CFLMI
CFLMI
CFLMI
Pakikipagkapwa-Tao
Filipinos are open to others and feel one with others. We regard others with dignity and
respect and deal with them as fellow human beings. Pakikipagkapwa-tao is manifested in a basic
sense of justice and fairness and in concern for others. It is demonstrated in the Filipino's ability
to empathize with others, in helpfulness and generosity in times of need (pakikiramay), in the
practice of bayanihan or mutual assistance, and in the famous Filipino hospitality.
Filipinos possess a sensitivity to people's feelings (pakikiramdam), pagtitiwala or trust
and a sense of gratitude or utang na loob. Because of pakikipagkapwa-tao, Filipinos are very
sensitive to the quality of interpersonal relationships and are very dependent on them. If our
relationships are satisfactory, we are happy and secure.
Pakikipagkapwa-tao results in camaraderie and a feeling of closeness to one another. It is
the foundation for unity as well as the sense of social justice.
Family Orientation
Filipinos possess a genuine and deep love for family which includes not simply spouse
and children, parents and siblings, but also grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, godparents and
other ceremonial relatives. To the Filipino, one's family is the source of personal identity, the
source of emotional and material support, and one's main commitment and responsibility.
Concern for family is manifested in the honor and respect given to parents and elders, in
the care given to children, the generosity towards kin in need, and in the great sacrifices one
endures for the welfare of the family.
This sense of family results in a feeling of belongingness and rootedness and in a basic
sense of security.
Filipinos live very intimately with religion. It is tangible, and touchable --apart of everyday life. We
ascribe human traits to a supernatural God whom we alternately threaten and thank, call upon for
mercy or forgiveness and appease by pledges. Thus prayer is an important part of our lives.
The faith of the Filipino is related to “bahala na” which, instead of being viewed as defeatist resignation,
may be considered positively as a reservoir of psychic energy, an important psychological prop on which
we can lean during hard times. This pampalakas ng loob allows us to act despite uncertainty.
Our faith and daring was manifested at EDSA and at other times in our history even when it was difficult
to be brave. It is also seen in the capacity to accept failure and defeat without our self-concept being
devastated since we recognize forces external to ourselves as contributing to how events in our lives
turn out. The results of the Filipino's faith are courage, daring, optimism, inner peace, as well as
the capacity to genuinely accept tragedy and death.
Ability to Survive
Filipinos have an ability to survive, which is manifested in our capacity for endurance despite difficult
times and in our ability to get by on so very little. Filipinos make do with what is available in the
environment (e.g., eking out living from a garbage dump). This survival instinct is related to the Filipino's
other strengths -- a basic optimism, flexibility and adaptability, hard work and a deep faith in God. It is
manifested in the millions of Filipinos who bravely live through the harshest economic and social
circumstances. Regretfully, one wonders what we might be able to do under better circumstances.
Extreme Personalism
Filipinos view the world in terms of personal relationships and the extent to which one is able to
personally relate to things and people determines the recognition of their existence and the value given
to them. There is no separation between an objective task and emotional involvement. This personalism
is manifested in the tendency to give personal interpretations to actions, i.e. "take things personally."
Thus, a sincere question may be viewed as a challenge to one's competence or positive feedback may be
interpreted as a sign of special affection. There is in fact some basis for such interpretations as Filipinos
are quite personal in criticism and praise.
Personalism is also manifested in the necessity for the establishment of personal relationships
before any business or work relationships can be successful.
Because of this personalist world view, Filipinos have difficulty dealing with all forms of impersonal
stimuli. It is for this reason that one is uncomfortable with bureaucracy, with rules and regulations and
with standard procedures, all of which tend to be impersonal. In the face of these, we ignore them or
we ask for exceptions.
Personal contacts are involved in any transaction and these are difficult to turn down.
Preference is usually given to family and friends in hiring, delivery of services and even in
voting. Extreme personalism thus leads to the graft and corruption evident in Philippine society.
Lack of Discipline
The Filipino's lack of discipline encompasses several related characteristics. We have a
casual and relaxed attitude towards time and space which manifests itself in lack of precision and
compulsiveness, in poor time management and in procrastination. We have an aversion for
following strictly a set of procedures and this result in lack of standardization and quality control.
