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.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

My New Book About Integritocracy

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


Integritocracy :Restoring the Soul of Democracy Through Integrity, Character, and Public Trust


What if the greatest crisis facing democracy is not the lack of elections—but the lack of integrity?


For generations, nations have invested enormous effort in building constitutions, creating institutions, conducting elections, and expanding democratic freedoms. Yet despite these achievements, corruption persists, public trust declines, institutions weaken, and citizens increasingly question whether democracy is truly delivering its promise.


In Integritocracy, Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope presents a bold and original philosophy born from years of reflection on Philippine history, governance, leadership, education, public service, and the human condition.


At the heart of this groundbreaking work lies a simple but profound proposition:


Democracy determines who governs. Integrity determines how a nation lives.


Through powerful narratives, historical reflections, philosophical insights, and practical principles, Dr. Teope argues that democracy without integrity eventually becomes vulnerable to the tyranny of numbers, where popularity overshadows character, power eclipses responsibility, and institutions lose their moral foundation.


This book introduces the concept of Integritocracy—a philosophy that does not seek to replace democracy, but to strengthen it by restoring integrity as the cornerstone of public life.


Inside this book, readers will discover:


• Why integrity is the missing foundation of democratic governance


• The dangers of the “Tyranny of Numbers” in modern politics


• The concept of “Integrity Capital” as a nation’s greatest invisible asset


• Why character must come before competence in leadership


• The role of family, education, faith, media, and citizenship in shaping national character


• How integrity influences economic prosperity, public trust, and institutional stability


• The Twelve Doctrines of Integritocracy


• A practical vision for building an Integritocratic Republic


Written in a reflective and deeply human style, Integritocracy moves beyond politics and enters the realm of civic philosophy. It challenges readers to look beyond governments and ask a more important question:


What kind of people must we become for freedom, justice, and democracy to endure?


Whether you are a student, educator, public servant, policymaker, business leader, community organizer, or concerned citizen, this book offers a compelling framework for understanding why nations rise, why institutions fail, and how integrity can restore public trust.


More than a book about government, Integritocracy is a call to personal responsibility, ethical leadership, and national renewal.


Because the future of democracy will not be determined solely by the leaders we elect.


It will be determined by the integrity we choose to live.


The Republic begins with us.


 👉 Click this to Get Your Copy! 



Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Kiko Barzaga, Alan Peter Cayetano, and the Question of Equal Standards in Democratic Accountability

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

A few days ago, I was having coffee with several friends from government, law enforcement, and academia when the conversation unexpectedly shifted from the usual discussions on governance, corruption, and public accountability to the issue surrounding former Congressman Kiko Barzaga. As often happens in gatherings where public affairs are discussed, opinions varied. Some defended the decision of the House of Representatives, while others questioned it. Then someone asked a simple question that immediately changed the direction of the conversation: “Kung si Kiko Barzaga ay na-expel dahil sa kanyang asal sa social media at sa kanyang mga pag-atake laban sa mga kapwa mambabatas, bakit tila ibang standard ang ginagamit kapag ibang politiko naman ang gumagawa nito?”

Tahimik ang mesa sa loob ng ilang segundo. At habang pinag-iisipan ko ang tanong na iyon, napagtanto ko na hindi ito simpleng usapin tungkol kay Kiko Barzaga o Alan Peter Cayetano. It is a question about fairness, consistency, and ultimately, a question about whether democratic institutions are willing to apply the same standards to everyone.

The issue involving former Representative Kiko Barzaga is already part of recent political history. Public discussions surrounding his case focused on his social media activities, his public criticisms of colleagues, his accusations against fellow lawmakers, his cryptic posts, and statements that many members of the House considered offensive, inflammatory, and inconsistent with the standards expected from a member of Congress. The House of Representatives eventually imposed disciplinary sanctions that culminated in his expulsion.

