Quote:
Originally Posted by stomachmonkey
Denis, A little surprised by your view.
Who the money belonged to and who was responsible for its loss is irrelevant.
There is no grey area here. It's either right or wrong.
|
I respect your morality, so let me pose you a (purely academic) question:
If you knew for a fact that a bag of $$ belonged to Mexican drug dealers or Taiwanese human traffickers, would you feel morally compelled to return it to them? How about Saddam Hussein's sons, if they were still alive?
Not saying that Brinks is in the same category as any of these examples, just wondering if there is any *line of demarcation* where you would not feel compelled to return the $$.
I have found wallets, noticed women leaving restaurants w/o their $5k LV handbags full of CCs and cash or found expensive cell phones and ipods and never once thought for a second about keeping them. No grey area for me there. Somehow the dropped Brinks bag has always been different to me, though. I think that a lot of what I consider to be good people would keep it.