The Philippines is a nation of star-struck ignoramuses
by Don Pedero
Philippine Star
October 29, 2000

Last July 23, I wrote about Nasty (short for
Anastacio), a balikbayan from
Los Angeles, who, while vacationing in
Manila, had nothing to say but
negative comments about the Philippines and
the Filipinos. The article
elicited a deluge of comments from our
readers. Though some agreed with his
curt observations, most were enraged at the
repulsive way he acted and whined.

For me, he was the classic epitome of the
"crow perched on a carabao,"
thinking and acting nauseatingly superior
just because he has become an
American citizen, inequitably comparing
everything here to how they are in
the first world. I was particularly irked by
his repulsive "know it all"
attitude and peeved no end by his irritating
Waray-American twang.
Those who have not read that article may
access philstar.com and click
archives, then select July 23 and click
Lifestyle. The article is entitled
"Little Brown Americans." As a backgrounder,
here is an excerpt:
The next day, I took them on a little city
tour and accompanied them to do
extra shopping at the duty-free shop. They
were to leave two days later for
their respective provinces (Randy is from
Pampanga, Nasty, from Samar).
"God, ang dilem-dilem naman ditow (it is so
dark here)!" screamed Nasty in
his characteristic Taglish slang, "At ang
inet-inet pa (and so warm)!

* * *

All throughout the day, Nasty complained
about everything. He griped that
all Filipinos he encountered were dense and
inefficient (I hope that didn't
include me!); that the traffic was horrendous
and drivers "drove like they
were late for their funerals"; that the
pollution from the smoke-belching
vehicles was irritating his dainty,
surgically-pinched nose.

He was disgusted that water closets didn't
work; horrified that there was no
toilet paper in public toilets ("God, how do
you people do it?" he
bewailed); petrified by street children
begging while soaking wet in the rain
("Where are the parents of these kids?" he
nagged).
He moaned about the proliferation of slums,
people crossing the
superhighways ("There should be underground
or overhead walkways for
pedestrians!" he demanded), the potholes on
the streets, the disgusting
garbage and filth all over the city, and the
annoying floods! And all these
he observed in just one day
Weeks after the publication of the article, I
took Nasty's silence to mean
that of contempt and anger. I must admit that
I didn't care because I was
really turned off by his arrogance. The good
news is, Nasty has finally
decided to break his silence and give u s his
side, loaded with a big piece
of his mind. The bad news is, he hits more
sensitive chords and it stings.

* * *

Nasty's E-Mail

Dear Dero,

My Zen master says, "Never fight fire with
fire." So, I sat in a lotus
position, imbibed the ethereal qualities of
cool mountain water and
stoically resisted the temptation of
answering back to defend myself in
rebuttal of your article. I kept quiet while
you and your readers had a
charlatan holiday, dissecting and fanning
sarcasm on my every comment about
your country and your people.

I am not mad at you for writing that piece. I
was never upset at any point,
even after your readers from all over the
world e-mailed in their
two-cents' worth. In fact, I found it rather
amusing and carnival-like.

I even felt happy that people still came to
the defense of your Philippines!
If you noticed, I now refer to the
Philippines and Filipinos as your country
and your people. Every time I went back there
for vacation, my
Filipino-ness always took the better of me
(blame those damn green mangoes smothered
with
bagoong!) and made me forget that I am, in
all reality, what you aptly
called a "Little Brown American." I have come
to terms with my own
identity- I am, after all, an American
citizen carrying an American passport!

What precipitated my quick decision to sever
my ties with your country
(aside from your ***** of an article) were
the Abu Sayyaf abductions (que barbaridad!),
the Payatas-like downslide of the peso (eat
your hearts out,
I earn sweet American dollars!), the "devoid
of conscience" graft and
corruption in your government (this has gone
on for the longest time-how
shameful!), and lately, the stupid
"Juetengate" and juicy but enraging
"Boracay" mansion gossips. With all these,
who would be proud to be a
Filipino? Besides, to tell you frankly, those
Erap jokes are no longer
funny- they are pass?and leave a bad taste in
the mouth and heart. No
Apology If I sounded brash and insensitive
with the way I threw my comments, well, I cannot do any-thing
about that because that is the way I am, and
I offer no apology. Here, in America, you have
to tell it like it is or you'll
never be taken seriously. I have learned to
drop my "Pinoy sugarcoating"
because out here, you get nothing done if you
are meek and sweet and pa-api.
Hindi puwede mag-Anita Linda dito!
When I commented about your pollution, street
children mendicants,
slums,potholes, toilets that don't work,
garbage, floods, and most of all,
the Pinoys' chronic lack of discipline, I was
merely putting into word
what I saw. I can't blame your being blind
about your country's situation.