Maaaring may mga sumasang-ayon sa naging desisyon, at maaari ring may mga hindi sang-ayon. Ngunit anuman ang paninindigan ng isang tao, isang bagay ang malinaw. Nagpasya ang institusyon na ang ilang uri ng asal at pag-uugali ay lumampas sa hangganan ng katanggap-tanggap na asal ng isang halal na opisyal. That decision established a standard. And once a standard has been established, it becomes reasonable to ask whether the same standard is being applied to everyone else.

Habang pinag-iisipan ko ang usaping ito, may isa pang tanong na nabuo sa aking isipan: If social media conduct can become a basis for disciplinary action, should the same principle apply to everyone? Ito ang tanong na hindi madaling sagutin dahil in recent years, many politicians have used Facebook, livestreams, interviews, and social media platforms not merely to communicate policies but also to criticize colleagues, challenge institutions, question motives, and influence public perception regarding ongoing political disputes.

At dito pumapasok ang pangalan ni Alan Peter Cayetano. The comparison is unavoidable because many of the actions that became controversial in the case of Kiko Barzaga are behaviors that critics argue can also be observed in some of Cayetano’s social media engagements. Through Facebook Live broadcasts and public online discussions, Cayetano has repeatedly brought political disagreements directly to the public, criticized fellow senators, questioned the motives and independence of colleagues, challenged institutional decisions, and employed rhetoric that many perceive as divisive and confrontational.

Sa iba’t ibang pagkakataon, ang mga hindi pagkakasundo sa loob ng Senado ay tila naililipat sa social media. Ang mga argumento na dati ay inaasahang maririnig sa plenaryo o committee hearings ay nagiging bahagi ng Facebook Live broadcasts, interviews, at online discussions. Ang resulta ay mas nagiging personal ang politika at mas nagiging emosyonal ang pampublikong diskurso.

Kung ang naging batayan ng disciplinary action laban kay Kiko Barzaga ay ang paggamit ng social media upang atakihin ang mga kapwa mambabatas, magbigay ng mga mapanuring bansag, kuwestiyunin ang kanilang mga intensyon, at ilipat ang mga institutional disputes sa social media arena, hindi maiiwasang itanong kung bakit tila iba ang pagtingin kapag isang senador naman ang gumagawa nito. The issue therefore is not whether Alan Peter Cayetano should automatically be sanctioned; the issue is whether the same standards that were used to evaluate Kiko Barzaga should at least be applied to Alan Peter Cayetano.

Fairness demands consistency. If Barzaga’s conduct was serious enough to trigger disciplinary proceedings, then similar conduct by any public official should likewise be subjected to examination. Otherwise, the public may conclude that ethics rules are not based on conduct but on position, influence, political affiliation, or political convenience. Sa isang Republika, hindi dapat magkaiba ang pamantayan para sa kongresista at senador, para sa kaalyado at kritiko, o para sa makapangyarihan at ordinaryong miyembro ng isang institusyon.

The Constitution grants each chamber of Congress the authority to discipline its own members. This authority exists because every institution must preserve order, professionalism, and public confidence. However, disciplinary power is not merely a privilege—it is also a responsibility. The authority to discipline was never intended to protect politicians from criticism; it was intended to protect institutional integrity.

There is a profound difference between criticizing policies and attacking personalities. Legislators are expected to challenge government actions, expose corruption, question public policies, and disagree with one another. Sa katunayan, bahagi iyon ng kanilang mandato bilang mga halal na kinatawan ng mamamayan sapagkat democracy requires disagreement, accountability, and criticism.

But democracy does not require the destruction of institutional respect. Kapag ang mga argumento ay napapalitan ng insulto, bumababa ang kalidad ng pampublikong talakayan. Kapag ang mga bansag ang pumapalit sa maayos na argumento, nasasaktan ang mga institusyon. Kapag alegasyon ang pumapalit sa ebidensya, unti-unting nawawala ang tiwala ng publiko.

Perhaps one of the most significant developments of modern politics is that social media has become a parallel legislature. In the past, legislators debated on the floor, but today, many debates occur online. Noon, privilege speeches ang sentro ng political discourse; ngayon, Facebook Live broadcasts at social media posts na ang madalas na pinagmumulan ng political narratives. Noon, committee hearings ang pangunahing venue para sa pagsusuri ng mga alegasyon; ngayon, madalas ay nahahatulan na ang isang tao sa social media bago pa man dumaan sa tamang proseso.

