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.

Monday, March 2, 2026

The Flavor of 2028: A Political Meditation on Love of Country and the Soul of the Republic

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

One quiet evening, when the noise of politics became too loud and the arguments on television began to sound more like rehearsed battles than honest discourse, I found myself watching Flavors of Youth alongside my daughter Juliana Rizalhea, who suggested that I watch it, for she had seen it so many times. I did not expect that an animated story about rice noodles, sisters, and a love that arrived too late would leave me staring at the ceiling long after the credits rolled. Yet it did. Because beneath its softness, I saw our country.


The first story was about memory. A simple bowl of noodles carried the warmth of a grandmother’s love and the innocence of childhood. As I watched, I thought of our nation. We too are guided by memory. We remember strong leaders. We remember painful chapters. We remember promises that inspired us and disappointments that broke us. But memory can both guide and mislead. Nostalgia can soften history until it becomes a myth. And as 2028 approaches, I ask myself—are we voting from nostalgia, or from wisdom? Are we choosing a President because of the comfort of a surname, the familiarity of a political dynasty, or the echo of past strength? Or are we choosing based on maturity born from experience?


The film’s second story about two sisters touched something deeper in me. One stood under the bright lights, admired, celebrated. The other quietly sacrificed, carried burdens unseen, endured without applause. And I thought of leadership. The presidency is not the spotlight; it is the weight behind it. It is not the rally; it is the responsibility after the rally ends. In 2028, we will once again see candidates who speak boldly, who move crowds, who dominate headlines. But the real question is not who can command a stage. The real question is who can carry the burden of the Republic when the stage is empty and the cameras are gone.


The third story about missed connections because of pride felt painfully familiar. Pride has divided lovers in fiction, and it has divided citizens in reality. Today, disagreement in our politics feels like betrayal. Criticism feels like treason. We have allowed tribal loyalty to replace thoughtful engagement. If we bring that same spirit into 2028, we risk electing not a leader for the nation, but a champion for one camp and a villain for another. A nation cannot heal if its election is framed as a permanent civil war.


And then there is the West Philippine Sea. I think of the fishermen who sail before dawn, who do not debate geopolitics but feel its consequences in the waves. I think of our Coast Guard officers facing intimidation, of our maritime rights affirmed by law yet challenged by power. The next President must not treat this issue as a slogan. It is about dignity. It is about sovereignty. It is about whether our flag means something beyond ceremonies. The leader we choose in 2028 must know how to stand firm without inviting unnecessary fire, how to assert rights without losing strategic patience. This is not bravado. This is stewardship of the nation’s honor.


Hovering above all this is the tension between the United States and China. Two giants pulling at the balance of the region. We are treaty-bound to one and economically intertwined with the other. The 2028 election will inevitably reflect this geopolitical tug of war. Candidates will be labeled, scrutinized, categorized. Too pro-US. Too close to China. Too confrontational. Too accommodating. But I believe the real question is simpler and deeper. Can the next President stand in front of both powers and say, without trembling, that the Philippines is not for sale? Can he or she engage in alliance without becoming dependent, negotiate trade without surrendering sovereignty, cooperate without becoming a proxy? We do not need a leader who chooses a foreign camp. We need a leader who chooses the Filipino people first.


That is why I resist the idea that 2028 is merely Duterte versus Marcos. If we reduce it to a clash of surnames, we reduce the Republic to a family feud. This election must be larger than dynasties. It must be about genuine love of country versus leadership that appears tethered to foreign strings. It must be about who will protect Filipino fishermen, Filipino workers, Filipino youth, Filipino dignity—not who can assemble the most powerful alliance of political clans. True patriotism is not loud. It is steady. It does not kneel easily. It does not sell cheaply.


And then I think of Generation Z. By 2028, they will not just be spectators; they will be decisive. They were raised in the age of algorithms, where truth competes with trend and depth competes with virality. I see hope in them. They are bold. They question narratives. They are less patient with corruption and more demanding of authenticity. But I also fear for them. The speed of information can replace the discipline of study. The viral clip can overshadow the policy paper. Yet if Gen Z chooses depth over drama, principle over popularity, and national interest over online hype, they can transform this election. They can demand a higher standard. They can refuse to be manipulated by nostalgia or tribal loyalty. They can insist that leadership be measured not by surname, but by substance.


As I sit in this political meditation, I realize that Flavors of Youth is not simply about youth. It is about the ache of growing up. It is about learning that life is not driven by impulse alone. It is about understanding that love—real love—requires sacrifice, discipline, and honesty. Perhaps the same is true for democracy.


The 2028 election will reveal who we are. It will show whether we have matured beyond blind loyalty, beyond emotional reaction, beyond inherited narratives. It will determine whether we choose convenience or courage, noise or nuance, foreign influence or sovereign dignity.


The President we elect will shape how we defend our seas, how we navigate superpower rivalry, how we unite a fractured citizenry, and how we define patriotism for the next generation.


