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  1. #1
    Kjertesvein's Avatar Remember to smile
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    Default The least corrupt states in the world?

    As the title, which country are the least corrupt, and how do they do it?

    And this is also post nr 4000.

    ~Wille
    Thorolf was thus armed. Then Thorolf became so furious that he cast his shield on his back, and, grasping his halberd with both hands, bounded forward dealing cut and thrust on either side. Men sprang away from him both ways, but he slew many. Thus he cleared the way forward to earl Hring's standard, and then nothing could stop him. He slew the man who bore the earl's standard, and cut down the standard-pole. After that he lunged with his halberd at the earl's breast, driving it right through mail and body, so that it came out at the shoulders; and he lifted him up on the halberd over his head, and planted the butt-end in the ground. There on the weapon the earl breathed out his life in sight of all, both friends and foes. [...] 53, Egil's Saga
    I must tell you here of some amusing tricks the Comte d'Eu played on us. I had made a sort of house for myself in which my knights and I used to eat, sitting so as to get the light from the door, which, as it happened, faced the Comte d'Eu's quarters. The count, who was a very ingenious fellow, had rigged up a miniature ballistic machine with which he could throw stones into my tent. He would watch us as we were having our meal, adjust his machine to suit the length of our table, and then let fly at us, breaking our pots and glasses.
    - The pranks played on the knight Jean de Joinville, 1249, 7th crusade.













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    Quote Originally Posted by Finn View Post
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  2. #2
    Poach's Avatar Civitate
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?


  3. #3
    Arch-hereticK's Avatar Indefinitely Banned
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Congratulations New Zealand.

    But you get no reward for not being evil unfortunately: damn you altruism.

  4. #4
    Kjertesvein's Avatar Remember to smile
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    I'm not collor-blind, but excess in cash seem to have an effect on the corruption, except Norway is rich, but even Iceland is better then us - in 09. Why?
    Thorolf was thus armed. Then Thorolf became so furious that he cast his shield on his back, and, grasping his halberd with both hands, bounded forward dealing cut and thrust on either side. Men sprang away from him both ways, but he slew many. Thus he cleared the way forward to earl Hring's standard, and then nothing could stop him. He slew the man who bore the earl's standard, and cut down the standard-pole. After that he lunged with his halberd at the earl's breast, driving it right through mail and body, so that it came out at the shoulders; and he lifted him up on the halberd over his head, and planted the butt-end in the ground. There on the weapon the earl breathed out his life in sight of all, both friends and foes. [...] 53, Egil's Saga
    I must tell you here of some amusing tricks the Comte d'Eu played on us. I had made a sort of house for myself in which my knights and I used to eat, sitting so as to get the light from the door, which, as it happened, faced the Comte d'Eu's quarters. The count, who was a very ingenious fellow, had rigged up a miniature ballistic machine with which he could throw stones into my tent. He would watch us as we were having our meal, adjust his machine to suit the length of our table, and then let fly at us, breaking our pots and glasses.
    - The pranks played on the knight Jean de Joinville, 1249, 7th crusade.













    http://imgur.com/a/DMm19
    Quote Originally Posted by Finn View Post
    This is the only forum I visit with any sort of frequency and I'm glad it has provided a home for RTR since its own forum went down in 2007. Hopefully my donation along with others from TWC users will help get the site back to its speedy heyday, which will certainly aid us in our endeavor to produce a full conversion mod Rome2.

  5. #5
    Stildawn's Avatar The Legislator of 'Lol'
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Haha im from NZ... And although we dont have massive scandles lol our politicians are just as two faced as everyone elses...

  6. #6

    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    I hear Indonesia is the second least corrupt in the world. We used to be the first though.


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    Treize's Avatar Dux Limitis
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Quote Originally Posted by jankren View Post
    I hear Indonesia is the second least corrupt in the world. We used to be the first though.
    Isn't Indonesia corrupt to the bone?
    Miss me yet?

  8. #8

    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Quote Originally Posted by ♔IPA35♔ View Post
    Isn't Indonesia corrupt to the bone?
    No sense of humor?


    "When one person suffers from a delusion it is called insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion it is called religion." -- Robert Pirsig

    "Feminists are silent when the bills arrive." -- Aetius

    "Women have made a pact with the devil — in return for the promise of exquisite beauty, their window to this world of lavish male attention is woefully brief." -- Some Guy

  9. #9
    H.r.E.'s Avatar Ducenarius
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    why would germany be green ?

