Dr. John's Wishful Thinking

Dr. John’s Wishful is a blog where stories, struggles, and hopes for a better nation come alive. It blends personal reflections with social commentary, turning everyday experiences into insights on democracy, unity, and integrity. More than critique, it is a voice of hope—reminding readers that words can inspire change, truth can challenge power, and dreams can guide Filipinos toward a future of justice and nationhood.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Anti-Corruption Is Failing—Because It Targets People, Not Systems

*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM


I remember one late afternoon at a jeepney terminal, where dust, diesel, and survival mix in the air. There was a barker everyone called “Baldo,” kalbo at payat, but with a voice strong enough to command movement. “Cubao! Cubao! Isa na lang! Alis na tayo!” he shouted, urging passengers to fill the last seat. Kahit halos puno na ang jeep, hindi pa rin ito umaalis. It needed one last condition before it could move, one last signal before the system would finally respond.


Habang pinapanood ko si Baldo, napaisip ako kung ganito rin ba ang sistema natin bilang bansa. Laging may hinihintay, laging may kulang, laging may kondisyon bago umandar. At kadalasan, ang kundisyong ito ay napaglalaruan, napapahaba, o napapakinabangan ng iilan. In many ways, this is how our fight against corruption operates. It is loud, visible, dramatic, but strangely stagnant. We call out names, we expose personalities, we investigate individuals, and we celebrate when someone falls. Ngunit pagkatapos ng ingay, tahimik na bumabalik ang lahat sa dati. The system pauses, resets, and waits again for another name.


Because the truth is uncomfortable. We have been fighting corruption the wrong way. We focus on people, not systems. Tanggalin mo ang isang corrupt na opisyal at papalakpak tayo. Palitan mo siya at aasa tayo. Ngunit bihira nating itanong kung bakit kahit iba na ang tao ay pareho pa rin ang resulta. Corruption is not merely a personal defect. It is a structural condition. Nasa disenyo ang problema, sa proseso, sa discretion, sa kakulangan ng transparency at real time accountability, at sa delay na nagbibigay ng pagkakataon upang maitago ang mali.


It is like cleaning the floor while the faucet is still running. Hindi mauubos ang problema kung hindi inaayos ang pinanggagalingan. Hindi ito kakulangan sa batas o kakulangan sa galit, kundi kakulangan sa systemic redesign. We have become too comfortable blaming individuals because it is easier. Mas madaling ituro ang tao kaysa baguhin ang proseso. Mas madaling magparusa kaysa magdisenyo ng prevention. That is why anti-corruption efforts fail, because the system survives every scandal. When one corrupt official falls, the structure absorbs the shock and continues as if nothing has changed.


If we are serious about reform, then we must redesign the system itself. Hindi sapat ang exposé. Hindi sapat ang kampanya. What we need is a structure that controls behavior, not just personalities. One way to begin is to measure integrity itself. Just as systems like Google Ads track performance through measurable data, we can design a governance model where integrity is also measured, recorded, and evaluated. Every government employee, official, and elected leader can be assigned an Integrity Score, a dynamic and evolving metric based on audit results, project delivery, transparency, and verified citizen feedback.


Ngunit mahalagang linawin na ang sistemang ito ay hindi dapat basta ipatupad nang walang proteksyon. It must be governed by clear rules, multi sector oversight, algorithmic transparency, and a built in right to appeal. Hindi ito pwedeng kontrolado ng iisang opisina o gamitin bilang sandata sa politika. Instead, it must be designed to prevent manipulation and ensure fairness. The goal is not to create another system that can be abused, but one that is more resilient than the current one.


At dito pumapasok ang usapin ng incentives. May magsasabi na hindi dapat bayaran ang pagiging tapat dahil ito ay obligasyon ng lingkod bayan. Tama iyon sa prinsipyo, ngunit kailangan din nating tanggapin ang realidad. For decades, corruption has been financially rewarding, while integrity has often been unrewarded. Ang mungkahi ay hindi pagbili ng konsensya kundi pagwawasto ng maling incentive structure. Reward those people with integrity with monetary incentives, not as a bribe, but as a legitimate recognition of measurable and consistent public service.


