth of ethical foundation and vision in those who 
exercise governance.  One cannot therefore overemphasize the need for 
leaders who adhere to foundational principles that guide their policies 
and actions. 
Four Fundamental Principles
            Which principles?  For
 a Christian leader, of course, the primordial principle is Jesus 
himself, his life and teachings. Since, however, the world today is far 
removed from the New Testament times, and the problems raised are 
obviously far different from those that Jesus faced, one must make an 
effort to relate the Gospel of Jesus to the problems and the situation 
in our time.  And the Church has done (and is doing) just that.  In our 
era, for instance, the Popes, in trying to apply the Gospel to the 
pressing issues of the day, issued various encyclicals that analyze the 
problems, determine the causes and suggest solutions.  Best known of 
these papal writings are Leo XIII’s Rerum novarum, Pius XI’s Quadragesimo anno, John XXIII’s Mater et Magistra and Pacem in terris, Paul VI’s Populorum progressio, and John Paul II’s Laborem exercens, Solicitudo rei socialis, and Centesimus annus. 
           
 As one runs through these documents, one notices not only that there is
 a growth and development in the understanding of problems, their causes
 and their solutions, but also that there is an increase in the number 
of principles that have to be taken into account, reflecting, no doubt, 
the ever increasing complexity of world realities.  Considering that one
 does not have the time to read through all of them, and the enormity of
 the principles enunciated there, the question may be asked: are there 
any fundamental principles from which the many other principles one 
encounters in the encyclicals ramify?  It may be recalled that when 
Jesus was asked about the great commandment that incorporates all the 
615 commandments in the law of Moses, he adverted to the injunction on 
loving God and loving one’s neighbor.  The same may be observed in the 
case of principles on societal realities.  Though various have been the 
attempts to spell out the fundamental moral principles in social 
doctrine, the newly published Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church lists only four:  (1) primacy and dignity of the human person; (2) common good; (3) solidarity, and (4) subsidiarity. 
           
 In what follows, I would like to relate these principles to the 
Philippine society in order to help the Christian leader engaged in the 
present issues toward its transformation.  This is not, of course, to 
say that these are valid only for Christian leaders.  Quite the 
contrary, they are not only permanent and universal; they are also 
primary and fundamental parameters of reference to interpret and 
evaluate social realities.  Even unbelievers can apply them, because 
they speak to all people and to all nations.  And their implications, it
 will be noted, are far-reaching.  What is important is that, one really
 seeks the truth about man and society, and it will be seen that the 
four are interconnected and complement each other. He cannot use any of 
them disjoined to the rest, unless he, to be sure, does it with a bad 
conscience. 
The Primacy and Dignity of the Human Person
           
 If the Philippine society is really to be orderly and humanely 
developed, it must be founded on a correct understanding of the human 
being. According to the Compendium, “the human person must always
 be understood in his unrepeatable and inviolable uniqueness” (131).  A 
center of consciousness and freedom, he is open to the infinite and to 
other created beings.  Unique though he is, with a dignity higher than 
any other creature, the human being is not sufficient unto himself.  He 
not only needs God on whom his life depends; he also needs others in 
order to realize himself.  As Vatican II, Gaudium et spes, 
stresses, “the beginning, the subject and the goal of all social 
institutions is and must be the human person, which for its part and by 
its very nature stands completely in need of social life” (25). 
           
 There are several points to be noted.  First off, because of his 
transcendental dignity, the human person cannot be subordinated to 
wealth, progress, means of production, institutions, and minerals.  He 
cannot be used to advance any of these.  Quite the contrary, all of them
 are ordained to his perfection.  Hence, it is morally objectionable, 
for example, to encourage prostitutes to promote tourism, to suppress 
the right of workers for business to earn more, to allow people to work 
in subhuman conditions in mining to increase profits.  Since they exist 
in order for the human person to realize himself, rights and duties 
directly and simultaneously flow from his very nature, rights which are 
universal, inviolable and inalienable.  The logic is simple.  If man is 
destined to perfection, he should have all the rights that are necessary
 to achieve that perfection.  This is the reason for being of the 
Declaration of the Rights of Man of the United Nations and the list of 
human rights in John XXIII’s Pacem in Terris. 
           
