Rating: Summary: Gets Right to the Point: Cheating Destroys the Commonwealth Review:
I recommend that this book be read together with John Perkins, "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man," and William Greider's, "The Soul of Capitalism: Opening Paths to a Moral Economy." As a pre-amble, I would note that a Nobel Prize was given in the late 1990's to a man that demonstrates that trust lowers the cost of doing business. Morality matters--immorality imposes a pervasive sustained, insidious, long-term, and ultimately fatal cost on any community, any Republic, and that is the core message of this book that most reviewers seem to be missing.
Any student of national security can tell you that one of the most important sources of national power is the population, followed by the economy, natural resources, and then the more traditional sources of national power: diplomacy, military, law enforcement, and government policies generally.
What this author makes clear is that our population has become a cheating population, one that cheats in school, cheats their employer, and cheats their clients (lawyers, accountants, doctors, all cheating). Such a population is literally undermining national security by creating false values, and undermining true values. Some simple examples: an estimated $250 Billion a year in individual tax avoidance; an estimated $600 Billion a year in theft from employers; an estimated $250 Billion a year in legalized corporate tax avoidance and investor fraud; and an additional $250 Billion a year in legalized theft form the individual taxpayers through Congressional support for unnecessary and ill-advised "subsidies" for agriculture, fishing, and forestry, as well as waivers of environmental standards that ultimately result in long-term external diseconomies...
At root, the author observes that pervasive cheating ensues from the perception by the majority that "everyone does it" and that the rules are not being enforced--that "the system" lacks legitimacy. In other countries, illegitimacy might lead to revolution, a revolt of the masses. In the USA, still a very rich country, the poor are cheating on the margins while the rich are looting the country, and we are not yet at a "tipping point" such as a new Great Depression might inspire.
This is a thoughtful book, and it does not deserve the negative comments from those whom the book most likely is describing all too well. Cheating diminishes trust and reduces value. America has become corrupt across all the professions, within Congress, within the media, within the political level of government (the civil service remains a bastion of propriety).
What price freedom? What price the Republic? You may or may not choose to agree with this author's diagnosis and prescription, but in my view, he gets to the heart of the matter. It's about integrity. We've lost it.
Rating: Summary: Richie's Picks: THE CHEATING CULTURE Review: "Lately, conservatives haven't had much to complain about. Many aspects of Americans' personal behavior have changed in recent years. Crime is down. Teenage pregnancy is down. Drunk driving is down. Abortion is down. Opinion surveys suggest that Americans are growing more concerned about personal responsibility, as conservatives have narrowly defined that term. And much of the supposed 'deviance' that conservatives have anguished about for a quarter century has been waning. "Still, cheating is up. Cheating is everywhere. By cheating I mean breaking the rules to get ahead academically, professionally, or financially. Some of this cheating involves violating the law, some does not. Either way, most of it is by people who, on the whole, view themselves as upstanding members of society. Again and again, Americans who wouldn't so much as shoplift a pack of chewing gum are committing felonies at tax time, betraying the trust of their patients, misleading investors, ripping off their insurance company, lying to their clients, and much more. "Something strange is going on here. Americans seem to be using two moral compasses. One directs our behavior when it comes to things like sex, family, drugs, and traditional forms of crime. A second provides us ethical guidance in the realm of career, money, and success. "The obvious question is: Where did we pick up that second compass?" So asks David Callahan in this fascinating look at where we are headed in America. Led by doped-up sports icons, doctors with bogus prescriptions, auto repair guys who find more to fix then is really wrong, corrupt stockbrokers, and ready-to-buy politicians, the leaders of the parade are the corporate executives. Of course, the amoral behavior by corporate executives is dictated by stockholders who, of course, are us and our parents and friends and our retirement portfolio managers. So where are we all going? "Cheating is not a new problem in the United States or anywhere else. It has existed in nearly every human society. "In Ancient Greece, the Olympic games were rife with cheating. Athletes lied about their amateur status, competitions were rigged, judges were bribed. Those caught were forced to pay fines to a special fund used to set up statues of Zeus. Greece ended up with a lot of statues of Zeus." There are a set of interrelated influences that the author believes are the cause of the current cheating epidemic in America--the increased pressures of job competition and insecurity, the widening rewards gap between the winners and losers in our economic system, the relentless trend toward deregulation that enhances temptation, and the belief by so many people that the system is