Tks  Ricky  for your email,  Friends, pls allow me to share this to 
you.....patrick

--- On Thu, 5/28/09, Ricky Xavier <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Ricky Xavier <[email protected]>
Subject: Honest and dishonest graft?
To: "1 Vote" <[email protected]>, "Movement for Good Governance" 
<[email protected]>, [email protected]
Date: Thursday, May 28, 2009, 12:06 PM

Here is an article which may help us better appreciate the issue against Manny 
Villar and how as Congressman and later Senator he was able to improve his 
financial position. Is it ethical or unethical? What would you do if placed in 
that position? Great are the temptations when one gets into power. That is why 
it is said power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.and so we need 
to choose very well who we elect into power and the system that will protect 
and support those we entrust not to fall.
Ricky











    
            
            


      
      The Long View: Honest and dishonest graft

By Manuel L. Quezon III

Philippine Daily Inquirer

First Posted 00:35:00 05/28/2009



The reason bishops and farmers get hosed down at the doorstep of the House 

of Representatives, an institution that’s supposed to represent and not 

repel them, is a simple one: land remains the fundamental basis for wealth, 

prestige and power in our country. Landowners are in a position to ensure 

their interests are protected by lawmakers, many of whom are landowners 

themselves. But it might be inaccurate to simply describe the House of 

Representatives as a “landlord-dominated” body, since there are many 

lawmakers who enter office without being landowners and who may never 

achieve the extensive landholdings hacenderos possess.



John Sidel has argued that for politicians, ownership of land wasn’t a sine 

qua non for obtaining political office, which is often how the origins of 

our political class has been understood. Rather, it would be better to 

understand ownership of land as the fruits of political office; that from 

quite early on, our system as it evolved, allowed enterprising individuals 

to turn their professional credentials, particularly as lawyers, into the 

means to gain access to political office; and that once in office, control 

over not only law-making but the executive management and control of the 

many licensing and permit-granting powers of government, is what enabled 

officials to buy land, and make the jump from obscurity to high social 

status.



This is what he calls the “mechanisms for private monopolization of the 

resources and prerogatives of the state”—in other words, a kind of dynastic 

regime of fixers. You do not have to be a hacendero to sympathize with and 

uphold the interests of hacenderos, because it’s just possible that many 

lawmakers don’t equate land wealth with owning plantations, but instead are 

more interested in urban property. It might just be that in contrast to 

hacenderos who inherited land, the political class is more likely to 

speculate in land, buying cheap property and selling that property when 

development has overtaken previously worthless areas, turning the land into 

prime commercial real estate.



The American Tammany Hall politician George Washington Plunkitt, at the turn 

of the 20th century, called this kind of speculation “honest graft,” in 

contrast to “dishonest graft,” or simply stealing from the public treasury. 

Honest graft, he said, boiled down to this: “I seen my opportunities and I 

took ’em.” How? He gave concrete examples.



Say, he said, “my party’s in power in the city, and it’s goin’ to undertake 

a lot of public improvements. Well, I’m tipped off, say, that they’re going 

to lay out a new park at a certain place.” Armed with such insider 

information, “I see my opportunity and I take it. I go to that place and I 

buy up all the land I can in the neighborhood. Then the board of this or 

that makes its plan public, and there is a rush to get my land, which nobody 

cared particular for before.”



The result? The rewards of speculation! “Ain’t it perfectly honest to charge 

a good price and make a profit on my investment and foresight? Of course, it 

is. Well, that’s honest graft.”



Another scheme involves the right of way for public projects: “Or supposin’ 

it’s a new bridge they’re goin’ to build. I get tipped off and I buy as much 

property as I can that has to be taken for approaches. I sell at my own 

price later on and drop some more money in the bank.”



Plunkitt rhetorically asked, “Wouldn’t you? It’s just like lookin’ ahead in 

Wall Street or in the coffee or cotton market. It’s honest graft, and I’m 

lookin’ for it every day in the year. I will tell you frankly that I’ve got 

a good lot of it, too.”



Or take another instance: “I’ll tell you of one case. They were goin’ to fix 

up a big park, no matter where. I got on to it, and went lookin’ about for 

land in that neighborhood.



“I could get nothin’ at a bargain but a big piece of swamp, but I took it 

fast enough and held on to it. What turned out was just what I counted on. 

They couldn’t make the park complete without Plunkitt’s swamp, and they had 

to pay a good price for it. Anything dishonest in that?”



“Somehow,” he bragged, “I always guessed about right, and shouldn’t I enjoy 

the profit of my foresight? It was rather amusin’ when the condemnation 

commissioners came along and found piece after piece of the land in the name 

of George Plunkitt of the Fifteenth Assembly District, New York City. They 

wondered how I knew just what to buy. The answer is, I seen my opportunity 

and I took it..”



Here, in a nutshell, is how many politicians in the past made their money, 

and as far as it goes, there was nothing specifically illegal with this 

method. But even at the turn of the last century, Plunkitt tried to 

distinguish between what he did, from plain and simple graft. His, he 

claimed, was the “honest” kind, in that it required street smarts and 

avoiding outright theft from the treasury.



But the world has moved on since the turn of the 20th century, and just as 

insider trading in the stock market is now illegal in the 21st, what could 

be winked at in the past can no longer be tolerated. The bar for permissible 

official behavior has been raised higher and higher. What has become 

obnoxious to the public is the idea that elected leaders, by virtue of their 

insider knowledge, can engineer public works so that their lands are 

affected, either in that they get to pay themselves, by means of right of 

way, or be first in line to profit from the development that follows from 

public works improvements.



Read Plunkitt’s bragging about “honest graft,” if you want to understand the 

real issue at the heart of the accusations against former Senate President 

Manuel Villar. The issue is not whether real estate is, by itself, 

incompatible with his being a public servant, but rather whether he has put 

public works at the service of his pocketbook, directly, by means of using 

his influence to maximize specific profits from specific properties. 




 

      

    
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          Ehemplo is a call of people dedicated to live a life of honor, 
integrity and good examples. Ehemplo is based on espousing Ehem -- the urgent 
call for cultural reform against corruption.



Ehem aims at bringing people to a renewed sensitivity to the evil of corruption 
and its prevalence in ordinary life. It seeks ultimately to make them more 
intensely aware of their own vulnerability to corruption, their own 
uncritiqued, often unwitting practice of corruption in daily life. 



Ehem hopes to bring people, in the end, to a commitment to live the way of 
Ehemplo --- critical of corruption, intent on integrity!

          


        
      
                  
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