SMTBSI wrote:Andrew McCeltic wrote:Turgon wrote:
Having an E&Y representative in there doesn't mean anything. He is probably just checking that all the procedures are done according to whatever has been previously stipulated.
As for the amount of people involved, let me tell you something. In my country, the biggest provider of software for restaurants (and bars, and coffee shops and the like) had a secret function integrated in the program that would allow the manager to issue a fake invoice that would not be included in the tax statements. This went on for years, with thousands of clients using it without the tax authorities being able to find anything. And the software house was tax certified and had accountants, auditors, engineers and lawyers all (probably) in the know. But when it was finally discovered, only a couple of people were indicted.
I'm not saying the lottery is fixed. But I won't say it isn't either. It certainly would be a lot easier than many people seem to think.
Maybe the greatest conspiracy of all.. is convincing smart people that conspiracies aren't possible. ..............
Of course it's possible. I disagree strongly with the idea I see expressed, quite often, that it would be "simple". So many posters say it would be "simple", but never seem to want to have a substantive discussion on what it would actually take to do it. I believe that this particular conspiracy, in 2016, would required a much larger roster of conspirators than many seem to believe.
Course, I also believe that the risk-reward profile is so bad that, in the current environment, no rational person would choose to attempt it.
But, it's definitely
possible.
Ok, but the big thing every anti-conspiracy argument leaves out is that it would be in the self-interest of the people involved to keep the conspiracy to themselves. If you're a party to it, and benefiting from it, and/or there are consequences to revealing it, you have major incentives to keep conspiracy-ing.
I'm a skeptic about all of these things, but I do believe the feasibility of conspiracy is much more undecidable than everyone assumes. Conventional wisdom says there are tinfoil people who think the Illuminati killed JFK to prevent an alien takeover of Cuba, and everyone else who knows every conspiracy theory is crazy and highly implausible.
What happens in most cases is that there's some dark spot or ambiguity in our knowledge and people fill it in with their imagination, projecting fears, fantasies, anxieties. But in other cases, people actually do lie, cheat, collude and conspire.
Fixing the NBA lottery? Not hard. It's just sports, hell, the owners are probably pragmatic enough that you could get all 30 in on it.
There are a lot of open secrets, it's also easy to bury things in paperwork, non-disclosure agreements, to make it impossible to get to the bottom of anything. Who gives a damn about the Panama Papers, for example, which were a big story a couple of weeks ago? Who's digging to find out which American politicians are using off-shore tax havens and talking out of both sides of their mouths about it?
Might've said this already, but the identity of Deep Throat (who brought down a conspiracy, ironically) was kept secret for 30+ years- Nora Ephron knew, or thought she knew, and blabbed about it, apparently, but everyone involved just lied when the subject came up.