so utterly corrupt that they have no fair shot at attaining the American Dream in an ethical manner. THE CHEATING CULTURE is an eye-opening introduction to the real world. It will enlighten high school students as to how their peers are adroitly eluding obstacles that might interfere with becoming rich, famous, powerful, and going to Disneyland. The only worry is deciding which is more effective: buying term papers online or paying tutors to write them for you; purchasing the proper mobile electronics to be able to secretly bring your answers into the classroom or having your parents line up a doctor who can sell you the learning disability diagnosis that will permit you more time to complete standardized tests. "The choice between being a winner or a loser in an economy filled with inequities seems stark and frightening to many college students. Says one student: 'Grades are the most important things which judge whether you go to medical school or to work as a janitor.' " It is not surprising that Callahan finds these same students go on to cheat in college, grad school and--for those who thus successfully navigate their way to and through the sidewalks of the Ivy League--in a business world where untold riches can be scooped up at the expense of a gullible public that is unprotected by a deregulated, corporate-lobbied government.
Rating: Summary: Innovative research & sound conclusions Review: A telling and innovative book that tackles a difficult ethical issue without pandering. At times a bit high-handed, but the emphasis on the need for ethical behavior in society apart from moral preaching is a practical and relevant argument worthy of the detail it recieves here.
Rating: Summary: Some Eye-Opening Reasons Why Cheating is Rampant Review: All Right, I may be naive, but I really didn't realize why tax cheating and corporate scandals are so rampant. Basically, Callahan statistically lays out how the chances of getting caught have never been slimmer.
For instance, there are around 17,000 publicly traded companies and even more mutual funds, brokerage houses, etc. Well, Callahan states that the SEC can only review the financial statements of about 6 percent of those. Also, the IRS has been gutted to such an extent that your chance of being caught cheating at your taxes approaches the chances of being struck by lightning...twice.
In other words, the rewards are great, the chances of being caught are slim, the punishment is light, and (this is the big thesis of the book,) the culture accepts the ability to get away with cheating as a marker of success.
I think your reaction to Callahan's arguments will be dictated by your politics and your worldview; a lot of his conclusions end in the growing gap between the rich and the poor.
One of the best things about his book is that it will teach you that if you are lying to your insurance company about where your car is registered, you shouldn't be making fun of Winona Ryder for her shoplifting.
The Cheating Culture doesn't come to any simple, easy solutions, but I don't know that there are any. The book is a relatively quick read.
Rating: Summary: Insightful look at contemporary economic life Review: Callahan's book deserves attention because we need to begin looking at the broader questions of "why a lot of things aren't working." Too often government and social agencies opt for a quick fix, such as longer prison sentences or denial of benefits, rather than examining the underlying question: "Why did this happen in the first place?" Callahan neither points nor shakes fingers. He does not condone cheating but explores social influences that encourage and reward cheating. Most important, he shows how lines have blurred between cheater and victim. Many people cheat on auto insurance, he says, but in fact these poorly-regulated insurance companies turn their customers into victims. And the institutions we're taught to trust, such as the medical system, cheat us too. Doctors who join multi-level marketing programs not only prescribe unnecessary products but also try to recruit their patients into a money-making scheme! Callahan focuses on economic pressures that drive ordinary people to cheat, especially "Winner Takes All." If losing means losing everything, there's enormous incentive to do whatever it takes to win. If anything, Callahan doesn't go far enough. He notes that parents hire "coaches" to help children get into colleges and "tutors" who sometimes do the work for the children. But here's the irony. Many coaches, tutoring services and ghost writers earn more than teachers. Well-paid teachers with a reasonable workload might make their services unnecessary. At one writing conference, a young man openly told a whole table of horrified listeners, "I earn a lot more ghostwriting term papers at the University of X than when I was an adjunct professor at the same university." Then again, has any culture or civilization ever truly rewarded integrity? During World War II, the US government advertised buying bonds as an act of patriotism -- but some economists say the real motive was to tame the fires of inflation. Before the days of informed consent, who knows how many unnecessary medical procedures were performed? We may not be cheating more than any previous culture -- it's just harder to hide and we're more willing to point self-righteous fingers at those who are caught. Like Callahan, I don't condone cheating, but I find myself frustrated with a system that punishes individuals who get caught while rewarding those who create situations that put those same individuals between a rock and a hard place.
