Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Morality of snitching  (Read 2913 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Morality of snitching
« Reply #20 on: December 10, 2014, 07:11:24 AM »
Quote from: ggreg
… Very disciplined criminals are few and far between….


Just so! (See below.)

Quote from: ggreg
… There was once a man who forged banknotes. …


This strikes a chord. My father's paternal uncles were all crooks (all of them died before I was born in the mid-forties), and several of them were anything but petty. The most gentlemanly and least physically dangerous of them was a man whom his brothers and associates nicknamed Rube—because that's what he was ("Rube" is an old crooks' demimonde slang term; look it up if you're interested).

Uncle Rube was by all accounts a world-class forger. According to both my father and my grandmother (who incidentally liked Uncle Rube the best of all her in-laws: "he was a sweet man"), when he came out of the slammer for the third time, half a dozen New York banks offered him a job that involved nothing more than coming into the office a few hours a week to look at and give his expert opinion on questionable-looking bills that had been deposited. Their true aim, of course, was to buy him off and thus, hopefully, keep him from returning to his old "profession."

As my grandmother put it, Uncle Rube turned the banks down flat for no other reason than that the very idea of working for a living in the straight world was simply too much for him to handle. Within a year of becoming free again, finding himself short of cash, he returned to his backup occupation as a "dip" (a pickpocket). Unfortunately, though he was a great forger, he was a lousy dip. He was caught with his hand in someone else's pocket and arrested almost immediately, and as a three-time loser, he was automatically sentenced to life in prison, where he very soon after died.

Quote from: ggreg
Would anyone on this forum tell the authorities if they had reason to suspect that someone was an illegal immigrant working in the United States?


I would. Not that it would do much good, alas.

Offline Meg

Morality of snitching
« Reply #21 on: December 10, 2014, 09:00:43 AM »
Quote from: ggreg
Let's assume you knew a married couple, non-Catholics who had four youngish children and stable or even a "happy" marriage.

But they were involved with a crime.  What would you blow the whistle on them for, and how would you make the decision ?  What factors would you consider?

Here are some examples of possible crimes of different natures so you can base your justification or demonstrate where and when and why one might tell on them versus when one would not.

1.  They grow dope (Cannabis) in a state where it is illegal and sell it to adults and make a five figure profit (say $20k per year) which they spend on supporting their family.  So they are not getting rich from this but they are subsidising their family.  If you object to cannabis then let's assume they brew beer and sell it without a licence, though as far as you know do it responsibly and with regard to human health.

2.  They run a legitimate business but fiddle their taxes and pay thousands less than they should.  Not simply tax avoidance but tax evasion.

3.  They are engaged in tax fraud where they are creating false IDs and invoices and claiming large amounts from the IRS in say welfare benefits.  Not merely not paying taxes, but stealing by fraud money they have absolutely no claim over.


Finally, assume that they have been convicted and already spent 3 years in jail only to come out and access some squirrelled away stash of at least several hundred thousand dollars, which you are 99.9999% certain is from their crimes since they don't have other jobs.  Do you grass them up such that they go back to jail for second stretch for money laundering or failure to disclose their assets after their previous conviction?

What's the moral basis for making a decision to grass someone up?  Is there something like a just war theory to decide what warrants you snitching on them?  Do you take into account the corruption of the government, justice system and the fact that any taxes paid are more likely to be spent on illegal wars than anything just and and good.

Someone on SD suggested that because money was "imaginary" and the financial system a gigantic pyramid scheme that no objective moral evil was being done by them stealing millions when the government prints hundreds of billions to bail out the banks.  Do you agree with this line of reasoning?


Greg,

Have you talked to the family (or at least the father in the family) about your concerns?


Morality of snitching
« Reply #22 on: December 10, 2014, 02:42:27 PM »
Yes, to the extent I reasonably could.

But the problem is that they come from an alien culture where corruption is endemic.

It's like trying to explain to an African truck driver why he should remain chaste.

Morality of snitching
« Reply #23 on: December 10, 2014, 10:36:57 PM »
Quote from: ggreg
Simple Poche.  People talk.  They show off their wealth.

That is often what puts the cops or the IRS onto them.

There was once a man who forged banknotes.  However he simply produced enough for his own needs, lived well, enjoyed fine wines, good food but was not outwardly ostentatious.  Simply always had money because he could print as much cash as he liked.

He was never caught.  He confessed in a memoir which was read after his death.

Very disciplined criminals are few and far between and they are rarely if ever caught.


You are right. Smart people don't talk. But then others wouldn't know about it.  

Morality of snitching
« Reply #24 on: December 10, 2014, 10:46:20 PM »
Let's assume a family of Mexican's move next door, they are agnostic, the teenagers dress like hoodlums, the father smells of pot and disappears for months at a time, does not appear to have any legitimate source of income but rents the house next door for cash. The mother is on welfare, you hear from a neighbor, but drives a 2 year old SUV. They have loud parties, leave trash in the yard but other than this keep themselves to themselves. They are an annoyance but not a threat. Would you report them.

I wouldn't have to complain. there are enough busybody neighbors who would do it for me. I remember about 15 years ago I was looking at houses. I was at this one house. There was an elderly couple across the street working in their yard. The wife came over to me and asked me what I was doing. I told her I was looking at houses and this one was for sale. She went on for around 45 minutes. When she was finished I left with the impression that I could sell drugs, I could run a brothel, I could do just about anything I wanted as long as I ekpt the grass cut and the yard looking nice it would be ok with her. As far as she was concerned the lowest pond scuм were those people who didn't keep up the appearance of their yards.