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.

Sunday, July 19, 2026

The Wealth Beneath Our Feet: Ang Yamang Nakabaon… at ang Kinabukasang Ninanakaw

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

There are conversations that end the moment you leave the room. Then there are conversations that quietly stay with you, refusing to leave your mind because they awaken something deeper.


On July 14, around noontime, I had the privilege of joining a Courtesy Visit to personally congratulate the newly appointed Cabinet Secretary Benhur Abalos and present him with a copy of my book, Integritocracy. What we expected to be a brief visit became a meaningful exchange of ideas that lasted for nearly two and a half hours. We discussed governance, national development, public service, peace and order, and many of the challenges confronting our nation today.


Among the many issues that were raised, one particular subject lingered in my mind long after we had left the Cabinet Secretary’s office.


Mineral smuggling.


It was not the longest topic we discussed, nor was it the only important one. Yet for reasons I could not fully explain, it followed me all the way home. As I drove back, I found myself looking at the mountains in the distance. They stood quietly, proudly, almost as if they had been watching generations of Filipinos come and go. Then a painful question suddenly entered my mind.


How can a nation so richly blessed beneath its soil still have so many of its people living in poverty?

That single question became the reason I decided to write this.


The Philippines is among the most mineral-rich countries in the world. Beneath our mountains lie enormous deposits of gold, nickel, copper, chromite, cobalt, iron ore, and many other strategic minerals that are essential to today’s global economy. According to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau, the country’s mineral production reached approximately ₱316.3 billion in 2024. Few nations have been blessed with such extraordinary natural wealth.


And yet, despite these blessings, we continue to witness overcrowded classrooms, public hospitals struggling with inadequate resources, communities repeatedly devastated by floods, farmers without sufficient irrigation, and millions of Filipinos still searching for opportunities to improve their lives.


Napaisip ako.

Baka ang problema ay hindi kakulangan ng likas na yaman.

Baka ang tunay na problema ay hindi natin lubusang napoprotektahan ang yamang ipinagkatiwala ng Diyos sa sambayanang Pilipino.


Mineral smuggling is far more than illegally transporting ore outside the country. It includes illegal extraction, underdeclaration of production, misdeclaration of mineral grades, falsified export documents, unauthorized transport, and sophisticated schemes that allow valuable resources to leave our shores without the Filipino people receiving their rightful share.


Sa bawat barkong umaalis na may lamang mineral na hindi naitala nang tama, hindi lamang bato ang nawawala.


Kasama roon ang mga pangarap ng milyun-milyong Pilipino.


Because these operations happen in secrecy, no government agency can determine their exact value. However, based on industry observations, enforcement trends, and economic modeling, it is reasonable to examine scenario-based estimates. If only ten to thirty percent of actual mineral production escapes legal reporting, the value of illegally extracted or smuggled minerals could range from approximately ₱30 billion to ₱100 billion every year. These are theoretical estimates—not official government statistics—but they help illustrate the possible magnitude of the problem.


If these estimates are even reasonably close to reality, government revenue losses through taxes, royalties, permit fees, customs duties, and local government shares could range from ₱8 billion to ₱36 billion annually. Beyond direct collections, the broader economy may be losing between ₱150 billion and ₱360 billion every year in investments, downstream industries, manufacturing, logistics, employment, and business opportunities.


Pero para sa akin, hindi pera ang pinakamalaking nawawala.

Ang tunay na nawawala ay pagkakataon.

Pagkakataon ng batang magkaroon ng disenteng classroom.

Pagkakataon ng pasyenteng makapagpagamot sa modernong ospital.

Pagkakataon ng magsasakang magkaroon ng sapat na irigasyon.

Pagkakataon ng kabataang makahanap ng marangal na trabaho.

At pagkakataon ng bawat pamilyang Pilipino na mabuhay nang may dignidad.


Mas masakit pa rito ang epekto ng illegal mining sa ating kalikasan. Every mountain illegally stripped of its forests weakens nature’s ability to protect us. Watersheds slowly disappear. Rivers become clogged with sediments and polluted by mine tailings and hazardous chemicals. Agricultural lands become less productive, fisheries decline, and biodiversity is lost.


Kapag dumating ang malakas na ulan, wala nang sapat na kagubatan upang sumipsip ng tubig. Ang mga ilog na mababaw na dahil sa sedimentation ay mabilis na umaapaw. Kaya mas lumalala ang pagbaha, landslides, pagkasira ng mga pananim, at pagkawala ng mga tahanan.


Nakakalungkot isipin.


Habang may ilang yumayaman sa ilegal na pagmimina, libu-libong pamilya naman ang nawawalan ng bahay.

Habang may mga sindikatong nagpapayaman sa pagpupuslit ng ating mineral, may mga batang hindi makapasok sa paaralan dahil sa baha.

Habang may ilang nagtatago ng bilyun-bilyong piso, gobyerno naman ang napipilitang gumastos ng bilyon-bilyong piso para sa rescue operations, relief assistance, rehabilitation, at reconstruction.


Dalawang beses tayong nalulugi.

Una, ninanakawan tayo ng ating mineral.

Pangalawa, tayo rin ang nagbabayad sa pinsalang iniwan ng mga nagnakaw.


Imagine what our country could become if those billions remained where they truly belong. Thousands of classrooms could be built. Public hospitals could be modernized. Flood control systems, bridges, irrigation projects, farm-to-market roads, and water systems could be completed. Scholarships could transform the lives of deserving students. More communities could be protected from disasters before tragedy strikes.


Recovered revenues could also strengthen the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the Philippine National Police, the Bureau of Fire Protection, the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology, and the Philippine Coast Guard. Local governments could accelerate digital transformation through innovations such as the VastX Digital Leadership and Governance System, improving transparency, disaster response, public service delivery, and evidence-based governance.


But solving mineral smuggling requires more than stronger checkpoints.


As per my analysis based on what I reflected during such great moments of dicussions, the Philippines must establish a National Mineral Traceability System supported by satellite monitoring, drone surveillance, artificial intelligence, GPS tracking, blockchain-secured documentation, and integrated databases connecting all concerned government agencies. Criminals thrive in darkness. Technology shines light where corruption hides.


Yet after everything has been said, I have come to one simple realization.

Technology can detect stolen minerals.

Laws can punish offenders.

Enforcement agencies can arrest smugglers.

But only integrity can truly protect the wealth of a nation.

The greatest mine in the Philippines is not the gold beneath our mountains.

It is not the nickel beneath our soil.

The greatest mine is the integrity of the Filipino people.


If we protect that, we will also protect every mountain, every river, every forest, every peso, and every dream entrusted to this nation.


The Philippines has never lacked natural wealth.

Perhaps what we have lacked is the collective courage to ensure that our blessings reach those for whom they were intended.

Because the wealth beneath our feet was never meant to become the silent fortune of smugglers and criminal syndicates.


It was entrusted by the Divine Providence to build schools instead of ruins, hospitals instead of hardships, hope instead of poverty, and a future worthy of every Filipino.


*****************************************

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Dear friends,

I am thrilled to share that my latest book about "Integritocracy" is now available on Amazon! Writing this has been a deeply fulfilling journey, but what makes this milestone truly special is the purpose behind it.

I have decided that the proceeds from the sales of this book will go entirely toward a worthy charitable cause close to my heart: funding academic scholarships for deserving and underprivileged students.

Education has the power to transform lives, and by purchasing a copy, you aren't just getting a new read—you are directly helping to pave the way for a bright student's future.
If you would like to support this mission and grab your copy, you can find it directly on Amazon here:



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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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