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.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Intellectual Masturbation, Narrative Warfare, and the Senate’s Dangerous Dance with Constitutional Fear

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



As an academician, former public servant, governance observer, and one who has spent years studying institutions, public security, political behavior, and democratic power struggles, I have learned that nations do not always tremble because of actual conspiracies. Minsan, ang mga bansa ay hindi niyayanig ng totoong sabwatan kundi ng mga kwentong ginagawang katotohanan tungkol sa sabwatan. Sometimes the greater danger is not the operational plot itself, but the emotional weaponization of speculation, hearsay, and politically useful storytelling. Perhaps that is why what recently transpired in the Senate disturbed me not merely as an observer of politics, but as a Filipino who still believes that certain institutions must remain sacred, disciplined, and worthy of the people’s trust.


There are institutions in a democracy that should never be casually reduced into stages for emotional spectacle. The Senate, at least in our constitutional imagination, has always been one of them. It is supposed to be a chamber of statesmen, a sanctuary of serious debate, a place where national anxieties are processed through discipline, evidence, and sober deliberation. Kaya masakit sa damdamin na makita ang isang institusyon na dapat ay sumisimbolo ng maturity at constitutional seriousness na unti-unting nagmumukhang entablado ng factional confrontation, emotionally charged accusations, at narrative warfare. This is not merely about a video presentation. It is about what happens when a constitutional institution begins lending its dignity to narratives whose foundations appear disturbingly fragile.


Allow me to use a phrase that some may find provocative, perhaps even offensive, but which I deliberately employ not to insult, but to analytically describe a very human political phenomenon. That phrase is intellectual masturbation. Hindi ito simpleng paggamit ng bastos na salita para magpatawa o manghamak. Ito ay metaphor para sa isang bagay na matagal nang umiiral sa academic circles, governance environments, strategic communities, at ordinary political conversations. Intellectual masturbation refers to speculative discussions among politically aware individuals where ideas are imagined, exaggerated, mentally stretched, debated, and explored not because there is an actual machinery to implement them, but because intelligent people naturally engage in political what-if thinking. Ginagawa ito ng academics. Ginagawa ito ng retired officials. Ginagawa ito ng former law enforcers, policy thinkers, political strategists, at maging ng ordinaryong Pilipino habang nagkakape, nag-uusap sa dinner table, o simpleng nagkukwentuhan tungkol sa kinabukasan ng bansa.


We talk about charter change. We talk about succession. We imagine elections, leadership transitions, constitutional reforms, even outrageous governance possibilities that may never happen. Sa madaling salita, minsan simpleng kwentuhan lamang ito. Minsan opinion exchange lamang. Minsan intellectual exercise lamang na walang konkretong operational consequence. That is precisely what makes the present controversy so troubling. Because what may have originally been speculative political chatter, recollected storytelling, or exaggerated political imagination was suddenly elevated into what appears to be a national constitutional threat narrative.


According to the dramatic framing of the Senate presentation, there were alleged discussions involving charter change, term extension, changing presidential qualifications to prevent Vice President Sara Duterte from running in 2028, and even possible election postponement. These are not light accusations. Hindi ito simpleng political tsismis. These are allegations that strike directly at democratic legitimacy, constitutional order, and public trust. And because the accusations are so grave, one would expect the highest standards of evidence. Bilang academician, simpleng tanong lamang ang bumabagabag sa akin: where is the evidence?


In academia, claims require citations. In intelligence work, single-source information is never accepted as automatic truth without validation. Sa batas, hearsay remains weak unless independently corroborated. Why then should politics suddenly be exempt from these disciplines? Ito ang tunay na nakakalungkot. Because when emotionally charged narratives, speculative recollections, or hearsay-like storytelling are elevated to the Senate floor, ordinary citizens do not naturally distinguish between evidence and theater. What they see is the Senate. What they hear sounds official. And because of that, even fragile narratives acquire institutional legitimacy.


