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Open Letter To Duterte Supporters: “Learn To Say Yes, With Reservations”

As the letter says, Sabi nga ni Alma Moreno, โ€œYes…with reservations.โ€ (Pills!)”

Duterte post yes with reservations

While several posts online have come out regarding the upcoming elections, this insightful open letter written by Marty Gonzaga is addressed to “hardcore supporters” of Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte in his bid for the presidential elections in 2016.

As the letter says, this is not to spread hate, nor is it to change their minds about who they’re voting for: rather, it’s a challenge to be more critical about what your candidate stands for, something that can be applicable to all other voters supporting different candidates. As Marty points out, “The point is that itโ€™s possible to vote for and agree with someone without agreeing with everything.”

The original note even includes hyperlinks to support facts stated here. Regardless of who you are supporting for the 2016 elections, this note is worth the read for us to be more critical in analyzing candidates’ platforms and ideals they espouse.

Dear Hardcore Duterte Supporter,
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This isnโ€™t a post about Duterte. This is a post about you.
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Yes, you. The guy who defends him on Rappler articles saying, โ€œDi bale kung babaero siya. Anong kinalaman ng personal life niya sa pagiging competent na presidente?โ€ The guy who sends anonymous death threats because Gab Valenciano holds a contrary opinion. The one who Carlos Celdran calls โ€˜delusional and lazyโ€™.
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For the record, you donโ€™t deserve the name calling. Labeling you a โ€˜Dutertardโ€™ is immature and doesnโ€™t add value to the electoral discourse. Itโ€™s not going to convince you to stop supporting your candidate. If anything, insulting you only empowers you. It makes you feel like a martyr. An underdog. It adds fuel to your fire.
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Besides, I think I understand you. I really do.
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Youโ€™re tired. Tired of coming home past nine after being stuck in two hours of traffic. Tired of having to double-check your pockets when walking through crowds. Tired of having to wrap your luggage in plastic at the entrances of NAIA. Tired of hearing promises of change. Tired of the same names with nothing to show for it.
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Macapagal. Roxas. Marcos. Aquino. Binay. Macapagal. Roxas. Marcos. Aquino. Binay. Like spokes on a wheel: โ€œThis oneโ€™s on top. Then this oneโ€™s on top. And on, and on, and on.โ€
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Duterte, like Daenerys Targaryen, isnโ€™t going to stop the wheel. Heโ€™s going to break the wheel. With his no bullsh*t and take-no-prisoners attitude, Duterteโ€™s a breath of fresh air in the circus of Philippine politics. โ€œFinally, a politician with balls who will bring real change!โ€
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I know how easy it is to feel desperate in times like these. Itโ€™s easy to be swayed by powerful rhetoric. Itโ€™s easy to trust our gut and to vote with our feelings. Itโ€™s how weโ€™re wired as people. As a marketer, my entire profession is built around the idea that consumers buy brands that tug at the heartstrings. And Duterteโ€™s brand? It doesnโ€™t just tug at your heartstrings; it sets your tired, desperate, and angry soul ablaze.
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And youโ€™ve thought about this too, I know. Itโ€™s not just your voting with your emotions. I admit, heโ€™s had smart moments. While I wonโ€™t be voting for him, I can definitely get behind federalism and decentralizing the Manila-focused economy. And I believe you when you say that Davao flourished under his term. Thatโ€™s why even I donโ€™t care that he swears a lot. โ€˜Substance over formโ€™ nga naman.
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Because you want him to win so badly, you defend him against all his detractors and critics. To you, Duterte is the Philippinesโ€™ last, best hope. And maybe Duterte is the best. Maybe. That isnโ€™t the point.
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The point is that itโ€™s possible to vote for and agree with someone without agreeing with everything that comes out of his mouth as if itโ€™s the Gospel truth. No candidate is perfect, not even the best ones.
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Sabi nga ni Alma Moreno, โ€œYes…with reservations.โ€ (Pills!)
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You can agree with 50-, even 60-, or 70% of what he says AND still call him out angrily whenever he says something stupid. Saying something stupid doesnโ€™t make him stupid.
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But overlooking the bad things that (allegedly) good people do is how tyrants are born. Itโ€™s your job as his supporter to keep him and his power in check.ย  Real friends donโ€™t let their friends do stupid things. #intervention
