In
today's world the word "ethical" has taken on a new meaning of "squeaky
clean" and "please look at me or my organization for we are ethical
practitioners." Do the new awareness responses mean much when you
really know the facts?
Look around. Today, more than ever before, it has become fashionable to
cheat. One could say, and come away without too much criticism, that
everyone expects it. The funny thing is the person who expects it, or
observes it, or knows someone who does it, never does it themselves.
Ironically, they actually believe they are not infected. As noted, this
is a national pastime.
Why is this? Why do husbands cheat on their wives and wives cheat on
their husbands? Does not the vow to love, honor, cherish, and "obey",
(some leave out the "obey" part now), mean anything. Well, it appears
the times indeed are changing.
In America at least, spousal cheating, encouraged by theater, movies,
partytime, and yes, peer pressure, is at epidemic proportions. Does
anyone feel guilty? Absolutely, just before it is time to maybe do it
again. Kids today, as a result, have groups of parents i.e. first there
is the real father and mother, then there is 1st father and 1st mother,
and 2nd father and 2nd mother, and so on and so forth, not to mention
step brothers and step sisters galore. When we talk about extended
families today, we are certainly not talking of the family of 50 years
ago that included aunts, uncles, and cousins right down to twice
removed. Now, there is no way to keep up.
Then there is the work environment. Parents who cheat at home, cheat on
the job. They lie and steal to get ahead. Oh, it is not the feloneous
type of stealing, although that is always possible, it is the subtle
kind -- stealing someones ideas, words, concepts, suggestions, as well
as time from the company on the phone, at lunch, leaving early on
weekends, calling in sick when one is not sick, and taking paper, pens,
pencils, paperclips and anything not to heavy to carry. If one is in
construction, they take bricks, boards, mortar and tools. Cheating on
the job has taken on national epidemic proportions. Walmart with their
360 degree cameras strung from the ceilings from every store watch the
employees as much as they watch the shoppers.
And what about the churches and among clerics, the courts and legal
profession, our schools and among the educators, the health field and
medical professionals , government at all levels and among the
legislators? What do we find? Cheating permeates every level of our
society.
And what about the kids? Where do they fit into this?
Over 70% of them admit to cheating before they graduate from high
school. By the time they finish college, 80% are willing to admit they
have done it in some way.
When college business students are asked what is the most corrupt field
to go into, over 90% suggest it is business. Yet, they willingly choose
it as their field of specialization because that is "where the money
is."
What about the tiny tots? At what age does a child learn to cheat?
Studies now show that 3 out of 4 know how to do it by the time they are
5. And where do they learn it from? The parents, of course.
So the old adage, "do as I say, not as I do", really does have a
beginning and a significance because it seems most have done it and
really do fear their offspring or their charges will do it too. Why?
Simply because it is wrong. We all know it. We all feel it, and we all
do not want our youngsters or our charges to do it. We really do want
them to be better than us. The internal gut wrenching feelings get us
every time. And if we don't feel anything? Well then we are
psychopaths, socially detached from society and any responsibility for
good.
In today's world the word "ethical" has taken on a new meaning of
"squeaky clean" and "please look at me or my organization for we are
ethical practitioners." Do the new awareness responses mean much when
you really know the facts? Lawrence Kholberg's theory of ethical
development may be hard pressed to determine why as human beings we
seem to be stuck in moving forward. It seems the further we go in
greater prosperity and technology development the behinder we get in
moral development. Is it an illusion?
Actions speak louder than words. To be ethical, one must act ethically.
One has to lead and show by doing and not accept society's drifters who
proclaim when observing ethical breeches that "they're just kids" or
"everybody does it" or "it was only a fling", or "I had no choice".
Unless somebody is holding a gun to one's head, everybody, no matter
how small or how old, has a choice. They may not like what the
potential outcome may be but they had a choice to do the right thing.
Is it tough? What do you think?
Fred DiUlus, CEO, Global Academy Online, Inc., (www.GlobalAcademyOnline.com),
is an e-Education pioneer, author of The Practice of Ethics, Geurilla
Entrepreneurship, Best-Worst in Online Degree Programs, and writer of
frequent articles on Ethics, Entrepreneurship, e-Education and Success
Motivation. He is the founder of CEFE, the ten year old non profit
Center for Ethics in Free Enterprise, (www.cefe.org) and pens the monthly Blog, The Ethics Doc (theethicsdoc.blogspot.com).