What does it say about someone when they repeatedly imply they have strong ethics?

Quote from swtrader:

what's interesting, is that there's a large number of people who would never steal from you directly, ie they would deliver a found wallet to your door, with every dollar intact

but if their boss told them to do something dishonest and decietfull that would potentially ruin you, they would


there's a book called 'Homo Americanus' which i havent read, that's supposed to detail the reality of the American Middle class person pretty well - ie 'soft fascism'

To understand why people unquestionably follow leadership (including sociopaths) , even though it may be counter to their personal beliefs, read up on the milgram experiment. Quite shocking, yet very enlightening experiment on human nature and why people tend to blindly do what they are told.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment
 
milgram experiment

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIWWYljYwpw

in consulting i encountered 2 types of dishonesty

1) the deliberate active deceit, the actor did it knowingly, deliberately, and even enjoyed doing it (usually in a managerial, HR, or sales role)

2) the passive role - not doing the direct deceit, but carrying on the process and communication with full knowledge that what they were converying was false and harmfull
 
For me its definitely a red flag - like the person who says "I wouldn't lie" - That tells me the person is a liar.

People who dont lie dont have to tell you - same with ethics - unless its a discussion on ethics
 
Is like the person who gives you an explanation that you haven’t asked for. It tells you they are guilty of at least one of the things that will be addressed.
 
Just another viewpoint, but have you ever noticed that a lot of accusations ( especially with politicians ) would be more applicable to themselves than the accused party ?
 
Quote from swtrader:

and i'm very sad to say this, but not many people pass the 'my boss told me to' morality test

working in tech consulting, i found that under the order of their boss, that average cubicle person is capable of about anything, no matter how dishonest

not all, but the average, yes

Right, and it starts with the barbed wire of voice mail.
 
Quote from dtrader98:

To understand why people unquestionably follow leadership (including sociopaths) , even though it may be counter to their personal beliefs, read up on the milgram experiment. Quite shocking, yet very enlightening experiment on human nature and why people tend to blindly do what they are told.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment

Wonder if optimizing the behavior demonstrated in the Milgram experiment is what military basic trainings breakdown of defiance is about. I'm done wondering.
 
Quote from Humpy:

Just another viewpoint, but have you ever noticed that a lot of accusations ( especially with politicians ) would be more applicable to themselves than the accused party ?

LOL, yes. People see faults in others that they are most familiar within themselves. There's one chatter here who posts, "you're projecting your inadequicies onto me" in every other post he makes. And all of his other posts is calling someone a loser. Good point.
 
Quote from Rearden Metal:

*Raises hand*

"Get Anyone To Do Anything" is one of the most useful books I've ever read. It's also very economical on words- All meat and no stuffing- so that even the most severe zero-attention-span ADHD cases can easily keep the pages turning.

http://www.amazon.com/Get-Anyone-Anything-Again-Psychological/dp/0312270178

Lieberman writes some easy to read, useful stuff...but some of his methods are slightly manipulative, and there are people that can see through them (without having any psych background).... so his methods won't work with everyone.
You are better off reading Proverbs :D
 
Trust is a weird thing. It's more on the person interpretting than the person actually saying it. Sort of like believing.

"Believe me... etc. etc. etc."

It's more about whether you agree or not to the idea the person is speaking about.

The typical application is Warm Reading 101. You start off pitching the guy with what he agrees on and leading that "trust" towards what you are really trying to pitch. It happens all the time with psychology books and often in ET (intentionally or unintentionally)...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warm_reading
 
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