I am a Muslim immigrant to America. Growing up in Pakistan, I saw the United States as the moral and ethical high ground where human dignity and national interests were held above partisan politics. However, I am wondering if that may be changing.
We must ask ourselves: Am I honest? Have I ever told a lie? The answer is likely yes, if we are honest to ourselves. We have all told small lies at some point in our lives, while not even recognizing that these are lies. This is a result of ethical fading.
I did not know much about the term "ethical fading" until recently. It was first described by Ann E. Tenbrunsel in 2004. As I started to read more about it, I kept thinking: It makes sense. It certainly explains a lot of what is happening today in our communities across the country.
Ethical fading is the phenomenon where unethical decisions are made, believing they are well within one's own ethical framework. But someone looking from the outside could simply see the unethical reality of such decisions. Some of us may remember what happened at Wells Fargo when thousands of employees opened hundreds of thousands of fake bank accounts. They believed in their own minds that it was acceptable since everyone else was doing it, but we can clearly recognize it as an unethical practice.
I believe ethical fading is almost the same thing as lying, and it is pervasive in our society.
Ethical fading, fueled by corporate greed, has brought us to this political and social divide. We see our own perspective as the only possible solution to our social, economic and political problems. I can see both sides of the political spectrum are trying to do the same thing by adopting a very different approach. Democrats are trying to "Build Back Better" and Republicans are trying to "Make America Great Again." It sounds pretty much the same to me, so why are we fighting?
My assumption is that certain American corporations are making unethical business decisions, and we are somehow made to falsely believe that moral principles are maintained. This practice is self-deception and is defined as being unaware of the processes that lead us to form our opinions and judgments. It is unfortunately common and widespread in our lives.
Corporations use language euphemisms. They tell us fables to justify their unethical actions. These stories are an edited version of the "real" story, devoid of all ethical implications. The term "right-sizing" falls into this category of language euphemism. It is the favored term for layoffs, which focuses attention toward the economic benefits and away from the human costs of putting people out of work. In doing so, an alleged unethical behavior becomes justifiable through a process of deception, in which we transform morally wrong behavior into socially acceptable actions.