Courageous leader calls for the abolition of … wang-wang?

Every dayโ€™s a school day when youโ€™re the editor of Vital Speeches International.

For instance, in his State of the Nation address last month, Philippines President Benigno Aquino made 16 references to a term called โ€œwang-wang.โ€

Here are some:

I stood before you during my inauguration and promised: we would do away with the use of the wang-wang โ€ฆ

Over the years, the wang-wang had come to symbolize the abuse of authority โ€ฆ

Abusing privilege despite promising to serveโ€”this was the wang-wang mindset โ€ฆ

Do you want to see the end of wang-wang, both on the streets and in the sense of entitlement that has led to the abuse that we have lived with for so long? โ€ฆ

We have fought against the wang-wang, and our efforts have yielded results โ€ฆ

Having rid the DOE of wang-wang, we have revived the confidence of investors in our energy sector โ€ฆ

To and the wang-wang culture in government, we employed zero-based budgeting to review programs โ€ฆ

I wish we could say we had completely eliminated the wang-wang attitude, but in some parts of our consciousness, it still persists โ€ฆ

Even in agricultrure, the culture of wang-wang once persisted โ€ฆ

We have put an end to the culture of entitlement, to wang-wang โ€ฆ

The etymology of wang-wang, it seems, is this: โ€œwang-wangโ€ refers to the sound sirens make. Sirens are sometimes used illegally in non-emergency situations by government VIPs who want to move through cities without following traffic rules.

So ixnay on the ang-wang way.

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