By THEPHILBIZNEWS STAFF
Diplomatic receptions and National Day celebrations are meant to be exercises in restraint—measured conversations, quiet networking, and protocol observed down to the last detail. Most guests understand this. A few, however, clearly do not.
Regulars on the embassy circuit have begun whispering about a small but persistent clique—well-dressed, well-heeled, and wildly misplaced—who mistake diplomatic events for red carpets. Their routine is predictable: hover near ambassadors, interrupt mid-sentence, tug sleeves, and demand photos as if visibility were a diplomatic credential.

The breaches are not subtle. At one recent event, during the singing of the Philippine National Anthem, a member of this group attempted to kiss a lady envoy. The diplomat declined, gently reminding the offender that the anthem was in progress. The music continued. The embarrassment lingered.
What irritates seasoned guests more is the entitlement. Ambassadors have been physically pulled away from conversations—often when engaged with someone deemed “less important”—for a photo op clearly intended for social media, not substance. In at least one case, a lady envoy refused, returned to her original conversation, and restored order without raising her voice.
Around the room, reactions ranged from stunned silence to quiet ridicule. One executive summed it up crisply: money may buy access, but it cannot buy class.
And yet, invitations keep coming. Photos keep appearing. The behavior repeats.
The question murmured over canapés now grows louder: how do these guests keep making the list—and what message does it send about the values being showcased at events meant to celebrate national dignity?
Tant pis.




