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, March 6, 2026

Kung Hindi Kayang Manalo sa Balota… Mag-File na Lang ng Disqualification Case for “Early Vote-Buying”

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


May isang nakalulungkot ngunit nakakatawang realidad sa ating pulitika ngayon. May mga kandidato na tila hindi na interesado na manalo sa pamamagitan ng boto ng taumbayan. Ang kanilang tunay na laban ay hindi na sa balota kundi sa korte. Instead of convincing voters, they attempt to eliminate their opponents through legal maneuvers. Sa madaling salita, kung hindi kayang manalo sa halalan, maghanap na lamang ng paraan upang ma-disqualify ang kalaban. Para bang ang campaign strategy meeting nila ay hindi na tungkol sa platform of government kundi tungkol sa tanong na, “Attorney, anong kaso ang pwede nating ihain?”


Kamakailan lamang ay nakabasa ako ng isang artikulo sa Facebook tungkol sa isang kandidato na pinapadiskwalify dahil umano sa vote buying. Ang halalan ay nakatakda pa sa susunod na linggo ng Marso ngunit ang kaso ay naisampa na noong kalagitnaan pa lamang ng Pebrero. Nang mabasa ko ito, hindi ko maiwasang mapangiti na nais humalakhak. Hindi dahil nakakatawa ang usapin ng vote buying, kundi dahil sa kabalintunaan ng akusasyon. Para bang may kandidato na sobrang excited bumili ng boto na hindi na niya mahintay ang eleksyon. Kung may Olympic event para sa “early vote buying,” baka gold medalist na siya.


Sa aking karanasan bilang dating politiko at bilang isang matagal nang nagmamasid sa galaw ng halalan sa Pilipinas, ang vote buying ay halos hindi kailanman ginagawa sa mga unang linggo ng kampanya. Kung mayroon mang ganitong gawain, ito ay karaniwang nangyayari sa gabi bago ang eleksyon o sa mismong araw ng botohan. Ito ay hindi lamang personal na obserbasyon kundi isang bagay na matagal nang kinikilala sa mga pag-aaral tungkol sa electoral behavior sa ating bansa. Sa madaling salita, kung may kandidato man na bibili ng boto tatlong linggo bago ang halalan, baka kailangan na rin siyang bigyan ng award sa category na “Most Generous but Least Strategic Politician.” or "Most Stupid Vote-Buying Politician of the Year."


Ang lohika nito ay napakasimple. Ang boto ng isang tao ay maaaring magbago kung ito ay binayaran nang napakaaga. Kung bibili ka ng boto tatlo o apat na linggo bago ang halalan, napakalaki ng posibilidad na makalimutan ka lamang ng botante pagdating ng araw ng eleksyon. Baka nga pagdating ng election day ay sabihin pa ng botante, “Ay may nagbigay pala sa akin noon? Sino nga ulit iyon?” Kaya sa praktikal na pananaw ng isang political operator, ang pagbili ng boto nang napakaaga ay parang bumili ka ng sorbetes sa umaga at inaasahan mong hindi ito matutunaw hanggang gabi.


May isa pang aspeto sa konsepto ng vote buying na madalas hindi naiintindihan ng mga taong walang karanasan sa aktuwal na pulitika. Kung talagang gagawin ng isang kandidato ang vote buying, napakalaking halaga ng pera ang kakailanganin niya. Hindi pwedeng basta bumili ng boto ng kung sino-sino lamang. Hindi rin praktikal na bilhin ang boto ng mga taong hindi pa nagpapasya o ng mga taong tiyak na boboto sa kalaban. Sa realidad ng political operations, may isang hindi nakasulat na patakaran: kung bibili ka man ng boto, uunahin mong tiyakin ang boto ng sarili mong supporters. Sapagkat kung hindi mo sila aalagaan, maaaring sila pa ang lumipat sa kalaban. Sa madaling salita, kung susuriin ang ganitong aspeto, napakalaki ng gastusin at napakakomplikado ng operasyon ng vote buying. Hindi ito parang bumili ka lang ng kendi sa sari-sari store.


Dahil dito, napakabigat ng akusasyon ng vote buying at hindi ito madaling patunayan. Hindi sapat na may nakita lamang na perang ipinasa mula sa isang tao patungo sa isa pa. Maraming aspeto ang kailangang patunayan. Sa larangan ng election law, madali ring gumawa ng senaryo upang palabasing may vote buying na naganap. Kung tutuusin, kung may konting creativity ang isang tao, puwede siyang gumawa ng eksena na parang teleserye. May pera, may camera, may drama. Ang kulang na lang ay background music.