Mas mabuti pang mapunta ang pera sa gantimpala ng katapatan kaysa mawala ito sa korapsyon. Kapag ang isang empleyado ay patuloy na pumapasa sa audit, walang anomalya, at may mataas na public trust, makatarungan lamang na siya ay mabigyan ng konkretong benepisyo. Kapag ang integridad ay may katumbas na financial reward, hindi na kailangang humanap ng ibang paraan para kumita. Incentives shape behavior, and when integrity becomes the rational and beneficial choice, more people will choose it.


Ngunit kahit may sukatan at gantimpala, babagsak pa rin ang sistema kung ang nag-audit ay may kahinaan. Hindi porke sinabi ng Commission on Audit na maayos ang audit ay awtomatikong tama na ito. Hindi natin nilalahat, ngunit kinikilala natin na may posibilidad ng kahinaan sa anumang institusyon. Kapag ang nagbabantay ay siya ring nakikipagsabwatan, nawawala ang saysay ng pagbabantay.


Kaya mahalaga ang counter audit system. Hindi ito para pahinain ang COA kundi palakasin ito sa pamamagitan ng independent verification. A separate and independent body, possibly composed of law enforcement professionals specializing in financial crimes, can conduct random reviews, forensic audits, and cross validation. Hindi ito duplication kundi reinforcement. It adds a second layer of protection, ensuring that audit findings are credible, validated, and not easily manipulated. Kung may nagbabantay, dapat may nagbabantay sa nagbabantay.


Kasabay nito, mahalaga rin ang tuloy tuloy na pagsusuri sa integridad ng bawat lingkod bayan. The Office of the Ombudsman can institutionalize an annual integrity aptitude assessment using digital platforms, randomized testing, and risk based targeting. Hindi kailangang sabay sabay ang lahat, kundi strategically implemented upang maiwasan ang bureaucratic burden. The purpose of this system is not compliance alone, but cultural transformation. Kapag alam ng bawat empleyado na sinusukat hindi lamang ang kanilang output kundi pati ang kanilang ethical decision making, nagiging bahagi ito ng kanilang pag iisip at pag uugali.


May magsasabi na kahit gaano kaganda ang sistema, makakahanap pa rin ng paraan ang corrupt. Totoo iyon. Ngunit ang layunin ng sistema ay hindi gawing perpekto ang tao kundi gawing mahirap, delikado, at walang saysay ang korapsyon. Systems do not eliminate human weakness, but they control its impact. A well designed system reduces opportunity, increases risk, and removes incentives for wrongdoing.


At syempre, hindi magiging kumpleto ang reporma kung walang malinaw at mabigat na parusa. Those who commit corruption must face swift, certain, and severe consequences, kabilang ang lifetime disqualification from public office, total asset forfeiture, at agarang criminal accountability. Hindi pwedeng malabo, hindi pwedeng matagal, at hindi pwedeng naaareglo. The system must make corruption a losing choice, not a calculated risk.


As I boarded the jeep that day, Baldo finally stopped shouting. Napuno na ang jeep at sa wakas ay umandar. There was movement, direction, and purpose. But our nation is not like that jeep. Hanggang ngayon, naghihintay pa rin tayo, naghihintay ng kondisyon, naghihintay ng tamang tao, naghihintay ng pagkakataon.


At kung ang sistemang ito ay mananatili at hindi mababago, ang problema ay hindi kailanman maaayos. Sa mga susunod na henerasyon, paulit ulit na lamang ang parehong kwento. Korapsyon sa bawat administrasyon, pagnanakaw sa kaban ng bayan, mga pinunong yumayaman habang ang mamamayan ay naghihirap, mga proyektong kulang sa kalidad, at mga eskandalong lilipas at malilimutan.


Kailangan itong tuldukan. Hindi bukas, hindi sa susunod na administrasyon, kundi ngayon. Kailangan na ng bagong sistema, isang sistemang sinusukat ang integridad, ginagantimpalaan ang tama, pinaparusahan ang mali, may counter audit sa bawat audit, at may patuloy na pagsusuri sa bawat lingkod bayan.