  10. #10

    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Quote Originally Posted by jankren View Post
    I hear Indonesia is the second least corrupt in the world. We used to be the first though.
    Lol. That's a good Joke.

  11. #11
    Last Roman's Avatar ron :wub:in swanson
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    pffft, Sweden. Whadda bunch of goody two shoes.
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    wilpuri's Avatar It Gets Worse.
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Quote Originally Posted by Last Roman View Post
    pffft, Sweden. Whadda bunch of goody two shoes.
    Not goody two shoes, simply naive.
    The common culture of a tribe is a sign of its inner cohesion. But tribes are vanishing from the modern world, as are all forms of traditional society. Customs, practices, festivals, rituals and beliefs have acquired a flut and half-hearted quality which reflects our nomadic and rootless existence, predicated as we are on the global air-waves.

    ROGER SCRUTON, Modern Culture

  13. #13
    Pious Agnost's Avatar Praefectus
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Quote Originally Posted by Sivilombudsmannen View Post
    As the title, which country are the least corrupt, and how do they do it?

    And this is also post nr 4000.

    ~Wille
    Being from New Zealand, I expect it's because we give the bastards too much money and benefits.

    Even then, they'll bend the rules, but not quite break them.

    Perhaps that they keep it legal (Only just?) for fear of being discovered (Quite likely in a small country like ours) is the reason we are 1st

    Quote Originally Posted by jankren View Post
    I hear Indonesia is the second least corrupt in the world. We used to be the first though.
    111th/180

    Close enough!
    Last edited by Pious Agnost; June 01, 2010 at 06:50 AM.

  14. #14

    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Lichtenstein? Nothing to corrupt.
    The Armenian Issue
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  15. #15
    Kjertesvein's Avatar Remember to smile
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    I found this, by scrolling down on your link :

    It is argued that the following conditions are favorable for corruption:
    • <LI sizset="5" sizcache="0">Information deficits
      • Lack of government transparency.
      • Lacking freedom of information legislation. The Indian Right to Information Act 2005 has "already engendered mass movements in the country that is bringing the lethargic, often corrupt bureaucracy to its knees and changing power equations completely."[10]
      • Lack of investigative reporting in the local media.
      • Contempt for or negligence of exercising freedom of speech and freedom of the press.
      • Weak accounting practices, including lack of timely financial management.
      • Lack of measurement of corruption. For example, using regular surveys of households and businesses in order to quantify the degree of perception of corruption in different parts of a nation or in different government institutions may increase awareness of corruption and create pressure to combat it. This will also enable an evaluation of the officials who are fighting corruption and the methods used.
      • Tax havens which tax their own citizens and companies but not those from other nations and refuse to disclose information necessary for foreign taxation. This enables large scale political corruption in the foreign nations.[11][citation needed]
      <LI sizset="6" sizcache="0">Lacking control of the government.
      • Democracy absent or dysfunctional. See illiberal democracy.
      • Lacking civic society and non-governmental organizations which monitor the government.
      • An individual voter may have a rational ignorance regarding politics, especially in nationwide elections, since each vote has little weight.
      • Weak civil service, and slow pace of reform.
      • Weak rule of law.
      • Weak legal profession.
      • Weak judicial independence.
      • Lacking protection of whistleblowers.
      • Lack of benchmarking, that is continual detailed evaluation of procedures and comparison to others who do similar things, in the same government or others, in particular comparison to those who do the best work. The Peruvian organization Ciudadanos al Dia has started to measure and compare transparency, costs, and efficiency in different government departments in Peru. It annually awards the best practices which has received widespread media attention. This has created competition among government agencies in order to improve.[12]
      <LI sizset="7" sizcache="0">Opportunities and incentives
      • Individual officials routinely handle cash, instead of handling payments by giro or on a separate cash desk—illegitimate withdrawals from supervised bank accounts are much more difficult to conceal.
      • Public funds are centralized rather than distributed. For example, if $1,000 is embezzled from a local agency that has $2,000 funds, it is easier to notice than from a national agency with $2,000,000 funds. See the principle of subsidiarity.
      • Large, unsupervised public investments.
      • Sale of state-owned property and privatization.[citation needed]
      • Poorly-paid government officials.
      • Government licenses needed to conduct business, e.g., import licenses, encourage bribing and kickbacks.
      • Long-time work in the same position may create relationships inside and outside the government which encourage and help conceal corruption and favoritism. Rotating government officials to different positions and geographic areas may help prevent this; for instance certain high rank officials in French government services (e.g. treasurer-paymasters general) must rotate every few years.
      • Costly political campaigns, with expenses exceeding normal sources of political funding, especially when funded with taxpayer money.
      • Less interaction with officials reduces the opportunities for corruption. For example, using the Internet for sending in required information, like applications and tax forms, and then processing this with automated computer systems. This may also speed up the processing and reduce unintentional human errors. See e-Government.
      • A windfall from exporting abundant natural resources may encourage corruption.[13] (See Resource curse)
      • War and other forms of conflict correlate with a breakdown of public security.
    • Social conditions
      • Self-interested closed cliques and "old boy networks".
      • Family-, and clan-centered social structure, with a tradition of nepotism/favouritism being acceptable.
      • A gift economy, such as the Chinese guanxi or the Soviet blat system, emerges in a Communist centrally planned economy.
      • In societies where personal integrity is rated as less important than other characteristics (by contrast, in societies such as 18th and 19th century England, 20th century Japan, and post-war western Germany, where society showed almost obsessive regard for "honor" and personal integrity, corruption was less frequently seen)[citation needed]
      • Lacking literacy and education among the population.
      • Frequent discrimination and bullying among the population.
      • Tribal solidarity, giving benefits to certain ethnic groups
    Hmmm.. not bad, not bad at all.