Mas lalo pang nakalulungkot na ang mismong abogado na naghain ng kaso ay tila ginagawang entablado ng propaganda ang social media. Ipinagmamalaki pa sa mga post na may naisampa na raw silang disqualification case laban sa kandidato. Para bang ang kaso ay hindi na legal pleading kundi parang bagong episode ng isang political reality show. Ang ganitong uri ng pag-aanunsyo ay hindi paghahanap ng hustisya. Ito ay tila isang paraan upang i-condition ang isip ng publiko na ang kandidatong ito ay disqualified na at hindi na dapat iboto.


Sa puntong iyon, ang hukuman ay hindi na ginagamit bilang instrumento ng hustisya kundi bilang bahagi ng political messaging. Ang korte ay dapat manatiling lugar ng tahimik na paghahanap ng katotohanan, hindi entablado ng propaganda. Kapag ang isang kaso ay ginagamit upang impluwensyahan ang pananaw ng publiko bago pa man ito maresolba, ang proseso ng hustisya ay nagiging bahagi ng political warfare. Para bang ang campaign slogan ay hindi na “Vote for me,” kundi “Wait for the court decision.”


Hindi ko sinasabing walang saysay ang mga batas laban sa vote buying. Mahalaga ang mga ito upang mapanatili ang integridad ng halalan. Ngunit kapag ang mga batas na ito ay ginagamit bilang sandata upang alisin ang kalaban sa laban bago pa man makapili ang taumbayan, ang diwa ng demokrasya ay unti-unting nasisira. Ang halalan ay hindi dapat maging law school moot court competition kung saan ang pinakamahusay na argumento ng abogado ang mananalo.


Sa aking mahabang pagmamasid sa pulitika ng Pilipinas, nakita ko na ang ganitong taktika ay matagal nang ginagamit ng ilang election lawyers. Ang kanilang mga kliyente ay binibigyan ng pag-asa na manalo hindi sa pamamagitan ng kampanya kundi sa pamamagitan ng disqualification ng kanilang mga kalaban. Ngunit ang ganitong uri ng tagumpay ay hindi tunay na tagumpay ng demokrasya. Ito ay tagumpay lamang ng teknikalidad.


Sa huli, kung talagang nais ng isang kandidato na magwagi, hindi ang vote buying o ang pag-file ng kaso ang tunay na landas. Ang magpapapanalo sa isang kandidato ay sipag, tiyaga, integridad, at malinaw na track record ng paglilingkod. Sapagkat ang kandidatong mananalo sa pamamagitan ng vote buying ay kadalasang may isang malinaw na layunin pagkatapos ng eleksyon: bawiin ang kanyang ginastos.


At saan niya ito babawiin? Hindi sa sarili niyang bulsa kundi sa kaban ng bayan.


Doon nagsisimula ang tunay na trahedya ng vote buying. Ang pera na ginamit upang bilhin ang boto ay nagiging utang na kailangang singilin mula sa pondo ng publiko. At kapag nangyari iyon, hindi lamang ang integridad ng halalan ang nasisira kundi pati ang tiwala ng mamamayan sa pamahalaan.


At dito ko gustong mag-iwan ng isang maliit na mensahe para doon sa kandidato na umaasang manalo sa pamamagitan ng pag-disqualify ng kanyang kalaban.


Kaibigan, kung ang plano mo para manalo ay alisin ang nangungunang kandidato sa pamamagitan ng kaso, baka kailangan mong magtanong ng isang simpleng bagay sa sarili mo. Kandidato ka ba… o assistant ng isang law firm?


Sapagat kung ang pinakamalakas mong campaign machinery ay ang petition ng abogado mo, baka hindi ka talaga handang tumakbo sa halalan. Baka ang tamang opisina para sa iyo ay hindi city hall o capitol, kundi law office reception.


At kung sakaling magtagumpay ka man sa ganoong paraan, tandaan mo ito. Ang panalo na nakuha sa pamamagitan ng pag-alis ng kalaban ay hindi tunay na panalo sa puso ng taumbayan. Para lamang itong basketball game na nanalo ka dahil pinaalis mo ang pinakamagaling na player ng kabilang team bago pa magsimula ang laro.


Technically panalo ka.


Pero alam ng lahat… hindi iyon tunay na laban.


Kaya sa susunod na eleksyon, baka mas mabuti na lang na mag-kampanya ka sa barangay plaza kaysa sa hallway ng korte. Mas mura pa ang pamasahe, mas maraming botante ang makakausap mo, at higit sa lahat, mas malaki ang tsansa mong manalo sa taumbayan kaysa sa footnote ng isang disqualification case.


