*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD
The first time I ever heard the phrase “Lucky Sperm” was not in a classroom or a political rally—it was while watching World Wrestling Entertainment. Stone Cold Steve Austin, in his usual rebellious flair, called Shane McMahon—the son of Vince McMahon—“Lucky Sperm.” . But it was Jim Ross the WWE announcer who coined the term “The Lucky Sperm Club,” mocking the sons and daughters of the rich and powerful who inherited not only money but also influence, prestige, and positions they never really earned. At first, it was funny, the kind of sharp entertainment you expect from wrestling. But as I grew older, that phrase began to echo in my head, especially whenever I looked at politics.
Because isn’t politics, in many ways, dominated by the same “Lucky Sperm Club”? Sons and daughters of political dynasties who inherit not only surnames but also votes, not only land but also loyalty, not only wealth but also machinery. Their birthright becomes their campaign platform, and before they can even spell “public service,” they are already introduced to the inner workings of power. They are taught how to smile for the cameras, how to shake hands during fiestas, how to project empathy during disasters—all the while knowing they will have resources behind them when their time comes to run.
On the other side of the coin lies the “Unlucky Sperm.” These are the Filipinos born without political surnames, without family machinery, without vast sums of money to bankroll a national campaign. They may be brilliant, honest, visionary—even more capable than the “lucky” ones—but they face a wall that is nearly impossible to climb. Their ideas rarely reach the stage, their names rarely get media mileage, and their campaigns often suffocate under the weight of financial realities.
History itself shows this cruel divide. Around the world, but especially in countries like ours where dynasties dominate, the presidency has almost always been the prize of the privileged. Political families recycle power, generation after generation, while outsiders are treated as token candidates or idealists with no chance. Democracy proclaims that “anyone can become president,” but the truth is that only a select few—those with the right surname, the right fortune, the right bloodline—can realistically aspire to that position.
And this is where democracy becomes distorted. The presidency, which should be the highest expression of the people’s will, becomes reduced to a family heirloom, passed on like an old piece of jewelry or a well-guarded business empire. Merit and vision no longer define leadership; inheritance does. Hard work, intelligence, and sacrifice are often not enough, because the machinery of politics is fueled by dynastic power and money. The “unlucky sperm” may try, but the playing field is tilted against them from the start.
What does this mean for nations like ours? It means that the vast majority of our people—ordinary Filipinos, the ones who truly understand the struggles of poverty, injustice, and everyday survival—are locked out of the very leadership positions that could change their lives. It means the same families dominate the halls of power, while potential leaders who may have been closer to the people’s real struggles never get the chance to serve. It means wasted potential.
I sometimes wonder: how many capable leaders have we lost simply because they were not born into the “Lucky Sperm Club”? How many visionaries, honest men and women, thinkers and doers, have been sidelined because their fathers were farmers and not senators, their mothers were vendors and not governors? The tragedy is not just personal—it is national. For every dynastic heir recycled into office, there is an “unlucky sperm” leader we never got to hear, never got to vote for, never got to entrust with our country’s future.
And so, the challenge is set before us. If we truly want democracy to flourish, we must rethink our structures. Campaigns should not only be about who has the most money, but about who has the most substance. Elections should not only be about family names, but about ideas. Political parties should not only gravitate toward the wealthy, but toward the deserving. Until that day comes, the “unlucky sperm” will remain on the margins—symbols of a democracy promised but not delivered.
Perhaps the greatest tragedy is not that the unlucky sperm
cannot be president, but that we, as a nation, are deprived of the leadership
they could have offered. For every dynasty that monopolizes power, there is a
forgotten Filipino who might have been the leader we truly needed. And until we
break this cycle, the presidency will remain less of a people’s mandate and
more of a family inheritance.