Courageous leader calls for the abolition of … wang-wang?
August 16, 2011
Every dayโs a school day when youโre 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 โwang-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 โฆ
Over the years, the wang-wang had come to symbolize the abuse of authority โฆ
Abusing privilege despite promising to serveโthis was the wang-wang mindset โฆ
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? โฆ
We have fought against the wang-wang, and our efforts have yielded results โฆ
Having rid the DOE of wang-wang, we have revived the confidence of investors in our energy sector โฆ
To and the wang-wang culture in government, we employed zero-based budgeting to review programs โฆ
I wish we could say we had completely eliminated the wang-wang attitude, but in some parts of our consciousness, it still persists โฆ
Even in agricultrure, the culture of wang-wang once persisted โฆ
We have put an end to the culture of entitlement, to wang-wang โฆ
The etymology of wang-wang, it seems, is this: โwang-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.