My Zen master says, "One cannot easily see
the dirt in one's eye." I am
sure though that you are aware of those
sordid details, but have grown
accustomed to them (like most Manile?s have).
All the complaints I aired may have hurt
your pride but what I wanted you to realize
is this: The things I pointed
out are all symptoms of a failing, falling
nation!

Suffering A National Karma?

Could yours be a country cursed with a huge
national karmic debt? It could
be payback time, you know. Look back into
your history, look deep inside
your hearts-what could you have done as a
nation to deserve this fiasco you are in
today?
What you are faced with didn't just happen
overnight-it developed and grew
into a monster in the course of time. Deeply
imbedded in the psyche of the
Filipino is the amalgamation of the
characters and events that have
impacted your lives - Dona Victorina, Dona
Concepcion, poor Sisa as well the other
hilarious and tragic characters of Dr. Jose
Rizal... Stonehill...the
notorious gangsters immortalized by your
Filipino movies like Asiong
Salonga (hmmm!), et al...the killers in your
(I thought they'd never end!) massacre
movies...those cheap, appalling titles of
your movies...those staged
"religious miracles" that your naive masses
believed...family men with pushy
queridas (mistresses)...your crooked
politicians, undependable police officers
and greedy customs collectors...your
bribe-hungry court
judges...Imeldific, gloriously smiling and
crying at the same time,
bejeweled. (How very Fellini!)

What you are is the sum total of your
history, your heritage and
culture,your education, the crap that your
press sensationalizes, the bad
icons that your movies glorify, the
artificial values your advertising
extols, the bad examples your leaders and
role models project. What you
feed your country's mind is what it becomes.
You have become the ugly monster
that you've created. You are now crying all
the tears your sickeningly
sentimental movies wailed out for years and
years! Your Biggest Fault If
there is one thing that comes to mind, I
think your biggest fault would be
your individual greed. "Ako muna!" seems to
be the national mantra. The
trouble is, very few people think for the
common good in a deplorable "to
each his own kurakot" festival. Coupled by
your crab mentality of pushing
down others, this can be fatal. You think
barangay, not national. Hello,
everybody else around the world is thinking
global! Europe is unshackling
her national boundaries while you are
building fences around your nipa huts.
Do yourselves a favor and look at your nation
as a ship. All of you are in
it and it is sinking! Realize your
oneness-what hurts your brother hurts
you, too. Think about the future of your
children and the succeeding
generations, and do something about it quick
before your poor little banca
plunges forever into the irretrievable depths
of despair.

Star-Struck Nation

You are a nation of star-struck ignoramuses.
You are easily awed by your
movie stars who are usually nothing but
uneducated, aquiline-nosed and
light-skinned ******** picked up from some
gutter somewhere. I have seen
what these artistas illusionadas can get away
with. They just flash their
capped-tooth smiles and policemen let them
get away with traffic violations; they bat
their false
eyelashes and customs officers impose no duty
on their suspicious balikbayan boxes.

Worst of all, with the Filipino movie
industry taking a nosedive, hordes of
actors and show personalities went into
politics. It is, as they say, the
next best "racket"-there is more money to be
made in the politicking
business than in show business! (And what is
this I hear that in the coming
elections, more are jumping into the arena?
Mag-hara-kiri na kayo!) How can
you expect these comedians and actors, who
only know how to take directions
from their directors, to direct your nation?
For them,politics will just be
an "act". No big surprise here, for they are
mere actors with no original
scripts to speak, no original visions to
share. So what can you expect but
a government that is a comedy of errors.
Serves you and your star- struck nation
right!
My Zen master says, "Give unto Caesar what is
due to Caesar, but keep
Charlie Chaplin on the silver screen to make
us laugh." To survive, you
must teach your citizenry to say no to three
things - no to drugs, no to
stealing and graft and corruption, and no to
artistas in politics. I hope you've
learned your lesson by now. (Yours is the
only country where Mexican soap
stars are received like royalty in the
presidential palace. How shoddy! God
forbid-Fernando Carrillo might end up being
your next president. At least
he has great abs and doesn't wobble like a
penguin when he walks!)
For those artistas who honestly believe that
they can make a positive
difference in the Filipino masses' life, they
must first study law,
business and public administration, and
immerse themselves in the life and passion
of Mother Teresa. Politics is not an art for
dilettante artistas to dabble in.
It is called "Political Science," hello?!

Educate Your Masses

Educate the masses - especially your
electorate. What you need is an
intelligent vote aside from, of course,
intelligent candidates. The
University of San Carlos in Cebu City, founde

d in 1595, and the University of Santo Tomas
in Manila, established in
1611, are the oldest universities in Asia,
and are even older than Harvard.
But the standard of Pinoy education has
deteriorated so much that the
Philippines ranks among the poorest in the
educational hierarchy of Asia.
Education, education, education-that's what
you need in this age of
information, information, information.
If all your social, religious and political
sectors don't sit down now and
decide to take the Right Way, the Philippines
and your children's children
will be grand losers in the worldwide rush to
the future. Education is one
sure way to salvation. Teach what is right,
good, beautiful and beneficial.
Downplay all negativity if you cannot
eliminate it altogether.

