Clarence Thomas is Acting without Ethics.

Most of Justice Thomas’ $267,000 loan for an RV seems to have been forgiven, Senate Democrats say (msn.com)

Apparently a great number of people find Clarence Thomas’ conduct to be just fine. If a man has spent his life as a hard cold right wing warrior, you will have many defenders. Clarence Thomas (and his wife) have many allies in government, media and among the punditry. They say there is nothing wrong with him taking gifts and trips from the wealthy. Not even loans, the kind that you don’t have to pay back disturbs their equanimity.

He lives a life of enormous privilege paid for by wealthy conservatives. His actual salary pales in significance to the number and value of what he receives.

Yet, we are told over and over again on conservative media that there is nothing wrong in having wealthy friends and taking the occasional goodie. That’s just common practice. This does inspire a certain curiosity for what is “common practice” among conservatives. There does seem to be a certain craving for luxury items among the conservative elite. I could refer to an certain governor’s lectern, for instance.

And Clarence Thomas’ failure to report these many, many items? Why, that’s just a grey area of the law. Thomas says he spoke to apparently completely and utterly anonymous lawyers of great repute – who tole him he did not have to report these kinds of gifts. I have one of those law degrees and I an unable to envisage any attorney under any circumstances telling Thomas that these gifts did not have to be reported. But who I am compared to the many anonymous figures in law that he says he consulted?

And then we have the wife of Clarence Thomas, Ginni Thomas. She has a non-profit political advocacy organization that she founded. So, people can make contributions to her organization. And we are told there is nothing wrong or unethical about the wife of a sitting Supreme Court Justice gathering political contributions. I am not so sure of that. It appears to me that you could give money to her organization and it would not be far-fetched to assume that you had gained some influence with her husband. However, much this may be denied.

I believe that the evidence provided publicly can lead to only one conclusion.

Clarence Thomas’ conduct is unethical and wrong.

No judge should take expensive gifts. No judge should fail to report accurately on their financial disclosure forms. No judge should have a wife who runs a political organizations that take contributions.

It is true that some of this falls into a grey area of legality or illegality. But a good and honest man would not have found so many grey areas to live in and Clarence Thomas appears to frolic in them.

He won’t resign, of course. To his allies, he is shining example of what is right and true. After all, aren’t his decisions vital for their interests?

But I will call him out for his moral failings.

It must be done. If we are to live in a moral world where evil and immoral acts have consequences, tolerating his conduct with out speaking or writing is just wrong.

We have an obligation as citizens of the United States to rebuke our leaders when they have strayed from morality and ethics.

Let us not be afraid to carry out our duty.

So, you found an advanced missile system in your back yard??

https://www.cnn.com/europe/live-news/russia-ukraine-war-news-09-30-23/h_79cabaddb694215355e81219150f9515

My first thought is that – it is amazing how many strange stories start with the words: “These two guys …”

These two guys in Ukraine found an advanced missile system abandoned in a back yard. So, dollars signs appeared before them or whatever passes for value in a just invaded area, and they apparently decided to hide it and maybe get some value out of it later.

And it turns out, that they hit the jackpot, they hadn’t found just any old advanced missile system but a very expensive one. According to the authorities, a little less than a million dollars. (I suspect it might be a reload for a SA-22.)

However, when a foreign nation invades and leaves stuff in your yard, it doesn’t belong to you. So, they’re in some kind of trouble. That in the midst of this war, that the Kyiv Regional Police are still in business and enforcing the law is truly amazing.

The patriotic thing to do would have been to give it to the military so they could very kindly and speedily return it to the Russians.

The Business Ethics lesson here for Americans is that if a foreign power or one of our branches of the military leaves a whole bunch of interesting stuff in your back yard, you are supposed to return it. And by the way, hiding it under a tarp is unlikely to be effective.

Ethics Roundup for Sept. 25th

Reading over my last posts, it seemed to me confusing to put the links to the stories after my comments, so on this one, there will be the link and then any comments I wish to add.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/costs-of-child-care-kara-lodato_l_64cbe4f1e4b01ca159892291

According to the article, modern families with children in the United States average 27% of their income on child care.

