Pooled editorial: Bishops want the truth?
*Not with flawed “processes and procedures” in searching for it
The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) has asked President Arroyo “to pursue relentlessly the truth” behind the Garci tapes and to stop moves to call off next year’s elections.
Sun.Star publications, including this paper, have vigorously pushed for both actions. But for now let’s look at the futile hunt for the truth.
Congress hearings on the Garci tapes have ended with basic questions unanswered about the phone talk between President Arroyo and then Comelec commissioner Virgilio Garcillano and the election cheating they allegedly plotted.
The hearings battered the image of the President and the Comelec and shattered people’s faith in the presidency, the elections, individual privacy, and even national security.
But the truth?
No chance, if by truth the bishops mean the certainty, “beyond reasonable doubt,” of the charges of lies and dishonesty and the punishment of the culprits.
They failed
Even the move to oust the President by means fair and foul failed.
One can’t say the impeachment was absolutely fair but the President did, at least on the surface, what she could rightfully do: she defended herself.
A political device, impeachment obviously does not work against a Palace occupant who knows how to use power to protect tenure.
As to efforts to evict the President by people power,
the opposition must know by now that it would take more than waves of scandal to build up a people’s outrage that would repeat an Edsa.
A political theory is that the opposition needs to show an alternative to the Arroyo rule: leaders not discredited or recycled from the Marcos and Estrada eras. A condition that does not help any the search for truth.
The bishops won’t get the truth. Not if the truth is pursued, as they insist, “through structures and processes mandated by law and the Constitution.”
The procedures are flawed and don’t work against a president who digs in and fights.
On the other hand, using revolt or military coup could bring the country worse harm.
In a bind
The bishops are in a bind. They cannot publicly castigate President Arroyo without fueling the violence they seek to avoid.
Perhaps they can tell her, privately if it helps, that the country is hurting and she has a lot to do with it — and she can do a lot to stop it. (Sun.Star Cebu)
IN A NUTSHELL:Â* Â*UNFORTUNATELY, IT IS NO LONGER ABOUT WHAT IS RIGHT OR WRONG BUT WHAT EACH SIDES CAN PROVE OR PROVE OTHERWISE AND THE GRAVITY OF THE CORRESPONDING CONSEQUENCE TO OUR NATION AND IF THERE IS A BETTER ALTERNATIVE.Â* FOR THE MEANTIME, WHETHER ALL OR SOME OF US LIKES IT OR NOT, WE HAVE THE ADMINISTRATION.