• @Coasting0942@reddthat.com
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      71 year ago

      Oh his, I was about to say a five million fine goes against the tenets of Monopoly Man, bless his appointed CEOs on Earth

    • circuscritic
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      1 year ago

      That’s not what that means. It means it’s just an additional, and “normal”, line item on the balance sheet, like toilet paper or the water bill.

      Edit: Reposting as I replied the wrong comment initially.

      • @SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s not normal. It’s hugely undervalued. Not getting taxed on 32 billion for an extended period of time is completely game changing. It’s like saying having to pay an $8 fine for the stolen company car is just the normal cost of doing business. That being said I see where you’re coming from. They get different rules so it’s probably seen as ok in their eyes to get an $8 car or in this case to steal the car themselves and pay an $8 fine later

        • circuscritic
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          1 year ago

          The phrase “cost of doing business” doesn’t mean “bankrupt” or “righteous penalty”, it means, especially in this context, that it’s an normalized and accepted business expenditure because of our corrupt regulatory system whereby white collar crime is NOT punished by meaningful punitive actions that would create a deterrence. Instead, any punitive measures can simply be accounted for as a “cost of doing business”.

          Let me give you a hyperbolic but extremely simple example:

          CEO: Let’s commit a fraud worth $100m

          VP: But that’s illegal

          CEO: Yes, but the fine would only be around $5m

          CFO: Perfect, I’ll add a $5m expenditure under the “cost of doing business” line item

          VP: Wow, that’s a great $5m expenditure, we’ll net $95m in profit

          CEO: Yep, that’s just the cost of doing business.

          Make sense?

          • @SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m aware of what you are saying and I agree but only to a point. I’m saying that even as a “normal” cost of doing business the size of the fine is not normal. To take your example it’s like this:

            CEO: “Lets commit 32 BILLION dollars of fraud.”

            VP: “That’s illegal.”

            CEO: “Yes but the fine would only be around $5m.”

            VP: “Sir, I’m not condoning this but that estimate seems absurdly low for the size of the fraud?

            CEO: “You’re right, the fine should be much much higher. Can we afford to get a $500m fine as a normal operating cost?”

            CFO: “We can. I’ll also talk to my connections in Washington to get the amount lowered and anything else will be gravy. Also, VP you’re fired!”