Ethics

Business Men, Lawmakers or Prosecutors; Who is the Most Honest?

Having been involved in business and politics and watched government attack us business folk and thus having been on all sides of this equation, it is readily apparent to me that the humans are just doing what humans do anyway. Humans are inherently problematic, often very deceptive and not such honest beings in general.

If we thrust the human animal into a modern civilization and the system does not take into consideration human nature it will not be fair and no one should expect it to be. Yet, if we will all step back from the situation and look at what we really have going here we will see what needs to be done and then we can start from there.

You see, as it stands now; Prosecutors often have political ambitions and judgeships are a political event. Lawmakers have interests in remaining in power and need money to do so and adjust the laws for lobbyists with special interest. Lawyers make money by hijacking the law. Cops have IQ of under 103 or they are not allowed to be police and one-third are criminals themselves hiding in broad daylight as protectors of peace? Every criminal I have ever met says they are innocent and every victim I meet wants revenge. So all this is human nature. The system is not taking all this into consideration.

So instead of fixing it all, we make more laws, more complex that no one can understand, totally ambiguous making a perfect breeding ground for lawyers to modify interpretation in order cheat the system, all for a fee. Throw in the financial gain of the free market place and now you have a free for all and what on Earth did you expect in a system filled with humans and system that does not take into consideration its own flaws? Consider all this in 2006.

Lance Winslow

Lance Winslow

 Tags: Business Men, Lawmakers, Prosecutors, who is the most honest

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Aphorism

By periodically investing in an index fund, for example, the know-nothing investor can actually out-perform most investment professionals. Paradoxically, when "dumb" money acknowledges its limitations, it ceases to be dumb.

Warren Buffett


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