This is pretty appalling. Don’t we want families to have children? As a nation building an environment child friendly and educationally strong should be priorities.

If we as a nation subsidized child care, more women and some men could enter the workforce, a win for every body. And if we had well payed, well educated caregivers for these children, well – that would be just good for everybody.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/beyonce-flies-out-disabled-fan_n_65108cf9e4b09cd54cbd1cb5

A disabled man want to see Beyonce perform. The airline refuses to serve him because of his “oversize” wheelchair. Beyonce pays to have him attend the concert.

This is positive business ethics! And a very fine example, indeed.

Good public relations and smart decision making go a long way. It is surprising how few businesses ever consider a good public relations move if it costs any sum at all. Innovation, intelligence and a willingness to risk a few buck can make a big difference in a business’ success.

https://apnews.com/article/writers-strike-deal-hollywood-wga-3336824c06795931845c889f1e08b3ff

The writers strike may be ending and we may soon see many television shows and other entertainment that have been on hiatus during the strike.

Is this a good outcome? I want to know more details particularly how the rank and file react to the agreement. So, give me a few days. It’s hard to make ethical observations while the details are hazy.

https://apnews.com/article/asian-games-esports-faker-00dd2440001d4c6796e9643969a6de5a

Coming to a television near you??

Egames – that is, popular computer games played competitively in an environment similar to the Olympic games.

Thirty years ago, the idea that competitive gaming with a television audience was considered a joke and a pipe dream.

Well, now it is a reality. Right now it is taking place in Asia but the United States can’t be far behind.

The game they are playing competitively today is “League of Legends.” A simple online search reveals an enormous market of all things, League of Legends, from figurines to art and gift cards.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/sep/22/nfts-worthless-price

Non-Fungible Tokens – Two years ago they were hot, all the rage. What are they? Ownership rights in a digital file which had a picture, video or text. They were going to worth millions, maybe more.

At the moment, this form of crypto investment is largely worthless.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/17/flight-attendants-threaten-strikes-alaska-american-united

Flight attendants have been paid badly for years, often working unpaid for hours a day and suffering a veritable deluge of insult and abuse from passengers.

They deserve a raise and they have made preliminary moves which point toward a likely strike.

Currently the airlines have completely recovered from the COVID crisis and are making record profits. It is time to share the wealth.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/25/crypto-king-or-conman-is-sam-bankman-fried-about-to-be-sent-down-for-a-century

This is hard to discuss. People invested in crypto-currencies which as far as I can tell have only a vaguely real existence. But even though, doubting people like me thought this was all just crazy. It was a very profitable form of crazy. This fellow, likely to go to prison for a century, was once considered to be worth 26 billion dollars.

This unregulated, non-governmental currency did real harm and has now impoverished many. Let’s try not to do this again. No more imaginary currencies or other only vaguely existing measures of value.

https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/25/business/legacy-admissions-curious-consumer/index.html

A legacy admission is where the child of a graduate of an institution is admitted on those grounds alone. It is completely totally wrong. It defies any standard of merit and is a truly pitiful offspring of the privileges extended to royalty and the very wealthy of previous corrupt generations.

That this truly nauseatingly, evil practice even exists in the United States is surprising. It is an enshrinement of family connection over any kind of merit.

The Wisdom of our Betters!

I live in Northeastern Oklahoma. This is in many way millions of light years from the great opinion setters in Washington and New York. I must admit how much I envy them. After all who expects intelligent observations and good writing from the middle of nowhere?

So, I was delighted to be once more the recipient of the that vast embodiment of Establishment wisdom, David Brooks. It is so kind of him to wander down from the plains of Olympus to cast a few minor pearls in my direction.

In this case, the pearls were cast in the form of a “tweet,” in which he complained that his meal at the Newark Airport was 78 dollars. Clearly the decline of the United States, even perhaps all of western civilization, can be observed in this travesty pricing. This hamburger was a vital piece of evidence in our cultural wars and disputes, and only a master of observation could have possibly realized it.

Now, there are people, just a few, who do not appreciate these thrown pearls which under any measure of objective evidence they should treasure.