The danger is that social media rewards outrage more than reason. Algorithms amplify controversy, and emotion travels faster than facts. Mas mabilis mag-viral ang galit kaysa katotohanan, mas mabilis kumalat ang insulto kaysa ebidensya, at mas maraming engagement ang kontrobersiya kaysa mahinahong pagsusuri. This challenge is not unique to Kiko Barzaga or Alan Peter Cayetano; it affects every public official who uses social media as a political weapon rather than as a tool for public communication.

The larger concern is what happens when lawmakers themselves become the loudest critics of the institutions they belong to. Criticism is healthy, oversight is necessary, and accountability is essential. Ngunit may malinaw na pagkakaiba ang pagiging kritiko at pagiging mapanira; may pagkakaiba ang debate at demonization; at may pagkakaiba ang accountability at vilification. Institutions cannot survive if every disagreement is framed as betrayal and every opponent is portrayed as an enemy.

Kapag bawat hindi sumasang-ayon ay agad na tinatawag na tuta, traydor, aso, o kasangkapan ng kung sinong makapangyarihan, unti-unting nawawala ang espasyo para sa makatwirang diskurso. Polarization replaces governance, emotion replaces reason, and narratives replace facts. At ang tunay na talo ay hindi lamang ang mga politiko kundi ang tiwala ng mamamayan sa kanilang mga demokratikong institusyon.

This brings us back to the central question: If certain conduct was deemed unethical in the case of Kiko Barzaga, should substantially similar conduct by any other legislator be subjected to the same scrutiny? Sa aking pananaw, ito ang tanong na dapat harapin ng mga institusyon—hindi kung sino ang mas popular, hindi kung sino ang mas makapangyarihan, at hindi kung sino ang mas maraming followers sa Facebook, kundi kung ang parehong pamantayan ay tunay na umiiral para sa lahat. Citizens can tolerate political disagreements, but what they cannot easily tolerate is inconsistency. People may disagree with a decision and still respect it if they believe the process was fair. Ngunit kapag tila magkakaiba ang pamantayan depende sa personalidad ng sangkot, doon nagsisimulang mabuo ang pagdududa.

The true test of ethical governance is not how institutions discipline their critics; the true test is whether institutions possess the courage to apply the same standards to everyone. Hindi nasusukat ang integridad ng isang institusyon sa kakayahan nitong parusahan ang mga kalaban nito—nasusukat ito sa kakayahan nitong maging patas kahit sa mga kakampi nito. A Republic does not weaken because politicians disagree; a Republic begins to weaken when citizens conclude that the rules apply differently depending on who breaks them. 

At marahil iyon ang pinakamahalagang aral sa usaping ito. The issue is no longer whether Kiko Barzaga or Alan Peter Cayetano was right or wrong. The issue is whether the Filipino people can still believe that the same rules, the same ethical standards, and the same principles apply equally to everyone. Because once that belief disappears, it is not merely the credibility of politicians that suffers—it is the very foundation of democratic governance that begins to crack.

 

________________________________________________________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public 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, management, economics, doctrine 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, June 23, 2026

The Philippines, Corruption, and the Fear That Keeps Me Awake

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



A few nights ago, I found myself staring at my phone long after a Viber conversation had ended with my friend Paul, an Aide-De-Camp to a veteran Senator. What began as an ordinary exchange of ideas about government appointments, governance, corruption, and public service slowly evolved into something that would keep me awake long after the discussion was over. As we talked, Paul shared observations that many Filipinos have probably heard before. There are public discussions about officials who have survived multiple administrations, alongside allegations circulating online about corruption involving certain appointees. Concerns persist that some officials identified with the present administration, as well as holdovers from previous administrations, continue to occupy influential positions despite recurring questions from the public. To be fair, allegations are not evidence, and social media is not a court of law; every public servant deserves due process and fairness. Yet, public perception matters, and when public distrust becomes widespread, even honest officials become victims of that distrust.


