Just for you, sandinbrain: Corporate Scandal Trading Cards
You appear to identify rather intensely with a certain characteristic of the RWE 'type,' in which, for purposes of emotional 'security,' one seeks to surround oneself with expensive, materialistic, status style 'stuff' i.e. collections ... luxury vacations... 'best of the best' type of lifestyle, like ... you know... to not only, attract 'friends' of like mind, but to impress them with 'superiority.'
I thought you might like this.
-g-
Collect 'em all! By David Plotz Updated Friday, July 19, 2002, at 5:06 PM PT
Unless you work for the Securities and Exchange Commission -- and probably even if you do -- the plague of scandals has left you as confused as an Enron auditor. Was it WorldCom's Bernie Ebbers or Global Crossing's Gary Winnick who made $735 million from his telecom firm's stock options?
Who destroyed ImClone -- the Waksals or the Rigases? What's the difference between Halliburton and Harken? What is Adelphia, anyway?
Here, to clear it all up, are Slate's Corporate Scandal Trading Cards -- the fastest guide to America's top 10 business crackups. (And they even come with the Slate Guarantee: You can trade our cards with your friends -- and they won't immediately lose 99 percent of their value!)
Click here to see the trading cards.
slate.msn.com
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