 Against this background, it would be hard, therefore, to imagine a 
Philippine leader training his sight on development, but at the same 
time trampling on the rights of his constituents, or depriving them of 
their rights.  How can one claim strong leadership without addressing 
the people’s right to life, bodily integrity and the means necessary and
 suitable for the proper development of life?  Just look at the quality 
of the ordinary people’s access to food, shelter, medical care, social 
services, security in sickness and old age, care for the handicapped and
 mentally ill and unemployment!  Can it really be called human? 
 Extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, disappearance cannot be 
justified in the name of state security.  The use of vote-buying, dagdag-bawas, fraud and violence is flagrant denial of the people’s free will in electoral process. 
           
 In addition, since each man has a human dignity, which should be 
respected, all persons are fundamentally equal before God and before 
humanity, irrespective of their race and color, nationality, economic 
status, sexual orientation, or achievement in life.  The President of 
the Philippines does not have more human dignity that the pedicab driver
 in Isla Puting Bato.  Human dignity does not reside in the 
economic power, political position, gender, social status of the 
individual.  No one is superior to his fellow men.  That dignity lies in
 his being an image of God, in his being a child of God, and in his 
eternal destiny.  What people acquire, amass or achieve in life has 
nothing to do with it.  True development cannot therefore allow a 
compartmentalized form of justice—one for the rich and the powerful and 
another for the poor. 
           
 However, it should be emphasized that the primacy of the human 
person must not be seen as a promotion of individualism, for inherent in
 the concept of the human person is the notion of social relationship.  
Man is a social being, who “recognizes the necessity of integrating 
himself in cooperation with his fellow human beings, and who is capable 
of communion with them on the level of knowledge and love” (Compendium, 149). Lest this be interpreted as an affirmation of collectivism, the Compendium
 equally emphasizes that the human person cannot “be thought of as a 
mere cell of an organism that is inclined at most to grant it 
recognition in its functional role within the overall system” (125).  
“By the very force of their nature and by their internal destiny,” 
individuals are united into an “organic, harmonious mutual relationship”
 (125). 
           
 This relational dimension of the human person, however, has to be 
understood as a corrective to the overemphasis on the primacy of the 
individual.  The realization of man’s human dignity is always in the 
context of the community. “Together with equality in the recognition of 
the dignity of each person and of every people there must also be an 
awareness that it will be possible to safeguard and promote human 
dignity only if this is done as a community, by the whole humanity” 
(145).  One cannot therefore merely regard the human person as an 
independent being, separate from others.  Consequently, if a leader 
wishes to promote human dignity among Filipinos, it cannot therefore be 
just the work of a few; it would take the collective effort of both rich
 and poor, a work that would entail the elimination of the gross 
disparity and inequality between them.
The Common Good 
           
 Which brings us to the second principle—the common good.  For, if 
individual human persons have to group themselves, its reason for being 
is the achievement of their collective welfare.  As individuals, they 
lack what is necessary for the enjoyment of social life; common good is 
needed to advance their human dignity.  Gaudium et spes defines 
it as “the sum of those conditions of social life which allow social 
groups and their individual members relatively thorough and ready access
 to their own fulfillment” (n 26).  Those conditions ran the gamut from 
goods and services to values that are actualized in the members of the 
community, enabling them to perfect their lives.  Thus, in placing 
itself at the service of each human person, society has no other purpose
 than the common good. 
           
 The achievement of the common good is not only the work of the 
individual members.  Since it is the reason for its existence, the state
 has the responsibility of attaining it; it must make available to 
persons the material, cultural, moral and spiritual goods in order for 
them to live a truly human life.  Because each one has a right to enjoy 
the conditions of social life brought about by the quest for the common 
good, the challenge for a Filipino leader who seeks to transform 
Philippine society is gargantuan.  A formidable obstacle to the 
attainment of the common good is the huge disparity between the 
oligarchs who are few and the proletariat members who belong to the 
great majority.  Naturally, the rich control the state apparatus, the 
economy, the mass media and the exercise of politics.  In such a 
society, it is difficult to speak of common good, for there is no 
equality, and the comfortable social conditions in which the rich 
live are not shared by the many that are deprived of the basic 
necessities.   One may not be mistaken to say that the privileged do not
 care for the common good—except the good that coincides with theirs; 
for the most part, all they are interested in are power and the 
privileges that go with it, even if these hurt the poor.
         
