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.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Dr. Bong Acop: Defending the Mandate of the People of the City of Antipolo’s 2nd District: A Candidacy Anchored on Continuity, Not Entitlement

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



The other afternoon, while passing through Antipolo City on my way to Teresa, Rizal, to fetch my usual siopao and pancit, I noticed something that made me slow down—not my vehicle, but my thoughts. Along the roadside were campaign posters. Familiar faces. New faces. And among them was Dr. Philip Bong Acop, alongside other candidates running for the vacant congressional seat left by the passing of Romeo Acop.


For a moment, politics felt very personal.


Only months ago, the people of Antipolo’s 2nd District had spoken clearly in May 2025. They chose Congressman Romeo Acop. The mandate was fresh. The trust was renewed. And yet, fate intervened. His passing did not revoke the will of the electorate—it merely interrupted it.


As I continued driving toward Teresa, I could not help but reflect. This is not about dynastic politics. It is not about preserving a surname. It is about continuing an interrupted mandate. The people were not dissatisfied. They were not looking for change. They were denied time—denied the opportunity to see the full term of the man they had just elected.


Dr. Philip Bong Acop’s candidacy, as I see it, is anchored on continuity, not entitlement. He is not stepping forward simply because he is the son. He is stepping forward because the mandate given to his father was cut short. The district’s direction was interrupted mid-course.


And what strengthens this position is that Dr. Bong Acop is not an untested figure. He is a three-term City Councilor who understands local governance, legislation, and public budgeting. He is a dedicated Medical Doctor whose profession itself is rooted in service, compassion, and discipline. His track record does not speak of inherited privilege—it speaks of preparation. In many respects, he is not only capable of continuing his father’s work; he is positioned to deliver services and satisfaction to the people at an even higher level. His qualifications make him, in my view, the most prepared to defend and carry forward that interrupted mandate.


Democracy, after all, has its built-in correction.


If he fails to perform, if he cannot meet the expectations of the people, there is 2028. The voters hold the ultimate authority to remove him and install someone they believe can do better. No office is permanent. No mandate is immune from public judgment. That is the beauty—and the discipline—of representative government.


But as I stared at those posters lining the road, I could not ignore another thought. Why the rush? Why the eagerness of others to immediately file candidacy for a position that the people had so recently filled? When a vacancy arises because of death, the first response should be solemn respect for the mandate that was just given. Instead, what sometimes appears is political hunger—the swift calculation that tragedy creates opportunity. To aggressively pursue the seat of a newly elected but deceased representative risks projecting bad faith. Democracy allows contest, yes. But morality demands restraint.


That is why when I later heard the news about Councilor LJ Sumulong, I saw something different. I saw a nationalist from Antipolo City who genuinely loves the city and understands the meaning of respecting an interrupted mandate. In moments like these, leadership is not only measured by ambition but by restraint. To recognize that the people have already spoken and to honor that decision even when opportunity presents itself reflects political maturity. It shows that public service is not always about stepping forward—sometimes it is about knowing when to step back out of respect for the electorate’s recent voice.


As I finally reached Teresa and picked up my siopao and pancit, I found myself reflecting on how politics, like everyday life, is about trust. The people of Antipolo’s 2nd District already expressed that trust months ago. What is being defended now is not a family’s claim to power—but the people’s original decision.


In the end, the posters will fade. Elections will come and go. But the principle remains: a mandate interrupted deserves the chance to be completed—subject always to the judgment of the people.


And that judgment, as always, will have the final word.

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*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.

 

Friday, February 20, 2026

Betrayers of the Nation or Realists of their Time? A Historical Comparison of Felipe Buencamino and Rodante Marcoleta

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


When we ask whether a public figure has betrayed the nation, we must move beyond emotion and look squarely at actions, context, and implications. The comparison between Felipe Buencamino and Rodante Marcoleta forces us to confront uncomfortable truths about calculated preservation, political realism, and the perception of alignment.


Historically, Buencamino began as a functionary under Spanish rule, later joined the revolutionary government of Emilio Aguinaldo, served as Secretary of Foreign Affairs, and participated in the Malolos Congress. He was not initially anti-revolution; he helped institutionalize it. But as the Philippine-American War intensified and American forces overwhelmed Filipino resistance, Buencamino advocated negotiation and eventual pacification. He later became a prominent leader of the Partido Federalista, openly supporting American sovereignty and even U.S. statehood for the Philippines. That shift from revolutionary independence to support for American annexation remains the core of the historical controversy. To uncompromising figures like Antonio Luna, this was surrender. To Buencamino, it was the calculated preservation of the belief that institutional continuity and the protection of Filipino lives under American rule were preferable to a prolonged and unwinnable war.


In the present era, Marcoleta operates within a sovereign Philippine Republic. His influence is exercised through legislative hearings, public inquiries, and policy debates. His method is unmistakably legalistic. He approaches national issues through statutory interpretation, constitutional argument, and procedural scrutiny. In debates concerning the West Philippine Sea, he has emphasized legal definitions, jurisdictional limits, and the importance of precise framing. He has questioned rhetorical strategies that lean heavily on confrontational symbolism without equal emphasis on enforceable legal boundaries.


