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.

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Political Self-Protection Through Narrative Inflation: The Case of Zaldy Co

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


The study of political behavior often feels distant until one recalls how its earliest patterns surface long before academic language develops to describe them. I first encountered the anatomy of false accusation, reputational distortion, and guilt displacement not in a university lecture, but as a high school student in an exclusive school for boys pressured into accepting blame for something I hardly touched. A Playboy magazine had circulated among a group of curious lustful creatures, passed eagerly from hand to hand in that reckless curiosity characteristic of teenagers. My involvement amounted to a brief, hesitant glance from a distance. Yet when the risk of punishment emerged, one of the boys—ironically the most engaged participant—rushed to “report” the incident to save himself. He framed himself as morally upright and pointed to me as a primary culprit simply because I was quiet, unassertive, and willing to sacrifice.


What happened that day became a personal primer in the political psychology of preemptive self-exoneration, a behavior in which individuals attempt to absolve themselves by controlling the narrative before facts can emerge. That high school moment, painful as it was, has returned to me with unsettling clarity as I watch the flood control scandal, where Zaldy Co has positioned himself as one of its loudest accusers. What I once witnessed in a school disciplinary case now unfolds on a national stage supported by media, institutions, and shifting political alliances.


Political psychology helps explain why Co has embraced the role of outraged truth-teller despite being closely connected to the systems under scrutiny. Goffman’s (1959) theory of impression management is instructive: when reputational stakes are high, individuals construct strategic public identities to mitigate potential damage. Co’s visible and repeated denunciations of corruption constitute a protective performance, enabling him to frame himself as a reformist figure rather than someone who benefited from the machinery that enabled the alleged anomalies.


This behavior aligns with McGraw’s (1990) findings on blame avoidance, which demonstrate that political actors actively preempt negative outcomes by shifting responsibility before blame is assigned. In high-stakes scandals, the pressure to engage in blame avoidance rises, prompting actors to deflect responsibility toward institutions, processes, or other individuals. Hood (2011) similarly argues that public officials under threat employ strategies of denial and narrative deflection to preserve legitimacy even when facing mounting evidence.


The act of enabling or encouraging the implication of the President reflects a more sophisticated political maneuver documented in crisis governance literature. Boin, ’t Hart, Stern, and Sundelius (2017) explain how actors engage in crisis exploitation, using chaotic events to reshape political power structures and public perception. When a political figure like Co senses institutional vulnerability, widening the crisis becomes a calculated means of self-preservation. By elevating the scandal to the level of the presidency, he dissolves any clear line of culpability and embeds himself within a broader narrative of systemic failure.


This approach resonates with Farazmand’s (2003) argument that manufactured instability allows political entrepreneurs to benefit from institutional confusion. Chaos creates opportunities for actors to rebrand themselves as truth-tellers, reformers, or indispensable voices. By expanding the scandal upward, Co transforms himself from a possible subject of investigation into an essential figure in a national drama.


Political communication theory adds further clarity. McCombs and Shaw’s (1972) agenda-setting research explains that repeated public statements shape which issues the public sees as important, while framing theory shapes how the audience interprets events. Co’s persistent framing of the scandal shifts public focus away from congressional oversight and toward executive responsibility. Once the President becomes symbolically implicated, the scandal is no longer an administrative issue—it becomes a question of national leadership, which conveniently obscures Co’s own proximity to the alleged irregularities.


Girard’s (1986) concept of scapegoat dynamics also helps interpret this behavior. Expanding blame to the highest office symbolically shifts guilt from individuals to institutions. The larger the target, the more diffused the moral contamination becomes, allowing political figures like Co to present themselves as corrective forces rather than contributors to wrongdoing.


Scholars of political transitions note that when actors anticipate potential changes in leadership, they engage in “pre-transition positioning,” crafting narratives to secure their future roles under a new administration (O’Donnell & Schmitter, 1986). In the volatile Philippine political environment, Co’s behavior reflects this anticipation. If public discontent weakens the presidency, he can later claim that he “warned the nation early,” allowing him to recast himself not as a villain but as a patriot. Should leadership change, he could be rewarded for his perceived courage; should the administration survive, he can frame his actions as principled oversight.


This aligns directly with Meier’s (2019) concept of strategic self-exoneration, where actors reveal selective truths or amplify controversies not for moral reasons but to mitigate personal jeopardy and restructure political narratives. By allowing the scandal to engulf even the presidency, Co ensures that any accountability process becomes diffuse, contested, and subject to political theatrics rather than rigorous investigation.