Rating: Summary: Insightful look at contemporary economic life Review: Callahan's book deserves attention because we need to begin looking at the broader questions of "why a lot of things aren't working." Too often government and social agencies opt for a quick fix, such as longer prison sentences or denial of benefits, rather than examining the underlying question: "Why did this happen in the first place?" Callahan neither points nor shakes fingers. He does not condone cheating but explores social influences that encourage and reward cheating. Most important, he shows how lines have blurred between cheater and victim. Many people cheat on auto insurance, he says, but in fact these poorly-regulated insurance companies turn their customers into victims. And the institutions we're taught to trust, such as the medical system, cheat us too. Doctors who join multi-level marketing programs not only prescribe unnecessary products but also try to recruit their patients into a money-making scheme! Callahan focuses on economic pressures that drive ordinary people to cheat, especially "Winner Takes All." If losing means losing everything, there's enormous incentive to do whatever it takes to win. If anything, Callahan doesn't go far enough. He notes that parents hire "coaches" to help children get into colleges and "tutors" who sometimes do the work for the children. But here's the irony. Many coaches, tutoring services and ghost writers earn more than teachers. Well-paid teachers with a reasonable workload might make their services unnecessary. At one writing conference, a young man openly told a whole table of horrified listeners, "I earn a lot more ghostwriting term papers at the University of X than when I was an adjunct professor at the same university." Then again, has any culture or civilization ever truly rewarded integrity? During World War II, the US government advertised buying bonds as an act of patriotism -- but some economists say the real motive was to tame the fires of inflation. Before the days of informed consent, who knows how many unnecessary medical procedures were performed? We may not be cheating more than any previous culture -- it's just harder to hide and we're more willing to point self-righteous fingers at those who are caught. Like Callahan, I don't condone cheating, but I find myself frustrated with a system that punishes individuals who get caught while rewarding those who create situations that put those same individuals between a rock and a hard place.
Rating: Summary: Society is to blame Review: David Callahan uses his book, "The Cheating Culture," as his way to criticize the American culture. Callahan says that in our society, cheating is prevalent in all different economic classes; it is not just lowlife and poverty stricken criminals as is the thought of most Americans. Today, according to Callahan, individuals in higher classes are more apt to cheating than the lower classes, and he blames this on the modern economy and the influence the American society puts on making money. He also attacks individual professions and parents for putting too much pressure on their children. Callahan uses numerous examples (that are sadly available in our culture) from major corporate scandals to cheating on homework in high school to make his point.
Everyone knows about the Enron and WorldCom scandals that occurred over the past few years. Callahan answers the question as to why already successful, rich companies will commit fraud and lie to stockholders to make even more money for themselves. Basically, in American society today, everyone is looking for the edge to make even more money than everyone else. Callahan attributes this to the growing gap between the upper and lower classes, and the society itself for being a country that is just looking to make money. I, along with many other Americans, can probably see that this is in fact happening in our country. There is nothing being done to try and lessen the gap between the rich and the poor. I also see why companies would want to cheat to make more money; it's easy to get away with! The IRS and SEC are understaffed and have been cut back in recent years, making it impossible to investigate every financial statement and all of the tax fraud. Callahan brings out many different numbers and statistics that show just how many people a year get away with tax evasion. People say, "Hey, if I'm not going to get caught, why not do it?"