We are impatient and unable to delay gratification or reward, resulting in the use of shortcuts, in
skirting the rules (the palusot syndrome) and in foolhardiness. We are guilty of ningas cogon,
starting out projects with full vigor and interest which abruptly die down leaving things
unfinished.
Our lack of discipline often results in inefficient and wasteful work systems, violations of
rules leading to more serious transgressions and a casual work ethic leading to carelessness and
lack of follow-through.
Kanya-Kanya Syndrome
Filipinos have a selfish, self-serving attitude that generates a feeling of envy and
competitiveness toward others, particularly one's peers who seem to have gained some status or
prestige. Towards them, the Filipino demonstrates the so-called crab mentality (referring to the
tendency of crabs in a basket to pull each other down) using the leveling instrument of tsismis, intriga
and unconstructive criticism to bring others down. There seems to be a basic assumption
that another's gain is one's loss.
The kanya-kanya syndrome is also evident in the personal ambition and the drive for
power and status that is completely insensitive to the common good. Personal and in-group
interests reign supreme. This characteristic is in the lack of a sense of service among people in
the government bureaucracy. The public is made to feel that service from these offices and from
these civil servants is an extra perk that has to be paid for.
The kanya-kanya syndrome results in the dampening of community spirit and in the
trampling upon of the rights of others.
From the discussion of the positive and negative traits of the Filipino, it is clear that there
is much that being good in us but there is much that need to be changed. It is also clear that many of
our strong points are also the sources of weakness.
As a people we are person-oriented and relationships with others are very important part
of our lives. We are thus capable of much caring and concern for others. On the other hand, our
personal orientation in the extreme leads to lack of objectivity and the disregard for universal
rules and procedures where everyone, regardless of our relationship with them, is treated equally.
Our personal orientation leads us to be concerned for people and yet unfair to some.
Our family orientation is both a strength and a weakness giving us a sense of rootedness
and security, both very essential to any form of reaching out to others. At the same time, it
develops in us an in-group orientation that prevents us from reaching out beyond the family to
the larger community and the nation.
Our flexibility, adaptability and creativity is a strength that allows us to adjust to any set
of circumstances and to make the best of the situation. But this ability to "play things by ear"
leads us to compromise on the precision and discipline necessary to accomplish many work-
oriented goals.
Our sense of joy and humor serves us well in difficult times and makes life more pleasant
but serious problems do need serious analysis and humor can be distracting and unconstructive.
Our faith in God and our religiosity, are sources of strength and courage but they also
lead to an external orientation that, keeps us passive and dependent on forces outside ourselves.
There are other contradictions in the many faces of the Filipino. We find
pakikipagkapwa-tao and the kanya-kanya mentality living comfortably together in us. We are
other-oriented and capable of great empathy and yet we are self-serving, envious of others and
unconstructively critical of one another.
We also find the Filipino described alternately as hard-working and lazy. Indeed, we see
that we are capable of working long and hard at any job. However, also apparent is our casual
work ethic as well as our basic passivity, in the work setting, waiting for orders and instructions
rather than taking the initiative.
Introduction
James Q. Wilson (1968) wrote, "It is not money, or organization that defines the
policeman's job, it is the job that defines the policeman. In a similar vein, Peter Manning and
John van Maanen observed (1978) "Policing is more than a job; it is a way of life." In short, what
makes cops different from non-police is the job itself.
Five characteristics of the job of police officer seem particularly useful in explaining how
police come to be different from civilians: the uniform, the power, working hours, danger, and
dirty work involved in police functions. In total, these factors work to separate the police from
the public and to accentuate any differences.
1 .The Uniform
The uniform sets the officer apart, and it clearly identifies his or her status as a police
officer. It is not possible for the uniformed officer to be inconspicuous or to blend into the
crowd. Wearing the uniform marks the officer as a member of a particular minority group--the
police.
