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.

Friday, December 19, 2025

Walang Takot, Walang Hanggan: Isang Lipunang Natutong Masanay sa Korupsiyon

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



Isinusulat ko ito hindi dahil wala na akong pag-asa, kundi dahil ayokong manahimik habang unti-unting namamanhid ang ating lipunan. Sa bawat pagbukas ko ng balita, sa bawat ulat na may kasamang mga salitang “exposed,” “under investigation,” at “may nakulong na,” iisa pa rin ang pakiramdam na bumabalik sa akin—walang pagbabago. Parang umiikot lang tayo sa iisang bangin, paulit-ulit na nadudulas, paulit-ulit na nangangakong hindi na mauulit, pero laging bumabalik sa simula.


Nandiyan na ang flood control scandal. Hindi na ito lihim. Hindi na ito bulungan sa likod ng mga pinto ng kapitolyo. May mga imbestigasyon na, may mga dokumentong lumabas, at may mga opisyal ng DPWH sa Mindoro na nakulong na dahil sa hayagang korupsiyon sa mga insertions ng proyekto—mga linyang tahimik na isinisingit sa badyet, parang maliliit na sugat na hindi agad ramdam, pero unti-unting inuubos ang katawan ng bayan. Sa papel, may galaw ang sistema. May aksyon. May hustisya. Ngunit sa aktuwal na buhay, sa mga probinsya at siyudad, tila wala pa ring takot.


Nakakalungkot dahil kahit lantad na ang pandarambong, kahit alam na natin kung paano ninanakaw ang bilyon-bilyong pondo ng bayan, tila tuloy pa rin ang loob ng ilan na magnakaw. Parang walang aral. Parang walang konsensya. May mga politiko na tila sanay na sanay na sa ganitong kalakaran—ang mang-scam, ang manuhol, ang magkunwaring may kapangyarihan. May mga kontratistang kabisado na kung kanino lalapit at magkano ang katumbas ng katahimikan. May mga “government pictures” na ginagawang puhunan—isang logo, isang ID, isang pekeng papel—sapat na para manloko ng kapwa.


Mas masakit isipin na marami sa kanila ang hindi natatakot. Hindi sa batas. Hindi sa Diyos. Hindi sa sariling konsensya. They scam people in broad daylight. They pretend to be powerful. They usurp authority they never truly earned. Isang selfie lang kasama ang pangulo o isang mataas na opisyal—bigla na silang nagiging “malakas.” Bigla na silang nagiging untouchable. At may mga Pilipinong naloloko pa rin—dahil sa matagal nang kultura ng paghanga sa kapangyarihan, dahil sa takot na kwestyunin ang mukhang may koneksyon.


At minsan, may bumubulong na tanong sa isip ng marami: nabuwag nga ba talaga ang sindikato sa DPWH, o pinalitan lang ito ng panibagong sindikato? May mga nahuhuli, may mga napaparusahan, pero sa ilalim ng lahat ng ito, may pangambang ang nangyayari ay simpleng pagpapalit lamang ng mga pangalan, hindi ng sistema. Para bang ang upuan ay pareho pa rin—nag-iiba lang ang nakaupo. At kung ganito ang mangyayari, paulit-ulit lang tayong iikot sa parehong trahedya. Kaya mahalagang makita ng taumbayan hindi lang ang pagbagsak ng mga personalidad, kundi ang sinceridad ng reporma, ang tunay na pagbabago, at ang malinaw na transparency sa bawat hakbang. Dahil kung hindi ito mararamdaman at makikita, babalik at babalik lang ang parehong kuwento—parehong galit, parehong pangako, parehong pagkabigo.


Ngunit ang mas masakit dito ay hindi lang ang korupsiyon—kundi ang katotohanang nais nating linisin ang sistema, pero tila wala tayong maipapalit. Paano nga ba lilinisin ang pamahalaan kung ang ipapalit ay isa ring magnanakaw o kurakot? Paano aayos ang lipunan kung ang mga naghahangad mamuno ay pare-parehong galing sa iisang hulma—parehong pangalan, parehong galawan, parehong kasalanan? Wala na bang iba? Wala bang multiple choice? None of the above?


