MAN UP!
So, Alexander S. Cauguiran dared his rival for the
Angeles City mayorship VM Bryan Matthew C. Nepomuceno to make a “full
disclosure” of the whys, whereases, and wherefores relative to the P1.2 billion
loan the city government contracted for a sports complex, a new city hall, and
equipment.
Man up! ‘Wag
na pong ilihis ang usapan. ‘Wag nang idaan sa papogi-pogi. Lahat na lang ba nga
bagay, Let it BE?
Cauguiran’s are but the latest soundbites in the
current political discussion, but way above in intellectual decibel over the all-too
pedestrian Pogi ka, pogi ku, pogi tamu, or
the cryptic MAY isang salita ORA mismo
ang gawa that have so far surfaced in the campaign.
Whether sublime or ridiculous, election blurb and
blabber have a way of becoming classics in the course of years. As proof, not
necessarily positive, I share here this I wrote over five years ago.
A classic heard around Pampanga and
beyond – as it was aired over dwRW – in the early 2000s. The
sayer – a mayor known for his pugnacious ways and pugilistic means – reacting
to the litany of perceived anomalies and corrupt practices he purportedly
committed which his vice mayor was reciting in Perry Pangan’s radio show.
“No can do. Never say die.”
His yet another classical phrase, a
corrupted take on the Kapampangan “E yu agawa yan. Mikamatayan
tamu” and the Tagalog “Hindi n’yo puwedeng gawin yan.
Magkakamatayan tayo.”
The hizzoner shouting at the
onrushing wave of policemen led by the regional commander axing and smashing
their way into his barricaded office where he holed himself in for two weeks to
prevent the police from forcibly unseating him. This after the Comelec ruled it
was not him that won the election in 1995.
A case for Ripley’s: Our man landed
third. The second-placer filed an election protest but before the case was
resolved to his favour, he was incapacitated by a massive stroke. And
third-placer took the mayoralty seat, which prompted the initial first-placer
to protest too, and, after a rather long period of hearings, was declared
winner.
His outrageous murder of the King’s
language notwithstanding, the mayor could rise to some rarefied air of
eloquence when forced to defend some profitable enterprise, as when he was
threatened with charges for illegal extraction of sand in his municipality, to
wit – delivered in his unique way: “There is no quaaarrrying in (his town).
There is ooonly the scrrrraping of the volcaaanic debrisss from our agricultural
laaands, pursuant to our noooble oobjective to renew theiiir prrroductiiivity.”
For all his barako, some
even say – lovingly –pusakal persona, this man had a pusong
mamon to his friends and needy constituents.
Another mayor – Apalit’s Tirso G. Lacanilao,
God bless his soul – was, by, of, and in himself a classic.
Possessed of a mug he himself claimed
not even his own mother could love, he was ridiculed for being – political
correctness, now – aesthetically-challenged. His election posters were stamped “Pangit!” by
his opponents.
Right there and then, he found the
stock-in-trade with, and by, which he won his three terms, easily. He simply
capitalized on his ugliness, to be blunt about it.
“Sinasabi po ng mga
katunggali ko na ako ay pangit, na ako ay mukhang kabayo. Sinungaling po sila.
Kayo na rin ang makakapagpatunay na hindi ako mukhang kabayo. Mukha akong
tsonggo.” (My rivals say I am ugly,
that I look like a horse. They are liars. You see for yourself that I don’t
look like a horse. I look like a monkey.) So spake Tirso on the political
stage, so the crowd roared in delight.
Then his segue to: “Alam ng
buong bayan na matatapang at nakakatakot ang aking mga kalaban. Hindi po totoo
yan. Hinahamon ko sila ngayon, kung sila’y talagang matapang at walang takot,
sige nga, magpalit kami ng mukha!” (The whole town knows that my
opponents are brave and fearsome. That is a lie. I challenge them now, if they
are indeed brave and fearless, let us trade faces!)
A campaign rap was even composed for
Tirso: “Y Tirso mayap ya / Maganaka ya pa / Andyang matsura ya” (Tirso
is good / He is kind-hearted / Though very ugly). To the sound of which Tirso
pranced on the stage like an ape. Again, to the paroxysms of
delight of his audience.
A laughingstock, Tirso made of himself.
An undefeated mayor, the people of Apalit made of Tirso.
Tirso could have served the very
template for one other politician who never retreated, never surrendered, but
never won the seat he coveted all his life.
Instead of making positive his
un-aesthetics, he despised any mention of it.
The now-lamented Ody Fabian – God
bless his soul – was slapped with a case for grave slander after he
nonchalantly said in his radio commentary over dwGV-FM “Masuwerte
ka, mababait ang mga kababayan ko, at pinapayagan kang gumala man lang diyan.
Hindi mo ba alam, bawal ang pangit sa bayang yan.” (You are
lucky, my townmates are tolerant and they allow you to roam around. Don’t you
know my town is off-limits to uglies?).
They don’t make politicians like
these anymore. How I miss them!
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