WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
Corruption—what is it, really? The abuse of entrusted power for private gain. Bribery, embezzlement, favoritism, fraud—all of that. Its opposite is integrity: moral principle, honesty, consistency. Integrity stands straight; corruption bends, twists, distorts.
If corruption is anything that deviates from what is legal or ethical, then the question becomes: Who is the corrupt one? Where do we point the finger—and is it ever fully away from ourselves?
The Problem: Where Corruption Starts
Some say vote-buying is corruption. I say yes—and more. But to call someone corrupt, you must also ask: who allowed the system for vote-buying to survive? Who makes it easy? Who turns a blind eye?
Voters who accept money contribute.
Politicians who offer money are corrupt.
Officials who fail to punish wrongdoing are complicit.
We are all part of a chain. Even small acts—accepting small bribes, tolerating solicitation, buying stolen goods—make the culture of corruption more tolerant.
What the Data Tells Us
Here are some recent facts:
In 2024, the Philippines scored 33 out of 100 on the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) by Transparency International; rank was 114th out of 180 countries. That’s slightly worse than the previous year.
On vote buying:
In May 2025 midterm elections, 806 complaints were filed (636 about vote-buying, 268 about abuse of state resources).
On Election Day, PNP recorded 28 vote-buying incidents across the country, 19 arrested, 22 still at large.
Surveys suggest that 66% of Filipino voters expect vote-buying to be prevalent in elections.
So the corruption we talk about is not abstract. It is real, widespread, seen, expected.
Where the Enemy Resides—In Us, in Systems
That old line—“We have met the enemy and he is us”—is painful, but powerful because it forces reflection. The enemy isn't always the corrupt official with headlines. Sometimes it is:
Our silence when corruption is reported.
Our tolerance when small injustices seem “just the way things are.”
Our decisions when we vote for someone who promises much but delivers little, or whose path to power is shady.
Our normalizing of “utang na loob,” patronage, favors, shortcuts.
Corruption is systemic. It lives in:
weak enforcement of laws
loopholes that allow bribery and abuse
lack of accountability
But also in culture—our cultural blind spots about what is acceptable.
What Integrity Looks Like
If integrity is the opposite, then:
Being honest in small things matters. Not taking bribes, not soliciting favors.
Being transparent: demanding receipts, public accountability.
Choosing leaders who have track records, not just slick promises.
Saying no, even when “everyone else does it.”
Integrity is painful because it often means standing alone, taking the harder path.
Questions We Must Ask
How many votes are bought and sold every election? How many reports are filed? How many were prosecuted?
What proportion of complaints about vote buying lead to meaningful sanctions?
How does poverty factor in? If people are desperate, maybe vote selling becomes a survival strategy. How do we address that root?
What laws exist, and are they enforced, against those who offer, those who solicit, those who cheat taxes, wages, etc.?
Suggestions: Turning Enemy into Ally
Here are ways we can begin to flip the narrative:
Final Thoughts
Yes, corruption is pervasive in the Philippines. Transparency scores are poor. Vote-buying is common. We expect it. And until we shift the culture—until we stop buying votes, stop selling them, stop tolerating abuse of power—nothing fundamental changes.
We often say “they are corrupt.” But often, we are part of the corruption, or at least part of what lets it survive. To fight corruption, we must first look in the mirror. We must recognize that the enemy is us—our choices, our silence, our complicities. Once that is true, only then can we begin to build true integrity: honest institutions, fair elections, trust in government. And perhaps, then, the country can move toward a future where “integrity” isn't just an ideal but a lived standard.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com
09088877282/02-21-2026