Callahan also talks about how people who wouldn't shoplift from a store, would lie on their taxes. People in the country do not see the correlation between the two because they feel that if they can get away with tax evasion, it is benefiting them and they deserve that. Shoplifting, on the other hand, they feel is very wrong. The same goes with cheating in high school. Callahan blames society for making students think that they need to get into a great school, and it doesn't matter how you do it. He also believes that students will cheat because they feel pressure from their parents to get good grades. They figure it is okay to cheat since everyone else is doing it, and all that matters is the letter grade anyways. I have seen this myself through my high school experience, and no one really looked down upon cheaters, they were just seen as people who knew how to play the game.
While I agree with Callahan on all of those points, he also makes some statements and comments that seem to go overboard. Throughout much of the book, he bashes the capitalist system saying that it creates too much of a class gap, while basically praising socialism. While I do believe there are some flaws in the capitalist system, socialism is not the way to go. He also bashes individual professions and students at certain colleges. Callahan spends much of an entire chapter discussing how there are too many crooked accountants, which is why there are so many companies cheating. I do not believe that you can just blame the accounting profession for whole companies committing fraud and different scandals. There are many decisions and approvals that budgets and write-offs must go through, and it is not just the accountants. Upper level management would also be the ones to blame in those situations. As far as cheating students go, Callahan makes the claim that most business students who cheat in college will also cheat in the working world. How do you come up with that information? This is obviously just a statement he makes with no solid information to back it up. It is impossible to know whether someone who cheats in college is also cheating in the workplace. That is an instance of just one of the claims Callahan makes that doesn't seem to make sense.
Overall, however, it is a very well-written book with many well-thought, provocative points in it. I felt that it was easy to read because you develop so many opinions as you go through. It will make you think about your own morals and what you would do in the situations some of these people were placed in. Callahan also offers no real solutions to the cheating problem, so it leaves us to think about what we should do to make a change. I would recommend this book for anyone to read, and more importantly, to discuss with others.
Rating: Summary: "Everybody's doing it." Review: David Callahan's new book, "The Cheating Culture," is a timely look at why and how so many Americans engage in morally ambiguous behavior in order to succeed in school, sports, and business. Some people cheat to make money; others do it to make themselves look more accomplished than they really are. Callahan explores not only why people cheat, but also how American institutions encourage cheating, and what we, as a society, should do to reverse this growing and alarming trend. Callahan fills his book with a host of examples, including lawyers who overcharge their clients, doctors who are paid by pharmaceutical companies to prescribe inappropriate drugs, students who cheat on their SAT's, athletes who take performance-enhancing drugs, and corporate bigwigs who engage in financial chicanery. He also cites examples of famous cheaters, such as Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky, who were convicted and served jail time for their financial crimes, and Kenneth Lay, the top man at Enron, who has still not been prosecuted for his role in a huge scandal that rocked the business world. "The Cheating Culture" is a thorough and very readable account of a serious problem in our society that receives far too little attention. The many anecdotes and interviews in this book bring home the pervasiveness and even the institutionalization of cheating in our country. I give particularly high marks to the final chapter of "The Cheating Culture," in which Callahan offers his ideas for attacking the problem head on. The author suggests that we attempt to rediscover and reinforce the principles of honesty, teamwork, and shared responsibility in our homes, schools, and businesses. Callahan believes that children should be taught ethical behavior in school and parents should be careful to set a proper example for their children. He also suggests that the federal government take its role as a watchdog more seriously, policing and punishing those who evade taxes, engage in creative accounting, and steal from their shareholders. Before we tackle a problem, we have to recognize that it exists. David Callahan's excellent book is a step in the right direction.
