Mr Cholmondeley-Corker (PaSC)
Senior Member
If you had publicly stated that you were against X, but you were sponsored by an organisation that openly supported X then do you think it is reasonable for people to question your personal integrity?
If you had publicly stated that you were against X, but you were sponsored by an organisation that openly supported X then do you think it is reasonable for people to question your personal integrity?
If you had publicly stated that you were against X, but you were sponsored by an organisation that openly supported X then do you think it is reasonable for people to question your personal integrity?
If you had publicly stated that you were against X, but you were sponsored by an organisation that openly supported X then do you think it is reasonable for people to question your personal integrity?
If you had publicly stated that you were against X, but you were sponsored by an organisation that openly supported X then do you think it is reasonable for people to question your personal integrity?
Well I'm shocked and stunned!loads of examples of our elected leaders saying one thing and doing the opposite
For an awful lot of people, personal integrity often has to go by the wayside when cash is involved. The person that's never had to do something that they disagreed with, or even objected to, is a very lucky one.
If a value or belief goes by the wayside because of cash, then I do not think that it was integrity in the first place.
I have to say that I was talking in general, not about angling. Show me someone that hasn't had to do something, in their working lives, that they have objected to, and they'll be very, very, lucky individuals. The bottom line is that you can't eat your integrity and ideals.