 It is also in the light of the common good that leaders must re-examine
 our international debt.  As John Paul points out in his Centesimus annus,
 “the principle that debts must be paid is certainly just.  However, it 
is not right to demand or expect payment when the effect would be the 
imposition of political choices leading to hunger and despair for entire
 peoples.  It cannot be expected that the debts which have been 
contracted should be paid at the price of unbearable sacrifices.  In 
such cases, it is necessary to find—as in fact is partly happening—ways 
to lighten, defer or even cancel the debt, compatible with the 
fundamental right of peoples to subsistence and progress” (39).  In the 
Philippines , for instance, not enough money is poured to health, 
education, and other basic necessities because what is intended for them
 are coughed up for debt repayment.  Indeed, the nature of this debt is 
such that the borrower becomes all the poorer rather than richer, linked
 as it is with oppressive conditions, not to mention the fact that a 
portion of it gets to the pockets of the elite.  One might as well ask 
Monsod if Shylock should get his pound of flesh!
Universal Destination of Goods
          This makes a mockery of the principle that naturally flows from the principle of common good—the universal destination of goods. 
 According to this principle, “God intended the earth and all that it 
contains for the use of every human being and people.  Thus, as all men 
follow justice and unite in charity, created goods should abound for 
them on a reasonable basis” (GS 69).  What we see in the 
Philippines is a pathetic distribution of goods.  Some provinces, for 
instance, have the best infrastructures, but others, especially those 
removed from the political center, wallow in the primitive. Mining has 
not enriched the Samar provinces and the poor; the profits went 
elsewhere. Globalization is embraced by those who control the economy, 
but has not improved the lives of the dispossessed.  Laws on land reform
 are enacted, but they are not really catered to the benefit of tenants 
and farmers.
         
 Indeed, despite all the press releases and fanfare attendant upon 
poverty alleviation program, the properties of the propertied remain 
intact.  That nothing is new under the sun as regards efforts to close 
the gap between the rich and poor finds its telling evidence in the slum
 problems in Metro Manila and other cities.  One can always ask what is 
being done by our leaders to correct the lopsided relationship in an  
economic structure that more often than not favors the moneyed. This has
 to be asked because “the universal destination of goods entails 
obligations on how goods are to be used by their legitimate owners. 
Individual persons may not use their resources without considering the 
effects that this use will have; rather they must act in a way that 
benefits not only themselves and their families, but also the common 
good” (Compendium, 178).
          Clearly, then, the right to private property is not absolute.  Indeed, Christian tradition has never recognized that right as untouchable.  According to John Paul II, in Laborem excercens,
 this tradition has “always understood the right within the broader 
context of the right common to all to use the goods of the whole 
creation; the right to private property is subordinated to the right to 
common use, to the fact that goods are meant for everyone” (84).  But 
will the rich part with their riches?  One might be asking for the 
moon.  But it is well to remind them of the words of St Ambrose in De Nabuthe that Paul VI quotes in Populorum progressio:
 “You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person.  You
 are handing over to him what is his.  For what has been given in common
 for the use of all, you have arrogated to yourself.  The world is given
 to all, and not only to the rich.”
         