Beyond theory, however, lies the human cost. Many honest public servants—engineers, technical personnel, regional directors—now find themselves caught in a narrative they did not create. Their reputations and families suffer because someone more powerful seeks protection through spectacle. Their silence does not reflect guilt but paralysis, the same paralysis I felt years ago as a high school student being unjustly accused.


The flood control scandal is not only a governance issue—it is a human story about how far individuals will go to rewrite their role from villain to hero, even if it means destabilizing institutions and hurting people who never sought to be part of the spectacle.


And so, I return to that moment in high school—not as nostalgia but as a warning. A louder lie once drowned out my truth, and today, the nation stands on that same fragile edge. In a time when guilt often speaks first and truth is forced to whisper, the real test before us is simple yet profound: will we allow the loudest voices to define our future, or will we finally choose to defend the truth that has waited far too long to be heard?


References

  • Boin, A., ’t Hart, P., Stern, E., & Sundelius, B. (2017). The politics of crisis management: Public leadership under pressure. Cambridge University Press.
  • Farazmand, A. (2003). Chaos and transformation theories: A theoretical analysis with implications for organization theory and public management. Public Organization Review, 3(4), 339–372.
  • Girard, R. (1986). The scapegoat. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Goffman, E. (1959). The presentation of self in everyday life. Doubleday.
  • Hood, C. (2011). The blame game: Spin, bureaucracy, and self-preservation in government. Princeton University Press.
  • McCombs, M., & Shaw, D. (1972). The agenda-setting function of mass media. Public Opinion Quarterly, 36(2), 176–187.
  • McGraw, K. M. (1990). Avoiding blame: An experimental investigation of political excuses and justifications. American Political Science Review, 84(4), 1133–1157.
  • Meier, K. (2019). Strategic disclosure and the politics of self-preservation. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 29(3), 403–417.
  • O’Donnell, G., & Schmitter, P. (1986). Transitions from authoritarian rule: Tentative conclusions about uncertain democracies. Johns Hopkins University Press.

____

 *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.

Monday, November 24, 2025

Pilipinas na Nasa Gilid ng Bangin ng Pagpanaw ng Demokrasya: Pumipili sa Katotohanan, Konstitusyon, at Kinabukasang Karapat-dapat sa Atin




Habang papalapit ang Nobyembre 30, tila may bigat na bumabalot sa hangin—hindi takot, hindi din naman kasiyahan, kundi isang tahimik na paghinto. Parang humihinga nang malalim ang buong bansa, na tila handang humarap hindi lamang sa katiwalian, kundi sa sariling konsensya. Ang Trillion March Against Corruption ay hindi basta pagtitipon; ito ay bunga ng kirot na pinasan nang napakatagal ng mga pamilyang nawalan ng mahal sa buhay dahil sa baha, ng mga komunidad na ninakawan ng kaligtasan, at ng sambayanang sawa na sa tanong kung kailan nga ba muling magigising ang tunay na diwa ng mabuting pamamahala.


Hindi pera lang ang ninakaw sa flood-control scandal. Ang ninakaw ay dangal. Ang ninakaw ay tiwala. Ang ninakaw ay buhay. Bawat sirang tulay, bawat gumuhong dike, bawat pamilyang nagluluksa ay paalala na kapag ang katiwalian ay nagiging bahagi na ng sistema, ang mga trahedya ay hindi na aksidente kundi inaasahang kabayaran. Kaya mabigat ang darating na martsa—hindi lamang dahil sa galit, kundi dahil ito’y paghaharap sa ating kolektibong sugat.


Ngunit sa likod ng taos-pusong damdamin ng taumbayan, may mga aninong gumagalaw. May mga grupong naghihintay ng tamang sandali para baluktutin ang tinig ng bayan. May naghahanda ng manggugulo, may bumubulong ng kaguluhan, may nag-aabang na sumiklab ang alitan upang sabihing hindi na kayang pamunuan ng gobyerno ang bansa. Hindi sila nagmamartsa para sa katotohanan. Nagmamartsa sila para sa sariling interes. Para sa kanila, ang gulo ay hindi panganib—ito ay oportunidad.


