Social Honesty is the best policy

mixmastermo

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Is it though?

I feel like truly honest and scrupulous people get taken advantage of, disregarded, and bullied.

Take traffic on a city street for example. The people who are the most civilized often have to wait the longest to get to their destination.

Take the workplace as another example- the most upstanding employees often get overlooked by the sneakier ones who run around and manipulate, gaslight, and gossip.

Is honesty the best policy?
 
Is it though?

I feel like truly honest and scrupulous people get taken advantage of, disregarded, and bullied.

Take traffic on a city street for example. The people who are the most civilized often have to wait the longest to get to their destination.

Take the workplace as another example- the most upstanding employees often get overlooked by the sneakier ones who run around and manipulate, gaslight, and gossip.

Is honesty the best policy?

I'd say transparency is the best policy as opposed to honesty in the workplace, there is a difference. I try to be as transparent as possible, basically so I don't need to remember what I've told people, and so I don't get found out I'm being sneaky and lose trust of my co workers.
 
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Is it though?

I feel like truly honest and scrupulous people get taken advantage of, disregarded, and bullied.

Take traffic on a city street for example. The people who are the most civilized often have to wait the longest to get to their destination.

Take the workplace as another example- the most upstanding employees often get overlooked by the sneakier ones who run around and manipulate, gaslight, and gossip.

Is honesty the best policy?
It is imo... it shows the character of a man imo...
 
I'd say transparency is the best policy as opposed to honesty in the workplace, there is a difference. I try to be as transparent as possible, basically so I don't need to remember what I've told people, and so I don't get found out I'm being sneaky and lose trust of my co workers.
But how can you be transparent and sneaky at the same time?
 
SO as some of you may have guessed there are some specific reasons I made this thread.

There's a situation going on at work- and I am finding out some of my co workers are being less than honest. I won't go too deep into it, but I've been campaigning for a change of our internal procedures on the production floor for a very long time and some people are against it. I've gotten long winded explanations as to why they think drastic measures are unnecessary, how we need to take things one small step at a time, but I always smelled BS from the start.

Turns out the small changes we implemented aren't nearly enough to fix the problem (shocker). I actually got blasted by my boss about 3 weeks ago because he felt I wasn't doing enough to fix the problem (BS and I stood my ground on that). I do have some level of respect for my colleagues in management as I do see they have a level of expertise in their respective fields. However when it comes to making changes in internal procedures (that ultimately would benefit all of us) there's always push back. I do meet with some of my colleagues individually to try to work things out ourselves before we are asked to provide a status report at our weekly staff meeting, and it was revealed to me during one of those encounters that the change I was suggesting would cause a lot of confusion on the production floor because some of the people working down there are not capable of following instructions.

I've kept that to myself for a long time. When we presented a status report last week, we went through it quickly and we didn't get into my recommendations because there was some acknowledgement of some of our issues. I thought ok at least we are getting somewhere. Today we had another meeting and my colleague spoke about how he found the source of the problem. He went into detail about his findings, and I let him finish, knowing full and well he wasn't telling the whole story. Right before we were about to segue into the next topic I mentioned that while my colleague's findings have some merit, they are not the sole cause of the issue. At that point I went into detail about what is happening and what is not happening, and I provided some hard evidence to back my claim up. The VP hosting the meeting (my boss) was super frustrated after seeing the evidence, and rightfully so! We all agreed that extra measures need to be taken to solve the problem.

You would think that after making a stand, clearing the air, and proving my point I would feel much better about the situation, right? Wrong. I walked away from that situation feeling that while I can have some level of respect for these colleagues in question, I cannot fully trust them. The whole situation makes me feel like shit tbh.
 
SO as some of you may have guessed there are some specific reasons I made this thread.

There's a situation going on at work- and I am finding out some of my co workers are being less than honest. I won't go too deep into it, but I've been campaigning for a change of our internal procedures on the production floor for a very long time and some people are against it. I've gotten long winded explanations as to why they think drastic measures are unnecessary, how we need to take things one small step at a time, but I always smelled BS from the start.

