Pubdate: Tue, 16 Aug 2016 Source: Sunstar Cagayan De Oro (Philippines) Column: Spark of Law Copyright: 2016 Sunstar Cagayan De Oro. Contact: http://www.sunstar.com.ph/cagayan/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2983 Author: Tibs Palasan, Jr. THE WAR PARADIGM OFTENTIMES, debates do not end in resolutions nor do the arguments meet squarely. The problem lies not in the lack of logic but on the different paradigms the reasoning proceeds from. Understanding the war on drugs require a proper paradigm, the paradigm of war. Over the years, decades even, the drug situation has worsened. Drug addicts took marijuana and cough syrups. They walked in the streets and their profile as addicts are unmistakable: long hair, tattered pants, skinny, and untidy. Overtime the addicts turn to synthetic drugs, most famous of which is "shabu." So too the profile of an addict: it has gone a massive transformation. For the untrained eye an addict maybe in your office without being noticed. They may even wear "barong" or coat and tie. Now and then though, the damage on society wrought by drug addiction is the same: rape, robbery, arson, and the host of other crimes. But the gravity of the crimes committed resulting from this drug menace has increased exponentially. The daily news of gory and sordid crimes hugs the headlines in the broadsheets and in the airwaves. To date more than 600,000 drug addicts and pushers have surrendered. The number is still rising. Of these numbers have not given up, we are sure that the crimes, ranging from petty to heinous, multiply tenfold. Crimes alone do not need the drums of war to beat. Law enforcement can take care of them. But the drug menace has taken another dimension. It has not only assaulted our peace in the community but even our democratic institutions as well. Through these years, in hushed and even whispered voices, we hear of politicians funded by the drug-lords, of judges and prosecutors under their payroll, and of police generals who are members of the inner sanctum of the drug ring. Yes, there were isolated raids when drug enforcement agencies were made to account for accomplishments. But those raids often netted only the underlings. What we ordinary mortals suspected all along to be happening in our society, President Duterte has verified the list of drug personalities. He must have been shocked that judges, prosecutors, generals, politicians, and even the lowly CAPFGU are involved. His heart must have bled that people he considers friends are on the list. When the drug menace has assaulted the apparatuses of the state, from the local government to the top echelons of the national police, from prosecutors to judges, ordinary law enforcement cannot anymore measure up to the herculean challenge. The drug menace has assaulted all levels of our society. It has become a pandemic scourge that infects even our law enforcement, and the justice system pillar. Left to the normal grind of low enforcement, the problem would worsen before we can solve it. We may even drown to become a narco-state. President Duterte has characterized the drug problem as necessitating a war. What we are witnessing is a war situation. The war paradigm calls for unconventional remedies. Truth to tell, you cannot simply secure search warrants to 600,000 plus who voluntarily surrendered. That would fill the court dockets. The 600,000 plus pushers or addicts are only a tip of the iceberg. The majority has decided to remain in the shadows. The drug menace is so massive. Faced with the enemies of the state, a president cannot simply wait for the justice system to grind and take its course. Unconventional ways must be adopted. Before we talk of our rights in a democratic state, we must first secure the survival of the state. What rights can you talk about if we become like Columbia and Mexico when drug-related crimes are a daily fare? What rights can we talk about if the drug cartel control our democratic way of life by buying their way out from their crimes, and by funding politicians during elections? Naming and shaming is an upfront to the reputation of the persons in the list. But if we come to think of it, what the president is doing is only to bring to the open the enemies of the state to that we can be aware of them, and fight them at every turn. Besides, tell me of a war where you don't identify the enemies? This is the dug-war paradigm of president. If you argue against it, then provide for the better option to solve the drug menace. That is the only way to kill a paradigm. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom