Moderators: Bakhtosh, EvilHomer3k
noxiousdog wrote:FWIW, GreenGoo, I agree with you.
If random strangers decided to shower me with money because I failed had a bad day, I'd have a good day and then send the rest of the money someplace directly related to the problem. I wouldn't be spending it on relatives.
She's not the reason people are donating money. The situation is why people are donating money. Therefore the money should be spent on something relevant to the situation.
I'm not big on care either way, but wanted GG to know he wasn't on an island with Smoove.
coopasonic wrote:I think for there to be a moral or ethical transgression, someone has to have been wronged in some way.
Smoove_B wrote:Isgrimnur wrote:she has no ethical quandary.
In my mind she might - if the video shows what her typical reaction is to this behavior in complete opposition to what she was hired to deal with. Maybe she really did hit the lottery and these kids just randomly decided to (1) abuse (2) film and (3) upload the video one day. If I was in a position where someone filmed me not doing my job, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be stepping up to collect $650K+ worth of donations for my trouble. If she takes that money she deserves every minute of scrutiny the media can possibly muster. But I do hope the next person they hire for the job actually does the work. As I said earlier, assuming the work was being done all along, the video is a fluke and the failure is at an administrative level well then I would also hope the media (and locals) start up with the pressure. But none of that requires $650K+ of guilt-easing donations.
noxiousdog wrote:coopasonic wrote:I think for there to be a moral or ethical transgression, someone has to have been wronged in some way.
No, there doesn't.
Example:
I use a cheat to beat a game.
I tell my friend I beat a game.
Is that ethical since no one was wronged?
Odin wrote:Smoove_B wrote:Isgrimnur wrote:she has no ethical quandary.
In my mind she might - if the video shows what her typical reaction is to this behavior in complete opposition to what she was hired to deal with. Maybe she really did hit the lottery and these kids just randomly decided to (1) abuse (2) film and (3) upload the video one day. If I was in a position where someone filmed me not doing my job, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be stepping up to collect $650K+ worth of donations for my trouble. If she takes that money she deserves every minute of scrutiny the media can possibly muster. But I do hope the next person they hire for the job actually does the work. As I said earlier, assuming the work was being done all along, the video is a fluke and the failure is at an administrative level well then I would also hope the media (and locals) start up with the pressure. But none of that requires $650K+ of guilt-easing donations.
Depends on the definition of "doing the job." Despite what a job description might say, the actual day-to-day particulars are set by the boss. If her boss told her, "Look, we get zero support from the administrators, so all you are there to do is sit in your seat and try to keep anybody from getting killed. Other than that, keep your head down. Oh, and help the driver if they ever need to back up the bus, I suppose. That would be great" then we have no business judging her (though we could judge her boss or her boss's boss or whomever else we felt was worthy).
noxiousdog wrote:coopasonic wrote:I think for there to be a moral or ethical transgression, someone has to have been wronged in some way.
No, there doesn't.
Example:
I use a cheat to beat a game.
I tell my friend I beat a game.
Is that ethical since no one was wronged?
EvilHomer3k wrote:Odin wrote:Smoove_B wrote:Isgrimnur wrote:she has no ethical quandary.
In my mind she might - if the video shows what her typical reaction is to this behavior in complete opposition to what she was hired to deal with. Maybe she really did hit the lottery and these kids just randomly decided to (1) abuse (2) film and (3) upload the video one day. If I was in a position where someone filmed me not doing my job, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be stepping up to collect $650K+ worth of donations for my trouble. If she takes that money she deserves every minute of scrutiny the media can possibly muster. But I do hope the next person they hire for the job actually does the work. As I said earlier, assuming the work was being done all along, the video is a fluke and the failure is at an administrative level well then I would also hope the media (and locals) start up with the pressure. But none of that requires $650K+ of guilt-easing donations.
Depends on the definition of "doing the job." Despite what a job description might say, the actual day-to-day particulars are set by the boss. If her boss told her, "Look, we get zero support from the administrators, so all you are there to do is sit in your seat and try to keep anybody from getting killed. Other than that, keep your head down. Oh, and help the driver if they ever need to back up the bus, I suppose. That would be great" then we have no business judging her (though we could judge her boss or her boss's boss or whomever else we felt was worthy).