Turns out the small changes we implemented aren't nearly enough to fix the problem (shocker). I actually got blasted by my boss about 3 weeks ago because he felt I wasn't doing enough to fix the problem (BS and I stood my ground on that). I do have some level of respect for my colleagues in management as I do see they have a level of expertise in their respective fields. However when it comes to making changes in internal procedures (that ultimately would benefit all of us) there's always push back. I do meet with some of my colleagues individually to try to work things out ourselves before we are asked to provide a status report at our weekly staff meeting, and it was revealed to me during one of those encounters that the change I was suggesting would cause a lot of confusion on the production floor because some of the people working down there are not capable of following instructions.

I've kept that to myself for a long time. When we presented a status report last week, we went through it quickly and we didn't get into my recommendations because there was some acknowledgement of some of our issues. I thought ok at least we are getting somewhere. Today we had another meeting and my colleague spoke about how he found the source of the problem. He went into detail about his findings, and I let him finish, knowing full and well he wasn't telling the whole story. Right before we were about to segue into the next topic I mentioned that while my colleague's findings have some merit, they are not the sole cause of the issue. At that point I went into detail about what is happening and what is not happening, and I provided some hard evidence to back my claim up. The VP hosting the meeting (my boss) was super frustrated after seeing the evidence, and rightfully so! We all agreed that extra measures need to be taken to solve the problem.

You would think that after making a stand, clearing the air, and proving my point I would feel much better about the situation, right? Wrong. I walked away from that situation feeling that while I can have some level of respect for these colleagues in question, I cannot fully trust them. The whole situation makes me feel like shit tbh.
I hope you are loaded dude. No position is worth sacrificing your integrity in any way
 
Honesty is always the best policy when it comes to financial dealings.

It gets a lot more complicated once you go into the family/relationship/friendship territory.

One of the easier way to decide if you want to be honest or not in a situation is if everyone in the world find out, will you be ashamed if you do. Have served me pretty well up to now.
 
SO as some of you may have guessed there are some specific reasons I made this thread.

There's a situation going on at work- and I am finding out some of my co workers are being less than honest. I won't go too deep into it, but I've been campaigning for a change of our internal procedures on the production floor for a very long time and some people are against it. I've gotten long winded explanations as to why they think drastic measures are unnecessary, how we need to take things one small step at a time, but I always smelled BS from the start.

Turns out the small changes we implemented aren't nearly enough to fix the problem (shocker). I actually got blasted by my boss about 3 weeks ago because he felt I wasn't doing enough to fix the problem (BS and I stood my ground on that). I do have some level of respect for my colleagues in management as I do see they have a level of expertise in their respective fields. However when it comes to making changes in internal procedures (that ultimately would benefit all of us) there's always push back. I do meet with some of my colleagues individually to try to work things out ourselves before we are asked to provide a status report at our weekly staff meeting, and it was revealed to me during one of those encounters that the change I was suggesting would cause a lot of confusion on the production floor because some of the people working down there are not capable of following instructions.

I've kept that to myself for a long time. When we presented a status report last week, we went through it quickly and we didn't get into my recommendations because there was some acknowledgement of some of our issues. I thought ok at least we are getting somewhere. Today we had another meeting and my colleague spoke about how he found the source of the problem. He went into detail about his findings, and I let him finish, knowing full and well he wasn't telling the whole story. Right before we were about to segue into the next topic I mentioned that while my colleague's findings have some merit, they are not the sole cause of the issue. At that point I went into detail about what is happening and what is not happening, and I provided some hard evidence to back my claim up. The VP hosting the meeting (my boss) was super frustrated after seeing the evidence, and rightfully so! We all agreed that extra measures need to be taken to solve the problem.

You would think that after making a stand, clearing the air, and proving my point I would feel much better about the situation, right? Wrong. I walked away from that situation feeling that while I can have some level of respect for these colleagues in question, I cannot fully trust them. The whole situation makes me feel like shit tbh.

Think of it this way sir.
Your honesty revealed the truth in their lies.

You should be proud of yourself being the kind of man others know they can count on to say what needs to be said.
I'd say you came out of this thing with the respect of your coworkers while making a change that needed to be made.

You're a good man in my book, much love brother.
 
No matter how people try to use words like family at work, people at work will slit your throat with no remorse if it means they get a bit more money or can be more lazy and get away with it.
 
I hope you are loaded dude. No position is worth sacrificing your integrity in any way
An old co-worker told me when he ran into another former co-worker unexpectedly somewhere, she looked scared shitless like she was expecting some payback. I'm guessing it's stressful when you do bad shit to people and hope you don't cross paths with them again.
 
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