The Senate is not a gossip chamber. Hindi ito talk show platform. Hindi ito political variety program. Hindi ito circus arena para sa elite theatrics. It is one of the highest constitutional institutions of the Republic. Historically, the Senate has symbolized seriousness, maturity, and statesmanship. Kaya napakahirap tanggapin ang posibilidad na ang official records nito ay maaaring paglagyan ng isang presentation substantially grounded on hearsay-like narration, recollected conversations, dramatic interpretation, and politically structured storytelling. Senate records are not social media archives. They are part of constitutional memory. Once material enters those records, it acquires permanence. Future scholars may cite it. Future political actors may weaponize it. Future narratives may treat it as though it emerged from rigorous evidentiary scrutiny.


This is precisely why the motion raised by Senator Migz Zubiri from the minority to strike out, expunge, delete, or erase the video presentation from the Senate records becomes, in my view, institutionally justifiable. Hindi ito simpleng censorship. Hindi ito dapat agad ituring na partisan fear o pagtatanggol sa sinumang personality. The deeper issue is institutional integrity. If the Senate preserves speculative storytelling lacking authenticated evidence, then it grants constitutional dignity to what may essentially be political theater. Once narrative becomes equal to evidence, emotional spectacle becomes equal to constitutional oversight, and dramatic accusation becomes equal to legislative seriousness, then the institution itself begins to erode.


What makes this episode even more politically fascinating, and frankly emotionally unsettling, is the narrative architecture itself. This was not merely a presentation of allegations. Para itong morality play. A battle between the so-called Great Thirteen and the Bulagaan Eleven. And in that narrative construction, the presenters did not merely present accusations. They presented themselves as heroes. They cast themselves as noble guardians of the Constitution, defenders of democracy, protectors of the Republic, and patriotic actors who allegedly acted not to defend Vice President Sara Duterte from impeachment, but to save the nation from constitutional sabotage.


Meanwhile, the Bulagaan Eleven were framed as villains, allegedly plotting charter change, term extension, constitutional manipulation, and democratic destruction. Napakalakas ng ganitong framing dahil bawat propaganda narrative ay nangangailangan ng bida at kontrabida. Former Senate President Tito Sotto becomes the symbolic kontrabida because hierarchy shapes public perception. Kapag ordinaryong politicians ang involved sa speculative discussions, madaling sabihing chatter lamang iyon. Pero kapag former Senate President ang na-frame, biglang nagmumukhang elite conspiracy.


Yet here lies the painful analytical question. Was there an actual operational conspiracy? Or was there merely speculative political conversation dramatically reframed for public consumption? Because discussion is not conspiracy. Speculation is not implementation. Intellectual masturbation is not governance.


Another difficult question emerges, one that perhaps many whisper privately but hesitate to articulate publicly. Totoo bang constitutional defense ito? Or is this indirectly about defending Vice President Sara Duterte amid the unresolved impeachment issue? O mas strategic ba itong effort to stall, delay, prolong, or divert public attention away from impeachment by constructing a larger emotional battlefield? These are uncomfortable but legitimate analytical questions because timing matters in politics.


Hindi pa resolved ang impeachment. The constitutional accountability question remains hanging over the political environment. Yet suddenly, public discourse is redirected toward constitutional conspiracy, Senate factional warfare, and dramatic narratives of democratic rescue. Political history teaches us that when one battlefield becomes inconvenient, another bigger battlefield is often created. A larger villain is constructed. Public emotion is redirected. And what once seemed central becomes secondary.


What makes this irony even heavier is that some political actors themselves argue that impeachment is not urgent because the nation faces inflation, food insecurity, economic anxiety, and pressing governance priorities. Valid naman ang argument na iyon. Ngunit kung totoo iyon, bakit acceptable ang dramatic Senate spectacle? If legislative time is precious, then political theater should also be problematic. If governance discipline is necessary, then Senate bardagulan should not dominate proceedings.


Ang masakit dito ay hindi lamang ang political conflict, kundi ang perception ng taumbayan. They do not see constitutional nuance. Hindi nila sinusuri ang technical legal distinctions. What they see are politicians fighting, senators attacking one another, and institutions sounding increasingly like battlegrounds instead of sanctuaries of governance. And that perception damages democratic legitimacy.