At kung hindi pa rin gumana ang kampanya mo… huwag kang mag-alala.


May susunod pang eleksyon.


Pero sana naman, sa susunod, balota ang labanan… hindi kathang-isip kaso ng "Early Vote-Buying". 😄

_______________________________

 *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.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Sabah and the West Philippine Sea: Memory, Law, and the Weight of Our Waters

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


One evening, after watching a historical film about a once proud maritime kingdom that slowly faded not because it was defeated in one grand war but because it allowed time, fatigue, and negotiation to thin its resolve, I remained seated long after the credits ended. The audience left. The lights rose. Yet I stayed, staring at the blank screen. The film was fiction, yet it felt painfully real. The kingdom in the story lost its territories not in fire but in silence. Not in surrender, but in gradual accommodation. As I walked out into the night, I carried with me an unsettling thought. Our seas, too, are living chapters of history. And we are the ones writing their next lines.


When I think of Sabah, I do not think first of cold arbitration awards or the sterile language of diplomatic notes. My mind wanders instead to the Sultanate of Sulu, established in the fifteenth century—a formidable maritime power that exercised recognized authority over Mindanao, the Sulu archipelago, and the rugged coasts of North Borneo long before modern borders were inked. The heart of the tragedy lies in 1878, when Sultan Jamalul Alam entered into an agreement with Baron de Overbeck and Alfred Dent of the British North Borneo Company. The document, drafted in a delicate mixture of Malay and Arabic (Jawi script), became the seed of one of Southeast Asia's most enduring disputes. The crux of the conflict is a profound misunderstanding about cession. While the English translation utilized the definitive term "cession"—implying a permanent, irrevocable transfer of territory to the British Crown—the Sultan’s understanding, rooted in the Malay term padjak, suggested a lease. To the Sultanate, this was a commercial arrangement for land development, not a surrender of ancestral sovereignty. From this single linguistic fracture, a vast geopolitical divide grew, transforming a 19th-century contract into a 21st-century struggle for national identity.


In 1962, the heirs of the Sultan formally ceded their proprietary rights over North Borneo to the Republic of the Philippines. President Diosdado Macapagal then asserted the Philippine claim over Sabah, framing it as a matter of territorial integrity and historical succession. In 1963, however, Sabah became part of the Federation of Malaysia following a process supported by a United Nations mission that assessed the sentiments of the population. The Philippines did not withdraw its claim, but over time it became diplomatically dormant, overshadowed by regional cooperation within ASEAN and broader strategic concerns.


Decades later, the descendants of the Sultanate initiated arbitration proceedings based on the 1878 agreement. In 2022, an arbitral award granted nearly fourteen point ninety-two billion dollars in favor of the heirs, citing Malaysia’s alleged breach of the agreement when it ceased annual payments after the 2013 Lahad Datu incident. For a brief moment, history seemed to reemerge in a modern legal forum. Yet Malaysia challenged the jurisdiction of the arbitrator, and enforcement efforts were suspended and contested in European courts. The award became entangled in procedural reversals, leaving once again a sense of unfinished closure.


Sabah, to me, is not merely about oil, gas, or minerals beneath its soil. It is about how historical rights, when not anchored in sustained state action, become fragile in the currents of international politics. It is about how sovereignty requires more than memory. It requires consistency.


And then there is the West Philippine Sea.


When I look at the West Philippine Sea, I see more than just a stretch of blue on a map; I see a testament to a nation’s resolve to meet raw power with the rule of law. In 2013, under the administration of President Benigno Aquino III, the Philippines took a historic, solitary stand, initiating arbitral proceedings under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to challenge China’s expansive "nine-dash line." It was a David-and-Goliath moment played out in the halls of international justice. The culmination of this journey arrived in July 2016, when the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague delivered a landmark ruling that reshaped the maritime world. The tribunal was unequivocal: China’s nine-dash line had no legal basis under international law, and any "historic rights" were superseded by the signing of UNCLOS. The award did more than just invalidate a line; it restored the geographical identity of the Philippines, affirming that vital features like Mischief Reef and Second Thomas Shoal—the latter being the site of the BRP Sierra Madre—lie firmly within the Philippines’ 200-nautical-mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).


It was a victory not of firepower but of documentation. A victory not of fleets but of legal argument.


And yet, the sea did not grow quiet.