Dahil kung hindi, mananatili tayong parang si Baldo, patuloy na sumisigaw, naghihintay, at umaasa, habang ang tunay na biyahe ng pagbabago ay hindi kailanman umaalis.

#DJOT

_________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academicpublic intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, managementeconomicsdoctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

When History Rhymes: From Fear to Reform, From Silence to Restoration, From Control to the War of Information—and Beyond Our Shores

*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM


I have always resisted the idea that we are prisoners of the past, condemned to relive what has already been written. No—I do not believe that history repeats itself. But I have lived long enough, seen enough of human nature and governance, to understand that it rhymes. And in that quiet, almost poetic truth, I find both a warning and a burden.


I was born during the time of Martial Law in the Philippines—a period marked, in its earlier years, by stories of missing persons, fear, and lives lost in the shadows of power. My father, a man of discipline in the Philippine Constabulary, lived that era not as an abstract narrative but as a duty—one shaped by command, structure, and belief in order. As a child, I saw the uniform not as a symbol of fear, but as a symbol of responsibility. Yet as I grew older, I came to understand that beyond the order we experienced in our home, there were voices outside of it—voices that were unheard, unseen, or, at times, deliberately silenced.


And yet, that same period did not end in darkness. It moved—through resistance, through awakening, through collective courage—toward the restoration of democracy, culminating in its lifting. That journey from suppression to expression is not just a chapter of history. It is a lesson written in sacrifice.


Decades later, I witnessed another arc during the Philippine Drug War under Rodrigo Duterte. In its early stages, the campaign against illegal drugs was defined by intensity—daily reports of deaths, a climate of fear, and a strong assertion of authority. For some, it represented protection and decisive leadership. For others, it raised profound questions on justice, due process, and human dignity. Again, two narratives emerged, each rooted in its own truth, each deeply felt.


But like Martial Law, this chapter also evolved. By 2022, the approach began to shift toward programs such as ADORE—Anti-Illegal Drugs Operations through Reinforcement and Education—reflecting a transition from sheer force toward a more balanced approach that included rehabilitation, prevention, and community engagement. From fear, there was an attempt to move toward reform. From enforcement alone, toward understanding.


It is important for me to state, not out of pride but out of responsibility, that I am the author of ADORE, grounded on what I conceptualized as the “8 E’s”—a framework designed to serve as its foundation. This framework was never meant to weaken enforcement, but to strengthen it through balance—integrating education, engagement, empowerment, evaluation, and ethical governance into the broader fight against illegal drugs. Because I have always believed that a nation cannot arrest its way to peace; it must also educate its way to transformation.


And here, the rhyme becomes undeniable.


In both eras, the nation began with a strong assertion of control in response to perceived disorder. In both, the early phase carried weight—fear, loss, division. And in both, there came a turning point—a recognition that order without humanity, and power without balance, cannot sustain a nation. There was a shift—from intensity toward humanity, from rigidity toward reflection.


But perhaps the most striking rhyme lies not only in policy, but in information itself.


During Martial Law in the Philippines, narrative control was centralized. Information was filtered. Media was regulated. The story of the nation was largely told by those in power, and what people knew was shaped by what was allowed to be seen and heard. Silence was not just absence—it was enforced.


Today, we live in the opposite environment—but the struggle is eerily similar.


We are now in an age of narrative overload, where information is abundant, but truth is contested. This is the new war—the war on information. Social media has become the new battlefield, where narratives are crafted, amplified, and weaponized. Influence can now shape perception faster than facts can establish truth.


And just like before, the nation is divided—not only by ideology, but by which narrative they choose to believe.


This is the modern form of narrative control. Not through silence, but through saturation. Not by limiting voices, but by overwhelming them—until truth itself becomes difficult to identify. And in that confusion, power finds space to operate, just as it once did in silence.


But this rhyme is not only ours. It is global.


I am reminded of the Suez Crisis, when Britain and its allies moved to seize control of the Suez Canal after Egypt nationalized it. What was framed as a matter of order, security, and strategic necessity was, to others, an assertion of power masked in justification. The canal was not just a passage of goods—it was a corridor of influence.