2. The Power
As previously discussed in earlier chapters, the uniformed police officer, with the
sidearm, baton, citation book, and other trappings of office, is a walking symbol of government
power. In most circumstances, both the officer and the citizen recognize that the officer is in a
dominant position and can do things to reward or punish the citizen. The fact of power means
that the police officer is not an equal of the citizen on the street. It changes the nature of the
relationship between the citizens and the police.
4. The Danger
Every day thousands of PNP personnel patrol our streets. While carrying out this
function, they deal with a myriad of issues, situations, and problems. They must also cope with
periods is which little is occurring, and constant movement and attentiveness are the rule in
responding to a call for help that may have life or death implications. This is true whether the
officer is patrolling large rural spaces or a small urban beat. As previously suggested, it is more
the exception than the rule for may patrol officers to have to deal with truly crime related
incidents, especially crimes in progress. Still, officers must always be vigilant and ready because
they never know when that “big call” will come that will require every ounce of knowledge and
skill to survive.
As participants in a very hazardous occupation, police officers have the potential for
encountering life-threatening conditions or the actual loss of life on a daily basis. Fortunately,
such situations do not occur as frequently as believed by individuals with little knowledge or
experience with policing. Still no situation should be taken lightly, because even the most
common activities could end tragically.
Spiritual Beliefs
PNP members are traditionally religious and God-loving persons. They attend religious
services together with the members of their family. During times of great personal crisis and
danger, they bravely forge on, confident that Divine Providence will grant them protection and
safety.
Valor
History attests that the Filipino law-enforcers have exemplified the tradition of valor in
defending the country from aggression and oppression and protecting/ preserving the life and
property of the people. They sacrificed their limbs and lives for the sake of their countrymen
whom they have pledged to serve.
Patriotism
The PNP members are traditionally patriotic by nature. They manifest their love of country with a pledge
of allegiance to the flag and a vow to defend the Constitution.
Discipline
The discipline of PNP members is manifested by instinctive obedience to lawful orders
and thorough and spontaneous actions towards attainment of organizational objectives guided by
moral, ethical and legal norms.
Gentlemanliness
PNP members are upright in character, gentle in manners, dignified in appearance, and
sincere in their concern to fellowmen.
Word of Honor
PNP members’ word is their bond. They stand by and commit to uphold it.
Duty
PNP members have historically exemplified themselves as dedicated public servants who
perform their tasks with deep sense of responsibility and self-sacrifice. They shall readily accept
assignment anywhere in the country.
Loyalty
PNP members are traditionally loyal to the organization, country and people as borne by
history and practice.
Camaraderie
The binding spirit that enhances teamwork and cooperation in the police organization,
extending to the people they serve, is manifested by the PNP members’ deep commitment and
concern for one another.
Misplaced Loyalty
Due to the bonds shared by police officers in their line of work, it becomes one’s
paramount duty to protect his fellow officers at all costs, as they would protect you, even though
you may have to risk your own career or your own life to do it. If your colleagues make a
mistake, took a bribe, seriously hurt somebody illegally, or got into other kinds of trouble, you
should do everything you can to protect them in the ensuing investigation. If your colleagues are
routinely breaking rules, you should never tell supervisors, reporters, or outside investigators about it. If
you don't like it, quit or get transferred to another assignment. But never, ever, blow
the whistle.
Cynicism
Sometimes, because of the experiences they acquire as law enforcers, police view all
citizens with suspicion. Everyone is a possible problem, but especially those who fit a type.
Recruits learn this way of looking at others from older officers if they have not come to the job
already holding these perceptions. Cynicism spills over to their relations with other people, since
they have found that friends expect favors and special treatment, and since police routinely
witness negative behavior even from the most upstanding of people. As a result, their work life
leads them to the conclusion that all people are weak, corrupt, and dangerous.
Rewards
Police do very dangerous work for low wages, so it is proper to take any extra rewards
the public wants to give them, such as free meals, Christmas gifts and free access to movies,
public transport etc. The general rule is: Take any reward that doesn’t change what you would do
anyway, such as eating a meal, but don’t take money that would affect your job, such as not
giving traffic tickets. One theory is that it is acceptable to accept any type of reward as long as it
was given wholeheartedly by an individual to a police officer. This rationalization was even
given a term: LAUGHING MONEY.
