http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-0228-greed-20120228,0,5965885.story
2/28/2012 8:39:41 AM
socioeconomic class is often blamed (at least as a pathway) for poor urbanites committing crimes, right? so rich = unethical; poor = criminals; and crimes = unethical, so all people are shit, fuck'em all.
2/28/2012 8:48:37 AM
Mo money mo problems
2/28/2012 8:48:47 AM
Not really that surprising. in life and especially in the work place, i've found the most successful people ($-wise) are those that are a bit more morally flexible than their peers. This moral flexibility allows them to operate in ways to their benefit....ways that constrain others.I guess it all comes down to your need/ability to lay your head down on your pillow at the end of the day, and go to sleep inowing you're a good person.shrug.
2/28/2012 8:59:27 AM
2/28/2012 9:25:09 AM
or maybe theyve cheated their entire lives to get ahead?why refrain from a proven formula?
2/28/2012 9:37:58 AM
ah, murder, theft, etc. aren't unethical!
2/28/2012 9:42:42 AM
lol this rhetoric building up the election is genius. it's the only hand you haveRICH = BADPEOPLE WHO WORK AND KEEP THEIR MONEY IS HORRIBLEPOOR PEOPLE ARE MISTREATED 100% OF THE TIME AND NO BIG GOVT IS THERE TO TAKE CARE OF THEMREPUBLICANS ARE THE ROOT OF ITguys this is all we are gonna hear from the democrats until nov 30. it's gonna get really repetitive[Edited on February 28, 2012 at 9:52 AM. Reason : -]
2/28/2012 9:48:49 AM
who said anything about republicans?
2/28/2012 10:23:52 AM
2/28/2012 10:28:34 AM
^^pack_bryan did. Only pack_bryan.^ Aaaaaannnnnnnnddddddddd you missed the entire point of the article. Congratulations.[Edited on February 28, 2012 at 10:32 AM. Reason : ]
2/28/2012 10:31:55 AM
oh look propaganda from the LATimes spreading news that rich people are bad and being rich is badnope. nothing to see here.brb. i need to go blindly read my propaganda from huffington post / russian tv / and al jazeera for the day
2/28/2012 10:36:40 AM
2/28/2012 10:42:03 AM
2/28/2012 10:45:22 AM
^I agree, and that's why I posted
2/28/2012 10:46:40 AM
2/28/2012 10:48:39 AM
2/28/2012 10:57:48 AM
2/28/2012 11:10:26 AM
I was responding to Shack's post in-kind. As for the article itself it's not terribly surprising, I'd wager than there might be some internal risk-assessments that go along with any unethical behavior, specifically the consequences of "getting caught". Becoming wealthy probably just changes the relative severity of "getting caught" scenarios in general and makes people more daring. Not to mention, as the article points out, wealth comes with a degree of isolation/insulation which probably detracts from the perceived legitimacy of the "rules".I guess there's also the feeling of inflated self-worth they tend to feel, as reported by similar studies, which I guess translates into less concern for the worth of others.[Edited on February 28, 2012 at 11:22 AM. Reason : .]
2/28/2012 11:13:49 AM
2/28/2012 1:42:30 PM
Three points:1) Ideally, a banker has incentive to make loans that follow through, so they restrict their advice to potential loanees to good advice. Without that incentive, and incentives to make bad loans, that translates into an incentive to actively deceive people. Do you think that every person who wants to buy a home should personally put the time and effort into learning finance in detail, and treat all bank loan consultants (who are supposed to help them) with suspicion? 2) Prior to the crash, investing in a home was considered a solid investment as property values kept rising. Buying a house you "couldn't afford" wasn't a bad idea when the value of said house was projected to rise substantially. Again, should every person looking into buying a house first obtain a knowledge of finance (and macro) to foresee a future housing crisis when nearly every force in the market is telling them no worries?3) Many of these houses didn't become houses they "couldn't afford" until the financial bottoming-out spread over the entire economy. If people only bought houses with cash, it'd be nearly impossible for the vast majority of people to ever become homeowners. So we get into mortgages assuming little things like "I wont lose my job due to an economic crisis and endure huge stretches of unemployment." The financial crash didn't occur because loanees suddenly went bankrupt en masse.[Edited on February 28, 2012 at 2:03 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2012 2:01:37 PM
I'll go ahead and answer #1 on behalf of all the conservatives in TSB.1) Yes.
2/28/2012 2:12:39 PM
On behalf of the libertarians, I will refer you to price exploration theory. Market clearing prices are achieved without 100% of shoppers actually bothering to shop around. Similarly, workable mortgage terms can be achieved without 100% of shoppers attending Harvard, it just requires several checks and balances which have been and remain broken in this country:#1 full recourse loans#2 end of bailout economics#3 end the tax preferences for debt over equity
2/28/2012 2:30:02 PM
^^ Exactly.
2/28/2012 2:32:26 PM
Behind every great fortune is a great crime
2/28/2012 2:41:59 PM
2/28/2012 2:58:13 PM
^
2/28/2012 3:08:36 PM
2/28/2012 6:45:39 PM
http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2012/02/does-being-wealthy-make-you-unethical-new-research-suggests-it-does.arsThe writeup on Ars Technica gives a bit more detail about the set of experiments the researchers ran. Better yet, try reading the actual study if you have institutional access to PNAS: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2012/02/21/1118373109
2/28/2012 7:56:09 PM
^Thanks. Surprised my unity ID still works. Graduated almost 2 years ago.
2/28/2012 8:02:51 PM