Reports of water cannon incidents, maritime standoffs, and gray zone tactics continue. Artificial islands built on previously submerged features remain militarized. Filipino fishermen still speak of intimidation. The arbitral ruling stands as binding under international law, yet enforcement relies on diplomacy, alliances, and strategic calibration rather than immediate compulsion.


Sabah reminds me that a claim can fade when political will wavers.


The West Philippine Sea reminds me that even a clear legal victory demands sustained articulation.


I am deeply aware of the asymmetry involved. China is a global power. Malaysia is a sovereign neighbor with whom we share cultural and economic ties. The Philippines must navigate these realities carefully. We cannot afford reckless escalation. War would devastate our economy, displace our people, and destabilize our region. Conflict often benefits those far removed from its human cost.


But quiet normalization of intrusion carries its own danger. Repeated compromise, if left unexamined, slowly reshapes what is considered acceptable. What begins as tactical restraint must not become strategic surrender.


As a Filipino, as someone who studies governance and believes in disciplined nationalism rather than emotional outbursts, I carry both pride and concern. Pride in the 2016 ruling, which demonstrated that international law still offers space for principled states. Concern that legal documents alone do not patrol coastlines.


When I imagine the fishermen of Zambales casting their nets or the families in Palawan watching news of maritime confrontations, I am reminded that sovereignty is not abstract. It is lived. It is felt. It is tied to food security, energy prospects in Reed Bank, and the simple dignity of not being driven away from one’s own waters.


From the Sultanate of Sulu to Scarborough Shoal, from North Borneo to the Spratly Islands, our story has always been maritime. We are not a people accidentally surrounded by water. The sea is our connective tissue. It is a trade route, a defense line, a livelihood, and an identity.


Sabah was a lesson in how history, when insufficiently defended by sustained state assertion, becomes contested memory.


The West Philippine Sea is a living test of whether we can combine law, diplomacy, alliance building, and national unity into a coherent strategy.


As I think back to that film about the fading kingdom, I realize sovereignty rarely collapses in a single dramatic moment. It erodes in the space between principle and practice. Between what we declare and what we sustain.


I do not advocate anger. I advocate steadiness. I do not call for war. I call for continuity. I do not cling to history as nostalgia. I treat it as a responsibility.


If the shores of Sabah whisper about unfinished chapters and if the waves of the West Philippine Sea echo with tension, then perhaps what they are asking of us is not rage, but resolve. Not noise, but national discipline.


Because in the end, sovereignty is not only about who controls a reef or a coastline. It is about whether a nation loves itself enough to defend its rights wisely, consistently, and without forgetting the lessons written in its own waters.

_______________________________

 *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, March 4, 2026

Senator Robin Padilla and the Call of Duty: Why the ROTC Must Rise Again

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



One quiet evening, while the world seemed ordinary and calm, I found myself scrolling through the news on my phone. It was one of those routine moments we rarely pay attention to. Yet suddenly, a headline flashed before my eyes like a bolt of lightning tearing across a peaceful sky. Missiles launched. Retaliation expected. Oil markets are trembling. Military bases placed on alert.


For a few seconds I simply stared at the screen.


Tahimik ang paligid. The room was still. Yet in that moment, the world felt fragile. Hindi sa Pilipinas nangyari ang unang putok, but I felt the unsettling realization that war today does not respect geography. It does not stop at borders. It travels silently through markets, through alliances, through energy prices, and through fragile sea lanes. Dumadaan ito sa presyo ng gasolina, sa taas ng bilihin, at sa kaba ng mga pamilyang Pilipino na umaasa sa isang mundong payapa.



In that moment I asked myself a simple but uncomfortable question.


If history suddenly turns violent, if the winds of conflict reach our shores, handa ba tayo bilang isang bansa?


We often discuss war as if it belongs only to soldiers and generals. But the truth is more sobering. When nations face crisis, it is not only armies that are tested. It is the spirit of the people.


And it is in this context that the advocacy of Robin Padilla becomes not merely a legislative proposal but a patriotic calling.


On July 15, 2025, in the 20th Congress, Senator Robin Padilla filed Senate Bill No. 617, the “Reserve Officers’ Training Corps Act.” To many observers, it was simply another bill among hundreds filed in the halls of the Senate. But to those who understand the deeper currents of history, the measure carried something far more profound. It carried the belief that a nation must prepare its youth not only to inherit the Philippines but also to defend it.


Robin Padilla is a man known by many faces. To some he is an actor. To others he is a public figure shaped by a colorful past. Yet beyond the image, there is something deeply Filipino in the patriotism he carries. His advocacy for ROTC is not the cold calculation of politics. It is the instinctive nationalism of a man who believes that the Filipino youth must grow not only with talent and intelligence but also with discipline, courage, and love for country.