Due Process
Due process is only a means of protecting criminals at the expense of the law abiding and
should be ignored whenever it is safe to do so. Illegal searches and wiretaps, interrogation
without advising suspects of their rights, and if need be (as in the much admired movies such as
Dirty Harry), even physical pain to coerce a confession are all acceptable methods for
accomplishing the goal the public wants the police to accomplish: fighting crime. The rules
against doing those things merely handcuff the police, making it more difficult for them to do
their jobs.
Introduction
Gratuities have become a part of a police officer's job. Although the formal code of ethics
disapproves of gratuities, most people feel there is nothing wrong with businesses giving
"freebies" to the police officer, such as free admission to a show or gifts. Many officers believe
that these are small rewards indeed for the difficulties they endure in police work.
Many businesspeople offer gratuities, such as half-price meals, as a token of sincere
appreciation for the police officer's work. So what could possibly be wrong with them? Some
pundits once suggested that officers are incapable of distinguishing between gestures of goodwill
and attempted bribery, and most officers do not view the acceptance of gratuities as a form of
corruption.
How do gratuities undermine public confidence? Some officers believe that gratuities are
dangerous because what might start without intent on the part of the officer may become a
patterned expectation. It is the taking in an official capacity that is wrong, since the social
contract is violated when citizens give up their liberty to exploit, only to be exploited, in turn, by
the enforcement agency that prevents them from engaging in similar behavior.
However, others have voiced their opinions that the failure to accept gratuities is a mortal
sin in community-oriented policing. The verdict on this debate is still out on this one.
Conclusion
Even though many people find little wrong with a cup of coffee, it's difficult to draw the
line between trivial and more expensive items. As result, one might come to the conclusion that
it is better to call all gratuities wrong than to consider them all right. Another ethical principle
suggests that each should treat every other with respect as a person and as a means to an end. In this
regard also we would have to condemn gratuities since the police officer would be using the
businessperson to obtain goods or services more cheaply. For that matter, we'd also have to
wonder about the ethics of the businessperson in giving the gratuities to police officers. If they
were expecting anything in return, even the goodwill of the officer involved, they would be using
the police officer as a means their own end and thus violating the second principle of ethical
formalism themselves.
The words nationalism and patriotism are often used interchangeably, meaning one for
the other. There is, however, a wide distinction between nationalism and patriotism as political
concepts. Let us consider the following.
Nationalism, etymologically, means love, care for, preservation and patronage of one’s
native land and everything in it—the country of birth of a national, whether it be Filipino or
otherwise. To be a Filipino nationalist, therefore, the ethnological ramifications of nationalism
must all be present in one’s being. This implies a heartfelt dedication for the love, care, and
preservation of the Philippines and everything that is identified with it: the Philippine territory,
the inhabitants, Philippine sovereignty, its government, all things that represent and symbolize
the country; the aspirations, hopes, dreams and needs of the Filipino people.
On the other hand, patriotism is taken from the Latin term pater, which literally means
“father”. Patriotism is the willingness and determination to lay down one’s life for the
fatherland—the constant resolve to sacrifice one’s life and limb for the preservation of the State.
It is the total realization of that love for the country, which is nationalism. In other words, to be
patriotic is to be nationalistic. Conversely, one cannot be patriotic without being nationalistic.
In the Philippines, today, we are lacking in patriots largely due to the diffusion of Filipino
values, culture, influence of conquistadores, and the confluence of historical bad governance.
The Philippine State is in dire need of statesmen who truly understand the basics of politics—
politics being defined as the systematic study of the state—the state being defined as having four
basic elements: territory (the Philippine archipelago, its waters, subterranean shelves, etc.),
people (the Filipino people who are nationalistic and patriotic), sovereignty (freedom from foreign
dictates), and government (a body politic composed of delegates who are considered to
be representatives of the people to stand and fight for Filipino interests, dreams, aspirations, and
hopes).
For as long as our political leaders blind us of these things, for as long as the Filipino
people refuse to learn, for as long as we remain mediocre, for as long we could not change
our self inwardly, for as long as we refuse to change, nationalism and patriotism will only be
words in the dictionary.
