Our favorite telenovela was interrupted for nearly an hour yesterday by an outburst from Senator-Judge Miriam (were still allowed to call her Miriam, are we?). I must confess (at the risk of being picketed) that I used to be an avid Miriam fan. She is, as youve all seen, quite eloquent. She used to have a terrific sense of humor, especially when skewering her enemies. Yesterday, some anti-Erap people were thanking the heavens that Erap defeated Miriam in 1998. Others found the Senate episode hilarious. No wonder weve become addicted to this soap opera.
What happened, Your Honor? Do you have to behave like Mike Tyson? How this crisis has turned our world upside-down.
Senator-Judge Miriams outburst eclipsed the testimony of prosecution witness Jazmine Banal and competed with the apprehension by government agents of the usual suspects in terrorist attacks in Metro Manila. And that microphone episode involving Senator-Judge John Osmeña and GMA 7 eclipsed the testimony of PAGCOR official Emilia Padua.
Such excitement. No wonder the most coveted theater seats in the country these days are those in the Senate gallery. Still, being a spectator at the Senate can be hazardous to ones health. Theres an upside to being part of the larger peanut gallery those who simply follow the proceedings on TV or radio. We can hoot, jeer, laugh until we get gas pains, stand up anytime. And we can change channels when the proceedings get boring.
And if all those controversial characters are in your office, wouldnt a top-notch defense lawyer at least wonder what theyre up to, since he might find himself implicated in something anomalous?
Why do we insist on the Presidents testimony? Because video, as the Clinton testimony showed, can be a merciless medium. It shows every frown, every eye movement, every twitch of the mouth. It shows a restless hand. It showed what Bill Clinton really meant when he said he did not have sex with that woman.
On video, you can come off squirming even when youre sitting still. The eyes, as they say, are the windows of the soul. Just by looking at someones eyes, many people can immediately tell a lie. Can President Erap look us in the eye and convince the nation that hes innocent, as he keeps insisting in his visits to poor areas? Or will he come off like another former US president, Richard Nixon, saying, "I am not a crook!"?
There are people who find it endearing that Joseph Estrada is a very bad liar, that he says what he means and means what he says. With Erap, his supporters say, what you see is what you get, no hypocrisy. If hes telling the truth in this impeachment case, he should use this endearing quality to convince the nation of his innocence. Face your accusers, Mr. President. Those in the peanut gallery promise to behave.