savvyman wrote:
Yeah I agree.
My comment was also about feelings in the recent past as I have watched numerous people in sports, entertainment, business & politics who when they behave very badly or express their true nature in comments about something that are harmful to others - they break out the PR playbook and issue a phony apology and maybe even go on some multiple talk shows where they express their phony shame multiple times. It s for the most part Bullsh@t and I wish people did not allow this. Sometimes the actions and words are so bad that an apology and repenting is not enough - the person should just dissapear from the public eye for at least awhile.
An Up-coming example of this will be Hillary Clinton. I not entirely up on all the details but she apparently used her personal email for all of her Secretary of State correspondence. This is a violation of law. When she was ordered to turn over the personal emails that were actually related to her work as Secretary of State to the US Government - Whoopsie - they were magically and mistakenly all erased. She will get away with this too.
Furthermore - her and her husband have received so many foundation contributions from so many shady figures in Governments from around the world - many of them have the worst Human Rights policies and practices towards Women (which is so hypocritical because both Hillary and Bill are feminist who supposedly believe in strong rights from women) - yet they have received contributions from people in Regimes around the world who are completely hostile to the most basic of human rights for women.
The reason I bring up Hilary because you watch - it will be an up-coming example of what I mean about these assholes behaving badly - getting caught - and then they issue their bogus apology - and the public forgives them. This kind of behavior noted above by Hillary is an example of the kind of behavior that should be unforgivable by the public and she should be rejected as a candidate for anything. But you watch - they know the playbook for manipulating the public into forgiving them for their in-excusable behavior. In fact you can be damm sure that they know even at the exact moment when they are behaving badly - Like taking Millions of dollars from Governments that treat women in the same respect as livestock - that if they are ever caught they will go implement game plan from the PR playbook for apologizing and faking shame - and then introducing new policies "So this Never Happens again" - and watch as they will get away once again with this bad behavior.
This is BS. Back to my original point that I am "getting tired of society letting every asshole off the hook for doing or saying despicable things as long as "They Apologize" and/or say they are in counseling or something like that". _ We should stop doing this and just tell certain individuals who behave very badly to just go away and dissapear from our public life - for at least awhile anyway.
Wow -That did not take long - Don't mean to turn this thread to a political one - see what I wrote above if interested and then read the news story today that is found below - just driving home the point of how the public should recognize and be aware of the bullsh@t and corruption of the entire ruling class and how the people that advance their agenda are protected and can get away with practically anything.
http://news.yahoo.com/state-dept-not-review-clinton-ethics-pledge-breaches-204846487.html>>>>>>>>>>>>>>(Reuters) -
The U.S. State Department will not review the breaches of the 2008 ethics agreement Hillary Clinton signed in order to become secretary of state after her family's charities admitted in March that they had not complied, a spokesman said on Thursday.Clinton, now the Democratic front-runner in the 2016 presidential election, had promised the federal government that the Clinton Foundation and its associated charities would name all donors annually while she was the nation's top diplomat.
She also promised that the charities would let the State Department's ethics office review beforehand any proposed new foreign governments donations.
In March, the charities confirmed to Reuters for the first time that they had not complied with those pledges for most of Clinton's four years at the State Department.
The State Department "regrets" that it did not get to review the new foreign government funding, but does not plan to look into the matter further, spokesman Jeff Rathke said on Thursday.
"The State Department has not and does not intend to initiate a formal review or to make a retroactive judgment about items that were not submitted during Secretary Clinton's tenure," Rathke told reporters.
The broken ethics agreement has made it harder for Clinton to deflect accusations in recent weeks that foreigners banned from donating to U.S. political campaigns can instead curry favor with her by giving to the charity that bears her name.
The charities accepted new donations from at least six foreign governments while Clinton was secretary of state: Switzerland, Papua New Guinea, Swaziland, Rwanda, Sweden and Algeria.
The governments of Australia and the United Kingdom, which were already funding projects at the time Clinton signed her ethics agreement, increased their funding by millions of dollars during this period.
The charities never told the State Department about the new and increased donations. In two instances, the charities said this was the result of "oversights"; for the other six, they said those donations were exceptions to the agreement for various reasons.
The charities also stopped publishing full donor lists from 2010 onwards; the annually updated list omitted donors to the foundation's flagship health initiative.
Rathke, the State Department spokesman, said the department was not aware of donations having an undue influence on U.S. foreign policy. When reporters asked how the department could know this without reviewing the belated disclosures, he declined to comment further. <<<<<<<<<<