Nitwits’ ride | Inquirer News
EDITORIAL

Nitwits’ ride

/ 06:45 AM December 28, 2013

Editorial and TV desks are swamped, on December 28, by features on practical jokes. The one fooled  is ribbed   Na-Niños Innocentes ka. That  jab  refers to the  feast of “The Holy Innocents.”

Liturgy readings recall  that  King Herod went ballistic  after the Magi, who found the Child and his Mother, didn’t report back, as asked. His centurions then  slaughtered boys, two years old and under, in Bethlehem.

“A cry was heard in Rama, sobbing and loud lamentation,” Jeremiah wrote six centuries earlier.  “Rachel bewailing her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not.”

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Bethlehem is dwarfed by the carnage that plays out daily here. Look  at  the “Under-age-5 child death rates”  (U5MR) indicator.”

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Two decades back 59 kids, out of every thousand births, never made it to age 5.  In 2011, only 25 under five died, notes Unicef. That’s a more-than-half cut in infant deaths. Take a bow.

But take a second look too. “UNDP Human Development Report 2013”  documents that the U5MR for Filipino kids stood at 29.  We are bracketed  between Moldovia and Uzbeskistan. In contrast, Malaysia’s slashed death rates to  6, Thailand to  13.

Odds are stacked against kids born in  penury cesspools. A child delivered in Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, once an Ampatuan clan feeding trough, has  four times less chances to reach the 5th  birthday than one born in Metro Manila.  Polluted wells to lack of medicine cut them down.

Number of Filipinas, who die at  childbirth,  quadruple that of Thais.  Last year, 15 mothers died every day due to complications during pregnancy and childbirth.  Many infants are borne by ill-fed mothers in job-short families.

Preventable ailments, like pneumonia and diarrhea, are main infant killers. Babies born pre-term — before the 37th week of pregnancy — are specially vulnerable. Almost a third of infant deaths stem from this one cluster.

“The first two years of life are a window of opportunity. “Nutrition programs then  have an impact on a child’s development, with life-long benefits,” International Food Policy Research Institute points out. After age three, the economic benefits dwindle to near zero.

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Lack of micro-nutrients saps intelligence quotients. IQs of ill-fed kids can be whittled down by 10 to 14 percent, an Asian Development Bank  study found.  This loss is irreversible. “Their elevators will never go to the top floor.” That’s layman’s lingo for permanently impaired lives.

These are preventable tragedies. Yet, there is no outcry. Why?

Because death stalks mostly kids in city slum hovels or farm shacks. Their burial shrouds are usually out of sight. As a result, these tiny coffins blend into the woodwork. The rich man who feasts daily never notices the pauper Lazarus scrounging for his leftovers.

Flabby responsible parenthood programs whittled maternal deaths too slowly. Responding to unmet family planning needs could slash maternal deaths by almost a third. More can be done to save mothers from premature graves or kids from being orphaned.

“There is unfinished business:” securing vaccines, adequate nutrition, medical plus maternal care, writes Unicef executive director Anthony Lake. “(There are) proven, affordable interventions. The challenge is to make these available to every child.” Indeed, “life is the threshold at which all other hopes begin.”

“After 25 years of pastoral and social involvement, I see the  Filipino family as very much at risk,” Jesuit sociologist John Carroll  notes. But the threat does not stem primarily from contraception. The main destructive forces are Infidelity, multiple families, drugs, alcoholism —  and sheer poverty.

The Bethlehem birth “has unavoidable social implications,” wrote Washingon Post’s Michael Gerson. “If the deity was born as an outcast, it is impossible to   treat outcasts in quite the same way. A God who fled as a refugee, preferred the company of fishermen and died as an accused criminal will influence our disposition toward refugees, the poor and those in prison”. As  Dorothy Day wrote: “He is disguised under every type of humanity that treads the earth.”

“Today, the   well-armed empire that judicially murdered Jesus of Nazareth exists only as an archaeological digs. The man who was born in obscurity and died an apparent failure is viewed as guide and friend by more than 2 billion people.  Our history, laws and art are unimaginable without his influence.  The author of this creed sought a different victory than politics brings — the kind that ends all selfish victories.”

Here, hard  cash is the sole yardstick of value. Doors open depending on your car model, checkbook or Virgin Island secret bank stashes. Ask Imee. “Net worth equals self-worth.”  A society that pegs the worth of a man on his pork barrel will betray the poor.

“Do you know who I am?” Mayor Jejomar  Binay Jr. denies he ever snapped  that to Dasmarinas Village guards who  manned a no-exit-after-10PM gate. The open gate was a block away. Yet, Binay, bodyguards who cocked their pistols, stood pat for an hour. His Makati cops hauled in the guards and kept them for four hours.” Checking their firearm licenses” was the excuse.

At a Canadian airport,  a junior cabinet member got  impatient when the long queue slowed down. He fretted that he might miss his  Christmas Eve flight. He became  angry, then enraged, and finally snapped at one of the attendants, “Do you know who I am?”

Without missing a beat, the attendant punched the public address mike’s button: “We have a gentleman here who doesn’t know who he is. Can someone please help him”

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Na Niños Innocentes tayo.   Translation: We took all  you nitwits for a ride.

TAGS: Moldovia, UNICEF, Uzbekistan

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