Even the self-branding of the Great Thirteen deserves scrutiny. Greatness is not declared. Greatness is demonstrated. Hindi porke’t tinawag mo ang sarili mong great ay great ka na. Institutional guardianship is earned through restraint, seriousness, evidentiary discipline, and constitutional maturity. Are they truly great if they allowed a dramatically framed but insufficiently substantiated presentation to occupy the Senate floor? Are true guardians of democracy those who elevate hearsay into constitutional fear? Or are we witnessing political branding disguised as constitutional vigilance?


And perhaps this is what makes the entire episode profoundly sad. The Filipino people are tired. Pagod na ang taumbayan sa elite political drama. Pagod na sa factional warfare. Pagod na sa institutional noise habang lumalala ang araw-araw na problema ng ordinaryong buhay. They need governance, not theater. They need stability, not emotional spectacle. They need institutions that calm public anxiety, not amplify it.


The Senate is far too important para maging isang circus. Masyado itong sagrado para gawing gossip chamber, at napakahalaga nitong constitutional institution para maging propaganda arena ng sinumang political faction. If there is a genuine constitutional conspiracy, then expose it properly through authenticated documents, corroborated testimony, operational proof, at ebidensyang kayang tumayo sa ilalim ng masusing pagsusuri.


Ngunit kung ang mayroon lamang ay hearsay, speculative recollection, dramatic interpretation, at politically useful storytelling, then we must call it for what it truly is: weaponized intellectual masturbation. Because intellectual masturbation, in its ordinary sense, may simply be harmless speculative discourse, isang mental exercise lamang ng mga politically aware na tao, ngunit kapag ito ay ginawang constitutional panic narrative, maaari nitong i-destabilize ang institutions, lasunin ang public trust, at ilihis ang buong bansa from the serious and urgent governance that the Filipino people desperately need.


#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.


Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Price of Integrity: Sen. Tito Sotto and the Politics of Refusing to Buy Loyalty

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


There are times in public life when politics ceases to be merely about numbers, coalitions, titles, leadership changes, or the endless arithmetic of power. May mga pagkakataon na ang pulitika ay hindi na lamang tungkol sa kung sino ang nanalo, sino ang natanggal, o sino ang may mas maraming kakampi. It becomes a mirror, forcing us to confront not merely who holds power but what kind of nation we are slowly becoming. At para sa akin, ito ang isa sa mga sandaling iyon.


So I ask, not with anger but with a genuinely heavy heart, to those who rejoiced when Tito Sotto was removed as Senate President, are you truly happy now? Masaya ba talaga kayo kung ang kapalit ng leadership change ay hindi mas malalim na accountability, kundi mas malalim na katahimikan? Are you truly happy if what replaces a leadership perceived to have tolerated scrutiny becomes a political environment where difficult questions are no longer asked, where uncomfortable truths are slowly buried under the soft blanket of political convenience, and where transparency becomes collateral damage?


What made this episode even more emotionally painful was the fact that these were not merely accusations from outsiders. Hindi ito simpleng tsismis ng social media. Hindi ito haka-haka ng mga bitter political observers. These words came from Senator Panfilo Lacson himself, a veteran public servant, a man who knows how the Senate works from the inside. And what did he say? He said one of the complaints against Tito Sotto was that he allegedly did not know how to “take care” of fellow senators. Marunong mag-alaga. Napakabigat na phrase niyan kapag inilagay sa konteksto ng pulitika.


Because in ordinary life, “taking care” is beautiful. We take care of our parents. We take care of our spouses. We take care of our children. We take care of those who are sick, weak, aging, or struggling. Pero sa pulitika, minsan ang magagandang salita ay nagiging euphemism para sa mga bagay na hindi magandang pakinggan. And then came the statement that should make every Filipino taxpayer stop and reflect. Senator Lacson reportedly said that Tito Sotto did not have the capacity to distribute around ₱142 billion. One hundred forty-two billion pesos. Pera ng taong bayan. Hindi ito simpleng political allowance. Hindi ito baryang pwedeng ikibit-balikat. Hindi ito maliit na halaga na parang pang-kape lang sa isang caucus meeting. That amount represents roads, schools, hospitals, medicines, scholarships, disaster response, and yes, flood control projects that should have protected vulnerable communities.