And as I close this meditation, I return to the quiet lesson of that anime film. Seasons change. Youth fades. But growth is a choice.


May 2028 not be about clans.

May it not be about vengeance.

May it not be about who shouts the loudest.


May it be about love of country—real, disciplined, unwavering love.


Because the future of our Republic will taste exactly as we choose to season it with our vote.

_______________________________

 *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.



The Death of an Iranian Leader and the War in the Middle East: Energy Shock, Economic Strain, and the Philippines at Risk

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


There are moments in history when the world seems to tilt quietly, almost imperceptibly, and yet everything that follows feels heavier. The confirmation of the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader for decades, is one such moment. It was not simply the passing of a political figure. It was the breaking of a pillar in one of the most volatile regions on earth. And when a pillar falls in the Middle East, even those of us living thousands of kilometers away must brace for the tremor.


At first glance, it feels distant. Tehran is far from Manila. The Persian Gulf does not wash upon our shores. The rivalries, the theology, and the long history of confrontation between Iran, Israel, and the United States may seem like chapters from another civilization’s book. Yet in our interconnected century, geography offers no protection from consequence. The death of a leader in Iran has already widened an escalating war. Retaliatory strikes have targeted U.S. bases across Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. Air defenses lit up Gulf skies. Airports suspended operations. Civilian hubs trembled alongside military facilities.


When missiles fly across the Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz trembles. And when Hormuz trembles, the global economy tightens its breath.


Nearly one fifth of the world’s oil supply passes through that narrow corridor. It is the throat of the global energy system. Even the perception of danger there is enough to ignite markets. Crude oil surges past one hundred twenty dollars per barrel not only because tankers stop moving, but because fear moves faster than ships.


For the Philippines, that surge is not theoretical. It is painfully practical.


We import nearly all the oil that fuels our daily life. We do not sit atop vast reserves. We do not possess the strategic buffers of major industrial powers. Our inventory, often described in optimistic tones as lasting roughly a month, is not a fortress. It is a countdown. Every day of prolonged instability in the Middle East tightens that margin.


Fuel powers our archipelago. It moves jeepneys before sunrise. It carries vegetables from Benguet to city markets. It sustains fishing boats along our coasts. It keeps generators alive in communities where brownouts are not abstract memory but recurring experience. When fuel prices rise, transportation costs rise. When transportation costs rise, food prices follow. When food prices rise, anxiety becomes a household companion.


I imagine the jeepney driver counting coins at dusk, unsure if tomorrow’s boundary will still make sense. I imagine the market vendor apologizing for adjusting her prices yet again. I imagine the young employee staring at an electricity bill, recalculating what must be postponed this month. War in the Middle East does not enter our lives with explosions. It enters quietly, through receipts.


Then there are our Overseas Filipino Workers across the Gulf region. Hundreds of thousands of our kababayan live and work in countries now within missile range of retaliation. They left home to build cities of glass and steel. Now those skies carry the threat of drones and ballistic arcs. Airports close. Flights are canceled. Communication lines strain.


Families here wait for a message that says simply, “Okay kami.” Remittances, which form a stabilizing artery of our national economy, suddenly feel fragile. In moments like this, the strength of a nation is measured not by speeches but by readiness. Evacuation planning, diplomatic coordination, and logistical precision—these must already exist before a crisis arrives. Because when the skies are tense, improvisation is not enough.


As I diagnose this crisis, I see more than a military exchange. I see structural vulnerability exposed. Energy security is national security. A country dependent on distant maritime corridors for its economic breath must prepare for the day those corridors become battlefields.


The death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei does not merely reshape Iran’s internal succession. It risks prolonging escalation. Leadership transitions in volatile states often invite hardline consolidation, retaliatory demonstrations of strength, and extended instability. Markets interpret uncertainty as danger. Investors hedge. Insurance rates rise. Shipping slows. The chain reaction reaches nations that never fired a shot.


The Philippines cannot control events in Tehran, Tel Aviv, or Washington. But we can control how prepared we are.


This is not a time for panic. It is a time for discipline.


Energy conservation must move beyond slogan into habit. Every unnecessary trip postponed and every conscious reduction in consumption extends our collective breathing space. Panic buying weakens us. Calm strengthens us.


Families must engage in honest preparedness conversations. Emergency savings, even modest ones, matter when inflation accelerates. Budget reassessment is not pessimism. It is prudence. Cutting nonessential spending today may soften the blow tomorrow.


Communities must rediscover solidarity. The vulnerable sectors will feel strain first—daily wage earners, transport operators, and low-income households. Cooperative buying, shared transport arrangements, barangay-level assistance, and civic mobilization—these are not dramatic gestures, but they are powerful ones. We are a people who survive typhoons and earthquakes together. Economic storms demand the same spirit.


Psychological resilience is equally critical. In an age where misinformation spreads faster than verified updates, fear can destabilize a society without a single missile landing. We must discipline ourselves to rely on credible information and reject rumor-driven hysteria. Calm is not denial. It is strength under pressure.


