Technologies for Business presents its concept of business ethics, which I am happy to call your attention to. (I ask you to please click on the link and read the whole article.)
James Pilant
Technologies for Business presents its concept of business ethics, which I am happy to call your attention to. (I ask you to please click on the link and read the whole article.)
James Pilant
Okay, send me your list of ten (or six or seven, whatever you got). Let me know how you want to be identified: full name, web identity, anonymous or even a picture.
Now, the caption says ten things about 2010, and that can be the best or the worst things about 2010.
You can also do it about the last decade or the 21st century.
Here let me give you a suggested set of topics –
Ten worst things about the last decade! (or best things, which would be really impressive because I can’t think of any)
Ten funniest things that happened in 2010 or the last decade.
Ten stupidest things said in 2010.
Ten worst decisions.
Ten best top ten lists.
Ten best reasons the year should end.
Use your imagination! Surprise me!
Post it as a comment on this entry. Okay?
Show me your wit!!!
James Pilant
This is from an ELIAS comment on my blog. It’s great, read them.
James Pilant
OK, the ten worst things about the holidays this year…
1)No Daily Show
2)Being Stuck at the airport
3)Being stuck at A DIFFERENT AIRPORT!
4)Had to buy a new phone charger…watched too much DVR with my TV Everywhere app, ran down the phone, plugged it in..and left the charger in the airport terminal
5)fruitcake, always fruitcake
6)Didn’t get Inception on Bluray
7)STILL STUCK AT THE AIRPORT!!
8)slipped in ice and fell, much to the amusement of all those around me
9)Still no Daily Show!!
10)that the holidays are over. Despite the stress and aggravation, I always love this time of year and am bummed when it’s over.
Professor Mintz’s post is entitled, Business Fraud. Most of the first paragraph is below but I want you to go to his site and read the whole thing. This subject is a critical factor in whether or not we should do more about business ethics or not. If his figures (or mine) are in anyway correct, our nation is being crippled.
In my last blog I wrote about the ever-increasing cost to society of criminal fraud that targets investors. Fraud in business organizations also seems to be on the rise despite all efforts to reduce it following well-publicized accounting frauds at Enron and WorldCom. According to research conducted by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) in 2008, U.S. organizations lose an estimated 7 percent of annual revenues to fraud. Based on the projected U.S. Gross Domestic Product this percentage indicates a staggering estimate of losses around $994 billion among organizations, despite increased emphasis on anti-fraud controls and recent legislation to combat fraud. Also, the median dollar loss caused by fraud schemes was $175,000. More than one-quarter of the frauds involved losses of at least $1 million. …
The costs may be 994 billion dollars, 7 percent of annual revenues, lost to corporate fraud. That doesn’t include corporate crime like dumping pollutants, evading taxes, killing or maiming workers by evading safety regulations, etc.
Is that enough reason to put business ethics as a primary legal and economic concern in every governing body from the cities to the federal government?
James Pilant
This is from Washington’s Blog. The original title is Secretary of the Navy Hatches Brilliant Plan to Sell More Gulf Seafood and Transport Oil to the War Zone.
From the Times-Picayune –
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who doubles as President Barack Obama’s point man on Gulf Coast oil spill recovery, is pressing America’s armed services to consume as much Gulf seafood as possible.
Navy Capt. Beci Brenton said Monday that Mabus has talked with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and the secretaries of the Air Force and Army, and his staff has talked to the Defense Commissary Agency, which operates a worldwide chain of stores for military personnel, making the point “that we should be buying Gulf Coast seafood.”
In a meeting Monday with Ewell Smith, executive director of the Louisiana Seafood Promotion and Marketing Board, Mabus reaffirmed his commitment to using the tools at his disposal to help the Gulf seafood industry recover from the damage the BP oil spill has done in reality and perception. The board is gearing up for a large-scale national marketing campaign, with $30 million in BP money and millions more in federal dollars, to reassure restaurants and markets across the country that Gulf seafood is safe.
Okay, they are having trouble selling seafood that may be (or is) contaminated with oil or chemical dispersant and the armed services are being pressured to buy some. Since the fellow in question is Secretary of the Navy, we should probably put the word, pressured, in quotation marks and note that the armed services (at least the navy) are going to buy gulf coast sea food.
Is this wise?
In about twenty years, when we can get some good data on the long term health effects, we will have a clear picture of whether or not this was a good idea.
In my mind, if there is choice between seafood from the gulf and somewhere else, that really isn’t a choice. I don’t like oil in my food. I’m just weird that way.
Thanks to the anonymous guys at Washington’s Blog for bringing this to my attention.
James Pilant
I wanted to find the very first episode of the Daily Show with Jon Stewart. I was unable to do so. He started in November of 1998. The best I have been able to do was seven months later. I just got curious as to what the show looked like more than ten years ago. (Star Wars, the Phantom Menace was just in theaters.)