 In view of this, one wonders whether those in governance would be 
willing to extirpate greed and sever themselves from their wealth, 
instead of trying to accumulate more of it.   Truth is, even public 
office is treated as private property—politicians perpetuate themselves 
in office through dynasty, as if they had the exclusive claim to it.  
Today, it is often told that the country needs leaders who can be 
trusted.  Of course, that is correct.  Filipinos hardly need a leader 
who is a liar, profligate, wanton, greedy, violator of human rights, 
self-serving, ambitious, tyrannical, and overweening.  The nation looks 
for a leader who could talk about “an economic vision inspired by moral 
values that permit people not to lose sight of the origin or purpose of 
goods so as to bring about a world of fairness and solidarity (Compendium,
 174).”  And of course he can walk the talk.  Since he himself is part 
of the oligarchy, he should be able to make his own life a showcase of 
how a politician can contribute to the common good.  He can do this not 
by siding with the landed gentry and the aristocracy, but by opting for 
the poor and the oppressed
Preferential Option for the Poor
          The reason for this is that the principle of preferential option for the poor logically flows from the principle of the universal destination of goods. In the words of the Compendium,
 “The principle of the universal distribution of goods requires that the
 poor, the marginalized and in all cases those whose living conditions 
interfere with their proper growth should be the focus of particular 
concern.  To this end, the preferential option for the poor should be 
reaffirmed in all its force (192).”   For John Paul II, in his Sollicitudo rei socialis,
 this option is a “special form of primacy in the exercise of Christian 
charity… It affects the life of each Christian inasmuch as he or she 
seek to imitate the life of Christ, but it applies equally to our social
 responsibilities and hence to our manner of living, and to the logical 
decisions to be made concerning the ownership and use of goods” (42).
         
 In this country where the majority wallow in misery and only a few 
enjoy so much wealth, common sense dictates that in the distribution of 
goods, the needy, the hungry, the homeless, those without medical care, 
the aged, the neglected and the hopeless should have preference, if all 
are created equal.  Yet, is there any aspiring national leader whose 
platform will make this principle real in everyday life?  Someone, of 
course, ran on the program for the mahirap, but when he abruptly 
ended his term, the poor were more numerous than ever.  The promise that
 relatives and friends would have no place in his dispensation was just 
that—a promise, for his bank accounts never showed that the hopeless 
were his beneficiaries.
         
 Truth is, the principle of the universal destination of common good and
 that of the preferential option for the poor can be translated into 
realities only if they are matched by a recognition of the participation
 of all at the level of political decision.  As things stand, it remains
 a figment of the imagination, for who makes political decisions?  The 
challenge of future leaders could be daunting.  Is there any 
presidentiable who is capable of betraying the interest of his social 
class?  The executive and legislative branches of the government are 
occupied largely by the rich and by those who in politics became rich, 
and one wonders whether they are prepared to give up their privileges.  
If the history of land reform law has anything to tell us, it is that 
the privileged class is not yet ready to give up its advantages to 
really lift the poor from wretchedness. Indeed, there is no evidence 
that the lot of the poor has improved since the birth of the Philippine 
republic.  Since those elected eventually become part of the privileged 
class, one hardly expects that what will be distributed to the poor 
really go beyond noodles, can goods, rice and PhilHealth cards.
Stewardship
         
  Yet, come to think of it—if the common good has a universal destiny, 
it is because no man can ever claim to own anything as his own; humans 
are only stewards of creation.  The principle of stewardship 
derives from the understanding that God is the source of all creation, 
and whatever man has is simply God’s gift not for himself but for the 
benefit of all.  In his World Day of Peace Message in 1990, John 
Paul II asserts that “the earth is ultimately a common heritage, the 
fruit of which are for the benefit of all.  In the words of the Second 
Vatican Council, ’God destined the earth and all it contains for the use
 of every individual and all peoples’ (GS 69).  This has direct 
consequences for the problem at hand.  It is manifestly unjust that a 
privileged few should continue to accumulate excess goods, squandering 
available resources, while masses of people are living in conditions of 
misery at the very lowest level of subsistence.  Today, the dramatic 
threat of ecological breakdown is teaching us the extent to which greed 
and selfishness—both individual and collective—are contrary to the order
 of creation, an order which is characterized by mutual 
interdependence.”
         