As our conversation continued, we shifted to the flood control controversy. For many people, it is simply another political issue, but for me, it has become a symbol. Every time I see images of flooded communities, I no longer see only water; I see broken trust, promises that failed to reach the people, and taxpayers wondering where years of appropriations went. A flood is not merely water; sometimes it is the visible consequence of invisible decisions made years earlier. Somewhere tonight, a father is carrying appliances through floodwaters, a mother is trying to save family documents, and a student is wondering how to replace books destroyed by another storm. Somewhere, a taxpayer is asking a simple question: Where did the money go? Perhaps that is why the flood control issue resonates so deeply. It is no longer simply about infrastructure; it is about trust. And trust, once broken, is among the hardest things to rebuild.


As a single father, I could not help but think of my daughter Juliana Rizalhea. What kind of country will her generation inherit? What kind of government will they trust, and what kind of leaders will shape their future? These questions lingered in my mind long after the conversation ended. I could not sleep—not because Paul had revealed some great secret, but because he had unintentionally forced me to confront a question I have wrestled with for years: What if corruption has become stronger than the systems designed to stop it? What if corruption has become so deeply embedded that it survives elections, administrations, reforms, and every promise of change? That thought is frightening.


For decades, governments have introduced reforms—new laws, new commissions, new technologies, new auditing mechanisms, and new procurement systems. Yet, corruption remains one of the most persistent challenges confronting our Republic. Why? Because corruption adapts. It studies every reform and looks for every weakness. Pass a new law and someone searches for a loophole; digitize transactions and someone finds a way around the system; strengthen oversight and someone attempts to influence the overseers. The painful reality is that almost every anti-corruption solution can eventually be challenged.


And that realization led me to perhaps the most uncomfortable question I have asked in years: What if corruption can never be completely eliminated? At first, that sounds defeatist, but perhaps it is simply realistic. No nation has ever completely eliminated corruption. The real difference between successful countries and struggling countries is not the absence of corruption; the difference is whether integrity remains stronger than corruption.


As my conversation with Paul was about to end, he suddenly caught me off guard by saying, “Doc, you should be in government.” I smiled and replied, “I would love to serve. But I can still help government even without a position.” The statement sounded simple, but the truth behind it is far more complicated because Paul unknowingly touched a wound I have carried for years.


The truth is that I have always loved public service, and I have served before. Years ago, I accepted an invitation to become a Municipal Councilor. Like many who enter government for the first time, I entered with idealism. I believed reforms were possible, that integrity mattered, that corruption could be confronted, and that good people could make a difference. But reality has a way of testing convictions.


There were meetings where I found myself asking whether anyone else in the room was as disturbed as I was by what I was seeing. There were moments when it felt as if I was fighting battles alone—not because there were no good people in government, for there always are, but because the system often has a way of isolating those who refuse to compromise.


After that local legilative experience, I chose not to continue. This was not because I stopped believing in public service, but because I discovered something painful: integrity alone cannot sustain reform. Integrity must be defended collectively. One honest person inside a system can inspire change, but one honest person standing alone eventually becomes exhausted.


To this day, I sometimes wonder whether I made the right choice. Every time I read about a scandal, see waste, or witness another controversy, a small voice inside me asks: Could I have made a difference if I had stayed? Could I have done more if I had remained in government? I do not know. Perhaps that is a question I will carry for the rest of my life.


What many people do not know is that I have never been comfortable applying for government positions; the opportunities that came to me came through invitations. One of those invitations involved a position at the level of Undersecretary. For many people, such an opportunity would have been impossible to decline, offering prestige, influence, authority, and a chance to shape national policy.


Before giving my answer, I asked a simple question: “Who will be my Secretary?” When I heard the name, I politely declined. Some people thought I was foolish or wasting an opportunity, and perhaps they were right. But I asked myself another question: How can I fight corruption if I do not trust the integrity of the leadership above me? How can I ask others to stand on principle if I compromise mine from the very beginning?