Because ROTC is not merely about creating reservists.


Too often critics reduce the program to marching drills and military commands. They remember the controversies of the past, and those concerns must never be ignored. History must be remembered so that reform becomes real. Safeguards must be built. Oversight must be strict. Respect for human rights must be non-negotiable.


But if we only remember the mistakes of the past and forget the purpose of the institution, we lose something essential.


ROTC is about formation.


It is about molding the holistic personality of a young Filipino. It teaches discipline in a culture that sometimes celebrates convenience. It teaches responsibility in a generation raised in the speed of digital life. It teaches that freedom is not merely enjoyed but protected.


When a young student wakes before sunrise for training, stands under the heat of the sun in formation, listens to commands, and realizes that his or her actions affect an entire unit, something changes inside that young person. Unti-unting nagbabago ang pananaw. The idea of duty begins to grow. The mindset shifts from “I” to “we.”


Doon nagsisimula ang tunay na patriotism.


For me, ROTC should begin in Senior High School.


Sa lumang sistema ng edukasyon ng Pilipinas, the stage we now call Senior High was equivalent to the first and second years of college. At that age, young Filipinos are no longer children. Their minds begin to search for meaning. Their hearts begin to absorb ideologies. They encounter political narratives, social movements, and powerful ideas competing for their loyalty.


Kung doon pa lamang ay mabibigyan na sila ng disiplina at civic orientation, mas magiging matibay ang kanilang pagmamahal sa bayan.


Today our youth are constantly exposed to narratives circulating across social media and activist spaces. Some of these narratives originate from radical ideological movements, including those aligned with communist legal fronts. These movements often frame their messaging in emotionally powerful language—justice, liberation, and revolution.


Magaganda ang mga salitang iyon. They resonate with the idealism of young hearts.


But idealism without discipline can be easily manipulated.


ROTC offers grounding.


It introduces the youth to the realities of national security. It teaches them that institutions, though imperfect, exist to preserve order. It reminds them that sovereignty is fragile and that the nation survives only when its citizens understand the responsibility of freedom.


Kapag nauunawaan ng kabataan ang sakripisyo ng mga sundalo, ang katotohanan ng insurgency, at ang halaga ng soberanya, nawawala ang romantisasyon ng armadong pakikibaka. They begin to see the difference between genuine reform and ideological destabilization.


This is not about silencing dissent. Ang demokrasya ay nabubuhay sa debate. But discernment is essential. A generation that debates without discipline becomes vulnerable. A generation that debates with civic grounding becomes the guardian of democracy.


The Philippines is also a nation constantly visited by disaster. Typhoons devastate communities. Floods swallow entire neighborhoods. Earthquakes strike without warning. In those moments, hashtags cannot lift debris. Viral posts cannot rescue trapped families.


What the nation needs are disciplined hands, calm minds, and courageous hearts.


ROTC can help build that generation.


And beyond disasters lies the question of sovereignty.


Ang West Philippine Sea ay hindi lamang isyu ng geopolitics. It is about national dignity. It is about ensuring that future generations of Filipinos inherit not only stories of courage but also the waters and resources that rightfully belong to them.


A nation whose citizens lack discipline becomes fragile. Ngunit ang bansang may mamamayang may malasakit at pagmamahal sa bayan ay nagiging matatag kahit sa gitna ng bagyo ng kasaysayan.


When I remember that night when the news of possible war flashed before me, I recall the momentary fear that passed through my heart. But what followed that fear was clarity.


Preparation is an act of love.


Ang paghahanda sa kabataan ay pagmamahal sa bayan. Teaching discipline is protecting the future of our nation. Cultivating patriotism is planting the seeds of survival.


And this is why the advocacy of Senator Robin Padilla deserves not mockery but serious national reflection.


Because sometimes the most patriotic ideas do not come wrapped in academic language. Sometimes they come from a simple but powerful instinct: the instinct to defend one’s country.


Now is the time for his voice to be heard in the halls of the Senate. Now is the time for Senate Bill No. 617, the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps Act filed on July 15, 2025, to move forward with urgency.


For when history begins to tremble, nations are not saved by speeches alone.


They are saved by citizens whose hearts beat with discipline, courage, and love for country.


At ang bansang may ganitong mamamayan ay hindi kailanman matitinag.


Because when the sirens of history begin to sound, the Philippines must not stand unprepared.


The Philippines must rise with a generation ready to say, with quiet conviction and unwavering pride,


Mahal ko ang aking bansang Pilipinas!

_______________________________

 *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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