Wednesday, November 07, 2007

six paradoxes and a little candor

According to some pundits, the fabric of our society is about to be shred to pieces, even if there is no sign of any thread which can be woven to clothe us while we try to find a warm home henceforth.

Poverty and discontent are widespread, as is confusion. Let me cite some paradoxes:

  1. The economy is improving while average family incomes are declining;
  2. Average family incomes are declining even as more and more are going abroad to remit incomes to their families;
  3. Remittances are increasing while real incomes are decreasing;
  4. The people who go abroad are unhappy but continue to keep ties with the country;
  5. They continue to keep ties with the country but their families remain unhappy;
  6. They are unhappy but they continue to tolerate GMA.
More than ten years ago, a friend who spent more than six years in Moscow to study cinematography shared this joke with me:

The 6 paradoxes of socialism
  1. there is no unemployment but nobody works;
  2. nobody works but everybody gets paid;
  3. everybody gets paid but the shops are empty;
  4. the shops are empty but all get what they need;
  5. they all get what they need but remain unhappy;
  6. they remain unhappy but they all vote for the communist party.
The comparison might be a little stretched, but there are a few parallels. Let me be candid. I took part, as a communist then, in securing a scholarship for the friend above in Moscow. I have many unanswered questions about what may come next if we kick out Gloria. But I can't stand the lying that passes off as governance.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I can see the paradox in 5 out of 6 but no 4 is not necessarily a paradox. It's human nature, blood ties for instance if you want and nothing much to do with discontent specifically tied to the notion of nationality.

Anna

PS: I've just discovered that you were (??) once a communist. I personally know the CPP-NPA founder and although I was never ever a communist, he and I have exchanged laughs several times.

viking said...

you're right known knee moose, some paradoxes just are not, and that's another paradox.
met the guy only once and his delusions made me want to puke.
I was tempted to get off the bus in Utrecht on the way from Amsterdam to Brussels some time ago to honor him with black roses.

Anonymous said...

"I've just discovered that you were (??) once a communist. I personally know the CPP-NPA founder..."

"met the guy only once and his delusions made me want to puke..."

So you weren't a Maoist then, sir Viking? Hehehe, a Dengist? A Lavaite? Or a Trotskyite? Just curious, hehe.

viking said...

Karlo,

Was NDfatigable, then a 'Maoist' then a 'Muscovite' then muscovado. I still consider myself a 'materialist' and my delusions are a bit more palatable now. You?

I translated PSR into Cebuano in 1977, FYI.

Anonymous said...

but why do you seem to view socialism as something that is just of the idealistic mind? im no member of any of these people's organizations but i do find some sense in what they're fighting for (social security like hillarycare except for oil). marx wouldn't have been voted as the most important philospher back in 2005 (see his wiki profile) if only for the idealism his work, diba?

or are we doomed to pan to a side-left or right-for survival?

karlomongaya said...

I was once with the NDs until right after this year's elections when my mom asked me to help out in the family business due to the crisis, hehe. (So far, GMA's so-called economic growth hasn't reach our shores)

viking said...

anonymous, you didn't get me correctly. I don't think socialism is just 'of the idealistic mind.' In fact, I think very hard about practical socialism.

karlo,
Good for you. The NDs are too proud to admit mistakes.