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.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Electric Vehicles and the Illusion of Escapes from the Oil Crisis

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


There was a quiet decision I made recently—simple, practical, almost hopeful. I bought an electric scooter. In my mind, it was a small act of independence, a way to step away from the relentless rise of fuel prices. Habang pataas nang pataas ang gasolina, I told myself, maybe this is the escape. No more lining up at gas stations, no more watching prices change overnight, and no more calculating every kilometer like it was a luxury. Just plug, charge, and go.


But reality, as it often does, has a way of humbling even our most well-intentioned decisions.


Because as I stood there, watching my scooter quietly charge in the corner of my home, a thought crept in—one that was not as comforting as the hum of electricity flowing through its battery. Saan nga ba nanggagaling ang kuryente? Where does this power truly come from? And more importantly, am I really free from the very fuel crisis I was trying to escape?


The truth unfolded not in theory, but in the harsh interconnectedness of our world. A disruption in the Strait of Hormuz—a place so distant from our daily commute—can ripple across oceans and quietly reach our homes. When oil supply tightens, prices surge. And when oil prices surge, everything begins to move with it.


Hindi lamang gasolina ang tumataas. The ships that carry coal—yes, even the coal that powers many of our plants—run on fuel. The trucks that deliver, the machinery that operates, the entire chain breathes through oil. As oil prices rise, so does the cost of transporting coal. And as countries scramble to adjust, demand for coal increases, pushing its price even higher.


And so, the illusion begins to break.


The electricity charging my scooter—the very symbol of my escape—is not untouched by this crisis. It carries within it the cost of fuel, of transport, of global uncertainty. It is shaped by forces far beyond the walls of my home. What I thought was a departure from oil is, in many ways, still connected to it.


Napagtanto ko, hindi pala ganun kadali tumakas.


And as days passed, another layer of truth revealed itself—not in headlines, not in policy briefings, but in the quiet arithmetic of everyday living. While the electricity consumption of my electric scooter seemed, at first glance, undeniably cheaper, I began to see the costs that do not immediately present themselves. The wear and tear that slowly accumulates. The battery whose life is not infinite, whose replacement is not inexpensive. The maintenance that is different, yes—but not necessarily lighter.


And then came a moment I could not ignore—a moment that turned reflection into reality. After a 27-kilometer ride, powered by a 2000-watt motor and a 72-volt battery, my scooter simply stopped. No warning that mattered, no gradual easing into failure—just silence in the middle of motion. It was, in its own quiet way, a tragedy. Not dramatic, not headline-worthy, but deeply personal. In that instant, the promise of convenience met the truth of limitation. The journey I thought was efficient revealed its boundary. And I was left not only stranded on the road, but confronted by the very question I had tried to outrun: How far can this really take me?


At hindi doon nagtapos ang karanasan.


I brought the scooter back. Bitbit ko hindi lamang ang unit, kundi ang bigat ng karanasang iyon—ang pag-asang unti-unting napalitan ng pagdududa. The sadder part was not just the malfunction, but the response that followed. There were words—subtle but piercing—that seemed to shift the burden back to me, as if the failure were mine to carry. Sa halip na solusyon, may bahid ng sisi.


And yet, in the midst of that disappointment, there was a glimpse of integrity. The dealer—perhaps understanding the weight of what had happened—took the initiative to refund. Walang mahabang argumento, walang paligoy-ligoy. Just a decision to make things right.


Napaisip ako, swerte pa rin pala ako. Because the reality is, not everyone is given that kind of fairness. Marami ang napapabayaan, nabibiktima ng tinatawag nating budol—where once the product is handed over, ikaw na ang bahala sa buhay mo. No support, no accountability, no safety net. Just a transaction, stripped of responsibility.


Compared to traditional motor vehicles, there is a lingering question of durability. How long will this last? How often will it need replacement? And how much will that truly cost over time? These are not questions often asked when we speak of “savings,” but they are realities that cannot be ignored.