Kapag ganitong umiinit ang sitwasyon, lumilitaw ang tukso ng mga “shortcut.” May mga nagsisimulang magsalita tungkol sa caretaker government, transition council, mga teknokratang ipapasok upang “patatagin” ang bansa. Isa sa mga pangalan na paulit-ulit na binabanggit ay si Ramon S. Ang—isang taong kagalang-galang, disiplinado, at mahusay mangasiwa ng malalaking korporasyon. Marami ang naniniwala, kasama na ako, na kaya niyang ihatid ang bansa sa mas matatag na ekonomiya at kaayusan.


At kailangan kong maging malinaw: Wala pong masama kung makita natin si Ramon Ang bilang posibleng lider ng bansa sa hinaharap. Noong 2022, aminado ako—umaasa akong tumakbo siya. Sa kaniyang talino, pananaw, at kakayahang humawak ng malalaking institusyon na may katahimikan at tapang, nakita ko ang potensyal niya para pamunuan ang Pilipinas tungo sa pagiging isang tiger economy. Maraming humahanga sa kanya. Maraming nagtitiwala. At kasama ako roon.


Pero iba ang paghanga sa paglabag sa Konstitusyon.


Ang Pilipinas ay hindi bansa ng shortcut. Bansa tayo ng batas. Kung talagang nais ng sambayanan na pamunuan tayo ni Ramon Ang o sinumang iba pa, ang tamang panahon ay 2028—hindi ngayon, hindi bukas, at hindi sa gitna ng kaguluhan. Sa halalan iyon magpapasya ang lahat ng Pilipino, hindi lamang ang iilang nasa Maynila, hindi lamang ang nasa mga boardroom, hindi ang mga negosyador sa likod ng pinto. Ang liderato ay dapat manggaling sa tao, hindi idinidikta ng iilan.


Kung ipapasok si Ramon Ang sa kapangyarihan sa paraang labag sa Konstitusyon, hindi lamang matatapakan ang ating demokrasya—masisira ang pangalan ng taong matagal niyang pinangalagaan. Sa sandaling siya ay maluklok sa isang posisyong hindi dumaan sa proseso, magkakagulo ang pulitika, mag-uumpukan ang mga kalaban, at dudungisan siya ng mga intrigang hindi niya hiniling. Hindi iyon karapat-dapat sa isang lider na nirerespeto ng marami.


At hindi rin iyon karapat-dapat sa ating bayan.


May malinaw tayong Konstitusyon. Kung mawalan man ng tiwala ang bayan sa Pangulo at Pangalawang Pangulo, malinaw ang susunod na mamumuno. Nasa mga institusyon ang sagot, ang pangulo ng senado, speaker ng kamara at chief justice ng supreme court ang nakalahad sa rule of succession. Doon nagmumula ang katatagan ng Republika. Doon tayo nagkakaisa bilang isang bansa. Dalawang beses nang kinuha ng People Power sa Maynila ang kapangyarihan mula sa Malacañang. Dalawang beses na napalitan ang liderato dahil sa lakas ng iilang nasa EDSA. Oo, makasaysayan ang mga iyon. Pero hindi iyon kabuuan ng tinig ng buong sambayanan. Hindi iyon representasyon ng bawat Pilipino mula Batanes hanggang Tawi-Tawi. Ingay iyon—hindi numero. Pag-aari iyon ng Imperial Manila—hindi ng buong Republika.


At hindi dapat maulit ang pagkakamaling iyon.


Ang Nobyembre 30 ay dapat maging araw hindi ng kaguluhan, kundi ng pagmulat. Dapat maging araw hindi ng paninira ng sistema, kundi ng pag-angkin muli sa dangal ng ating demokrasya. Dapat maging araw ng katapangan—hindi ng pagiging padalos-dalos. Dapat maging araw ng pagkakaisa—hindi ng pag-agaw ng kapangyarihan.


Bilang ama, guro, at lingkod-bayan, ang hangad ko ay isang Pilipinas kung saan ang aking anak ay mamumuhay sa ilalim ng pamahalaang may dangal at prosesong iginagalang. Isang Pilipinas kung saan ang liderato ay pinipili dahil sa tiwala, hindi dahil sa gulo. Isang Pilipinas kung saan hindi kailangang guluhin ang bayan para lamang magpalit ng kapangyarihan.