Yet what is often forgotten is the consequence. Britain, despite its military capability, found itself overstretched—economically strained, politically pressured, and ultimately forced to withdraw under international and financial pressure. The cost was not only strategic defeat, but a blow to its global standing, exposing the limits of power when not matched with sustainable strategy and global legitimacy. It triggered fiscal strain and accelerated the decline of British influence on the world stage.


Fast forward to today, and we see a similar tension unfolding in the Strait of Hormuz crisis. The involvement of the United States in Iran and the struggle over control of a critical global oil route has once again placed the world on edge. The narratives are familiar: security, deterrence, necessity on one side; overreach, escalation, and consequence on the other.


And here lies a deeper and more urgent rhyme.


If the lessons of Suez are not carefully studied, there is a possibility—however distant, yet real—that history may rhyme once again, not in identical events, but in outcome. A prolonged engagement, miscalculated strategy, or failure to balance force with diplomacy could impose immense financial burdens, strain alliances, and challenge the sustainability of power. The United States, as a global leader, must recognize that dominance alone does not guarantee success; it must be matched with prudence, restraint, and foresight.


Thus, the warning is clear: the United States must avoid allowing this rhyme to unfold into consequence. It must manage its operations and approaches with clarity, discipline, and strategic wisdom—lest it face a modern echo of Suez, where power asserted without sustainable balance leads not to control, but to costly retreat.


What is striking is not just the conflict—but the narrative surrounding it.


Just like in Suez, just like in Martial Law, just like in the Drug War—there are competing stories. One speaks of security, necessity, and order. Another speaks of control, excess, and consequence. And the people—whether in a nation or across the globe—are left to decide which version of truth they will believe.


This is the rhyme.


From the Philippines to the Middle East, from Martial Law to the Drug War, from Suez to Hormuz—the pattern remains: power asserts, narratives justify, people choose what to believe, and only later does reflection attempt to correct.


And even within our own national experience, this rhyme extends further into the political transitions that define our collective memory. After years under Martial Law, the regime of Ferdinand Marcos Sr. was ultimately ended in 1986 through a people-driven movement that restored democratic institutions. There was hope—immense hope—that change would bring not only freedom, but immediate reform, stability, and national progress. Yet history shows us that transitions, while necessary, do not automatically guarantee transformation. Instead of seamless reform, the nation encountered new challenges—political instability, economic difficulties, and interrupted development plans that struggled to regain momentum.


And today, in 2026, as voices once again emerge calling for the removal or weakening of leadership under Ferdinand Marcos Jr., I cannot help but hear the rhyme once more. The call for change is not new. The promise that a shift in leadership will resolve deep-rooted national problems is not new. But history reminds us—gently yet firmly—that change in leadership, by itself, is not the same as change in direction.


There is a danger in believing that removing one figure will automatically produce progress. Because if the structures, the culture, and the deeper systemic issues remain unaddressed, then the outcome may not be reform—but repetition in a different form. The rhyme may unfold again: a change of regime, followed not by sustained development, but by disruption, delay, or even regression.


This is not an argument against change. It is a call for understanding change. Because true reform is not anchored on personalities alone—it is anchored on systems, discipline, continuity of good policies, and the collective maturity of a nation.


If we fail to recognize this, then we risk repeating the emotional cycle of hope and disappointment—different in actors, but identical in consequence.


As someone who has lived through one era and witnessed another unfold, I have come to understand that history rhymes because human nature does not change. The tools evolve. The platforms modernize. But fear, ambition, control, and belief remain constant.


And yet, I still hold on to hope.


Because if history only rhymes, then we are not condemned to its ending. We are given awareness. We are given memory. We are given the ability to discern—not just what is being done, but what is being said, and why it is being said.


So I write this not merely as a reflection, but as a reminder. The rhyme of history is not meant to trap us—it is meant to awaken us.


Because in this age, the greatest battle is no longer just for territory or power.


It is for truth.


And if we fail to defend it, then the rhyme will continue—louder, deeper, and more dangerous than ever before.


#DJOT

_________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academicpublic intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, managementeconomicsdoctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.


Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

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