Sa dami-dami ng Pilipino, napakaraming maaaring pagpilian. May mga taong may prinsipyo. May mga taong may integridad. May mga taong malinis ang hangarin para sa bayan. Ngunit sila’y nananahimik—nasa academe, nasa propesyon, nasa komunidad—piniling umiwas sa maruming pulitika dahil alam nilang sisirain sila ng sistema bago pa sila makapasok. At habang sila’y tahimik, sila-sila pa rin ang nasa poder ng pamahalaan.


Sa dami ng ganitong sitwasyon, maraming sumisigaw ng pagbabago. People Power Revolution daw. Pero ilan na ba ang People Power na ating dinaanan? At ano ang naging bunga? Sa halip na kaayusan, mas naging magulo ang lipunan. Sa halip na pagbabago, mas dumami pa ang magnanakaw. Mas naging tuso. Mas naging garapal. Maraming sumisigaw ng pagbabago, ngunit sa totoo lang, hindi pagbabago ang nais—nais lamang pumuwesto, para sila naman ang magnakaw.


Bakit ganyan? Dahil ayaw nating harapin ang masakit na katotohanan: ang problema ay hindi lang ang lider—ang problema ay ang sistemang paulit-ulit nating pinapayagan. Ang solusyon ay hindi sigaw sa lansangan lang, kundi paggising ng isipan. Hindi na sapat ang People Power sa panahong ang galit ay madaling manipulahin at ang rebolusyon ay nagiging shortcut sa kapangyarihan.


Ang tunay na kapangyarihan ay naroon pa rin—sa pagpili. Sa balota. Sa pag-aaral. Sa pagiging mapanuri. Kailangan nating gamitin ang isip, hindi lang ang emosyon. Hindi na puwedeng tatanggap ka ng pera para bumoto. Hindi na puwedeng maging panatiko dahil minsan kang natulungan. Hindi na puwedeng ang tanong ay “Ano ang makukuha ko ngayon?” kundi “Ano ang mangyayari sa bayan bukas?”


Isipin natin ang bayan. Isipin natin ang kinabukasan. Isipin natin ang pamilya at ang mga anak na magmamana ng mga desisyong ginagawa natin ngayon. Huwag nating sukatin ang lider sa kung magkano ang ibinigay niya, kundi sa kung anong uri ng bansa ang kaya niyang itayo. Dahil ang boto ay hindi pabuya—ito ay pananagutan.


Nakikita ko rin naman ang intensyon ng pamahalaan na linisin ang lipunan. Hindi ko iyon itinatanggi. May mga operasyon, may mga pag-aresto, may mga pangalang inihahain sa publiko bilang patunay na may ginagawa. Ngunit tila kulang pa ang bigat. Dahil kung ang mensaheng nararamdaman ng tao ay “may nakukulong, pero may mas marami ang nakakalusot,” ang epekto nito ay hindi takot kundi kapal ng mukha. Nagiging sugal ang korupsiyon—kung malas ka, kulong; kung swerte ka, yaman at impluwensiya.


Ang tunay na trahedya rito ay hindi lamang ang perang ninakaw. Ang mas malalim na sugat ay ang kulturang unti-unting hinuhubog—isang kulturang nasasanay. Nasasanay sa eskandalo. Nasasanay sa galit na mabilis mapagod. Nasasanay sa imbestigasyong walang malinaw na dulo. Paulit-ulit ang siklo: may malaking isyu, may ingay, may pangako, tapos katahimikan. Hanggang makalimutan. Hanggang may susulpot na namang bago—mas garapal, mas mapanakit, mas hayag.


At dito nagiging tunay ang aking pangamba—not because corruption survives, but because it is slowly being forgiven by silence. Ang pinakanakakatakot na yugto ng isang nabubulok na lipunan ay hindi kapag lantaran ang pagnanakaw, kundi kapag ang galit ay napapalitan ng pagod, at ang pagod ay nagiging dahilan para tumingin na lang sa ibang direksyon. Kapag ang kasamaan ay hindi na kinokondena, kundi tinatanggap bilang normal.


