Why we are activists: An open letter to all parents | Inquirer Opinion

Why we are activists: An open letter to all parents

/ 05:00 AM August 29, 2019

These are undoubtedly scary times. All fingers from our government and mass media seem to point to student activists as “salot ng bayan” at best, and recruiters for communist insurgent groups at worst. We know that you may feel that you have to protect us from the hands of our military, police and other state elements by discouraging us from taking to the streets… but we wish you would take time to understand why your children have become activists in the first place.

Your children live in a world where in each corner of their eyes, they are surrounded by the results of a society that has been divided by unbridled capitalism.

On their right, they are faced with politicians who think nothing of the people they are supposed to serve. Time after time, they are failed by those who’ve made public service a career, the primary trade of which is serving the elite minority: capitalists, hacienderos and foreign capitalists and politicians. On the streets, state elements roam around to kill unsuspecting poor citizens, whether they are drug users or not, under the name of a drug war that serves as a guise for its antipoor nature. In our beautiful nature, massive multinational mining companies suck the earth dry of resources at the expense of displacing hundreds up to thousands of people. And to top it all off, at the top of our political system, we have the most vile, misogynistic, elitist reptiles, such as President Duterte, who enable all these atrocities to happen by defending a status quo that is profoundly oppressive and undemocratic.

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On their left, they are faced with the vast ranks of the toiling masses, who in the worst of conditions have stood up and fought for their rights collectively in an oppressive society ruled by the few. From labor unions and women’s groups to environmental groups, LGBTQ+ groups and more from the oppressed sectors in society; animated by the dire circumstances  brought upon by the fascist Duterte administration, they defend their rights against all forms of violence inflicted upon them—whether it be black propaganda, psychological warfare or physical violence. Though they may be strong, they are outnumbered and overpowered by an enemy who has all the money and political capital to thwart most of their just and legitimate calls.

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OPINION

In a society of oppressors and oppressed peoples, whose side will you choose? This is the basic question that we as student activists are faced with every day.

We engage in student activism precisely because of what we’ve been learning from the very start: that we’ve been taught to love our fellow countrymen and stand for what is right.

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We may not ever come fully to understand each other, but we hope you understand that what we fight for as student activists is greater than us. We hope one day—once the struggle has ended, and the old world of violence, greed and oppression has been replaced by a world of genuine peace, love and empowerment—you will be able to look back at us, your children, and be filled with pride for what we’ve done.

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SAMAHAN NG PROGRESIBONG KABATAAN,

[email protected]

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TAGS: activism, activists, Inquirer letters, Samahan ng Progresibong Kabataan

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