It is here that perception becomes geopolitically sensitive. The People’s Republic of China continues to assert expansive claims in the South China Sea and rejects the 2016 arbitral ruling in favor of the Philippines. When a Filipino legislator questions assertive national narratives or tempers confrontational rhetoric, critics argue that such positions, whether intended or not, can be interpreted as softening resistance. In this sense, some observers claim that Marcoleta’s actions and framing impliedly align with China’s preferred narrative, not through formal endorsement, but through strategic posture that appears less confrontational. In geopolitics, implication can carry as much weight as declaration.


This is where the concept of calculated preservation must be carefully examined. Calculated preservation is the philosophy that national survival and institutional stability should take precedence over symbolic defiance. Buencamino’s calculated preservation meant accepting American sovereignty as a transitional reality, believing that survival within an imperial framework would allow Filipinos to rebuild and eventually progress toward self-government. Marcoleta’s calculated preservation, in the eyes of his supporters, emphasizes legal discipline, diplomatic restraint, and institutional continuity rather than escalation. Both approaches prioritize structural stability and domestic survival over emotional confrontation and rhetoric nationalism.


However, calculated preservation carries risks. It can be perceived as weakness. It can be misunderstood as accommodation. It may protect institutions in the short term while eroding public morale in the long term. National loyalty is not only about technical correctness; it is also about collective confidence and strategic messaging. Leaders must therefore weigh not only the legality of their arguments but also the psychological and diplomatic signals they transmit.


So are they betrayers of the nation? Betrayal requires deliberate abandonment of national interest in favor of a foreign power. The historical record shows Buencamino ultimately aligned himself with American sovereignty after military defeat, an act many interpret as abandonment of revolutionary independence. In Marcoleta’s case, what exists is a controversy over implication and strategic framing rather than explicit renunciation of Philippine sovereignty. Disagreement with his positions does not automatically equate to disloyalty. Yet in matters of territorial integrity, even perceived softness can trigger serious public concern.


The debate surrounding these two figures reveals an enduring national dilemma. Should loyalty to country be measured by uncompromising resistance or by cautious institutional preservation? Should leaders prioritize symbolic assertion or legal defensibility? These questions continue to divide opinion across generations.


In the end, judgment must be anchored in evidence and context, not solely in emotion. Calculated preservation may be a strategy of survival, but it must always be balanced with visible commitment to national interest. Otherwise, perception may overshadow intent.


History will continue to scrutinize Buencamino. Contemporary politics will continue to scrutinize Marcoleta. But as a nation, we must learn to distinguish between controversial strategy and genuine abandonment of national loyalty. Only then can our discourse mature beyond accusation and toward principled evaluation.

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*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.

 

Licensed on Paper, Unprepared in Reality: The Quiet Failure Behind Our Licensure Success Stories

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


I once sat across a professional who, on paper, was licensed, certified, and legally qualified. Yet within minutes of the examination, something felt deeply wrong. The answers were hesitant. The fundamentals were missing. The confidence that should come from real mastery simply was not there. As an educator and examiner, you develop an instinct for this. You do not humiliate. You probe gently. You return to the basics. And there, quietly and painfully, the truth revealed itself. This was not anxiety. This was unfamiliarity. Later, through confirmation that came in careful and restrained conversations, I learned what I had already sensed. This individual had technically passed the licensure examination, but in reality had failed it. What carried them through was not competence, but a fraudulent leakage. That moment stayed with me, because I realized I was not just examining a professional. I was confronting the consequences of a system that had betrayed its own purpose.


That memory resurfaced when Senator Sherwin Gatchalian raised the alarm over alleged licensure examination leaks. For me, this is not a headline meant to trend and fade. It is personal. I write this as an educator, a public safety and law-enforcement professor, and a former public official who has spent years training people entrusted with lives, safety, and public trust. When licensure examinations are compromised, the damage does not remain inside testing rooms. It walks into clinics, classrooms, construction sites, and public offices, carrying a license it never truly earned.


I cannot forget the Nursing Board Examination leakage scandal of the early 2000s. At that time, I was already teaching and mentoring students whose dreams were larger than themselves. Many came from families that had exhausted their savings, sold property, and endured separation just so a child could take a chance at a better life. When the scandal broke, the damage was immediate and cruel. Honest passers were suddenly questioned. Filipino nurses, known globally for competence and compassion, carried suspicion they did not deserve. The system failed them, and the wound lingered long after the news cycle moved on.


There is, however, a deeper and more uncomfortable layer to that episode that must be recalled with care and sobriety. Subsequent investigations during the nursing board controversy established that the leakage did not originate from examinees or random third parties, but from individuals who were themselves part of the examination process, acting in improper coordination with certain review centers. The motivation was not ideological but commercial. In a highly competitive review-center industry, passing rates became marketing currency. Prestige translated into enrollment, and enrollment translated into profit. This environment created incentives where ethical boundaries could be blurred. This does not mean that all examiners or review centers were complicit, nor should suspicion be generalized. But it does reveal a structural vulnerability. When those who craft examinations operate within an ecosystem where licensure outcomes are commodified, the system becomes exposed to abuse if safeguards, oversight, and institutional firewalls are weak.