Darating ang araw—kung hindi pa ito dumarating—na ang mga anak natin ay hindi na magtatanong kung bakit may korupsiyon, kundi kung bakit tayo nanahimik. At wala tayong maisasagot. Dahil ang katahimikan ng mabuti ay mas malakas na pahintulot kaysa sa ingay ng masasama. Sa bawat eskandalong hinayaang malimot, may isa na namang magnanakaw ang natutong huwag matakot.


Hindi tayo talo dahil mahina ang batas. Talo tayo kapag ang batas ay nagiging palabas lamang. Kapag ang pagkakulong ay nagiging simboliko, at ang hustisya ay nagiging negotiable. Kapag ang takot ay pansamantala, at ang lakas-loob ng mga kurakot ay nagiging permanente. Sa ganitong sistema, ang aral ay malinaw: magnakaw ka lang nang maayos, at lilipas din ang lahat.


Ayokong mamana ng susunod na henerasyon ang isang bansang sanay nang makalimot. Ayokong ituro sa kanila na ang pagiging disente ay kahinaan, at ang panlilinlang ay diskarte. Dahil sa sandaling iyon, hindi na pera ang ninanakaw sa atin—kinukuha na ang ating pagkatao bilang isang bayan.


Kung hindi tayo kikilos ngayon, kung papayag tayong mapagod, kung hahayaan nating lumipas na naman ito na parang dati, darating ang panahon na wala nang matitirang galit—at kasabay noon, wala na ring matitirang pag-asa. At kapag nawala ang pag-asa, ang bansa ay buhay na lamang sa mapa, pero patay na sa konsensya.


At iyon ang krimen na wala nang makukulong.


_____

 *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.

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

The Friction Wall Trick Behind the Flood Control Scandal

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


I have come to realize that the flood control scandal in this country was never hidden—not from me, and not from anyone who truly wanted to see. It was not buried in classified documents or concealed behind silence. It stood there in plain sight, bold and documented, pressed carefully against what I now understand as a friction wall. Like an object forced against a wall with no glue or nails, it looked stable enough to ignore, secure enough to tolerate, and convincing enough to let time pass without consequence. But physics teaches a simple truth I can no longer unsee: nothing held only by pressure is ever truly secure. Gravity never stops pulling, even when everything appears still.


When I think about the friction wall trick, I see how an object stays suspended not because it is attached, but because constant force is applied. The wall pushes back, creating friction just strong enough to resist gravity—for a while. But that balance is temporary. Tiny vibrations, fatigue, and the quiet erosion of time slowly weaken the grip. Static friction always has a limit. When it finally gives way, even slightly, the illusion collapses. The fall only looks sudden because the slipping was ignored.


That, to me, is exactly how the flood control scandal survived. I saw the budgets published, the projects announced, and the signboards standing proudly along riverbanks that would later overflow and erase entire communities. I watched hearings convened, investigations promised, and reports prepared. Everything was visible—just enough to create the feeling that something was being done, just enough to slow outrage. The system did not deny corruption; it overwhelmed it with process. Responsibility was diluted across agencies, committees, and signatures until public anger no longer knew where to push. Like the object on the wall, outrage stayed suspended—held there by friction, not resolved by justice.


Then there was the money. Billions meant to protect lives from floods were siphoned away, and yet even that stolen wealth lived in a strange, suspended state. I realized that the money, like the object on the wall, was never truly free. It could not move openly. It could not be spent without fear. It could not be enjoyed without consequence. Every peso taken demanded more pressure to keep it hidden—more shell companies, more protection, more silence. What was stolen to guarantee comfort slowly became a burden.


Time did what it always does. I saw allies lose power. I saw paper trails resurface. Whispers hardened into evidence. The same billions once meant to buy influence became radioactive—too dangerous to touch, too visible to deny. Accounts froze. Assets were traced. Figures once whispered turned into case numbers. Wealth meant to secure freedom became the weight that pulled its owners toward jail cells. Corruption did not collapse because someone pushed harder, but because friction could no longer hold.