Unti-unti kong napagtanto, hindi pala ito tunay na pagtitipid. It is not the kind of saving that liberates—it is the kind that allows you to endure. You are not escaping the cost; you are merely reshaping it. Instead of paying heavily at the gasoline station, you pay quietly through electricity bills, through battery degradation, through the eventual need to replace what was once new.


And in that realization, the narrative shifts.


What we often celebrate as innovation becomes, in lived experience, a mechanism of adaptation. A coping strategy. A way to survive the immediacy of fuel hikes without truly escaping the deeper economic weight of mobility.



Because when an oil crisis strikes, it does not knock loudly at our doors. It seeps in—through higher transport costs, through increased generation charges, through the silent rise in our electricity bills. And before we even realize it, the burden has already arrived.


Oil Crisis → Higher Oil Prices → Higher Transport Cost → Higher Coal Cost → Higher Generation Cost → Higher Electricity Rates


Ito ang katotohanan na hindi natin agad nakikita, ngunit araw-araw nating nararamdaman.


And perhaps that is the most sobering realization of all—that even in our quiet attempts to adapt, to survive, to be practical, we remain bound to a system we cannot yet fully control.


As I walked away from that experience—without the scooter, but with a deeper understanding—I felt both pride and pause. Pride, because I had dared to try. Pause, because I now understood the deeper truth behind that attempt.


Hindi sapat ang tumakbo palayo sa krisis.

Kailangan natin itong harapin—bilang isang bansa, bilang isang sistema, bilang isang sambayanan.


Because in the end, the goal is not merely to escape rising fuel prices.

The goal is to build a future where the next generation no longer has to.


#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.



Tuesday, March 31, 2026

VP Sara Duterte: Facing the Trial, Healing the Nation

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


“The truth will set you free, but first it will make you uncomfortable,” a reflection often attributed to Gloria Steinem, a renowned feminist leader and journalist who championed truth, equality, and the courage to confront injustice—reminding us that before a nation heals, it must first face what is difficult.


In times when division runs deep and the lines between truth and deception begin to blur—when colors, parties, and allegiances overshadow reason and when disinformation grows louder than facts—the true measure of patriotism is not avoidance but courage. Sa ganitong panahon, ang tunay na pagmamahal sa bayan ay nasusukat sa kakayahang humarap sa katotohanan. And perhaps today, that courage must be embodied by Vice President Sara Duterte.


If she truly believes in her innocence, if her conscience is clear that no impeachable offense has been committed, then the most powerful act she can offer is not through statements crafted by advisers or narratives amplified by allies, but through facing the impeachment process head-on. Hindi ito simpleng legal na laban—ito ay paninindigan para sa katotohanan sa harap ng sambayanang Pilipino.


Because the Filipino people are not blind. They are not merely spectators in a political contest. They observe, they reflect, and they discern. Hindi man sila agad magsalita, ngunit inuunawa nila ang bawat kilos at bawat desisyon. If she stands before the nation and presents all facts, evidence, and truth with clarity and conviction, no amount of political maneuvering, majority vote, or narrative spin can erase what the people themselves will witness. Truth, once revealed, cannot be undone.


More than clearing her name, this moment presents an opportunity to end the cycle of doubt, misinformation, and political division that continues to fracture the nation. Sa pagharap niya, maaaring mapalitan ang ingay ng propaganda ng linaw ng katotohanan at ang banggaan ng opinyon ng pagkakaunawaan.


History itself reminds us of the cost of avoidance. May mga pagkakataon sa ating kasaysayan kung saan ang mga pinuno na naharap sa impeachment ay hindi lubos na humarap sa proseso—tulad ng nangyari kay Joseph Estrada sa gitna ng kanyang impeachment trial na nauwi sa EDSA People Power II, kung saan ang kakulangan ng malinaw na pagharap ay nagdulot ng pagkawala ng tiwala ng publiko at tuluyang pagbagsak sa kapangyarihan. Sa kaso naman ni Renato Corona, ipinakita na ang laban ay hindi lamang nasa proseso kundi nasa mata ng publiko—patunay na ang transparency at pagharap ang tunay na sandata.