So naturally, any thinking Filipino must ask, "What exactly was expected from a Senate President? Na ang pagiging “marunong mag-alaga” ba ay nangangahulugan ng pagiging mahusay sa institutional leadership, pagiging fair sa committee assignments, pakikinig sa mga kasama, at pagpapanatili ng healthy working relationships? Or does “taking care” mean something darker? Does it mean distributing public money to satisfy political expectations? Does it mean keeping colleagues politically comfortable? Does it mean using taxpayer resources as lubrication for political loyalty? If that is even remotely true, then this is no longer merely about Tito Sotto. Ito ay usapin ng moral decay sa ating political culture.


And what makes this even sadder is Senator Lacson’s own admission that his Blue Ribbon Committee report may have contributed to Tito Sotto’s downfall. Pag-isipan natin iyan. A Senate President potentially losing power because accountability mechanisms were functioning. A leader becoming politically vulnerable because oversight was doing its constitutional job. A Senate presidency weakened because difficult truths were beginning to emerge. Kung totoo ito, napakasakit isipin. Because what message does that send? That accountability is dangerous? That transparency is politically expensive? That exposing corruption is a liability? That future Senate Presidents should be careful not to dig too deep because truth can be politically fatal? Napakabaliktad yata nito.


At dito kailangan din nating maging intellectually honest, objective, at evidence-based. Dahil predictable sa ating political environment na the usual opposition voices or anti-administration critics will immediately rise and ask, “Bakit mga senador lang ang nadidiin? Bakit hindi si Speaker Martin Romualdez? Bakit hindi si Pangulong Bongbong Marcos?” Let me say this clearly. Those are legitimate political questions in a democracy. Walang masama sa pagtatanong. In fact, questioning power is part of democratic citizenship. But democracy also demands discipline. Accountability must be evidence-driven, not emotionally selective.


As of this stage, the names that surfaced came from testimonies, witnesses, and investigative proceedings within the Blue Ribbon Committee. Ang mga tumuturo sa ilang senador ay hindi ordinaryong tsismoso sa social media. They are individuals who were heard within the formal context of a Senate inquiry. That does not automatically make every allegation true, but it gives the allegations institutional weight worthy of examination.


But we must also be careful not to reduce legislative inquiry into a theater of speculation. Hindi lahat ng gustong magsalita ay automatic credible witness. Hindi lahat ng nagtuturo ng pangalan ay dapat agad gawing katotohanan. Hindi lahat ng nagsasabing “ituro ito” o “isama iyan” ay dapat agad tawagin ng Senado at gawing witness. Institutions must exercise discipline. Kailangan ng corroboration. Kailangan ng consistency. Kailangan ng documentary support. Kailangan ng evidentiary credibility.


Take for example the questions surrounding Guteza bakit siya biglang nawala? That itself raises legitimate concerns. Then there are issues involving the 18 Marines and the consistency of certain narratives and statements. These deserve scrutiny, yes. But scrutiny must still be grounded in disciplined fact-finding, not emotional assumption.


Because once we abandon evidence and embrace political speculation, accountability itself becomes weaponized.


Now, if someone asks me, “Should Speaker Martin Romualdez be investigated if evidence emerges?” My answer is yes. “Should the President be investigated if credible evidence points upward?” Absolutely yes. Walang sacred cows sa tunay na accountability. But the operative phrase is credible evidence.


If, for example, a principal source such as former Congressman Zaldy Co himself returns to the Philippines, submits to formal inquiry, gives sworn testimony, and presents verifiable documentary evidence directly implicating higher officials, then yes, the investigative landscape changes dramatically. Then public pressure for broader inquiry becomes not merely political rhetoric but an institutional necessity.


But until then, we must remain intellectually disciplined. Hindi puwedeng dahil anti-administration ang isang observer ay automatic kasama na agad sa narrative ang Speaker o ang Pangulo kahit wala pang sapat na ebidensyang nakalatag sa kasalukuyang issue. That is not objectivity. That is political projection.


And ironically, that kind of speculative overreach can weaken genuine accountability because real wrongdoers can then dismiss legitimate investigations as partisan witch hunts.


That is why this issue must be approached with both courage and discipline.