And these people have been saying and, even worse, writing mean things. I hesitate to call attention to this pitiful criticism, but even in the wild country of Northeastern Oklahoma, we know that opinion setters like David Brooks are all but invulnerable to criticism from the chattering masses of humanity he dwells so far from.

So, what did these pitiful complainers say? They pointed out that a hamburger and fries run roughly seventeen dollars and that the rest of the bill was for his drinks, apparently scotch. So, seventeen dollars for food and sixty-one dollars for alcoholic beverages.

And these complainers can’t help themselves but to also suggest that a hamburger costing seventeen dollars is not quite so indicative of societal decline.

This is all very unfair and I want David Brooks to know that out here in Northeastern Oklahoma, I’ve got his back.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/david-brooks-78-burger-tweet_n_650cafcee4b0adc2891391b9

Business Ethics Roundup: Week of Sept.17-23

Here I am posting once again after a long hiatus. I don’t mind confessing that my absence has a lot to do with getting COVID and suffering long term effects. It came pretty close to killing me and for a long time and even now I get tired and drained of all energy at odd moments during the day.

I have been blogging on a regular basis of Facebook. I have a site called Business Ethics, and every day I make witty, acidic and occasionally accurate observations on the news. It is not quite as serious as this web site.

Well, let’s get going. Each paragraph is followed by a link to the story. I hope you enjoy. JP

The Events of this Week.

The social media site formerly known as Twitter scored at the bottom of six social media companies when rated for how they handled climate disinformation. This is appalling. Surely the platform can do more to eliminate lies. I am certainly not a “free speech absolutist.” That kind of stance empowers the evil among us. Truth, fact seeking and the use of reason are hall marks of our civilization and we should rely on those values pressing forward.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/sep/20/twitter-x-musk-climate-misinformation-social-platforms

It appears a man was directed onto a collapsed bridge by Google Maps. A law suit had been filed. Is the company responsible for providing safe and accurate maps? A lot of that will be determined by how the company advertises and its policies toward safety. I expect they will claim that they merely map and the consequences of an inaccuracy must fall upon the user. I will be watching this as it works its way through the courts. Strangely enough I halfway think the company will settle just to avoid the litigation, but that is just a random thought on my part.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/sep/20/google-maps-collapsed-bridge-negligence-lawsuit

What does this resignation mean? My perception is that Murdoch has been gradually stepping down for the last decade and not much will change. But I can be wrong and I have been in the past. This prediction business even when well informed is pretty tricky. I am glad that he is gone. He was a dark cloud on our society, a curse upon the truth and well meaning people everywhere.

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/sep/21/rupert-murdoch-stepping-down-chair-fox-news-corp

There are still pieces of good news even bordering on miracles in this day age. Here I present a case in point. A toddler wanders off with two family dogs in tow and is found safe and sound napping in the forest. Sounds like something out of the Brothers Grimm!

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/21/lost-michigan-child-sleeping-dog-pillow

A Senator has been indicted. This story broke a few minutes ago. I don’t really want to comment until I get some more information but it is obviously a major story.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/robert-menendez-indicted_n_650d98c2e4b04db03fdc1805?wef

There are many disgusting and pitiful men in Washington pretending to serve the nation. But one currently stands out for his cruelty and his overwhelming stupidity, Tommy Tuberville. The alleged Senator from Alabama has placed a hold on military promotions causing havoc among the officer corps. The following video editorial scorches him nicely and I suggest you listen.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/lawrence-odonnell-disgraceful-senator_n_650d628ee4b0514b68958836

The Same Rules for Everyone!

Facebook Rules sometimes don’t apply!  

Here is a quote from the article listed below.  

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg intervened to reinstate a false anti-abortion video to assuage conservative Republican politicians, according to internal company documents Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen provided to Congress that The Financial Times examined. 

The incident was reportedly one of several instances of Facebook senior executives countermanding company policy to allow American politicians and celebrities to post whatever they wanted despite pleas from employees to moderate the content, according to the documents. 

