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ajapale
Guest
Writing in today's Warsaw Business Journal Zbigniew Piekarski spoke of "The herd mentality"
http://www.wbj.pl/?command=article&id=22061&type=wbj (www.wbj.pl/?command=artic...1&type=wbj)
He cited two examples from Ireland:
Does he have a point? Are we victims of the herd mentality?
Ajapale
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http://www.wbj.pl/?command=article&id=22061&type=wbj (www.wbj.pl/?command=artic...1&type=wbj)
He cited two examples from Ireland:
In the Republic of Ireland, the smoking of tobacco in all workplaces and public places was banned, and this ban had the support of the majority of the population, including smokers. Also on that day and in the same place, over 5,000 individuals voluntarily declared that they were liable to tax on their offshore bank accounts. This is happening in a country whose popular culture revolves around smoke-filled public houses and where in June 2002 an investigative report running to more than 10,000 pages implicated Charles Haughey, a former prime minister, and many of the political and business elite of large scale and systematic tax evasion running for over 20 years.
The significance of these two acts are as follows. The Republic of Ireland was one of the first to experience an unprecedented economic boom. Now there are signs of stress and of it ending. The subconscious belief of the herd is that the good times will continue only if they can reform and improve human nature and their own cultural predisposition.
Does he have a point? Are we victims of the herd mentality?
Ajapale
(mods if this does not belong here please move it