I suppose it is possible that she was specifically told not to do her job. Other than that I completely agree with Smoov. I am astounded that she's winning the lottery for being absolutely terrible at her job.
GreenGoo wrote:GargoyleBoy wrote:Let's be clear here, GreenGoo - you're the one stating that she has an ethical obligation. I don't understand: 1. The rationale for there being an ethical obligation attached to a gift she didn't ask for; and 2. The specific ethical obligation in this case.
Where does it say - anywhere - what she's required to do with this money, or that she's required to take only a portion of what was raised in her name? Please help me understand.
Context and spirit of the gift. I've already said that a bunch of times. That's all there is to it. If you don't feel those have any bearing, then they don't. For you.
It has not a single thing to do with legal, or written. Those are meaningless red herrings.
It's not a birthday present, although you guys seem to think it is, so...shrug.
noxiousdog wrote:coopasonic wrote:I think for there to be a moral or ethical transgression, someone has to have been wronged in some way.
No, there doesn't.
Example:
I use a cheat to beat a game.
I tell my friend I beat a game.
Is that ethical since no one was wronged?
GargoyleBoy wrote:noxiousdog wrote:coopasonic wrote:I think for there to be a moral or ethical transgression, someone has to have been wronged in some way.
No, there doesn't.
Example:
I use a cheat to beat a game.
I tell my friend I beat a game.
Is that ethical since no one was wronged?
False argument. When you cheat, you are wronging everyone who didn't cheat.
Arcanis wrote:What if I just claim victory even if I never played solitaire?
LawBeefaroni wrote:Arcanis wrote:What if I just claim victory even if I never played solitaire?
Wait, are we at the point of proving that lying is not unethical?
LawBeefaroni wrote:Arcanis wrote:What if I just claim victory even if I never played solitaire?
Wait, are we at the point of proving that lying is not unethical?
GargoyleBoy wrote:
False argument. When you cheat, you are wronging everyone who didn't cheat.
GargoyleBoy wrote:Also, please explain what her specific ethical obligation is. If there is an ethical obligation, it follows logically that there is a certain obligation - that is, that she must do a particular thing. What is it? How did you arrive at this conclusion?
gameoverman wrote:It's like if I went up to her and said "I saw that video of those kids bothering you, those bastards! Here's $20, have lunch on me grandma."
She's not obligated to spend that $20 on lunch. Once I give her that money she can do whatever the hell she pleases without any judging from me. I can control whether I give her the money or not, I can't expect to be looking over her shoulder as she spends it, deciding if she's betraying my trust.
If the funds are not used for "a vacation of a lifetime" then they are not being used as intended. To be fair, there is certainly reasonable doubt as to whether ALL of them are intended as a vacation of a lifetime, but there is an ethical obligation to treat those dollars that were intended for vacation, for vacation. It's explicit on the donation page.
Isgrimnur wrote:Your parent/friend scenarios imply that there's a known need there that you are granting funds to meet, and that there's some sort of request being made, or at least an explicit need that's been stated.
With the bus lady, she expressed no need for a vacation, nor for funds of any point. If I give $5 to the guy on the street, I have no say, nor a stake, in where those funds go.
Random internet stranger is not equatable to parent/friend.
Covenant72 wrote:So now we have the following modification to your father/son example (ignoring the fact that she isn't asking for anything) that should easily demonstrate the grey area.
Son: Can I have $20 for lunch?
Dad: Sure, here's $40
Son: ??? (Profit)
noxiousdog wrote:GargoyleBoy wrote:
False argument. When you cheat, you are wronging everyone who didn't cheat.
How? In what way are they harmed or wronged?
noxiousdog wrote:GargoyleBoy wrote:Also, please explain what her specific ethical obligation is. If there is an ethical obligation, it follows logically that there is a certain obligation - that is, that she must do a particular thing. What is it? How did you arrive at this conclusion?
"Karen Huff (The bus monitor) deserves a vacation! ... Lets give her something she will never forget, a vacation of a lifetime!"