That rules should apply to everyone in the same way is an axiom of conduct. It is a standard of fairness. We deserve at least this minimum from Facebook 

James Alan Pilant  

Links:  

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mark-zuckerberg-facebook-anti-abortion-video-politicians_n_617729f1e4b010d93314d129

Postscript – I’ve been gone from this site for about a year. I was tired and maintaining a blog while dealing with long term effects from COVID-19 (I had both varieties and the shots) was more than I could handle at the time. I’m back.  

Business Ethics Roundup: Sept. 27th – Oct. 3rd

This is the week that the President was diagnosed with COVID19 and sent to Walter Reed Hospital. As an expert on ethics, I have a couple of observations. The President’s behavior after his exposure was reckless and foolish. He pointlessly endangered the lives of his staff and at a scheduled meeting of major fund raisers took no precautions at all. Secondly, the irony of a man who has discouraged intelligent action on the virus and ignored precautions having become infected with the virus is palpable.

It is also important to note that the messaging coming out of the White House that the President has a mild case and is recovering while taking medication for the most serious of cases makes little sense. Once again as an ethics expert I have to note that the White House has so little credibility that some of my friends don’t even believe that he is actually ill!

I would like to believe that those of us who have been critical of the President would forbear from taking pleasure in his suffering. I have had the COVID19 virus and it is an awful experience. I do not wish it on people and I don’t believe that the Almighty smites individuals with disease not to mention earthquakes, tornadoes, etc. For gentlemen and ladies, the only proper response to illness is a sincere wish for a quick recovery.

Some years ago, I taught a class in criminal justice and some of the students hated Obama so much they could scarce answer a question in the course without saying something disparaging about him. I regard Obama as an average President who missed his opportunities to do justice in the economic crisis of 2008, so I’m not a fan but the level of pure hatred was just amazing. I don’t want to do that nonsense. You can oppose the President without hating him. The place for disputes in a democracy is the ballot box and the courts; and we should let those play out.

In other business ethics news, Robert Murray, the former controversial head of now defunct Murray Energy has applied for Black Lung Benefits. His company was notorious for fighting every claim from his workers for such benefits. There is a certain irony at play here.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/former-coal-magnate-battled-mining-214941138.html

“Whose Vote Counts,” premiered this week on Netflix focuses on the problem of voter suppression in the United States. It is definitely an ethics problem. As if to underscore the importance of the film, the governor of Texas issued a proclamation limiting the number of drop off boxes for absentee voting to one per county. Such obvious villainy is not often seen.

https://www.vox.com/21431320/whose-vote-counts-explained-netflix

In this week of intense irony, it is important to note that the three leaders who most denigrated the threat of the virus have all come down with it. Bolsonaro, Boris Johnson and the President have suffered or are suffering from the disease. Will this experience soften their views or teach them wisdom? Don’t be ridiculous. The denial of science, a critical view of experts, this unwillingness to follow the path of experience and knowledge is wired into their political selves.

https://www.vox.com/2020/10/2/21498493/trump-coronavirus-bolsonaro-johnson

The Pope in a new Encyclical entitled, “Fratelli Tutti,” or “Brothers All,” criticized free market capitalism and trickle down economics.

The marketplace by itself cannot resolve every problem, however much we are asked to believe this dogma of neoliberal faith,” the pope wrote.

He added that free-market capitalism “reproduces itself” by resorting to the magic theories of “spillover” or “trickle” as the only solution to societal problems.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/04/business/pope-francis-market-capitalism/index.html

In an unusual departure for Fox News, Chris Wallace told the network’s audience to wear masks and follow the science. This was an example of positive business ethics. He was under no obligation to explain this or make a claim often criticized by his own network but he did it anyway.

https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2020/10/02/fox-news-chris-wallace-trump-covid-19-diagnosis-orig.cnn

In some sad and unfortunate economic news, about 3.8 million jobs in the United States have disappeared forever.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/02/economy/permanent-job-losses-recession/index.html

Jet suits are now being tested in the United Kingdom for use in rescues in rough terrain. My memories of personal rocket propelled suits is confined to James Bond and my recollection is that the suit had very little time in the air and generated monstrous amounts of heat. It appears that personal jet packs have come down in price and have much improved times and efficiency. The world changes!

