Business Ethics

C&L's Late Nite Music Club with Fugazi

Title: Long Division
Artist: Fugazi

Since this site devotes much of this center column to the goings-on in Washington, it's high time that we gave some real estate to some of the music that has provided the city's better pulse. There's no better place to start than Fugazi.

Fugazi is usually given a lot of credit for their unparalleled integrity and business ethics. All their shows were under six dollars. They didn't sell T-shirts. Their CD's cost eight dollars when all others were $14.99. They let local bands open for them. All shows were all ages. They refused to sign to a major label and instead sold millions of records on singer-guitarist ian Mackaye's own Dischord Records. When my friends and I bought a fake ticket (I thought it was real) to see them when I was 13, one of their crew told the band how we got duped and they let is in through the back door because they felt bad for us.

Anyways, that's what most screeds about Fugazi usually mention. They don't mention that had they been complete money-grubbing jerks a la Gene Simmons and built a commercial empire of emptiness and greed, they still would be one of the best and most intense bands of all time. I hope they end their hiatus soon.



TOPICS Video Cafe

Carly Fiorina: There Is No Substitute for Ethics

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Carly Fiorina on Late Edition Nov. 21, 2008. Too bad she didn't apply some of these same standards to herself when she headed HP.

BLITZER: Carly, what's the most important lesson people out there, around the world, right now, should learn from this Bernard Madoff scandal, this alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme -- not only wealthy people losing everything but a lot of charities losing everything as well?

What happened here? What's the most important thing we have to learn from it, to make sure it could never happen again?

FIORINA: Well, I think two things. And I recently wrote an op- ed in The Wall Street Journal, saying this. First, every financial instrument and all financial institutions, regardless of their nature or their type, need to be visible and transparent to appropriate regulators, period.

We cannot have huge pools of capital that are simply opaque to regulation.

BLITZER: So much more regulation?

FIORINA: We need a strong and sensible regulatory framework that doesn't choke capitalism but that can see and act on what it sees. But, secondly -- and this is my message to business people all over the world -- there is no substitute for ethics. Yes, people need to be responsible about their investing, but dishonest business people need to go to jail. They need to have the full extent of the burden of the law brought to bear.

This is a terrible blotch on the credibility of business, just as, by the way, so many failed companies are, right now, because it is not true to say that only a credit crisis has caused these companies, whether they're automobile companies or banks, to fail. They are failing because management and boards have taken unwise decisions.

I'm not saying everybody was dishonest. But there's a level of responsibility, here, that business leaders, I believe, must step up to. At a minimum, let's be ethical. And at a maximum, let's be responsible to something more than the short-term stock crisis.