If the funds are not used for "a vacation of a lifetime" then they are not being used as intended. To be fair, there is certainly reasonable doubt as to whether ALL of them are intended as a vacation of a lifetime, but there is an ethical obligation to treat those dollars that were intended for vacation, for vacation. It's explicit on the donation page.
noxiousdog wrote:Isgrimnur wrote:Your parent/friend scenarios imply that there's a known need there that you are granting funds to meet, and that there's some sort of request being made, or at least an explicit need that's been stated.
With the bus lady, she expressed no need for a vacation, nor for funds of any point. If I give $5 to the guy on the street, I have no say, nor a stake, in where those funds go.
Random internet stranger is not equatable to parent/friend.
You're saying ethics depend on your relationship with a person?
noxiousdog wrote:Isgrimnur wrote:Your parent/friend scenarios imply that there's a known need there that you are granting funds to meet, and that there's some sort of request being made, or at least an explicit need that's been stated.
With the bus lady, she expressed no need for a vacation, nor for funds of any point. If I give $5 to the guy on the street, I have no say, nor a stake, in where those funds go.
Random internet stranger is not equatable to parent/friend.
You're saying ethics depend on your relationship with a person?
noxiousdog wrote:Covenant72 wrote:So now we have the following modification to your father/son example (ignoring the fact that she isn't asking for anything) that should easily demonstrate the grey area.
Son: Can I have $20 for lunch?
Dad: Sure, here's $40
Son: ??? (Profit)
I think it's more of:
Dad: here's $20 for lunch. [exit stage left]
Mom: [enter stage right] Here's $20 for lunch.
Son: ?? ... Profit!
noxiousdog wrote:This is -extremely- unethical. If I give my son $20 for lunch money and he spends it on anything but lunch, he has betrayed my trust unless there's a specific agreement in place that he can choose hookers and blow over nutrition.
If the parent relationship is a problem for you, if I give a friend $200 to cover rent, and instead he gambles it away and gets evicted, you really have no issue?"
Arcanis wrote:LawBeefaroni wrote:Arcanis wrote:What if I just claim victory even if I never played solitaire?
Wait, are we at the point of proving that lying is not unethical?
I'm trying to figure out what criteria he is using to determine what is ethical.
Maybe we could buy him a new laptop? Or he might even put it towards an anti-bullying cause himself - it seems like he had some ideas for how to use small fractions of Karen's $ for an anti-bullying speaker to come to the school, but people quickly convinced him to let her have complete control over how it's spent. Can we do the same for him?
Isgrimnur wrote:Maybe we could buy him a new laptop? Or he might even put it towards an anti-bullying cause himself - it seems like he had some ideas for how to use small fractions of Karen's $ for an anti-bullying speaker to come to the school, but people quickly convinced him to let her have complete control over how it's spent. Can we do the same for him?
/thread
Peacedog wrote:RuperT wrote:It was a question. 'Envy' is a four-letter word, but it's also a basic human response. I can admit I felt it for her unearned windfall, somewhere in the hindbrain, but it was easily neutralized by an assertion of how good my life is, at the very least by the fact that I don't have to make a living RIDING TWICE EVERYDAY IN A BUS FILLED WITH TEENAGERS.
I felt no envy whatsoever for her windfall. None.
I'll wager that's not a fringe reaction, and it was certainly interesting that your response immediately went to "envy".
GreenGoo wrote:Isgrimnur wrote:Maybe we could buy him a new laptop? Or he might even put it towards an anti-bullying cause himself - it seems like he had some ideas for how to use small fractions of Karen's $ for an anti-bullying speaker to come to the school, but people quickly convinced him to let her have complete control over how it's spent. Can we do the same for him?
/thread
Lol, there are over 30,000 contributors. But by all means, take this guy's word that he speaks for all of them.
In addition, each student will be required to complete 50 hours of community service with senior citizens and will complete a formal program in bullying prevention.
Her supporters have raised more than $660,000.
Klein plans to spend the donation money on bills and donations to Autism and Down Syndrome Charities.
naednek wrote:There, now the people who think it's their business for what she does with the money should be happy.
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