I think you are right to much "" Theft "" that is shrugged off. dishonest activity is now passed off as spin to cover it up along with the bribery created using spin.and this type of activit with out consequence,, when corporations are used for theft.. and open theft at that .. it is sad when there is so theft that it has become a way of life and to the point you have to look directly at want is theft..
I think one form of theft is caused bu drug dealers selling drugs to children,, they are stealing lives and no idea.. games that teach children to kill so they will fill there roll when the coprerate bosses need killing done with out emotional consequence. This path is a very dangerous one and the religions of the world are approving of them.. if nothing more that not doing anything. "... forgive for what i have done,,, and what i have failed to do. Allan On Fri, Apr 1, 2011 at 2:53 PM, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote: > You've hit on many types of theft but, unfortunately, fraud is so > common here that most people just shrug. The topic could expand > greatly. For instance, we could trace various governing and economic > systems and how they cover theft with grandiose rhetoric/documents but > essentially they are stealing another's labor, wealth or property- > even ideas and methods. The Papacy was also a thief of simpletons. > Liberals are also great thieves. A conservative is someone who has > something to conserve. The legal system and also the banking system > employ outrageous means to get at other people's money. Farming and > banking don't mix- a line from the movie "Sweetland". An examination > of the media/entertainment sets up the double-think. It's likely > sociopathic. > > The lopping off of hands? I thought it traced back to basic needs- > mostly food. Reminds me that the British chopped off the thumbs of > master weavers in India to protect their own home industry or that > scene in "The English Patient". > > > > > > On Mar 30, 12:10 pm, Don Johnson <[email protected]> wrote: > > Identity theft. Using another's credit info to get loans and so forth. > > That's stealing. Fraud too. People that leave their internet connections > > unprotected often have neighbors using it for free. Stealing. Pirating > > cable, satellite, downloading copyrighted songs for free illegally. All > > stealing. Claiming illness or otherwise lying to receive either company > or > > government benefits. Claiming to look for work but really sabotaging > > yourself by looking for jobs you aren't qualified for or are unsuited for > > and/or falsifying job hunting paperwork to get unemployment checks. All > > stealing. Forming an unholy alliance with politicians where you raise > > massive amounts of money for them and donate to their campaigns and in > > return they bilk the tax payers for billions and send some of it back to > > your interest group in raises or benefits. Worst kind of collusion and > > completely legal in the case of public unions. > > > > I like the Sharia law of lopping off appendages for stealing. I think it > > would seriously cut down on the chicanery we here in the West have to > suffer > > through. It's getting expensive. > > > > dj > > > > On Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 12:45 PM, allan deheretic <[email protected] > >wrote: > > > > > > > > > I have been ragging away on some other thing I am attempting to write > > > but several thing came across my mind that might be how many ways can > you > > > think of stealing and having people not realize they have been stolen > from? > > > or is it how can I steal let me count the ways. > > > Allan > > > > > -- > > > ( > > > ) > > > I_D Allan > > > > > If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken > > > Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,- Hide quoted text - > > > > - Show quoted text - > -- ( ) I_D Allan If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