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More importantly, as a Filipino citizen, you deserve to ask more from your candidate. He will never be perfect, but that shouldnโ€™t change the fact that you should be demanding continuous improvement. We deserve nothing less from the highest office in the land. For Duterte to say โ€œtake me or leave meโ€ is bratty, immature, and arrogant. Wala siyang room for improvement, ganon? But I digress.
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Iโ€™m not going to beg you not to vote for him. I think the arguments for why we shouldnโ€™t elect a womanizing, human rights abuser (by his own admission) into office have been said. If you havenโ€™t been convinced by any of those yet, then I really donโ€™t think anything I can say will (though it wonโ€™t stop me or others from trying).
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At the very least, I will ask you to say โ€œYesโ€ to Duterte…with reservations.
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1. I ask that you turn your โ€œCompetent naman siya kaya okay lang kung babaero siya.โ€ย  into a โ€œCompetent siya, pero hindi sana hindi na siya maging babaero. Or mag-sorry man lang siya.โ€
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Calling him out for being an unapologetic womanizer isnโ€™t just an irrelevant attack on his personal life. It speaks of being complicit to the internalized misogyny of Philippine society – an issue he should be cognizant of as an aspiring head of state. I hate that I have to repeat this, but it says a lot when a male candidate will get a surge in the polls for being perceived as macho for having multiple girlfriends. A woman with two boyfriends would be called a pokpok and hated. If that isnโ€™t the definition of outright sexism, then ewan ko nalang.
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2. I ask that you say yes to being tough on crime, but demand that your candidate find a way to do so without resorting to vigilante justice that bypasses due process.
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As hard as it is to imagine, it isnโ€™t discipline or human rights. Itโ€™s discipline AND human rights. Go to (or at least read about) life in Western Europe, and youโ€™ll see itโ€™s possible.
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In the first place, the threat of death penalty doesnโ€™t even reduce crime rates, according to Amnesty International (Source: https://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/…). And โ€˜teaching kids a lessonโ€™ by sending minors to jail (yes, Duterte said that) does more harm than good. According to UNICEF, a โ€˜first-time offenderโ€™ kept out of jail is EIGHT times more likely to change and becoming an honest, productive citizen than those who go to jail. (Source: https://www.unicef.org/philippines/c…) And all this assumes that Duterte (and the guns he hires) have King Solomon-like wisdom and that heโ€™s never wrong about who he chooses to kill in the name of safety and security. Even with due process, the courts have been wrong. What more when the trial is done away with entirely? Besides, be consistent: remember when you prayed for Mary Jane Veloso when she was being falsely accused of being a drug mule?
*not to mention the fact that Duterteโ€™s “iron fist” seems to only apply to poor, small-time petty criminals with no access to lawyers. Big-time criminals like GMA get โ€˜house arrestโ€™ and are โ€˜innocent until proven guilty’ (but, again, I digress).
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3. I ask that you continue to be proud of what Duterte has accomplished in Davao. But I also ask you to challenge the idea that (1) Duterte did it all by himself – without the cooperation and willingness of the citizens of Davao and without support from national initiatives and (2) Duterte can replicate Davaoโ€™s success nationwide (where the issue is far more complex than just instituting a centralized 911 and eliminating petty crimes).
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Sabi nga ni Binay, โ€œI will make all cities as rich as Makati.โ€ We all know thatโ€™s impossible, so why is it so hard to challenge the feasibility of Duterte making all cities as safe as Davao?
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If youโ€™re going to vote for Duterte, then fine. We will agree to disagree. But please vote for him on the belief that he will grow up and mature in office. Vote for Rody Duterte 2.0, a candidate who can bring order and discipline while respecting our fundamental human rights. A Rody Duterte that understands why unapologetic womanizing is two steps back for feminism.
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If his most ardent supporters, donโ€™t call him out on his flaws, then who else will he listen to? Defending his flaws empowers him to say, I was voted in because of being a womanizer instead of in spite of being a womanizer. It legitimizes what is blatantly wrong.
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Iโ€™m not asking you to vote for Roxas, Poe, Defensor-Santiago, or Binay. All I ask is that you accept constructive criticism thrown your candidate’s way.ย  If and when you tick the box that says DUTERTE, RODRIGO on election day, please say โ€œyesโ€ with reservations.
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#Du30 #Halalan2016 #Duterte2016
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