At the national level, structural reform can no longer be postponed. Strategic petroleum reserves must move from discussion to legislation. Renewable energy expansion must accelerate beyond ceremonial announcements into measurable capacity. Geothermal, solar, wind, and diversified energy sourcing are not simply environmental aspirations. They are sovereign shields. Agricultural productivity must strengthen so that food inflation does not compound external shocks.


Reactive governance is costly governance. Preparedness must be institutionalized before the next crisis erupts. Because there will be a next crisis. Global conflict cycles are not anomalies. They are recurring features of a multipolar world.


The missiles may never cross Philippine skies. Yet their echo already reaches our markets, our transport terminals, our grocery aisles, and our remittance centers. The death of an Iranian leader is not just a Middle Eastern event. It is a global stress test. And we are part of the global system.


This moment demands maturity. It demands that we respond not with hysteria but with foresight. Not with blame but with unity. Not with theatrical politics but with disciplined policy.


In a world where distant wars can enter our kitchens without crossing our borders, prudence becomes patriotism. Preparation becomes love of country. And resilience—quiet, collective, unwavering—becomes our most reliable defense.


Even if the Middle East burns in uncertainty, the Philippines need not burn in chaos. We may feel the heat. We may endure the strain. But if we choose discipline over panic and solidarity over division, we will endure—not untouched, but unbroken.

*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.


Sunday, March 1, 2026

Political Dynasties Are Not the Disease, Ignorance Is The Real Pandemic

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


“Give me a child until he is seven, and I will show you the man.”


Whenever I hear that line, I do not think of abstract philosophy. I think of the Philippines. I think of how we keep demanding sweeping political reforms while neglecting the formative years when the character of a citizen is quietly shaped. We debate anti-political dynasty laws with intensity, believing that one statute can disinfect our democracy. Yet in the silence of reflection, I have come to believe that political dynasties are not the disease. Ignorance is the real pandemic, and it has spread patiently across generations.


A dynasty survives not because it is invincible, but because it is rarely interrogated by an informed electorate. It thrives when familiarity feels safer than competence, when assistance is confused with accountability, and when rhetoric is louder than record. This is not an insult to our people. It is a painful confession rooted in love of nation. Hindi mahina ang Pilipino. Hindi kulang sa kakayahan. Ngunit kulang tayo sa maagang paghuhubog ng kamalayang sibiko. We were taught to memorize historical milestones but not to analyze public budgets. We were trained to participate in elections but not deeply prepared to evaluate leadership.


Each election cycle, we hope for renewal. We long for integrity. We become frustrated when disappointment returns like an old wound reopened. Yet we seldom ask whether we have prepared our children to become discerning citizens long before they are called voters. Civic maturity does not magically appear at eighteen. It is cultivated slowly, deliberately, and consistently.


That is why I believe the solution must be structural and generational. We need a mandatory, intensive civic education program from Grade 1 to Senior High School. From the earliest years, children must learn not only about heroes but about accountability, not only about rights but also about duties, and not only about government branches but also about how taxes are collected, how budgets are allocated, and how corruption steals opportunities from their own communities. In elementary school, civic discipline can be planted through simple lessons on fairness, responsibility, and shared resources. In junior high school, students can be introduced to constitutional principles, ethical leadership, and the real functions of local government. By Senior High School, they should be capable of analyzing policy proposals, debating national issues, understanding media manipulation, and distinguishing propaganda from evidence.


Imagine a Senior High graduate who knows how to read a public financial statement, who understands how disinformation spreads online, who can question respectfully yet firmly, and who sees public office as a sacred trust rather than a family entitlement. Such a citizen would not be easily swayed by surname, spectacle, or seasonal generosity. Such a voter would demand performance, not pedigree.


Masakit mang aminin, hindi pamilya ang pangunahing kalaban kundi kamangmangan. The battle we face is not against bloodlines but against blind loyalty and political illiteracy. Laws may regulate who can run for office, but they cannot regulate how citizens think. A prohibition can remove a name from the ballot, but it cannot remove uncritical habits from the mind. Only education, sustained from Grade 1 to Senior High School, can break that cycle.


I write this with both sorrow and hope. Sorrow because we have mistaken symptoms for causes. Hope because I have seen the brilliance of Filipino youth when guided with discipline and purpose. Our children are not destined to inherit flawed political habits. They are capable of discernment, courage, and principled leadership if we choose to form them intentionally.


If we truly love this Republic, reform must begin where children sit and learn, not only where politicians argue and legislate. We must build citizens before we redesign systems. We must educate before we prohibit. When we raise a generation trained from childhood to Senior High School in civic responsibility, dynasties will not need to be outlawed. They will be peacefully outgrown.


Political dynasties are not the disease. Ignorance is the real pandemic. And like any pandemic, it will not be defeated by outrage alone, but by sustained education, disciplined national commitment, and a heartfelt determination to raise a thinking, discerning, and patriotic Filipino electorate.

_____

 *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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