One of the positive elements of capitalism is innovation and technological development.

https://www.cnn.com/videos/business/2020/09/29/paramedics-jet-suit-gravity-lon-orig-mrg.cnn/video/playlists/business-tech/

It is fascinating to observe that you can tell how well Joe Biden is doing in the polls by observing the international value placed on the Russian Ruble. The higher his poll numbers go, the lower the ruble.

Irony just abounds this week.

https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2020/10/2/how-is-joe-biden-doing-in-the-polls-ask-the-russian-ruble

The Post Office is an American Institution and for rural American, a vital part of the people’s lives.

Across the rural West, the U.S. Postal Service has long been an integral part of everyday life — especially in recent months, ever since the pandemic made residents wary of going to the grocery store or driving to town for necessities. According to the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive think tank, the postal service is a literal lifeline: About one in four veterans live in rural communities, and 80% of their prescriptions come through the mail. Additionally, residents 65 and older rely more on mail prescriptions than younger people do. Many rural post offices also distribute packages from private delivery services, such as UPS, FedEx and Amazon. And across the Western United States, residents also rely on the postal service to deliver mail-in ballots.   

How residents rallied to get their post office back

The House of Representatives passed a 2.2 trillion dollar stimulus bill. The Senate and the President are unlikely to allow the bill to proceed. The great mass of the American people are of little concern to our ruling elites.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/second-stimulus-check-600-unemployment-heroes-act/

A Senate panel is moving to subpoena the CEO’s of Twitter, Facebook and Google. This is a bipartisan effort although each party has different issues that concern them about the tech giants.

It is important that these organizations have some responsibility to their users although the Senate is a blunt instrument at best.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/senate-commerce-committee-subpoena-mark-zuckerberg-facebook-sundar-pichai-google-jack-dorsey-twitter/

As Addictive as Cigarettes?

In a House hearing, Tim Kendall a former executive at Facebook testified about its addictiveness.

Kendall, CEO of time-management app Moment and former director of monetization for Facebook, told the hearing held by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce: “Tobacco companies initially just sought to make nicotine more potent. But eventually that wasn’t enough to grow the business as fast as they wanted. And so they added sugar and menthol to cigarettes so you could hold the smoke in your lungs for longer periods, At Facebook, we added status updates, photo tagging, and likes.”

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/facebook-addictive-as-cigarettes-former-executive-says/

According to an article in Scientific American, Greenland is melting faster than any time in the last 12,000 years.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode/greenland-melting-fastest-any-time-in-last-12-000-years/

Business Ethics Roundup: Week of Sept. 20th – 26th.

“We are going to crush this lady.” 

Seven former employees of E-bay were arrested for sending a bloody pig mask and cockroaches to a couple who ran a small web site which drew the ire of the company. The quote, “We are going to crush this lady,” is from CEO Devin Wenig. This truly ridiculous crimes committed to punish a small independent web site have resulted in several guilty pleas as well as resignations and firings.

The proper response to criticism is to fix the problems in your own house and a due tolerance to the critic. This kind of economic and social “jihad” is both reprehensible, unwise and outside the behavior expected of ladies and gentlemen.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/27/tech/ebay-cockroach-pig-mask/index.html

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/09/ex-ebay-employees-to-plead-guilty-in-bloody-pig-mask-cyberstalking-case/

Singapore has adopted facial recognition for identity verification both public and private. Is this wise? It is too early to tell but this technology can easily be misused and there is certainly a vast imbalance of power between the government and the “identified.” I’m very uncomfortable with this. It’s not surprising that Singapore, long a practitioner of paternalistic control is the first nation to dive all the way to the use of this kind of system.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-54266602

A new Pew Research Center survey of 13,200 people (a truly excellent sample size) shows that less than half of the 22 million jobs lost due to the pandemic have been recovered. About 1/3 of the sample indicated they had got their old jobs back and another 15% had found new jobs.

The data on those that recovered jobs showed a strong class difference in job recovery rates with of 58% middle and upper class workers finding work again opposed to only 43% of the lower class.

Recovery funds have found their way to the giant corporations and even mega churches but to these 11 million unemployed Americans, our fellow citizens, little has been done and it appears that our ruling class finds the suffering of these “little” people to be beneath their notice.