Because why do Filipinos elect senators? Hindi natin sila binoboto para maging protectors ng isa’t isa. Hindi natin sila binoboto para maging members ng isang exclusive protection club. We elect them to legislate. We elect them to defend national interest. We elect them to protect the Constitution. We elect them to exercise oversight. We elect them to expose corruption. We elect them to ask uncomfortable questions. We elect them to hold power accountable. Hindi natin sila binoboto para magtakipan. Hindi para manahimik. Hindi para protektahan ang political friendships habang ang taong bayan ang nagdurusa.


And let us not forget what this issue is all about. Flood control. This is not abstract corruption. Hindi ito simpleng accounting issue. Hindi ito sterile discussion ng numbers sa committee hearing. Flood control means human suffering. Flood control means the mother carrying her child through chest-deep floodwaters habang umiiyak at nagdarasal na sana hindi sila tangayin ng rumaragasang tubig. Flood control means the father standing helpless habang pinapanood niyang lunurin ng baha ang pinaghirapan niyang bahay. Flood control means the elderly grandmother sa evacuation center na walang gamot, walang maayos na tulugan, at walang kasiguraduhan kung makakabalik pa siya sa tahanan. Flood control means students missing school because roads disappeared underwater. Flood control means business owners watching years of hard work vanish overnight. Kapag ninakaw mo ang flood control money, hindi ka lang nagnanakaw ng pera. Nagnanakaw ka ng seguridad. Nagnanakaw ka ng buhay. Nagnanakaw ka ng pag-asa.


That is why if senators are indeed implicated, then the Senate must never become their sanctuary. Hindi dapat maging safe house ang Senado. Hindi dapat maging protective fortress ng mga may dapat ipaliwanag. Hindi dapat maging laundry shop ng political reputations.


And this is where I speak heart to heart with fellow Filipinos. To those who celebrated Tito Sotto’s removal as Senate President, I ask again: are you truly happy? Masaya ba kayo kung ang resulta nito ay pagtatakpan ang accountability? Masaya ba kayo kung mananatili ang mga may bahid ng corruption allegations habang patuloy silang tinatawag na “Honorable”? Because that title is supposed to mean something. Ang “Honorable” ay hindi simpleng dekorasyon. Hindi ito parang badge lang na automatic na nakakabit kapag nanalo ka. It is supposed to symbolize dignity, trustworthiness, moral credibility, and public honor. But honor without accountability becomes theater. Honor without transparency becomes a costume. Honor without truth becomes branding.


And perhaps what hurts me most is not even Tito Sotto’s political loss. Politics has winners and losers. Normal iyan. What hurts is the possibility that integrity itself became weakness. Na ang accountability ay naging bagahe. Na ang transparency ay naging inconvenience. Na ang katotohanan ay naging politically dangerous. Imagine spending decades in public service believing leadership means stewardship, discipline, institutional respect, and public duty, only to discover that for some, leadership means accommodation, protection, and silence. Masakit iyon. Hindi lang political defeat iyon. Personal heartbreak, iyon.


Still, despite all this sadness, I refuse to lose hope. Because injustice has one weakness. Hindi ito kayang magtago habang buhay. Truth leaks. Documents surface. Witnesses speak. Conscience awakens. Power shifts. At ang mga tinatago, sooner or later, lumalabas. So no, this is not the time to surrender. Hindi ito panahon para manahimik. Hindi ito panahon para mapagod. Hindi ito panahon para sabihin na “ganyan talaga ang pulitika.” Because silence has always been corruption’s favorite ally.


So I ask one final time, not as a partisan, but as a Filipino. Will you truly be happy if those who stole from the people remain protected? Will you celebrate if transparency is suffocated? Will you smile if accountability dies quietly? Masaya ba kayo kung ang mga dapat managot ay mananatiling komportable, naka-barong, naka-amerikana, may escort, may privilege, at may title na “Honorable,” habang ang ordinaryong Pilipino ay lumulubog sa baha, sa hirap, at sa kawalan ng hustisya?


Because if that is victory, then perhaps what we have lost is not merely one Senate Presidency. Perhaps what we have lost is something far more painful. Our moral outrage. Our democratic conscience. At baka, unti-unti, ang kaluluwa mismo ng ating Republika.


#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.


Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

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