If you have a problem, can you report others?

Keagan 2022-01-03 08:01:44

This is "The Whistleblower" in 2009, because there are several movies with this name. Based on a true story, it was originally thought to be a repetition of "Inside the Panic", but the "informer" who was fired by the Big Tobacco Company played by Russell Crowe was an innocent good man. He was out of justice, serving society, Responsible for others, but persecuted. The vice president and nutritional biochemist of the grain company, played by Matt Dimon, reported to the FBI out of exemption, and provided the FBI with audio and video information. As the story stretched, the grain company began to fight back. , It was discovered that the informer himself was also scumbags, embezzled and bribed tens of millions of dollars. In the end, it was a lawsuit.
Our current anti-corruption situation is often caused by standing in the wrong line, or flaws in the external (reporting by real name) or ourselves (cousin, Xiaosan, etc.), but there are very few reports from the inside. If the people around you have problems, will they bring yourself out? Why? An important question, like a similar problem in a movie, is not clean. Does he have the power or obligation to report to his superiors and colleagues? Is it worth doing? If a person has a problem, the people around him can feel it best, but because of the community of interests, everyone is the beneficiary of the system. Whoever has no problem, who can be "non-sticky" like Ma Ying-jeou, so he can become a character , Is also his determination. In the Kuomintang system, it is not easy to be spotless, so he can withstand the test of elections. The biggest advantage of elections is that they can dig deep and fully CT. What you used to do Anything can be revealed for you, and those with stains dare to campaign. Transparency is the best antiseptic. Right now, we still hope that more people with conscience in the system will stand up, stand on the side of justice, and follow the guidance of the heart. We also hope that our policy can encourage such people, not like that guy who is conscientiously trying to rescue a girl who missed his feet, but opposes the sad thing of being detained and fined, which prevents other people who also have a sense of justice from doing the right thing.

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The Informant! quotes

  • Mark Whitacre: I read this study in Time magazine when I was at Cornell, which is an Ivy League school, and there were people, including my mother, who never believed I would make it into an Ivy League school. Maybe Ginger, who I met in marching in the eighth grade. And the study said people had nice, sympathetic feelings about people who were adopted, and treated them better. So I made up this adoption story, and people *did* treat me better. And when I got a job, one of my professors told people at Ralston Purina that I was this amazing guy that had accomplished all this in spite of being adopted. And so it was really *other* people who spread the story, not me. Although I admit it was wrong to start it and everything, it was other people who kept it going, even the people at ADM.

  • Mark Whitacre: Mark Whitacre, secret agent 0014.

    Rusty Williams: Why 0014?

    Mark Whitacre: Cause I'm twice as smart as 007.