 Can a political leader curb the greed and selfishness of the privileged
 class?  Greed and craving for huge profit left in their wake the 
destruction of natural resources—forest denudation, floods, destruction 
of crops and aquatic animals, plunder of mines and death of rivers, 
obliteration of corals and mangroves, to mention a few of their evil 
effects.  Today, people are reaping the whirlwind, but although the 
problem has affected almost every one, especially now that climate has 
changed a lot, the victims remain those who are in the underside of 
history.  But one cannot take up the cause of the poor without 
antagonizing those who make fantastic profits in the destruction of 
environment. One wonders whether a leader could still pursue a program 
of total development, given the oppositions he has to hurdle.
Solidarity
         
 There is no formula for a political will that does not antagonize the 
beneficiaries of a lopsided system of distribution of goods, but any 
attempt would have to presuppose a change of vision of humanity.  Such a
 vision would certain include the principle of solidarity, because this 
stands in opposition to all that greed and selfishness imply.  If social
 evil arises because a good number are lusting for power and greedy for 
wealth, and love to work only for their selfish ends, solidarity 
signifies the contrary—the offering of one’s self for the common good.  
Solidarity, in the words of John Paul II in Sollicitudo rei socialis,
 is “not a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress at the 
misfortune of so many people, both near and far.  On the contrary, it is
 a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common 
good, that is to say, to the good of all and each individual, because we
 are all really responsible for all” (38).
         
 The principle of solidarity highlights interdependence as intrinsic to 
the social nature of man. “It is above all a question of interdependence
 sensed as a system determining relationships in the contemporary world,
 in its economic, cultural, political and religious elements, and 
accepted as a moral category.  When interdependence becomes recognized 
in this way, the correlative response as a moral and social attitude, as
 a virtue, is solidarity” (SRS 38).  Solidarity then obliges 
those who are well-off to share their goods and services with the 
unfortunate.  At the same time, it urges them to correct injustices done
 to the poor, especially those that arise from the consuming desire for 
profit and thirst for power, like extending one’s tenure of office by 
advocating charter change.  It this way, they are able to lose part of 
their possessions and become committed to the common good.
         