Yet if she chooses not to face the accusations, the shadow of doubt—fair or not—will remain. Sa pulitika, perception can shape reality. Kahit walang kasalanan, ang hindi pagsagot ay maaaring magmukhang pag-iwas, at ang mga tanong na walang sagot ay nagiging hinala sa isip ng mamamayan. But if she confronts every accusation, she does not merely defend herself—she reclaims the narrative.


At kung sakaling siya ay usigin, at kahit maipakita niya ang lahat ng ebidensya ng kanyang inosensya, ngunit pilit pa rin siyang patanggalin sa pwesto, doon lalabas ang tunay na tinig ng sambayanan. The people’s response will come not from manipulation but from a deep sense of justice. Sapagkat ang Pilipino ay may kakayahang kumilala ng tama at mali, at sa panahon ng kasinungalingan, darating ang sandali na sila mismo ang kikilos upang ituwid ito.


Because in the end, the Filipino people are the real jury. Not a handful of politicians, not the weight of political numbers, but the collective judgment of a nation that sees, hears, and understands. Kapag nakita nilang ang katotohanan ay pinipilipit, hindi nila ito hahayaan—sila mismo ang magtatanggol nito sa paraang tahimik ngunit makapangyarihan.


In this way, she transforms—from a leader surrounded by controversy into a symbol of courage and accountability. Isang lider na hindi nagtago kundi buong tapang na humarap sa pagsubok habang nakatingin ang buong bansa.


In a nation weary of division and exhausted by political conflict, such an act becomes more than a personal defense. It becomes a national declaration—that truth still matters, that leadership demands courage, at ang mamamayang Pilipino ang tunay na huhusga.


At marahil, sa simpleng pagharap na iyon, hindi lamang niya malilinaw ang kanyang pangalan, kundi maipapakita rin kung bakit siya karapat-dapat mamuno. Dahil sa huli, ang lider na kayang humarap sa katotohanan ay siya ring lider na kayang humarap sa kinabukasan ng bayan nang may tapang at paninindigan.


#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.

Monday, March 30, 2026

If Not Now, When: Corruption, Impeachment, Accountability, and the West Philippine Sea in a Time of Crisis

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


I remember one late afternoon at a small place called Inopia Eatery in Modesta Village. It was one of those ordinary spots—manufactured chairs, simple tables, the quiet sound of utensils, and the heavy silence of people thinking more than talking.


Sa isang sulok, nandoon si Meynard, isang jeepney driver. Nakaupo siya mag-isa, nakatingin sa kanyang plato. Isang ulam, hinahati-hati niya, parang sinusukat kung paano ito pagkakasyahin sa gutom at sa budget. Paminsan-minsan, tinitingnan niya ang kanyang kamay—parang iniisip kung magkano pa ang natitira, kung sapat pa ba ang kita niya para sa susunod na pasada.


Bigla siyang napabuntong-hininga at marahang nagsabi, “Ang mahal na ng diesel… hindi ko na alam kung kikita pa ako bukas.”


Walang drama. Walang sigaw. Pero ramdam mo—yung bigat ng realidad.


At habang siya ay kumakain nang tahimik, may tanong na hindi niya kailangang sabihin pero malinaw mong maririnig:


Bakit parang kami na naman ang kailangang mag-adjust?


Because if we do not talk about corruption in the middle of a crisis, when will we?


Gusto kong linawin nang malinaw—hindi ako anti-government, hindi ako anti-President, at hindi rin ako pro-impeachment. My position is not anchored on personalities or political camps. I stand firmly as anti-corruption and pro-accountability. Sapagkat para sa akin, ang tunay na pagmamahal sa bayan ay hindi pananahimik—ito ay ang tapang na itama kung ano ang mali.