THE FOUNDATIONS OF PATRIOTISM
One of the concepts I struggle to express is a clear description of the kind of sacrificial
patriotism found in the United States that runs through the entire broad population, versus the
pride-based (self-interested) patriotism in the Philippines. U.S. patriotism involves a willingness
to give of oneself to help the nation. It seems to me the Philippines does not have the same
passion to build a strong nation, or the discipline required to do it. I suppose there are reasons for
that.
I want to take a shot at pegging why there is a difference. What are some fundamental
differences between America and the Philippines as it pertains to the foundations of patriotism?
The Constitution
To be patriotic, you have to have a set of ideals. Something that inspires your passion.
The Declaration of Independence and Constitution of the United States were written by very
smart people with historical perspective and a determination to avoid the punishments imposed
on them by Great Britain. The punishments included autocrat governance, penalties (taxation)
without representation, and religious persecution. The two documents lay out important ideals
and the essential principles of law. The patriotic passion is found in all the opportunities
represented by the idea of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” that is the foundation for
U.S. laws.
Obedience to Laws
The U.S. cherishes its courts. The courts are the place where politics is supposed to stay
out, although it does occasionally sneak in like a thief in the night or germs on Your Honor’s
intellectual robes. The courts adhere to the notion that fast is fair, and fair is factual and built on
a pile of case law that argues out the most infinite details of right and wrong in America. Courts
earn their respect.
Warmongering
Americans don’t really like war but the world is a contentious place. The U.S. is actually
an ANTI-IMPERIALISTIC state, not an imperialistic state. She pursues hegemony, or an active
pursuit of her self-interest, not land-grabbing or domination over other nations.
Because of her wealth and the productive energies and passions of her immigrant peoples,
America is powerful at waging war. So she rides frequently to the rescue, or jams her guns and
troops into nations that are viewed (sometimes erroneously) as troublesome. Americans rally
around the troops, always. It doesn’t matter the political party. War unifies like nothing else.
The Philippines gets battered by this power or that now and then because the nation does not have the
wealth or the patriotic passion to pursue an international agenda. The Philippines is PAWN to the
moves of the global power pushers of any given century. Spain, America, Japan, China. You can’t rally
around submission.
The Philippines does the best duck and cover drill on the planet because her citizens are tired of
being rebels and slaughtered. And poverty does not an army build. Or navy. Or air force.
The Philippine Constitutions outlaws war as a legitimate means for the State to defend
Filipinos. Article II, Section 2:
The Philippines renounces war as an instrument of national policy, adopts the
generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land and
adheres to the policy of peace, equality, justice, freedom, cooperation, and amity with
all nations.
It is hard to rally patriotically around peace when other nations do not play by the same
rules.
What’s Next?
America and the Philippines are today strategically aligned. The Philippines does not
want foreign bases here (the Constitution bans them) and America does not need bases here. The
Philippines does not want China sucking oil out of Philippine territory and the U.S. wants China
to stop claiming Asian and Latin American resources as if China were some kind of privileged citizen of
the planet. Like enough of the emotionally nationalistic China bully-boy routine, this
snarling vampire sucking oil and gold and iron and rare metals from the planet’s battered carcass.
China’s is a patriotism gone Hitleresque.
It seems to me that, for the Philippines to rise as a modern nation and as an important economic
player in Asia, she needs to get her patriotic act together, where patriotism is founded on:
Passionate commitment to Constitutional principles of freedom and opportunity.
Commitment to the unified Filipino community that comes from giving enough of
oneself to obey laws.
Development of a patriotic conscience among the rich and powerful. Yes, and among
the main religions.
Principled and firm advancing of self-interest in international affairs.
If it were me, I would want “war-making” re-inserted into the Constitution as a legitimate
practice rather than rule it out. One can adhere to the preference for peace without stripping the
nation of its right to defend itself with guns and bombs.
One final thought. You don’t have to be rich to be patriotic, but you have to see a future rich with
possibilities. Subsistence seldom looks forward. Poverty looks as far as the next meal.
Philippine patriotism will grow deeper if the nation can climb out of its relentless
poverty.