The national tragedy of the federal government’s failed response to the coronavirus continues. We have the example of many successful governmental responses from around the work to emulate and we don’t. We have conducted a policy based on federal inaction and incompetence coupled with fifty different state governmental approaches often bordering on the moronic. Our individual reactions are shaped by conspiracy theories, exuberant denialism and concepts of personal freedom and free market absolutism that border on lunacy.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/9/27/21458234/coronavirus-jobs-unemployment-rate

Maryland becomes the first state to ban foam food service products.

“Single-use plastics are overrunning our oceans and bays and neighborhoods,” Democratic Delegate Brooke Lierman, the main sponsor of the House bill, told CNN when it passed in 2019.
“We need to take dramatic steps to start stemming our use and reliance on them … to leave future generations a planet full of wildlife and green space.”

I believe that in time more states will adopt this measure.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/27/us/maryland-foam-container-ban-trnd/index.html

Peloton is cutting the price of one of its exercycles. This company was through a fluke of history, the coronavirus, multiplied in its success. Many people unable to jog or walk bought exercycles online. Still too rich for my blood.

I use a rowing machine which I strongly recommend. Unlike a cycle, the rowing machine is a full body workout. But as we age, regular exercise becomes more and more important.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/08/tech/peloton-new-products/index.html

A Massachusetts Veterans’ home combined two dementia wards apparently to save money. Since one was infected with the COVID19 version and the other wasn’t, many veterans died. The decision has been described as “baffling.”

This action and others have resulted in two federal indictments.
There is something horrifying with how casually these veterans were discarded. Weren’t they promised a life time of care? What does this say about us as a nation and a people that this happened.
And  on this same point the treatment, the lack of mourning, for the dead in this pandemic is most concerning. As I continue toward the end of my life, it pains me to think that having reached a certain age, I am expected to perish unmourned and unthought of. Two hundred thousand Americans dead and we continue with our disastrous policies and fail in our duties to the dead – to mourn and remember their lives and contributions.
Lane Unhjem, a farmer in North Dakota, suffered a heart attack while tending his fields. He is in ICU and recovering. But without him, his crops would go unharvested and the money for their sale lost.
Sixty neighbors volunteered to come out and make sure the harvest went as planned. They acted to save his income and thus his farm.
For some, and they number in the millions in this nation, acting to save a competitor without recompense beggars the imagination. Under Ayn Rand’s system of thinking, this altruism, this compassion is a crime against logic and reasonable thought.
Yet, for the time being, there are still those among us who believe in humankind, the values of sharing and civic as well as community duty.
The former head of that vile organization, Cambridge Analytica, Alexander Nix, has been banned from running limited liability companies in England for seven years. The firm offered “unethical” services. Among the unethical services offered were “honey traps’ and “voter disengagement services.” A honey trap is where a woman offers sexual favors which are then used often with covert filming to blackmail opponents. Voter disengagement is a method of using social media to disgust and discourage potential voters from supporting an opponent.
If this strikes you as a small penalty for advertising these disreputable acts, you are not alone. Nix admits no wrongdoing and says he only agreed to the penalty to avoid lengthy litigation.
These kinds of penalties fail to discourage this kind of wrongdoing. What is to become of morality and ethics in the world of business when these slaps on the wrist are all the penalty that violators face?

The agency said it had found that Nix “had caused or permitted SCL Elections or associated companies to act with a lack of commercial probity”.

“The unethical services offered by the companies included bribery or honey trap stings, voter disengagement campaigns, obtaining information to discredit political opponents and spreading information anonymously in political campaigns,” it said in its statement.