And all the while, the floods kept returning. Year after year, the same rivers rose. The same communities drowned. The same “completed” flood control projects failed when they were needed most. Water became testimony. No press release could stop it. No committee could delay it. Reality, like gravity, kept pulling the truth back into view.


This is where the lesson stopped being just about governance and became about life itself. I have seen how those who rise through corruption often appear suspended high on the wall—visible, untouchable, admired by some, and feared by many. They seem secure because pressure holds them there: power, connections, intimidation, money. But they are never truly attached. They do not stand on solid ground; they are merely pressed against it by forces that must never weaken. And time always weakens them. Allies tire. Protection fades. Fear loosens its grip. Gravity—quiet, patient, unarguable—keeps pulling.


When they fall, it is not because life is cruel. It is because life is honest. What is not built on integrity cannot remain aloft forever. The ground is not waiting in anger; it is waiting in truth. The fall is not punishment—it is consequence.


What still haunts me about the flood control scandal is not simply that corruption existed, but that we were trained to endure it—to mistake delay for justice, suspension for stability, and friction for accountability. But physics teaches me otherwise. Systems built on pressure rather than integrity do not last. Stability without honesty is not strength; it is strain.


In the end, gravity always wins. Not because it is violent, but because it is patient. And truth behaves the same way. It pulls quietly, relentlessly, until the wall can no longer hold, until the hands grow tired, until everything propped up by deception finally falls. The flood control scandal was never a secret. I now see that it was merely suspended—waiting for gravity to finish what time had already begun.

_____

 *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, December 15, 2025

Ending Corruption in the Philippine Government?

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


I first understood corruption not through anger, but through a quiet grief that settled in slowly. As a father, I would watch my child sleep and wonder what kind of country would one day explain itself to her. Not through speeches or textbooks, but through what she would see rewarded, what she would see ignored, and what she would quietly be taught to accept. Children do not learn values from words alone. They learn from patterns. And corruption, I came to realize, is not only a failure of governance—it is a failure of what we pass on as normal.

In public service, corruption rarely appeared as a dramatic crime. It did not arrive with threats or envelopes slid across tables. It came softly. A document that would not move. A process that took just long enough to exhaust you. A silence that suggested you were expected to understand. No one demanded anything outright. The system was far too experienced for that. It relied on fatigue, on attrition, on waiting people out. Integrity was not attacked; it was made impractical. Corruption did not shout. It waited.

As a former municipal councilor, I observed how the need for survival gradually replaced ethical principles. Decisions were rarely framed as right versus wrong but as safe versus costly. Speak up and risk isolation. Cooperate and remain protected. Many chose survival, not because they lacked values, but because they were human. They had families to feed, children to educate, parents to care for. When integrity threatens livelihood, morality becomes a burden too heavy for ordinary shoulders. In those moments, corruption stops being shocking and starts being understandable.

This forces a truth we often avoid: if people must choose between standing on principle and surviving with dignity, corruption cannot be completely ended. Expecting heroism from those who are barely surviving is not reform—it is cruelty disguised as virtue. A society that praises integrity but refuses to protect it quietly teaches its people to abandon it.

As an educator, this truth hurts deeply. I teach integrity, fairness, and accountability, yet I know that the world my students will enter often punishes those values. Some ask softly, almost apologetically, “Sir, paano po kung tama ka… pero ikaw ang talo?” That question is not academic. It is existential. It is the sound of hope negotiating with reality.

Becoming a father sharpened this pain. I began to see corruption not just as stolen money, but as stolen futures. When children grow up watching dishonesty rewarded and integrity ignored, they learn dangerous lessons long before they understand politics. They learn that rules bend for the powerful, that silence is safer than truth, and that success often comes from connections rather than character. Corruption, then, is not merely practiced—it is inherited.

At some point, we are forced to confront another uncomfortable reality. Even the strongest laws against corruption—even the harshest penalties, even the threat of death—will not eliminate it. History has already answered that question. Fear can restrain behavior for a time, but it cannot erase desire. Law can punish acts, but it cannot extinguish temptation. Power, discretion, and opportunity will always test the human heart, and some will always fail that test.