    ~Wille
    Thorolf was thus armed. Then Thorolf became so furious that he cast his shield on his back, and, grasping his halberd with both hands, bounded forward dealing cut and thrust on either side. Men sprang away from him both ways, but he slew many. Thus he cleared the way forward to earl Hring's standard, and then nothing could stop him. He slew the man who bore the earl's standard, and cut down the standard-pole. After that he lunged with his halberd at the earl's breast, driving it right through mail and body, so that it came out at the shoulders; and he lifted him up on the halberd over his head, and planted the butt-end in the ground. There on the weapon the earl breathed out his life in sight of all, both friends and foes. [...] 53, Egil's Saga
    I must tell you here of some amusing tricks the Comte d'Eu played on us. I had made a sort of house for myself in which my knights and I used to eat, sitting so as to get the light from the door, which, as it happened, faced the Comte d'Eu's quarters. The count, who was a very ingenious fellow, had rigged up a miniature ballistic machine with which he could throw stones into my tent. He would watch us as we were having our meal, adjust his machine to suit the length of our table, and then let fly at us, breaking our pots and glasses.
    - The pranks played on the knight Jean de Joinville, 1249, 7th crusade.













    http://imgur.com/a/DMm19
    Quote Originally Posted by Finn View Post
    This is the only forum I visit with any sort of frequency and I'm glad it has provided a home for RTR since its own forum went down in 2007. Hopefully my donation along with others from TWC users will help get the site back to its speedy heyday, which will certainly aid us in our endeavor to produce a full conversion mod Rome2.

  16. #16
    Comes Domesticorum
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    I think they may have ranked Greece a bit too high.

  17. #17
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    AMERICA!!! (not really)
    "WE WILL SMITE THE INVADERS FROM OUR SKIES! Though they sweep over our lands like the sands of winter, never again will we bow before them; never again endure their oppression; never again endure their tyranny. We will strike without warning and without mercy, fighting as one hand, one heart, one soul. We will shatter their dreams and haunt their nightmares, drenching our ancestors' graves with their blood. And as our last breath tears at their lungs; as we rise again from the ruins of our cities...they will know: Helghan belongs to the Helghast." -Scholar Visari

  18. #18

    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    good old corrupt Armenia in the bottom of the rankings
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  19. #19

    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Quote Originally Posted by Lord Mov View Post
    good old corrupt Armenia in the bottom of the rankings
    Well I don't think the federal government is that corrupt

    but some states have corruption and some counties are just ridiculous (guy getting away with speeding because he knows the cops etc)

  20. #20
    razor-'s Avatar Decanus
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    Default Re: The least corrupt states in the world?

    Not too suprising that it is the small rich countries on top, many with homogenous cultures.




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