James Pilant
The web site, Chink in the Armor, is not for the faint hearted. The outrage bubbles. The anger seethes.
Fairly often, my rage bubbles up when I am writing about these business ethical lapses. He has more anger than I have and I have a lot.
I am just putting down the first sentence and then the first paragraph of this gentleman’s post -
I am pissed. I am seriously pissed. And here are some of the things I am seriously pissed about
1) My daughter will probably NEVER see her 87 year old grandfather again because we live on the left side of this country and he lives on the right side. What with the implementation of the Gestapo/Stasi/TSA Fascist Police State, we will NEVER travel on the airlines again. It is my responsibility to protect my child from evil and she will NOT be subjected to her first cavity search by the Goons of the TSA. Feel the Love.
Go here for the rest.
I think that is a fair representation of the writing. I want you to read it. I like anger. I don’t think there is enough out there.
James Pilant
P.S. I have looked over this web site for some more information about the writer, you know, the kind of stuff you find on the back of a book. I didn’t come up with any. If the author would like to let me know about this, I will be happy to expand this blog entry to include or create a brand new post.
From Reuters through the blog, Chink In The Armor -
The U.S. Justice Department urged Congress on Wednesday to require mortgage companies to retain records for 10 years to make it easier to prosecute fraud.
Rita Glavin, acting head of the department’s criminal division, told a hearing of the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee that mortgage settlement statements and other loan documents are critical to investigating or prosecuting fraud.
But they can be hard to get from lenders, brokers and title companies that provide loan services. “All too often, such entities go out of business, and their records are either abandoned or destroyed,” Glavin said in testimony submitted to the committee.
She said half of the top 10 U.S. subprime mortgage originators in the second half of 2006 had either gone out of business or been sold a year later.
Our Internet privacy is disappearing. Probably the government is looking at our posts down to the last comma and thirty to forty companies have embedded cookies to follow our visits and there enough tracking software on us to tell if we spent nano seconds at one place or another.
So, they are playing games with us and manipulating us.
Let’s manipulate back.
On your social networking sites, move a lot. If you always wanted to live in Hawaii, get a map and find a nice place and declare it your home. Move every couple of months. You can live in fictional places from Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis to John Foster Caine’s Xanadu (a double header – fictional character and fictional place). What about birthdays? These are excellent ways for people to track down medical and financial information about you. Well, have you ever wanted to have two birthdays in a year? Why be a piker, have three or four. Change them every few weeks.
Political beliefs? Give up being a boring Democrat or strict Republican. Vote with the crew of the Enterprise, join the “wild” party, declare yourself at one with the hopes and aspirations of the Pirates of the Carribean.
How about being tracked on the internet and having your every move sold to spammers and marketers determined to exploit this knowledge? At the end or beginning of your web surfing, go wild. Visit this web site and discover how to build your own coffin. Go to the World Wildlife Fund and discover how to adopt a beaver! Fill your your web trackers with useless and incorrect information. Make their tracking as useless as time permits.
Ah, the tough one, how do we write e-mails to annoy the Department of Homeland Security? It’s easy. Now, you’ve heard people say to put words in like terrorist or bomb. Don’t do that. Write e-mails in praise of the Department of Homeland Security or the FBI or the DEA and alway include the latest plot these agencies have foiled. The computer will probably have to cough up all these e-mails to an actual person to discern the seriousness of the message. What will they find? – that you like the government! What could be more harmless?
Now, there are a few of you saying, “James, you shouldn’t be messing with the American government’s ability to catch terrorists?” To which I reply, “They have never said or alleged at any time that they are reading our e-mails. So, obviously, there is no surveillance and you are doing no harm at all. You can’t interfere with non-existant privacy violations, can you?”
“If they were monitoring our e-mail, that would be a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment, so you see they can’t be doing that. What’s more I love the Deparment of Homeland Security. What a bunch of great guys! I sleep better at night knowing that they are looking out for me!”
What about you? Have you ever become tired of that same old face in the mirror? It’s time to live a little! Get yourself a new e-mail. Become a movie star, a little old lady, an heiress or a Wall Street executive. Creat a dozen new e-mail addresses, every single one with a new version of yourself. Didn’t Walt Whitman say, “I am multitudes!” Be a multitude. Leave a few blog comments in your new identity. Try out some interesting points of view.
If all these turkeys want to collect information on you, help them out. Give them tons of information. Be cooperative. Don’t just show them the data from one person but dozens.
And do log on and post from different computers. Use programs that disguise or block identity searches, so our friends can grow and develop as human beings (whatever doesn’t kill us, makes us stronger!!).
These people are kind enough to take an interest in us. We should take an interest in them and help them out with a much data as possible.
James Pilant