Even those who shout the loudest against corruption from the streets are not immune. Moral outrage is easy when one has nothing to lose. Integrity is tested only when power is real, when systems are weak, and when no one is watching. Many who enter office with clenched fists and noble promises slowly learn to justify what they once condemned. Corruption does not always corrupt suddenly. Sometimes it persuades patiently.

This is why corruption must be understood not as a disease that can be cured once and for all, but as a cancer that requires constant treatment. Laws are chemotherapy. Strong enforcement can force remission. Accountability can shrink the tumor. But no honest physician promises that cancer will never return. The danger lies not in admitting this truth, but in pretending otherwise.

When corruption recedes, vigilance weakens. When vigilance weakens, corruption mutates. It returns in subtler forms—more technical, more legalistic, more polite. It learns the language of reform and hides behind procedure. And because it no longer looks like the old corruption, people hesitate to name it. That hesitation is how it grows again.

Some countries, uncomfortable as it is to admit, have lived with corruption and still achieved economic growth, stability, and fewer poor people. Corruption exists, but it is constrained. It is not allowed to paralyze the state or completely derail long-term goals. People may resent it, but they also see roads built, schools opened, jobs created. Survival and progress soften moral outrage. This does not make corruption right—but it exposes a harsher truth about countries like ours. Our tragedy is not corruption alone. It is corruption without results. Corruption that takes and gives nothing back. Corruption that coexists with poverty, broken systems, and endless excuses.

If corruption cannot be fully eliminated, then the question is no longer how to end it completely, but how to live honestly in its shadow.

For ordinary people, the answer is not martyrdom. Survival is not a sin. Silence chosen to protect one’s family is not the same as corruption chosen for profit. What matters is refusing to admire dishonesty, refusing to glorify stolen success, refusing to teach children that corruption is intelligence. Quiet resistance matters. What we normalize in private becomes culture in public.

For the government, however, there is no such excuse. The state exists precisely so people do not have to choose between integrity and survival. When citizens are forced to make that choice, governance has already failed. The duty of government is not to preach morality, but to design systems where honesty is safe, where corruption is slow and risky, and where justice arrives before despair hardens into acceptance.

Above all, the government must protect those who choose to remain upright. A society that praises whistleblowers in speeches but abandons them in reality teaches a devastating lesson: survival belongs to the silent. When justice becomes selective—when the powerful are negotiated with and the weak are punished—corruption stops being shameful and starts feeling justified. At that point, the state loses moral authority.

As a single father, I fear not only stolen money but stolen futures. As an educator, I fear teaching ideals that the world seems determined to punish. As a citizen, I fear a government that mistakes rhetoric for repair, slogans for safeguards, and temporary calm for lasting change.

Corruption may never disappear. It will retreat, regroup, and return—sometimes loudly, sometimes quietly, sometimes wearing the language of reform itself. The question has never been whether corruption exists. The real question is whether we will remain awake enough to recognize it each time it comes back and disciplined enough to confront it again and again, without illusion and without fatigue.

That is the final warning.

Not that corruption exists—for it always has, and it always will—but that we grow tired of resisting it. That we mistake moments of silence for healing, and short pauses for victory. That we begin to believe the pain is gone simply because it no longer screams. And in that exhaustion, we slowly lower our guard.

The real danger is not the return of corruption, but our acceptance of it. The moment we tell ourselves it is inevitable. The moment we stop naming it. The moment we teach our children how to survive within it instead of why it must always be challenged. When corruption becomes background noise, it has already won.

We do not lose our country in one great collapse. We lose it in small permissions, in tired compromises, in lessons quietly passed down at the dinner table—lessons that say, “This is just how things are.”

This was never a call for perfection.

Perfection was never the goal.

This is a plea for vigilance—for the stubborn refusal to look away even when we are weary; for the courage to remember when forgetting feels easier; for the discipline to keep resisting what we know is wrong, not because we believe we will finally defeat it, but because surrender would mean teaching the next generation that dignity is optional.

And that is a lesson: no nation survives.

_____

 *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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