Some people spend fortunes trying to enter government, but I walked away from an opportunity because I could not afford the price of compromising my conscience. Power, titles, and positions are seductive, but integrity is expensive. Sometimes integrity requires saying no to opportunities others spend their entire lives pursuing.


Perhaps this is why I have become increasingly convinced that the Philippines does not suffer from a shortage of laws; rather, the Philippines suffers from a shortage of integrity. Ang problema natin ay hindi kakulangan ng batas. Ang problema natin ay kakulangan ng integridad. The Constitution, laws, regulations, and safeguards are all clear, yet corruption persists—hindi dahil kulang ang batas, kundi dahil may mga taong handang baluktutin ang batas para sa pansariling interes.


This is why I continue to believe in what I have often described as "Integritocracy." Not as a replacement for democracy, but as a reminder of democracy’s greatest vulnerability. Democracy tells us who wins; integrity determines what they do after they win.


Perhaps the greatest enemy of the Philippines is no longer corruption itself, but normalization. The moment people stop becoming shocked by scandals, corruption wins. The moment people say, “Lahat naman sila ganyan,” corruption wins. The moment honesty becomes naïve and integrity becomes laughable, corruption wins. Maybe this is simply wishful thinking, maybe integrity will never become fashionable in politics, and maybe corruption will always find ways to survive. But I refuse to believe that cynicism is a better alternative.


Looking back, perhaps Paul thought he was encouraging me to return to government, but in reality, he left me with a much bigger question: if good people continue refusing to participate because they are discouraged by corruption, who will remain inside the system? To be clear, I do not count myself among those good people; making such a claim would be entirely self-serving. Whether I belong in that company is not for me to decide, but rather for those who know me and those who hate me to judge.


I do not know whether corruption can ever be completely defeated. Perhaps every law will eventually be challenged, every reform will be tested, and every system will reveal weaknesses. But that does not mean we surrender. If there is one thing I fear more than corruption, it is the possibility that one day my daughter Juliana Rizalhea’s generation will stop believing that integrity matters.


One day she and millions of young Filipinos will inherit this Republic. When that day comes, I want to be able to tell her that whether I was inside government or outside it, whether I held a position or not, whether I succeeded or failed, I never stopped believing that integrity was worth fighting for. Because when a nation loses faith in integrity, corruption no longer needs to defeat it—the nation defeats itself.

#DJOT

________________________________________________________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public 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, management, economics, doctrine 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.


 

When Schools Become Crime Scenes: The Silent Crisis Facing Philippine Education Today

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




No father has ever kissed his child goodbye before school believing it would be the last time.


Every school day begins almost the same way. Gigising ang mga bata na parang gusto pang matulog ng limang minuto. Nagmamadaling kumain ng almusal, hinahanap ang nawawalang notebook, nagrereklamo sa assignment na hindi natapos, at naghahanda para sa isa na namang ordinaryong araw sa paaralan. Bilang mga ama, paulit ulit nating pinapaalalahanan sila na mag aral nang mabuti, igalang ang kanilang mga guro, umiwas sa gulo, at umuwi nang ligtas. It is a routine so ordinary that we rarely stop to appreciate it.


Perhaps that is why tragedy hurts so deeply.

It always begins on what appears to be an ordinary day.

As a single father, that thought has never been more real to me than it is today.


The new school year has already begun in many parts of the country. Muling nabuhay ang mga silid aralan. Muling narinig ang ingay ng mga estudyante. Muling nabuhay ang mga pangarap ng libo libong kabataan. My daughter Juliana Rizalhea or JR’s school, however, will officially open on July 18. Kaya habang nagsimula na ang klase sa maraming paaralan, she is still enjoying the last remaining days of her vacation. Tahimik lamang na nakalagay sa isang sulok ng aming bahay ang kanyang school bag, naghihintay ng panibagong school year. In just a few days, she will once again wear her uniform of a Senior High School, carry that familiar school bag, and walk through the gates of her new school.


Before that day comes, I already know exactly what I will tell her.

