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Hi Nick,
As I said before, it's an old trick to demand somebody quantifies the unquantifiable. Is there a method of calculating the number of businessmen who carry out unethical practices? Not to my knowledge. To calculate it as the number of CEOS of megacorporations convicted in court compared to the number of active businessmen is unacceptable and tends to discredit your argument.
If you want evidence that there are more than the tiny fraction of one per cent that you quote, I suggest you contact the Better Business Bureau in any large city and find out the number of complaints lodged with them each year.
My own evidence is based on several years as an editor of a newspaper Action Line, which dealt with issues that included dishonesty by both businessmen and customers. I would not disagree with your assumption that the figure we are seeking is less than one per cent, but is it is a "tiny fraction of one per cent"? I won't ask you to quantify. Because even a tiny fraction of one per cent is too much and can cause incalculable damage to the community. You have only to look at the fall out from Enron (an infintinessimaly tiny fraction of one hundredth of one per cent) to realise that.
Your challenge to quantify also diverts our discussion away from integrity to what might be termed a quibble (evasion: OD) over statistics. Our discussion, and we appeared to agree on our opinions, was on honesty in business.
My point, and I am not sure that you agreed with me on this, was that the original posting about "Volume One" did not include the information that there had to be an intention to produce, at least, a Volume Two before such a strategy should be used, leaving the door wide open for businessmen with questionable integrity to use the tactic when there was no intention of producing a second volume.
Can we at least come together on this?
Patch
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