 But the poor cannot just wait for the rich to be committed to their 
obligation under the principle of interdependence; it is important that 
the victims of history express their solidarity with one another, if 
society is to be transformed.  As John Paul II asserts in Laborens exercens,
 “in order to achieve social justice…, there is a need for ever new 
movements of solidarity of the workers and with the workers.  This 
solidarity must be present whenever it is called by the social 
degradation of the subject of work, by exploitation of workers, and by 
the growing areas of poverty and hunger.  The Church is firmly committed
 to the cause, for she considers it her mission, her service, a proof of
 her fidelity to Christ so that she can truly be the Church of the poor”
 (37). 
To
 uplift the poor from misery, a Filipino leader cannot just therefore 
express interdependence through distribution of rice and noodles in 
times of calamities.  More has to be done, including setting up 
draconian measures to correct the continuing degradation of the poor.  
Far from depending merely on the oligarchy to dispense crumbs, he must 
encourage small communities, organizations, employees and workers to 
unite themselves.  Considering the opposition that this step might 
create, since he would be making enemies of those well-placed in 
position of power and privilege, he would need the help of other 
institutions, like the Church.  If the Church in the Philippines is 
really a church of the poor, it would have to opt in favor of workers, 
peasants, fisher folk and the marginalized, in their effort to liberate 
themselves from injustices.
Subsidiarity
That
 small groups should make initiatives that could help them achieve their
 own perfection brings us to the last fundamental principle of Catholic 
Social Doctrine—subsidiarity.  This principle stipulates that the 
society, the government, and other bigger institutions, rather than take
 advantage of, or oppress the smaller ones, should be helpful to them, 
especially the ultimate members: the individual.  Far from 
absorbing them or colonizing them, they should enhance their proper 
activity.  Pius XI, in his Quadragesimo anno, expresses the 
principle as follows: “Just as it is wrong to withdraw from the 
individual and commit to the community at large what private initiative 
and endeavor can accomplish, so it is likewise an injustice, a serious 
harm, and a disturbance of proper order to turn over to a greater 
society, of higher rank, functions and services which can be performed 
by smaller communities on a lower plane” (79).  If the principle of 
solidarity is opposed to all forms of political or social individualism,
 that of subsidiarity stands in opposition against all forms of 
collectivism.
Like
 the previous principles, this one is based on the dignity of the 
individual.  All forms of society, whether big or small, are meant to 
help him.  And because man is a social being, smaller societies, like 
the family, local association, small groups and the like, are the locus 
in which the individual human person exercises that social dimension of 
his existence and relate him to the bigger society.  This bigger society
 has the obligation to create conditions in which the individual can 
grow and develop his potentials, and reach perfection.  Consequently, 
what can be done at the level of the small group should remain there, 
and not absorbed or taken over by the larger one.  Its competence is to 
be respected. 
The
 larger community can take over its role only if it cannot be realized 
at the local level; but if it can be done, the State, for instance, 
cannot substitute itself in its stead in terms of responsibility and 
initiative.  In other words, the performance of an action is best done 
at the lowest possible level.  The same may be said of its responses to 
local problems.  Problems in smaller groups are to be met at that level,
 and the government can intervene only when the solutions are beyond the
 capacity of that level.  There is, thus, no justification for the 
government to dictate families as to how many children they should have;
 that is the sphere of husband and wife.  Nor can it prescribe what 
forms of contraception couples should accept, for that is the competence
 of married people who decide in the light of their religious belief.
The
 implication here is that individuals and smaller communities are 
empowered to get involved in the realization of their life and mission. 
 They take the reign of their own history.  According to the Compendium,
 participation is expressed in activities through which the citizen 
contributes to the cultural, social, economic and political life of the 
community to which he belongs; it is a duty to be fulfilled by all, with
 responsibility and with a view to the common good (189).  By 
participating, the individual becomes active in ordering his life, and 
is also able to help other individuals in the community, especially 
those in dire need.  The obligation to be at the service of others is 
concretized by this principle.  
In
 terms of governance, the principle of subsidiary obviously implies 
political reforms whereby the influence of the national government is 
reduced in order to promote local autonomy.  The Constitution of 1987 
has already provided some form of autonomy to the Muslims and to the 
indigenous peoples.  In 1991, the local government code enacted reforms 
for greater accountability and transparency.  But one wonders whether 
these are enough.  On the other hand, how would the people be protected 
from local governance where people are colonized by their own local 
officials?  The individuals at the local level still do not participate,
 and because those in governance somehow substituted only the role of 
those at the national level, social conditions are never created in 
which individuals grow and realize their potential.
But
 an even greater challenge is to transform the political system into 
such that the local government becomes self-sufficient and not merely 
depends on the internal revenue allotment for its survival.  But this 
problem is rooted in the feudal system that characterizes the 
relationship between the national and the local levels.  Under this 
system, the master-servant relationship where loyalty, subservience and 
dependency appear as virtues, is itself paralleled in the local level, 
in terms of the relationship between local politicians and clients, 
exacerbating the concentration of wealth in the hands of a few and the 
pauperization of the disenfranchised.   Of no less importance, a 
structural reform has to be instituted in such a way that the poor can 
have a share in the powers of the government, if their participation in 
governance is not to remain in theory; that way, they can participate, 
for instance, in the decisions on the allocation of funds.  With their 
participation, they can see to it that money really goes to where it is 
needed, not ending up in the pockets of the elite that now control the 
set-up.
Final Word
TAKING
 ALL THESE principles into account, one gets the impression that the 
nation has still a long way to go, if it is really to achieve integral 
liberation and development.  Those entrusted with governance have to 
understand that these principles are sine qua non for real development, and they have to be taken as principles for reflection, criteria for judgment and directives for action,
 if they are really intent on uplifting the majority of the people from 
misery.  But then, it would take much sacrifice for them and for those 
holding power and enjoying privilege.  Political will would not be 
enough; leaders would have to be willing and ready to lose power and 
privilege for the sake of the many in the process of transforming the 
Philippine society.  Still, the question remains: will they be ready to 
lose them?  If our history of politics has anything to tell us, it is 
that politicians scarcely care for any of these principles, for their 
objective is not much more than the capture of power and the enjoyment 
of its privileges, no matter if these harm the deprived.  The challenge 
for leaders today and tomorrow is to break with that history.*
 
 
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