Reluctantly
Resident disMember
- Local time
- Yesterday 6:46 PM
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2010
- Messages
- 3,135
Do you have values?
I do, though I'm no INTP (neither is OP)
This doesn't mean I never lost track of them or became something I didn't like. What are you contemplating?
When it suits me..
Yes, but I'm not sure what they are.
I have my own peculiar set of values, and interestingly I have to say them a more moral person in a way than a devout Mormon friend of mine. Basically all of my morals are based on The Golden Rule. So for example, my friend recommended that I lie about my street address so that my kid would get into a particular charter school, which I refused to do because that would unfairly diminish the chances of other parents.
See, I'd have no problems lying about that.
I value honesty, integrity, loyalty, strength, compassion and endurance.
Your first statement doesn't fit your second. ...
It does if you know the details.
It does if you know the details.
I value honesty on a personal level... But I'd have no problem lying to an institution or organisation
@Archie You obviously think everyone else is more important than your son.
News to me, every example I see of somebody who got ahead worked for it. Some cheated along the way, others didn't, and a few had opportunities handed to them.The system doesn't serve the hard working.
It was a random lottery with preference going to geographic location. Oddly enough not long after we bought a house that would have guaranteed getting in. But guess what? After seeing his friends who did get in we realized that not going was the best thing to have happened. It was 5-6th grade charter school, but he was on the same campus for the 7-8 grade public school part of it, and it was all new and exciting, and he had the best two years of his schooling there. He finally got into a group of really great friends who really bonded together. If he had been in the charter school it would have been boring and downhill by 7-8 since he wouldn't have come in fresh. And now he sailed into High School this year on a solid basis, practically a miracle for an INTP.The fact that your son isn't getting in only shows how it serves those who are willing to lie.
Hold your horses (for congress) Caligula, you've got some stiff competition.i study Machiavellianism and plan to be the most deceptive and cunning piece of shit to walk the earth
So I should teach him to lie and cheat to get ahead?
In Ariely’s studies, research participants are presented with several matrices of math problems to solve, and told to tally the number of correct answers. They then put the test in a shredder (actually the tests are not shredded), and they are asked to report the number of correct answers, receiving a cash award for each correctly solved matrix. Ariely’s results show that most people cheat a little bit – overreporting slightly the number of matrices they solved correctly. A few people grossly cheat, and only a few people are completely honest.
Ariely’s research goes on to show that the incidence of cheating is not greatly affected by the chances of getting caught, but cheating increases if another participant is seen blatantly cheating – a modeling effect. Contrary to traditional economic models, cheating was unaffected by the size of the monetary award. In fact, when pay for each correct matrix was raised from 50 cents to $10, cheating actually declined! So, people will cheat a little, but not a lot (think of income tax fudging – most only do it a little).
A typical organization loses 5% of its annual revenue to employee fraud. Applied to the estimated 2009 Gross World Product, this figure translates to a potential global fraud loss of more than $2.9 trillion.
i study Machiavellianism and plan to be the most deceptive and cunning piece of shit to walk the earth
I have my own peculiar set of values, and interestingly I have to say them a more moral person in a way than a devout Mormon friend of mine. Basically all of my morals are based on The Golden Rule. So for example, my friend recommended that I lie about my street address so that my kid would get into a particular charter school, which I refused to do because that would unfairly diminish the chances of other parents.
If someone doesn't respect you and holds that view without reason, that's their folly, isn't it? You can prove them wrong. It's more difficult managing dysfunctional team members.
I have values, but not really.
They wouldn't take me if I tried to join.IWell yeah...but just never join the military. Once you are in, they think they can humiliate you as long as it's not considered "immoral" or "unlawful". Without going into details, the only reason I'm not in trouble right now is because I played politics and it became a "we all get in trouble or none of us do" kind of thing. But I'm happy because now I'm getting kicked out with either a positive or neutral discharge. I'm still kind of surprised that all worked out. But I'm not exactly the explosive kind of anger, more the defensive. I'll be angry, but still playing my moves over in my head, even though I'm much more emotional because of it.
Any plans for what to do afterward? I know of someone who initially wanted to move into supply chain management but wound up going to law school instead. And I definitely have the same thought process.
Is Starbucks still a thing? I don't think I've seen one in forever.What, like, you get mad if your coffee from Starbucks is too hot or cold or something? But not enough to do anything about it?