My coloring book (The Cory Aquino Legacy)

a.red

This is my copy of the Constitution; it’s a compilation; it contains not just the consti, but laws and subjects under consti law like: election law, local government code, admin law, etc. etc.

Maybe it was just a coincidence that as i glanced sideways from where i was seated today, i noticed something very yellow. I never saw it before (“never saw” means never noticed; never realized it was yellow. i wasn’t a very visual person before; i only became somewhat  visual recently, go figure.)

The book shelf here has a sliding, glass cover so you could see the titles inside. There it was, very yellow; gleaming, it happened to have been flung horizontally, instead of tucked vertically. Here it is.

a.wide copy

Our then consti law professor, VV (Justice V.V. Mendoza) said “You buy the wide one, the wide copy of the Constitution, it has a matrix that compares the Malolos consti, the 1935 consti, the 1973 consti, and the present Constitution, it’s published by National Bookstore. Plus, it’s easy to read, the letters are big. Well, you can buy others, the small ones if you want.”

Among the features of the ’87 Consti are: an emphatic, if not redundant Bill of Rights.

Like the free-speech clause; as everybody knows, “speech” in the “free-speech” clause in constitutional law jurisprudence includes all kinds and all forms of expression; yet, in the free-speech clause of the ’87 conti, the phrase “of expression” was added (a Lino Brocka amendment): “No law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech, of expression, or of the press..” Just to make sure everybody understands the scope of free speech and  that censorship  is presumed unconstitutional.

Or, as everybody knows, the right to remain silent includes in constitutional law jurisprudence the right not to be forced to sign any statement or give any statement or to talk, by being roughed up, or by being electrocuted or by water-boarding, etc.; yet in the ’87 Consti, immediately after the right- to- remain silent provision, this was added: “No torture, force, violence, threat, or intimidation….shall be used” etc.. Just for emphasis. Just to make sure it is clear.

I like emphatic, never mind if it’s redundant, let’s keep it that way if only to make clear our intent and our will not to allow a dictatorship to rule the land again.

I’m doing this randomly. I’m sure there are other features. There is an anti-foreign military bases, troops, or facilities provision: “After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement (on)…Military Bases, foreign military bases, troops, or facilities shall not be allowed except under a treaty….recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State.” The present Visiting Forces Agreement is not recognized as a treaty by the U.S. and therefore does not conform with the ’87 Consti.

Also, under the ’87 Consti, you only need a majority vote in the Supreme Court to strike down a law as unconstitutional (in the ’73 consti, you needed 2/3 of the Supreme Court.) Some older lawyers who did not study under the present consti still get confused sometimes and think it’s 2/3.

And of course, there’s an airtight provision that prevents the abuse of the Commander-in-Chief power of declaring martial law, by requiring that: 1) should martial law be declared, within 48 hours the President should report to Congress; Congress can revoke it. 2) Congress if  not in session, shall convene within 24 hours; 3) the Supreme Court can exercise judicial review over it; 4) the Constitution cannon be suspended; 5) courts cannot be shut down; 6) legislature cannot be shut down; 7) military courts shall not exercise jurisdiction over civilians; 8) any person arrested shall still be charged within three days otherwise, he/she shall be released; and in any case such arrested person can apply for bail or for a writ of habeas corpus; 9) and in all cases, martial law cannot be for more than 60 days.

What this Constitution did was to, as it were, “distribute” the exercise of this particular Commander-in-Chief power among the different branches of government by allowing, even requiring, the other branches to review it, and revoke it if necessary ; and by putting a time cap of two months on it.

The new government that rose from the collective struggle of the people that dismantled the dictatorship changed the legal landscape of our life.

Many of the cases that we are able to file now, many of the rights that we fight for now, many of the institutions that we try to safeguard now or watch over, were made possible by that then new government.

Sure, much more could have been done: a genuine agrarian reform program; justice for the tens of thousands of victims of martial law. The majority plodding and dying in sub-human conditions of poverty, hunger, and disease, remain mired through more than twenty years of the same.

My train of thought is being disrupted whenever i see the trapos (traditional politicians ) tonight come out and say “Ituloy ang laban ni Cory sa 2010” (“Carry forward the fight of Cory through 2010), you wonder. 2010? They’re thinking of themselves again. (nangampanya.)

Politicians have a way of inserting themselves in the scenery,  striding in with their entire entourage and their publiscists, when you’re reflecting on what had been and what should be, to guide your future action —  as i leaf through my old, yellow copy of the Consti; did you know it was as big and wide as a coloring, tracing, connect-the-dots book?

As you can see, i didn’t finish this post, cannot seem to finish a post again, much was done when the dictatorship and its vestiges were dismantled; much more could still be done.

In Memoriam: Cory Aquino

cory.two

(Photo by k.ratzinger, right-clicked from http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/ used here for non-commercial purposes under terms of use of the “creative commons license” granted by the photographer to flickr.com)

Written and posted last March 24, 2008:

(March 24, ’08) Iconic: Superwoman has to rest….

(3-24-’08) Except for last night where she looked a bit wan, even grey, in that film footage of ABS-CBN of the Easter Sunday mass, former President Corazon Aquino in all the interfaith masses, “truth forums”, and “communal actions” where she marched, gave messages, squeezed into crowds and joined in singing “Bayan Ko”, never gave a hint of the physical condition she had to endure. Until thirty minutes ago, through an advisory read by the other public personalities in her family.

(3-24-’08) Only today, when she requires much-needed rest did she instruct her family to issue a statement that she has cancer of the colon.

(3-24-’08) While we are optimistic that the condition can be treated, she could have chosen a less stressful life these past months to slow down those microscopic abnormal cells from multiplying; she could have done that, she could have stayed away, gone abroad or somewhere far away for a much-needed medical vacation, which is what most would have done faced with a similar situation.

(3-24-’08) But Cory Aquino is not most of us; she doesn’t choose the more comfortable option at the cost of other people’s comfort. The desecration of truth was more disconcerting to her than her own physical pain. Sure, she is not perfect, her life-choices, however, had helped topple dictatorships and remove corrupt governments.

(3-24-’08) There goes whatever excuse many of us put up in postponing to confront this regime in the most assertive and active, even if inconvenient, way. We never run out of excuses: “Been there, dun that”; Cory Aquino has been going the distance at the cost of precious time and life. “I’ve done my share”; “i’m trying my best”; Cory Aquino tells us: Not enough, look at this government. “The traffic jam is horrendous, can’t stand the pollution”; Cory Aquino has been facing a life-threatening condition since December; last February 16 flashing her trademark bright smile, she told the interfaith crowd: “Hwag kayong mag-alala, hangga’t kaya ko pa, nandito ako” (”Please don’t worry, as long as i can still manage, i will be here”) then showed again her familiar radiant beam.

(3-24-’08) She likes to paint flowers. She could have chosen to do that.

(3-24-’08) We who run about  hale and hearty but refuse inconvenient engagements, run more risk of passing on for our uselessness and irrelevance. We who have no ailments but insulate ourselves from the strife and conflict around us, are more likely to lose our breath for our dumbness, obliviousness and utter pettiness. Our selfishness feeds and nourishes a decomposing government that will soon be outclassed and outmarched by people’s movements and inspiring moms, and Cory Aquino.