With this reality in mind, it may also be time for the government to confront another sensitive but unavoidable issue: the regulation of review centers themselves. In practice, the future of many aspiring professionals is shaped not only by their schools but by the review centers that prepare them for licensure examinations. These centers have grown into a parallel education industry, expanding rapidly, opening multiple branches nationwide, and even operating through franchising. Like mushrooms, they multiply with remarkable speed, yet with minimal oversight relative to their influence. While many review centers act ethically and responsibly, the absence of clear and uniform standards creates vulnerabilities. Teaching methods, instructor qualifications, content integrity, and ethical boundaries are often left unchecked. When passing rates become marketing tools rather than reflections of genuine preparation, credibility is put at risk. If the integrity of licensure is to be protected, review centers can no longer remain invisible actors in the regulatory landscape. Sensible monitoring, accreditation standards, and accountability mechanisms are no longer optional, because the credibility of future professionals increasingly depends on how these centers prepare, guide, and discipline their examinees.


There is also a national dimension that we rarely confront honestly. We often celebrate the fact that thousands of Filipinos pass licensure examinations and are therefore qualified to work abroad under regional and international integration frameworks. We take pride in producing professionals who can compete globally, and the government is understandably pleased when these professionals become overseas Filipino workers who contribute valuable dollar inflows to the economy. But we must ask a more uncomfortable question. When they go abroad, are they truly competent and ready? Every Filipino professional who works overseas represents not just themselves, but the country, the flag, and the credibility of our education system. There are painful realities we prefer not to discuss, including stories of licensed professionals who end up underemployed abroad, using their professional credentials merely as entry points but not actually practicing the profession they trained for. This is not always a failure of opportunity. Sometimes it is a failure of preparation. When numbers matter more than readiness, we export credentials instead of competence, and that is a disservice both to our people and to the nation they represent.


As painful as these scandals are, I have come to accept a harder truth that many are afraid to say aloud. The real problem is not the licensure examination. The exam is only where failure finally becomes visible. The deeper problem lies years earlier, inside the colleges and universities that produce graduates who are supposed to be ready to be licensed, but are not.


I have mentored students who graduated with honors on paper but were fragile in practice. I have watched young people break down after failing board exams, not because they were lazy, but because they were never truly prepared. In those moments, it becomes painfully clear. The licensure examination did not fail them. The system that trained them did.


If we are serious about reform, we must stop treating licensure examinations as the villain. The exam is doing exactly what it was designed to do. It filters. It exposes. It draws a hard line between readiness and unpreparedness. What makes people uncomfortable is not the exam itself, but the truth it reveals.


The uncomfortable truth is this. Many schools offering programs that require licensure examinations are not properly monitored, not properly equipped, and not properly accountable. Laboratories are incomplete. Faculty lack depth or real-world exposure. Curricula are outdated. Clinical, field, and practicum experiences are treated as requirements to be checked off rather than competencies to be mastered. Yet graduates are marched to the stage, handed diplomas, and told they are ready.


They are not.


Education has slowly been reduced into a commodity. Enroll, pay, attend, graduate. As if a degree were a product and not a responsibility. As if enrollment alone guarantees competence. Schools, particularly those chasing numbers and revenue, have become manufacturing plants of graduates who are not prepared to be licensed and not prepared to practice, but are released anyway into a system that will later expose them.


This is where regulation must be honest and firm. Schools that offer programs requiring licensure examinations must be strictly monitored by the Commission on Higher Education. Facilities must matter. Faculty qualifications must matter. Training depth must matter. Passing rates must matter. Schools should never allow students to graduate, much less walk on stage, if they are clearly not equipped with the knowledge and competence demanded by their profession.


If education were done right, the licensure examination would feel almost ceremonial. Not because it is easy, but because the graduate has already been forged by years of rigorous study, discipline, and real-world exposure. The exam would simply confirm what the school already ensured. That the graduate is competent. That the graduate is safe. That the graduate is worthy.


But that is not the reality we see.


Instead, we see shock, repeated failures, desperation, and when leaks occur, temptation. Not because people are inherently immoral, but because the system cornered them into inadequacy long before they reached the testing room. Even if every licensure exam were perfectly secured, the failures would still surface. The unprepared would still fail. The problem would simply appear quieter, not solved.


This is why focusing only on exam leakage, while necessary, is incomplete. True reform must begin where education begins. In classrooms. In laboratories. In clinical and field training. In the courage of regulators to suspend or close programs that cannot meet standards, no matter how politically inconvenient. In the courage of schools to delay graduation when students are not yet ready, even if it hurts enrollment figures.

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 *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.

 

I say this as an educator, a public safety and law-enforcement professor, and a former public official. We are not doing our youth any favor by letting them graduate unprepared and then blaming the licensure examination for their failure. That is not compassion. That is negligence.


The licensure examination is not the disease. It is only the diagnosis.


And what we are uncomfortable seeing in that diagnosis is not the cruelty of the exam, but the education system’s quiet surrender to mediocrity.

__

 *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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