“Anak, kung sakaling may mambully sa’yo, huwag mong sarilinin. Huwag mong isipin na kailangan mong kayanin mag isa. Tell me immediately. I’ll always be here for you.”

Ngumingiti lang siya.

Minsan natatawa pa.

Marahil iniisip niyang masyado lang mag alala ang kanyang Daddy.

At bilang ama, sana ay lumaki siyang hindi kailanman lubos na mauunawaan kung bakit paulit ulit kong sinasabi ang mga salitang iyon.

Because I know exactly what bullying feels like.


Like many Filipinos, naging biktima rin ako ng bullying noong elementary at high school. I know what it feels like to enter a classroom pretending everything is alright while quietly questioning your own worth. Alam ko ang pakiramdam na maging katatawanan ng iba. Alam ko ang pakiramdam na tumawa kasama nila habang tahimik na dinadala ang sugat na hindi nakikita ng kahit sino.


May mga pagkakataong gusto kong lumaban.

May mga pagkakataong mas madaling piliin ang galit kaysa pagtitiis.

Pero sa gitna ng lahat ng iyon, tahimik akong nangako sa sarili ko.

One day, those who laughed at me would see a different version of the boy they once underestimated.

Hindi ko sila gagantihan ng suntok.

Hindi ko sila gagantihan ng galit.

Success became my revenge.


Every diploma I earned, every opportunity entrusted to me, every Student-General taught, every foreign school I attended, every article I wrote, every book I published, and every milestone I achieved became my answer to those painful years.

Pain did not destroy me.

It refined me.

Perhaps that is also why I intentionally raised JR differently.

Gusto kong lumaki siyang mabait.

Pero hindi mahina.

Respectful.

But never defenseless.


That is why I made sure she learned Taekwondo, Judo, Boxing, Mixed Martial Arts, and even responsible firearms handling under proper supervision. Hindi para turuan siyang maging marahas kundi para turuan siyang magkaroon ng disiplina, self confidence, emotional control, at kakayahang protektahan ang sarili kung wala nang ibang mapagpipilian.


Ironically, the greatest lesson martial arts teaches is not how to fight.

It teaches when not to fight.


Habang tahimik na ine enjoy ni JR ang nalalabing araw ng kanyang bakasyon, I came across the heartbreaking news about the shooting incident at San Jose National High School.

Three young lives were lost.

Several others were injured.

Habang binabasa ko ang bawat detalye ng balita, another tragedy immediately entered my mind.

Naalala ko ang estudyanteng namatay sa loob ng isang paaralan sa Marikina City noong 2025, ilang kilometro lamang mula sa paaralan ni JR at ilang linggo lamang ito pagkatapos manalo si JR ng silver medal sa Taekwondo.


Then I remembered the Ateneo shooting, an incident that shocked the entire nation because it happened in a place where people least expected violence.


Three different schools.

Three different stories.

Three different circumstances.

Yet all of them point toward one painful reality.

Our schools are no longer immune from violence.

Sometimes violence comes from a firearm.

Sometimes it comes from emotional pain that has been ignored for far too long.

Sometimes it comes from years of bullying, rejection, humiliation, loneliness, or unresolved trauma.

Maaaring magkaiba ang sandata.

Maaaring magkaiba ang sitwasyon.

Pero iisa ang naging wakas.

Lives are lost.

Families are broken.

Dreams are buried long before graduation.


Kapag pinagsama sama mo ang mga pangyayaring ito, hindi na sila simpleng magkakahiwalay na balita.

They reveal a silent crisis confronting Philippine education.

At that moment, I was no longer reading the news as a professor.

I was no longer reading it as someone who teaches leadership, governance, and public safety.


I was reading every line as a father.

And everything changed.

Napatingin ako sa school bag ni JR.

Tahimik lamang itong nakapatong sa aming table.

Pero bigla itong nagkaroon ng ibang kahulugan.

It was no longer just a school bag.

It became a father’s trust.

A father’s dream.

A father’s future.


Then one painful question quietly entered my heart.

“What if that had been JR?”