Kaya ngayong papalapit ang Nobyembre 30, may tanong akong iniiwan sa bawat Pilipino:


Hahayaan ba nating ang galit ang magpabukas ng pintuan sa mga paraang labag sa batas—o ipagtatanggol natin ang prinsipyo na bumubuo sa ating Republika?


Papayag ba tayong ang pinakamalakas na boses sa Maynila ang laging nagtatakda ng kapalaran ng buong bansa—o kikilos tayo para sa tahimik ngunit malawak na tinig ng sambayanang naniniwala sa proseso?


Ipagkakatiwala ba natin ang kinabukasan sa ingay—o itataya natin ang sarili sa Konstitusyong nagpoprotekta sa ating lahat?


Tinatawag tayo muli ng kasaysayan.

At sa pagkakataong ito, piliin sana natin ang landasing hindi dinidikta ng takot at kaguluhan, kundi ng tapang, talino, at pagrespeto sa batas.

_____

 *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, November 23, 2025

Blueprint for Integrity: How Councilor Vito Sotto's Green Building Code Builds an Honest Quezon City

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


One of the advance studies I accomplished is Environmental Studies, where my advocacy has always been anchored on Sustainable Environmental Development. I vividly remember writing one of my major papers—Green Engineering and Architecture and Its Impact on Socio-Political and Economic Development—a study that explored how the design of our built environment can shape not only ecological outcomes but the very integrity of governance itself. Reading the Quezon City Green Building Code of 2025 felt like seeing the academic ideals of that paper come alive through legislation. It was as if the theories I once defended in classrooms had finally stepped into the realm of real, transformative policy.

Seeing Councilor Vito Sotto as the principal author instantly framed the ordinance with intention and credibility. Measures like this do not emerge from routine drafting—they emerge from a mind that understands that sustainability is also governance, that environmental responsibility is also moral responsibility. His authorship embodies a kind of leadership that sees beyond the immediate and imagines the long-term health of a city. It is a reminder that good policy is often written quietly, but its impact echoes loudly through time. 

The ordinance itself is a powerful blend of science, planning, and conscience. In aligning with national laws on clean air, climate change, heritage preservation, and waste management, Quezon City shows that it is not merely keeping up—it is stepping ahead. It recognizes that cities cannot remain passive in a world facing rising temperatures, flooding, and environmental stress. The ordinance takes buildings—symbols of development—and turns them into allies of sustainability.

But what many may overlook is how this ordinance becomes a subtle yet effective weapon against corruption in engineering and public works. Corruption thrives where rules are vague, inspections subjective, and standards flexible. This ordinance does the opposite—it defines, clarifies, and standardizes. It exposes every technical requirement to the light. Everything from renewable energy systems to ventilation standards to building classifications to heritage considerations is laid out with precision (pages 6–17).  When rules are clear, corners cannot easily be cut. When expectations are strict, substandard materials cannot quietly slip through.

The ordinance also dismantles the culture of discretionary approvals—one of the long-standing roots of corruption in public works. By requiring detailed annual assessments for existing structures and technical compliance for new ones, it places the strength of enforcement not on individual inspectors but on the consistency of the system itself. Standardized inspections leave less room for negotiation in the shadows. They make favoritism difficult and collusion risky. They transform engineering from a playground of influence into a discipline of accountability.

Knowledge likewise becomes a safeguard. The establishment of a Green Building Knowledge Hub ensures that architects, engineers, regulators, and the public understand not just the rules but the philosophy behind them. When knowledge is democratized, manipulation becomes harder. When everyone understands what a building must comply with, no one can easily falsify, bypass, or negotiate their way out of compliance.

Even the sections on heritage conservation indirectly combat corruption. Historically, heritage permits have been fertile ground for informal arrangements because of their complexity. But here, criteria are fixed, documented, and notarized. The gray areas are replaced with defined requirements. The complexity is replaced with clarity. Corruption loses its hiding place.

Sustainable development and corruption prevention are not separate goals—they mirror each other. What is sustainable is, by nature, honest. What is honest, by nature, protects the environment. This ordinance creates a city where buildings are constructed not just to stand, but to stand with integrity. The long-term thinking required in green engineering naturally rejects the shortcuts that corruption demands.

As I read the ordinance’s final provisions, I realized I was not only reading environmental policy. I was reading a moral framework for public works. A quiet revolution disguised as a building code. A shift in how a city thinks about responsibility—not only to its people today but to generations coming tomorrow.