A Native American tribe, the Monacans, are fighting to preserve the original site of their capital from the building of a pumping station.
We as a nation are in a period of reckoning when it comes to Native American sites and history and, in particular, native remains. This should form part of the business communities’ concerns when it come to not doing harm as well as pursuing the public good. We are not endangered by recognizing native culture; we are enriched and enlivened by our mixture of cultures and the amazing combination of European, African and Native American cultures have built a vital and active culture.
As we have seen in Brazil, anti-indigenous organizations are becoming increasingly influential and powerful. This is a business ethics concern.
Anti-Indigenous ideologies challenge bedrock human rights through a number of means. Relying on stereotypes, for instance, is a common tactic in almost every country: Indigenous communities are seen as lawless or corrupt and incapable of managing land, water, wildlife or infrastructure — roles that anti-Indigenous activists and fellow travelers argue should be taken on by the state or corporations instead of Indigenous communities. Those same arguments are often extended to the adoption of Indigenous children, access to health care, and payment of taxes. In all cases, anti-Indigenous individuals and organizations argue that Indigenous people are incapable of managing their own affairs by engaging with racist dog whistles and established stereotypes to undermine rights to land, resources, language and culture. (From the article below.)
There is a currently developing scandal in Pakistan alleging that corrupt officials are issuing pilot’s licenses to those unqualified. I’m sure you can imagine the dire consequences of issuing pilot’s licenses for money.

Business Ethics Roundup Sept. 13th – 19th

This week in Business Ethics is marred by the death by ovarian cancer of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. She died during the week of Rosh Hashanah which in Jewish lore means she is particularly blessed. Here is a guide for my readers unfamiliar with the surrounding concepts.

Rosh Hashanah 2020 — A Guide for the Perplexed

Currently that American Institution, the Post Office, is under attack. Don’t believe me? A federal judge called the changes: “a politically motivated attack on the efficiency of the Postal Service” It is very poor business ethics indeed to sabotage a public agency, a public good for all Americans, for private gain. I found a good article on the importance of the sorting machines which I include here as well as the article I got the federal judge quote from.

https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/federal-judge-slams-dejoy-s-politically-motivated-usps-attack-n1240453

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/mail-sorting-machines-are-crucial-for-the-u-s-postal-service/

Tragically there appears to be increasing violence surrounding requests that people wear masks and practice social distancing. In a particularly callous attack, a 67 year old gas station worker suffered a fractured skull after being assaulted with a pipe. It is a particularly bitter reality that during a worldwide pandemic, many Americans are unwilling to pull together in the wake of the viral threat to protect each other from infection. This generation of Americans is half helpless to act on behalf of the common good. Many believe in the crass nonsense of libertarianism and similar beliefs that the only interest is self interest. The generations of Americans that sacrificed in the face of war and epidemic must be astonished at this willingness to sacrifice our fellow Americans out of simple pig headedness.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/long-island-social-distancing-attack-arrest_n_5f66b573c5b6480e89700af8

Are we entering the Pyrocene, the age of fire? Stephen Pyne suggests in the High Country News that is indeed the case. He says that in previous ages we had ice ages and this current situation is the other side of the coin, that is, ages of fire. It’s a good read and a fairly brief one. It is attached below.

West coast wildfires signal a planetary fire age

Over the last twenty years, financial institutions including the often mentioned five, HSBC, JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered and Bank of New York Mellon (BNY Mellon), conducted about 2 trillion dollars in suspicious activity. Rest assured this is a developing story and we are going to hear more as the particulars work their way to the surface.

https://www.aljazeera.com/ajimpact/banks-moved-alleged-dirty-money-red-flags-reports-200920203410592.html

Federal charges of among other charges, commercial bribery, were filed against six individuals who are charged with bribing Amazon employees to gain an unfair advantage. The bribes totaled about $100,000. Temporary suspensions of competitor accounts was one of the means used to gain advantage.

This kind of crime causes people to buy inferior or even dangerous goods. Let’s hope Amazon acts to clean up its staff.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/amazon-marketplace-fraud-scheme-six-indicted/

New York filed a 2 billion dollar lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson for its role in the opoid crisis, that is, encouraging opoid use and downplaying the risks of addiction. Since Oklahoma has already won a case and 500 million dollars from the company, one has to wonder why the state has waited this long and is that the correct amount?
In positive business ethics, a firm from the UK is making protective masks out of peas which is very environmentally sound.
How is it that a video in which a man committed suicide live on Facebook does not violate their standards and is still up? Facebook says it has a policy against suicide and videos showing self harm but isn’t enforcing it.
Very poor business ethics indeed.
Movie Theatres have been open for about a month but the economic returns have been disappointing. Mulan’s crash at the box office could not have helped matters.