That single question is enough to break even the strongest father.

Mula sa sandaling iyon, hindi mo na nakikita ang headline.

Hindi mo na nakikita ang statistics.

Hindi mo na nakikita ang breaking news.

Ang nakikita mo na ay ang sarili mong anak.

You begin imagining your own home.

You begin imagining your own future.

Iniisip mo ang tawag sa telepono na ayaw marinig ng kahit sinong magulang.

Iniisip mo ang katahimikang papalit sa dating tawanan.

Iniisip mo ang kwartong naiwan na parang anumang oras ay bubukas ang pinto.

Nandoon pa rin ang mga libro.

Nandoon pa rin ang school shoes.

Nandoon pa rin ang mga medalya.

Nandoon pa rin ang mga pangarap.

Pero wala na ang batang minsang nangarap ng lahat ng iyon.

Days become weeks.

Weeks become months.


Yet every afternoon, almost without realizing it, a father still glances toward the gate.

Habit is stronger than grief.

Hope sometimes becomes stronger than reality.

Sa isang maikling sandali, umaasa pa rin siyang makarinig ng yabag.

Umaasa pa rin siyang marinig ang isang simpleng tawag.

“Daddy…”

Pero ang katahimikan ang sumasagot.

Life outside continues.

Traffic moves.

Schools reopen.

People return to work.

The news cycle changes.

But for one father…

time stopped the day his child never came home.

Ito ang dahilan kung bakit hindi ko kailanman sasabihing,

“Bullying lang naman ’yan.”

No.

There is no such thing as “just bullying.”

Bullying slowly destroys confidence.

It teaches children to doubt themselves.

It convinces them that they are unwanted.


Some become stronger.

Some become quieter.

Some lose confidence.

Some lose hope.

And some eventually believe that nobody is listening anymore.


Violence never begins with the sound of a gunshot.

Suicide never begins on the day someone dies.

Both begin much earlier.

Nagsisimula ito kapag ang isang bata ay palaging mag isang kumakain.

Kapag ang pangungutya ay nagiging libangan.

Kapag ang pang iinsulto ay nagiging normal na usapan.

Kapag ang sugat sa damdamin ay tinatawag lamang na drama.

Kapag ang tahimik na paghingi ng tulong ay wala nang nakakarinig.


The tragedy at San Jose National High School reminds us of the devastating consequences when violence erupts inside the classroom.

The tragedy in Marikina reminds us that emotional pain, when ignored, can become just as deadly.

The Ateneo shooting reminds us that no school, no matter how prestigious or well protected, is completely immune from violence.

Hindi ito tatlong magkakahiwalay na pangyayari.

Tatlong babala ito para sa ating lahat.

Tatlong paalala na ang kaligtasan ng ating mga anak ay hindi lamang nasusukat sa taas ng bakod, dami ng CCTV, security guards, o metal detectors.

A truly safe school is one where every child feels protected physically, emotionally, psychologically, and socially.


It is a place where bullying is confronted before it destroys a life.

It is a place where every child believes that someone is listening.

Habang binabasa ko ang mga ulat na ito, paulit ulit na bumabalik ang mga tanong sa aking isipan.

How many warning signs went unnoticed?

How many complaints were ignored?

How many opportunities existed to intervene before everything reached the point of no return?

Perhaps we may never know.

But one thing is certain.

Every tragedy involving a child should never force us to ask only who committed the act.

It should also force us to ask whether someone failed to prevent it.

Because every ignored complaint.

Every unanswered cry for help.

Every unresolved bullying incident.

Represents another opportunity to save a child that was lost.

As a father, my instinct is to protect JR.


Pero hindi lahat ng bata ay may magulang na agad napapansin ang tahimik nilang pagdurusa.

That is why protecting children can never remain solely a family responsibility.

It must become a national responsibility.

Ito ang dahilan kung bakit naniniwala akong panahon na upang kumilos ang ating pamahalaan.

Hindi na sapat ang maglabas lamang ng memorandum pagkatapos ng bawat trahedya.