And at the heart of this transformation is its principal author, Councilor Vito Sotto. What he crafted is more than legislation—it is a blueprint for integrity. It is a city saying: We will not only build. We will build honestly. It is Quezon City choosing a future where environmental sustainability and corruption-free governance walk hand in hand.

This is the kind of ordinance that becomes legacy. The kind that children decades from now will benefit from without ever knowing the battles, principles, and intellect that shaped it. And for me, both as an educator and researcher of environmental systems and a believer in ethical governance, this ordinance is a promise fulfilled: that a city can rise, responsibly and honestly, when vision meets courage and legislation meets integrity.

____

 *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.

 

Tentacles of Power: Why Corruption Survives Even After Resignation

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



I once heard a story that never left me—a tale of a crime leader finally captured after years of evading justice. His arrest was hailed as a national victory. The news celebrated it, the people applauded, and authorities proudly proclaimed that the syndicate he led had finally been dismantled.


But as the months passed, a darker truth surfaced. Even behind bars, he continued to command operations. His minions—men he had positioned carefully in communities, businesses, and even government offices—never stopped working. They still followed his instructions with the same precision as before. The threats continued. The extortion continued. The invisible machinery of his syndicate remained alive.


It made me ask: How can someone imprisoned still wield so much power?


Eventually, I understood. The man’s freedom was removed, but his influence was not. His physical body was confined, but his network remained active in every office, every phone call, every quiet transaction carried out by those who stayed loyal to him. The head was jailed, but the tentacles continued to move.


This story returned to my thoughts as I watched the unfolding of the flood control scandal—a chapter in our nation’s political life where certain officials were compelled to resign. Their exits were dramatic, public, and seemingly decisive. The public was assured that justice had taken its course.


But as someone who has lived inside public service, as a former municipal councilor, as an educator, as a mentor to law enforcement officers, and as a Filipino who has spent years studying governance, integrity, and the anatomy of corruption, I know that real danger does not end with resignation.


Because in our government today, the same truth persists:

They may have resigned, but their tentacles remain.


I have seen how corruption embeds itself—not through one person alone, but through a web of loyalties, quiet arrangements, and appointments placed strategically across agencies. These individuals—the protégés, the operators, the insiders—stay behind even after their benefactors fall.


They continue to process documents.

They continue to approve projects.

They continue to whisper instructions.

They continue the shadow operations.


Public administration scholars call this bureaucratic capture, a phenomenon where institutions are slowly taken over by interests that do not serve the public good. But beyond academic terminology, I have witnessed this personally. Good people get marginalized. Honest voices get drowned. And corrupt networks thrive because they have been allowed to plant themselves deeply into the system.


This is why I cannot join in the celebration of these resignations—not yet. A resignation is merely the removal of the face of corruption, not the body. It is a symbolic victory, not a structural reform. The deeper problem lies not in the departure of officials but in the survival of their appointees, their operators, their tentacles—still embedded in the bureaucracy, still carrying out the same old playbook.


I write this with the weight of someone who has spent years teaching young officers that integrity is non-negotiable. That service must never be anchored on loyalty to one person, but to the nation. That corruption destroys not just funds, but hope, morale, and the future of generations yet unborn.


And yet, we again face a system where corruption regenerates like a wound that refuses to heal because the infection is still inside. Corruption hides in friendships, alliances, debts owed, and silent obedience. It is not the leader alone—it is the entire architecture supporting him.


So I return to the image of that imprisoned crime leader. His downfall looked like justice from afar, but it was not justice at all. The body was jailed, yet the syndicate lived on through the tentacles left free to operate.


Our situation today feels painfully similar.


Unless we dismantle the networks, unless we remove the embedded operators, unless we cleanse the bureaucracy not only of personalities but of the loyalties they planted, we are not confronting corruption—we are merely rearranging it.


And so let us face this truth boldly:


Unless the tentacles of these corrupt officials who resigned are finally removed from government, corruption will always be there to exist.


And perhaps what is even more troubling is this: even as they resign, somewhere in the shadows, quiet celebrations continue. The celebration remains with them, because for them, little has changed. ’Di lang sa kanila ang may beer.


In their hidden circles, the tentacles will raise their glasses and proudly declare:


“Laging may beer sa amin.”


A haunting reminder that unless we cut them off completely, they will continue to toast to a system they believe still belongs to them.

 ____

 *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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