Rating: Summary: "Everybody's doing it." Review: David Callahan's new book, "The Cheating Culture," is a timely look at why and how so many Americans engage in morally ambiguous behavior in order to succeed in school, sports, and business. Some people cheat to make money; others do it to make themselves look more accomplished than they really are. Callahan explores not only why people cheat, but also how American institutions encourage cheating, and what we, as a society, should do to reverse this growing and alarming trend. Callahan fills his book with a host of examples, including lawyers who overcharge their clients, doctors who are paid by pharmaceutical companies to prescribe inappropriate drugs, students who cheat on their SAT's, athletes who take performance-enhancing drugs, and corporate bigwigs who engage in financial chicanery. He also cites examples of famous cheaters, such as Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky, who were convicted and served jail time for their financial crimes, and Kenneth Lay, the top man at Enron, who has still not been prosecuted for his role in a huge scandal that rocked the business world. "The Cheating Culture" is a thorough and very readable account of a serious problem in our society that receives far too little attention. The many anecdotes and interviews in this book bring home the pervasiveness and even the institutionalization of cheating in our country. I give particularly high marks to the final chapter of "The Cheating Culture," in which Callahan offers his ideas for attacking the problem head on. The author suggests that we attempt to rediscover and reinforce the principles of honesty, teamwork, and shared responsibility in our homes, schools, and businesses. Callahan believes that children should be taught ethical behavior in school and parents should be careful to set a proper example for their children. He also suggests that the federal government take its role as a watchdog more seriously, policing and punishing those who evade taxes, engage in creative accounting, and steal from their shareholders. Before we tackle a problem, we have to recognize that it exists. David Callahan's excellent book is a step in the right direction.
Rating: Summary: Cheating Does Pay Review: David Callahan's The Cheating Culture, is a flawed but nonetheless important book, particularly in the current, Republican-controlled era of free markets, loosening regulations, and tax policy favoring the wealthiest Americans. The examples are hardly original and mostly well-known, and the premises are relatively simple: that cheaters cheat because it's easier, because the payoffs are constantly getting bigger, and because the penalties border on non-existent. The scope is so wide that the book lacks depth, and the author's final prescriptions seem quaintly idealistic. What could easily be a nice article in The Atlantic Monthly fills an entire book here, making the text feel rather repetitive at times. All of that being said, The Cheating Culture is still a worthwhile read. The very width of the scope is telling in itself, since it serves as a reminder of just how widespread cheating has become in American life. The effect is demoralizing for the reader, particularly when one recalls how different, and how much more moral, and self-monitoring, life was in the 1950's. Callahan brings together the corner-cutting, law-bending, and outright illegal examples of cheating from all aspects of modern life in America, from small-scale cheating on exams in high school or lying about one's age for the Little League (Danny Altamonte) to corporate cheating by the likes of WorldCom and Enron. He addresses tax fraud, false advertising, promotion of legal drugs for uses other than those approved by the FDA, improper billing by lawyers, and touting of dot.com stocks by Wall Street analysts who knew the underlying companies were poor investments. Not all readers may be familiar with all his examples, so their mere breadth may be eye-opening for some who have not really put two and two together before. Callahan's strongest contribution is his linkage of income disparity to the culture of cheating. The premise is not likely his original insight, but it connects the growing divide between the wealthy and the working poor to the willingness of nearly everyone to justify cheating because "everyone else does it." The author suggests that more and more average people will do anything to become part of the Winning Class, the wealthy few who have all the advantages and keep getting richer. What's interesting about this book is also what the author does not discuss. He eschews religion as a counterweight to morality, preferring to focus on the vague notion of ethics. He also gives little insight into behavior in other countries, whether increased cheating is just an American cultural phenomenon or is endemic in the modern world. He short-changes the media's role in glorifying winners, and perhaps most significantly, he fails adequately to trace the cheating trend to its sources, the market glorifying, deregulated era initiated by Ronald Reagan. While cheating certainly existed before Reagan's Presidency, the current wave, and the government's inabilty to control it, surely began with cutting funding for the SEC and the IRS, loosening government regulations and controls, and establishing trickle-down economics as the basis for government economic and tax policy. Personally, I was saddened by the very notion that such a book was so easy to put together. No special research was required, and no new scandals needed to be uncovered. Cheating has become such a part of American life that we can find it everywhere. From government to religious institutions, from education to sports to medicine, we cynically assume that everyone cheats, or will cheat, given the opportunity. Callahan has attempted to pull this all together and offer some suggestions for how to change it. The effort is a noble one, but quixotic. Someone or something far bigger than a book will be necesary to shift America's moral compass. Still, the topic is worth talking about. This book might be most effective if read and discussed by high school and college students, those who can perhaps still be dissuaded from joining the Cheating Culture.
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