You'd have to be crazy to lie on
your resume’ these days. It's so easy for others to use a search engine like
Google, Bing, or Yahoo! to check that resume. So who would try to sneak a lie
past them? The CEO of Yahoo!
Recently, Yahoo! CEO Scott Thompson
was caught with a little too much creativity on his resume’. How did he think
he could get away with it? Besides, as
the CEO of Yahoo!, the better he made the company, the greater were the chances
his lie would be discovered. Does he arm-wrestle with himself, too?
What was that grandiose
lie on Thompson's resume’? He claimed that he had gotten a degree in Computer
Science from Stonehill College. Stonehill College? I'm sure that's a fine
school, but is that the one you'd choose if you were going to risk your future
with a lie?
Last year, authorities discovered that Yale's
football coach, Tom Williams lied on his resume’. Coach Williams had said that
he had been a finalist for a Rhodes scholarship. It turned out that the coach
had never been a Rhodes Scholar candidate, or even an applicant. What was he
thinking? "There's no way anybody could possibly find out that I'm making
up this little Rhodes Scholar thing?"
In a particularly odious episode,
during Richard Blumenthal's 2010 campaign for Senator in Connecticut, he
claimed he had served in Vietnam. This was exposed as a lie during the
campaign.
Remember Michael "Way To Go
Brownie" Brown, the FEMA director during Katrina? His resume’ stated that
he had been a political science professor at the University of Central
Oklahoma. School officials said he was never a member of the faculty. This
revelation was quite disturbing, since everything else about Brown seemed so
exemplary.
So why do people do this when the
odds are so much against keeping their secrets secret? I'll bet most of them
could still do fine without padding their resume’s. All right, forget about
"Brownie" – if you can. Scott Thompson had proved he could be a
successful CEO before Yahoo! Richard Blumenthal won his election even after he
was caught lying about serving in Vietnam. So why do they do it?
I don't think saying they want to
get caught is the whole picture. I think it's more that they want there to be
the possibility of getting caught. Maybe
in this sit-behind-a-desk-all-day world, this is the kind of thrill some people
have found to replace the physical thrills of yesteryear. They aren't going to
wrestle a grizzly bear before their morning latte, so they lie about where they
went to school. They aren't going to win the one they love in a duel while
waiting for the car's GPS to be fixed, so they lie about fighting in a war.
They aren't going to fight off a python and save a kid's life after their wine
tasting class, so they claim, well, they claim they fought off a python and
saved a kid's life. For them, their bravery is tested on the battlefield of the
internet. Like with most famous warriors, they know the odds are against
success. That's probably what makes the fight so exciting.
I'll never be tempted to lie on a
resume’ just so I can see if I can beat internet search engines. I don't need a
substitute for physical bravery. For the last two years, I've been getting my
rush from fighting amateur boxing matches. So far, I'm eight and two, nine and
one if you count the controversial Lopez decision. Think I made that up? Well,
I just can't imagine how you could check on me.
So you're a fighter, eh?
ReplyDeleteI *used to be one. But I had to quit on account of my hands, y'know. Yeah, the Ref kept stepping on them.
Yeah, and I made a last second 40 footer to win the 1968 high school state basketball tournament my senior year. You're gonna believe that one, aren't ya? This thing reminds me of the old song "Liar, liar, pants on fire..."
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