Let us talk about corruption—not as a slogan, but as a lived reality. Corruption is not an abstract concept. Ito ay nararamdaman sa bawat litro ng diesel na hindi na kayang bilhin ni Meynard. It is felt in every peso that fails to reach the people who need it most. Every peso lost to corruption is a peso taken away from fuel subsidies, social protection, education, and economic stability. Habang ang mamamayan ay nagtitiis, may mga pondo na dapat sana’y tumutulong—ngunit nawawala. At kung hindi natin ito haharapin ngayon, kailan pa?


Now, let us confront the issue of impeachment. Hindi ito dapat gawing drama ng politika, at hindi rin dapat gawing sandata ng kapangyarihan. Impeachment is a constitutional process—not a political weapon. Ngunit hindi rin ito dapat katakutan o iwasan kung may malinaw na batayan. It is not about removing a person—it is about upholding the principle that no one is above the law. Kaya malinaw ang paninindigan—hindi ako pro-impeachment, ngunit ako ay pro-truth. Kung kinakailangan ang proseso upang ilabas ang katotohanan, hindi ito dapat pigilan. Kung wala namang basehan, hindi rin ito dapat abusuhin. The issue is not impeachment itself—it is integrity.


Then comes accountability—the backbone of governance. Without accountability, systems collapse quietly. Kung walang pananagutan, ang krisis ay nagiging paulit-ulit na siklo. Flood control projects get funded, yet communities still drown in floods. Budgets are approved, yet services remain inadequate. This is not just inefficiency—this is failure of accountability. At habang ang mamamayan ay hinihingan ng sakripisyo, hindi ba’t mas nararapat lamang na ang pamahalaan ay managot sa bawat pagkukulang?


At dito lalong lumalawak ang usapin—ang West Philippine Sea.


Because national sovereignty is not separate from governance—it is a reflection of it. Paano natin ipaglalaban ang ating karagatan kung ang ating sistema ay may kahinaan? How can we defend what is ours externally if internally we tolerate corruption and weak accountability?


Habang ang mga mangingisda ay nawawalan ng access sa sarili nating karagatan, habang ang kanilang kabuhayan ay unti-unting nawawala, this is no longer just a territorial issue—it is a human issue. It is about dignity, livelihood, and national identity. And if resources meant to protect them are not properly utilized, then we are failing not only in governance—but in sovereignty.


Hindi dapat tumigil ang paghahanap ng hustisya dahil lamang sa may krisis sa gasolina. In fact, mas lalo itong dapat paigtingin. Because crises expose the cracks—and it is our duty to repair them, not ignore them.


Kung may dapat higpitan, hindi ang sinturon ni Meynard—kundi ang sistema ng pananagutan.

Kung may dapat bantayan, hindi lang presyo ng diesel—kundi ang bawat sentimo ng pondo ng bayan.


Because silence, in times like this, is not neutrality—it is surrender.


Sapagkat kung hahayaan nating manahimik ang usapin ng corruption, impeachment, accountability, at ang West Philippine Sea ngayon, kailan pa natin ito haharapin? Kapag mas malala na ang krisis? Kapag mas marami nang tulad ni Meynard ang nawalan? Kapag mas kaunti na ang natitira sa atin?


Hindi tayo dapat umabot sa puntong iyon.


So let this be clear:


Hindi tayo laban sa pamahalaan.

Hindi tayo laban sa Pangulo.

Hindi tayo pro-impeachment.


Ngunit hindi rin tayo bulag.


We are against corruption.

We stand for accountability.

At handa tayong ipaglaban ang tama—para kay Meynard, para sa bawat pamilyang Pilipino, at para sa ating bayan.


Because the strength of a nation is not measured by silence—but by the courage to confront the truth.


At kung hindi ngayon, kailan pa?


#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

Search This Blog