This document discusses the importance of transparency in exposing wrongdoings that were previously hidden. It notes that through sharing information online, people can shine lights on dark corners and greed, immorality, and persecution that were allowed to fester previously. It also suggests that years of education do not necessarily equate to merit, and people are looking beyond sales pitches to see the truth of situations.
This document discusses the importance of transparency in exposing wrongdoings that were previously hidden. It notes that through sharing information online, people can shine lights on dark corners and greed, immorality, and persecution that were allowed to fester previously. It also suggests that years of education do not necessarily equate to merit, and people are looking beyond sales pitches to see the truth of situations.
This document discusses the importance of transparency in exposing wrongdoings that were previously hidden. It notes that through sharing information online, people can shine lights on dark corners and greed, immorality, and persecution that were allowed to fester previously. It also suggests that years of education do not necessarily equate to merit, and people are looking beyond sales pitches to see the truth of situations.
Delving into these digital mines and getting up with jewels
of "good and bad and horrible. We look and imagined this reality for what it was, crawling behind boardroom doors, crowd sourcing salary content, videoing acts of aggression and immorality and sharing them in the country, the world. We shine lights at dark corners, getting out all those things that permit greed and immorality and persecution to survive and fester and thrive. We ended thinking that years of education is equivalent to merit, we stopped buying into these sales pitches, yet things thought to make us look like we were all winners."