It is no coincidence that I dislike certain industries profoundly -
insurance, stockbrokers, economists, and all but the most basic levels
of banking. I regard them as equivalent to snake oil, and symptomatic
of the way our society has gone off the rails in a lot of ways.
Granted, it's also changed in ways that appear to be for the better
(both the Internet and the burgeoning entertainment industry being
stellar examples), and maybe the one is inextricably linked to the
other. But I'm not convinced that's true, and I often fear that our
entire society is a house of cards waiting to fall, because nobody
shares my conviction that things must be viewed as either substantial or
untrustworthy, with no risk-taking or leaps of faith.
My
attitude is that if things go straight to hell, someone will always find
ways of shifting the blame and claiming that such things "just happen",
that nothing about the way they operate needs to change as a
result...but this is of absolutely no benefit to the unlucky saps who
paid the price for their failed gamble or their confidence game. I
believe that when something goes wrong - and it ALWAYS does - you need
to hold those responsible to account for their failure to do EVERYTHING
right. If you do, in fact, have perfect information to operate on, and
make all your choices be absolutely the right ones, then you assume no
fault if you still fail; it simply proves that the task was impossible.
But to induce someone into attempting a probably-impossible task
because you've manufactured some apparent proof that it will work, and
then to have it fail and say that person dies in the attempt, makes you a
murderer IMO.
I believe that our society ought to adopt
such a hard-line attitude toward absolutely everyone who holds
responsibility for someone else's life or livelihood; on my watch, we'd
never have had a sub-prime mortgage crisis or anything of similar ilk,
because I would have made it a capital crime for the real estate
industry to play with the value of people's homes in order to line their
own pockets.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
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