Ethics

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Stop the Spin - Business Ethics Are Ethics as Lies Are Lies

Business ethics are always in the news from research specific to work ethics to headlines about the criminal leadership behavior of C-Level executives. Yet, government leaders many of whom raise the loudest voices about the lying behavior of C-Level executives by demanding one hearing after another have a different attitude when one or several of their own lies.

First, I do not understand why we as self-leaders in business, education and government have a problem with the word lie. Instead, many are taken to be politically correct and talk about "mis-speaking, mis-representation of the truth, mis-calculation" the list of spin seems to grow every year.

Why can we not be forthcoming and identify a lie as exactly as a lie? Then identify someone who lies as a liar? Why are so many so fearful of calling a lie exactly what it is a lie? Most people know what a lie is that being the opposite of the truth. And why do we still view these individuals who speak lies as leaders who display great leadership skills?

Back in the late 1980's, my local school superintendent used the phrase a "mis-representation of the truth" to explain a lie. This was before all the political ramifications specific to the tenures of the latest two Presidents of the United States and those currently running for President. Bottom line - he was attempting to cover up a lie.

Webster defines a lie "to make a statement or statements that one knows to be false especially with the intent to deceive." The second definition states "to give a false impression."

Regardless if it is a C-Level executive leader or an elected government official, everyone should be held to the same standards or business ethics that these individuals demands of others. Too often, many have the attitudes of "wink and nod" and "do as I say and not as I do."

If we want to build a business workplace environment that consistently demonstrates high business ethics, then we need to accept the definition for what a lie is as well. We cannot as the old expression goes "have our cake and eat it too."

Edmund Burke understood how lies transform themselves into mis-representations of the truth when he said: "All that is required for evil to prevail is for good men (and women) to do nothing."

Now is the time for good people to stop being fearful of political correctness and call lies exactly what they are lies. And to call people who speak lies, liars. Until we take those actions, evil (and a lie is evil) will continue to prevail. And this spin results an under performing workplace culture where productivity to profitability suffers.


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