The Ideal President

I've got news for you. (As if you didn't
already know.) No matter whom you
put up there as your leader or president, it
will be the same banana. Even
a holy man can turn into another J. E. (Judas
Escario t) for a few pieces of silver.
Kumpares, alalays, relatives and cronies will
encrust like flies
and maggots on his cordon sanitaire. And it
will be the same despicable "Sa
amin na 'to!" hullabaloo all over again.

Take an advice from Aling Epang: "Pumili ng
matanda, mayaman, mabait, at
madaling mamatay." Get a president who is old
- so that he is full of
wisdom, rich - so he won't need to steal more
money, goodhearted - so he
will render heartfelt service to his people,
and is in the sunset of his
life - so that he will think of nothing but
gaining good points to present
when he meets his Creator. And may I add: At
iisa lang ang pamilya! This
is, of course, asking for the moon. Just pray
fervently for an intelligent
leader with a pure heart who genuinely loves
the common tao!
Magpakatotoo Kayo! Wake up and look at the
real you. Enough with looking at
your reflection in glorious,
self-embellishing mirrors. The tropical sun
can play tricks, you know. Do not wait for
darkness to fall before you take
that much-needed long, hard look at your real
situation. Magpakatotoo kayo, ano?
This isn't a wake-up call-it is the final
alarm!

Save the ship while you still can. Don't wait
till your people have no more
dreams left to hang on to, no more hope to
sustain their broken spirits. I
came home, spent my penny-pinched savings so
that even in the minutest way
I could help your bruised economy. Your
politicians sit on their fat,farting
butts and get balatos (kuno!) in the
millions. Receivers are as guilty as
the givers. Now, tell me, who is really
nasty?
I Have Made My Decision; So Should You.

My Zen master says, "Life is all about
decisions, not choices." I have made
a decision which I know will be very hard for
me to keep- You will never
hear from me again (not in this vein) and I
will not even think of visiting
or buwisiting your Manila ever. This is my
way of letting you know that I
have given up on you. Bahala na kayo! Only
you can help yourselves because
at the stage you are in, nobody would want to
help you. My Zen master says,
"You have to fall to learn to rise again."
How much lower do you want to go?

Anyway, regarding the Philippines as a
tourist destination, you have a lot
of cleaning up and face-lifting to do before
foreigners would dare go to
your islands again. The Abu Sayyaf episode
has done your tourism industry
more damage than you could ever imagine, and
it will take a long time before
the world forgets. (By the way, your tourism
projects are lusterless and
have no global impact. If you want real
business, spruce up your
infrastructure and do aggressive marketing on
the World Wide Web!)
Of course, I would gladly reverse my decision
if someone offered me
exclusive lordship over lotto, bingo,
jueteng, pintakasi and the jai
alai.Think about it: this will be to your
advantage because I never give
tong or blood commission to anyone! (If only
your president used the
millions he received from those gambling
lords to build homes for the
masses, you wouldn't have any more squatters.
Huling hirit: defrost those
Marcos billions, pay off some debt, place the
rest in high-yield
investments, feed your hungry, and spread
bounty and joy to every Filipino!
Are you stupid or what? - That's your money
sucked from the blood of your people!)
I have made my decision, now make yours. I
would hate for the day to come
when I'd have to say, "I told you so!" Good
luck! (You need it.)

An ex-Filipino,
J. Anastasio "Nasty"

P. S.          My Zen master says, "Vox
populi is not always the voice of God."
P. P. S.      Come over to L.A and I'll show
you a great time!
P. P. P. S.   Our friend Randy says hello! We
will be going to Vancouver to
                 feast our eyes on the colors
of autumn. Wish you could join us.
P. P. P. P. S. The new Miss America, Angela
Perez Baraquio, is of Filipino
                     ancestry. Dero, her
parents hail from Pangasinan just like you!
But keep in
                     mind that she is an
American (in case some wise fools over there
claim her
                     to be Filipino like they
always do whenever someone becomes
successful).
                       Wait for the girl to
say it- don't put words in her mouth!
P. P. P. P. P. S.      Mabuhay kayo (SANA)!
P. P. P. P. P. P. S.   Sa totoo lang, MAGDUSA
KAYONG LAHAT! (Don't you just love my
``````````````Waray-Kano accent?) He-he-he!
- Same

* * *

My Short Reply

Dear Nasty,

Thanks for your e-mail. I swear you sort of
stole the words from right
under my tongue. Now, I am utterly
speechless.
Send my regards to Randy. Wishing you the
best!

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