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Re: good vs evil


From: Bernd Jendrissek
Subject: Re: good vs evil
Date: Fri, 7 May 2004 13:41:17 +0000 (UTC)
User-agent: tin/1.7.1-20030918 ("Berneray") (UNIX) (Linux/2.4.18 (i686))

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In article <x5y8o4k3rh.fsf@lola.goethe.zz> David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org> wrote:
>How does a corporation commit murder?  Care for an example?
[...]
>How does a corporation defraud investors?  Care for an example?
>
>If such deeds are committed, they are committed by individuals, and
>they are accountable for their actions.

Yes, but corporations do provide a large degree of blurring of the
responsibility.  And if you can't single out one or a group of
conspirators to murder, you can't prosecute.

"Murder": finding out that the mine shaft is full of radon, and refusing
to install extractor fans.  Dumping toxic waste in rivers, from which
people drink, who then die.  Okay, *murder* requires *intent* to kill,
but you'd still have manslaughter.

Fraud: publishing misleading or downright false annual financial
reports.

Yes, you possibly can nail an individual, or go all the way up the
hierarchy (I just did what I was told to do) until you get to the CEO.
But then the CEO can often somewhat credibly claim, "I gave no such
instruction" - you get to "understood" job requirements with no records
to produce as evidence.

No evidence => can't prosecute.

- -- 
http://voyager.abite.co.za/~berndj/ (f1084a555d2098411cff4cefd41d2e2a1c85d18c)
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
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