Hindi na sapat ang magkaroon lamang ng counseling kapag mayroon nang namatay.

Government intervention should begin before another child becomes another headline.


Perhaps the time has finally come for Congress to enact a comprehensive Safe Place Act.

Hindi batas na puro parusa lamang pagkatapos ng trahedya.

Kundi batas na pipigil upang hindi na mangyari ang susunod na trahedya.

The law should require every school, university, government office, workplace, and private institution to establish effective anti-bullying mechanisms, anonymous reporting systems, behavioral threat assessment teams, accessible mental health services, conflict mediation programs, and regular Safe Place compliance audits.

Every complaint should be documented.

Every warning sign should be investigated.

Every cry for help should receive an immediate response.

More importantly, accountability should never stop with the bully.

Kung paulit ulit nang may ulat ng bullying ngunit walang ginawang aksyon ang mga school officials.

Kung pinili ng mga administrador ang katahimikan kaysa responsibilidad.

Kung pinili ng mga nasa awtoridad ang convenience kaysa intervention.

Then negligence must likewise carry administrative, civil, and even criminal consequences whenever that failure contributes to serious injury, suicide, or violence.

Authority should never exist without accountability.

Leadership is measured not by titles.

Leadership is measured by the lives it protects.

The true measure of a school is not the number of medals displayed on its walls.

It is the number of children who safely return home every afternoon.

The true measure of government is not the number of investigations it conducts after another tragedy.

It is the number of tragedies it prevents before they ever happen.

Habang nagsimula na ang klase sa maraming paaralan, JR is still counting the remaining days before July 18.

Soon she will once again carry her school bag and walk through the gates of her school.

Like millions of fathers across the country, I will quietly watch her leave.

Hindi dahil wala akong tiwala sa kanyang paaralan.

Hindi dahil nagdududa ako sa kanyang mga guro.

Kundi dahil alam kong ang bawat ama ay may iisang hiling lamang sa pagtatapos ng bawat araw.

Na makauwi nang ligtas ang kanyang anak.

Every afternoon, I wait for one familiar sound.

The sound of our gate opening.

The sound of footsteps coming home.

Then I hear that familiar voice.

“Daddy… I’m home.”


Those simple words remind me that another ordinary day has ended exactly the way every school day should end.


Safe.

Complete.

Whole.


Madalas kong naiisip ang mga amang hindi na muling narinig ang mga salitang iyon.

Ang kanilang sakit ay hindi dapat manatiling isang headline na makakalimutan din ng panahon.

It should become our reason to build better schools.

Better communities.

Better leaders.

And a better nation.


This is why I refuse to lose hope.

Hope begins when parents choose to listen before their children stop talking.

Hope begins when teachers notice the quiet student sitting alone at the back of the classroom.

Hope begins when classmates choose kindness over ridicule.

Hope begins when school administrators refuse to ignore reports of bullying.

Hope begins when government chooses prevention over reaction.

And hope begins when all of us realize that protecting our children is not only the responsibility of parents or schools.


It is the responsibility of an entire nation.

Naniniwala pa rin akong ang paaralan ay dapat manatiling tahanan ng mga pangarap.

Naniniwala pa rin akong ang mga guro ay patuloy na magiging pangalawang magulang ng bawat batang ipinagkakatiwala sa kanila.

Naniniwala pa rin akong mas marami pa ring mabubuting kabataan kaysa sa masasama.

At higit sa lahat, naniniwala akong ang bawat trahedya ay maaaring maging simula ng tunay na pagbabago kung magkakaroon lamang tayo ng lakas ng loob na matuto mula rito.


When the school bell rings tomorrow, may it continue announcing not fear, but hope.

May every classroom become a place where children discover their potential instead of hiding their pain.

May every father wait at home with peace instead of fear.

And may every child who walks through the school gates each morning return home carrying not only books and lessons, but another day of dreams still waiting to be fulfilled.


Because the future of the Philippines is not only being shaped inside our classrooms.

It is also being protected there.

#DJOT

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*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public 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, management, economics, doctrine 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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