Glass ceiling for people of integrity 
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 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   DEC. 13-19, 2019 17  
 BY PHILIP FOGLIA 
 Glass ceilings are unofficially  
 sanctioned impediments  
 to professional advancement  
 that  have  traditionally  stymied  
 women and minorities  
 from  navigating  traditional  
 paths to success in a chosen  
 vocation. Honesty and integrity  
 in our politics and government, 
  virtues that are normally  
 admired, are now traits that  
 will short circuit a career for  
 office seekers or other public  
 servants. 
 Consider  the  controversy  
 over  whistleblowers. Whistleblowers  
 are individuals who  
 expose information or activities  
 that are illegal, unethical,  
 wasteful or harmful within an  
 organization or government  
 entity. While many governmental  
 agencies have internal  
 affairs divisions and Inspectors  
 General  to  root  out  such  
 activities, they can’t be expected  
 to uncover all improprieties.  
 Individuals  in  the  trenches  
 are  relied  upon  to  report  suspect  
 activities.  It  is  crucially  
 important to encourage and  
 support these people. Instead  
 we see a rash of corruption  
 apologists  calling  them  spies  
 and  even  surveillance  by  law  
 enforcement being described  
 as spying. Honesty and integrity  
 are unfortunately not part  
 of the equation. 
 It’s even worse in our political  
 system. Personal honesty  
 and integrity are virtues one  
 would think are basic characteristics  
 necessary for election  
 to  office.  In  today’s  political  
 world they guarantee failure.  
 Today’s political culture is a  
 far cry from what our Founding  
 Fathers envisioned.   
 John Adams said, “Always  
 stand on principle ... even if  
 you stand alone.”  
 George  Washington  said,  
 “I hope that I shall always  
 possess  firmness  and  virtue  
 enough  to  maintain  what  I  
 consider  to  be  the most  enviable  
 of all titles, the character  
 of an honest man.”   
 Thomas  Jefferson  said,  
 “The whole art of government  
 consists  in  the  art  of  being  
 honest.”   
 Thomas  Paine  declared,  
 “He who dares not offend cannot  
 be honest.”   
 It’s  not  just  that  integrity  
 is out of fashion, truly honest  
 men and women are shut out of  
 the political process. Individuals  
 not willing to compromise  
 their values or abandon morality  
 simply cannot succeed in  
 our current political climate.  
 Not  to  be  confused with  compromise  
 on issues, integrity  
 requires  truth  telling,  transparency  
 and advancing the  
 well-being  of  the  country,  not  
 individual  ascendancy.  Our  
 Founders  wisely  knew  that  
 in a large democratic republic  
 compromise would have  
 to occur or oppression by one  
 view or another would tear the  
 country asunder. But it had to  
 be done intelligently and virtuously. 
 Compare the Founders previously  
 quoted  with  those  on  
 the political scene today where  
 lying and hypocrisy are the  
 norm. Childish name-calling,  
 demonization  of  people  who  
 disagree and telling demonstrable  
 lies are the currency  
 of our so-called leaders. The  
 sad reality is that a person of  
 virtue  cannot  succeed  in  our  
 current political climate and  
 deviousness is rewarded at the  
 ballot box. So deeply divided is  
 our nation that we are willing  
 to accept outright lies from our  
 leaders if they are from our  
 side of the political spectrum. 
 In his Farewell Address,  
 George Washington  wrote,  “It  
 is substantially true that virtue  
 or morality is a necessary  
 spring of popular government.”  
 He  believed  that America was  
 becoming one of the great nations  
 of the world and give to  
 mankind  “the  magnanimous  
 and too novel example of a people  
 always guided by an exalted  
 justice and benevolence.” 
 Currently we are not living  
 up to that aspiration. 
 Phil  Foglia  is  a  former  
 state  and  federal  
 prosecutor  and  Special  
 Deputy Inspector General 
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