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How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

原文链接:https://forum.iask.ca/threads/120010/

crystal_clear : 2007-07-25#1
On a cool, overcast morning near downtown Toronto, 45-year-old Carlo Thorne has stopped by Gerrard Square, a small indoor shopping mall, during a long fitness walk. When he hears an abandoned cellphone ring, he answers it and speaks to the woman on the other end of the line. Thorne agrees to wait for her to come and retrieve it, later telling her, “I was raised in a spiritual family, so we always give back what is not ours. If I’d left it, it would be like stealing.”

On the other side of the Atlantic, in a square in central London’s lively and cosmopolitan Soho district, another cellphone has been mislaid next to a statue of King Charles II. Close by, a man in his late 20s wearing a casual black jacket is feeding bread to the pigeons. He waits for a gaggle of Japanese tourists to pass by, then grabs the phone. Glancing around warily, he hurries away into crowded Oxford Street. He doesn’t call any of the numbers in the phone’s directory, and the phone’s owner has not seen it since.

In the Bosques de Palermo, the largest park in Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires, Marcelo Elías jogs past an abandoned cellphone. It’s ringing. The 38-year-old caretaker stoops to answer it. “Yeah, you’ve lost your handset near the running track,” he tells the caller. “Where are you?”
The grateful owner tells him she’s five blocks away. Soon afterwards, Elías runs up and hands over her phone.

In each of these incidents, the people who had mislaid their phones were not the careless members of the public they appeared but Reader’s Digest researchers from our editions around the world conducting an experiment. Last summer we made headlines internationally when we measured global courtesy.* This year we decided to test people’s honesty, sending reporters to the most populous cities in 32 countries to leave a total of 960 mid-priced cellphones in busy public places.

We observed the phones from a distance, called them and waited to see if anyone would answer and return them, call us later on numbers we had programmed into the directories or keep the phones for themselves; after all, they were tempting, brand new phones with SIM cards that would allow people to use the phones if they kept them.

We then ranked each city’s honesty according to how many phones we got back. This was not a scientific study but a snapshot of how ordinary people behave when unexpectedly confronted by the choice: Do I try to give it back or do I keep it for myself? Here’s what we found.

The honest citizens of Toronto returned an impressive 28 out of the 30 phones left in that city, coming a close second in our global rankings to Ljubljana, Slovenia. The residents of this small European city (population 267,000) returned all but one of the phones left there.

“If you can help somebody out, why not?” said 29-year-old Toronto insurance broker Ryan Demchuk, who returned a phone found close to TD Bank in an underground concourse. Demchuk echoed the sentiments of many of the people we spoke to in Canada’s most populous city (with 5.4 million). “Integrity in this city is exceptional,” said Demchuk. “I lost my wallet and got it back, and I returned two wallets in a week.”

Seoul, South Korea, was third in our rankings, followed by Stockholm, Sweden, where, for people we spoke to, doing the right thing was part of everyday working life.

Observed railway ticket inspector Lotta Mossige-Norheim, who found our phone on a shopping street and handed it back: “I’m always calling people who’ve left a handset on my train.”

There was surprise in some quarters when New York finished top of our global courtesy ratings last year, but New Yorkers proved it was no flash in the pan by tying for fifth place this year with the Indian city of Mumbai, and Manila in the Philippines. In each of these cities, 24 of the 30 phones were handed back.

Initially, New York technology worker Derrick Wolf, 25, nudged our phone nervously with his foot by a Central Park fountain before picking it up and speaking to us. “I was hoping it wasn’t a bomb,” he told us. “Security fears might stop some New Yorkers picking up a strange mobile, but most are pretty honest.”

At the bottom of the rankings, Malaysia’s capital, Kuala Lumpur, and Hong Kong tied—with only 13 of our 30 phones returned.

In Times Square on Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay, a security guard picked up our phone, asked a group of smokers if it was theirs, then wrapped it in a piece of paper. When approached by our reporter, he stammered, “What phone? I didn’t see any phone. If you’ve mislaid something, report it to lost and found,” while clearly gripping the cell tightly in his hand.

Indeed, it appears you can’t always trust a man in uniform, as he was one of six shopping-centre security guards around the world—in cities from Buenos Aires to Sydney—whom our reporters observed pocketing phones.

In Bucharest, Romania—joint bottom with Amsterdam in the European rankings, with 16 phones unreturned—a 30-something man in a blue sweater was particularly keen to keep a phone we left in a grocery cart. He hung up as our reporter tried to call him, then ran off to his Skoda car, slammed down the accelerator and screeched out of the parking lot. Apparently it takes a higher power to encourage honesty in the Romanian capital. Stanciu Vica, 68, was one of several people who mentioned religion when explaining why they helped us. “My dear, how could I take something that wasn’t rightfully mine?” she asked. “God would turn me to stone.”

Wealth was no guarantee of honesty. In prosperous New Zealand, a smartly dressed woman in her 50s grabbed a “lost” phone from a ledge in front of upscale Auckland department store Smith and Caughey’s, bolted down the street and never tried to contact our reporter. By contrast, a young Brazilian woman, who looked almost destitute and had three young children in tow, handed back a cell she picked up in a São Paulo park. “I may not be rich,” she said, “but my children will know the value of honesty.”

Not everyone was quite so concerned to make a good impression on their children, however. In Amsterdam, a Dutch boy of about ten implored his parents to let him keep a phone he’d found on the Kalverstraat. They seemed of two minds, but after he’d given his mother a kiss on the cheek and a big smile, they gave in.

All over the world, the most common reason people gave for returning our phones was that they, too, had once lost an item of value and had the good fortune to have it returned.

When our reporters left a phone on a bench in Toronto’s Eglinton Square, Mike Shea answered it when it rang and, despite being in a rush, agreed to meet our female reporter at the mall’s security desk.

The 44-year-old Shea told us that he’d lost both his cellphone and his wallet in the past, and both had been returned to him. “I had no hesitation in answering, because it’s happened to me. In general, people in Toronto are really helpful.” And honest, it seems, unlike some Helsinki citizens.

“I’ve had cars stolen three times, and even the laundry from the cellar was taken,” said Kristiina Laakso, 51, who came to our aid in the Finnish capital.

So, how did the world perform in our honesty test? Globally, 654 out of 960 phones—that’s a heartening 68 percent—were returned to us. “Despite what the media tell us, crime is not the norm,” says University of California psychologist Paul Ekman, author of Emotions Revealed and an expert on deception. “People want to trust and be trusted.”

Ferenc Kozma wouldn’t argue with that. The 52-year-old Hungarian, who used to work as a builder, has been homeless for six years, yet it never occurred to him to keep the phone he found on a Budapest train platform. “You find things and you lose things,” said Kozma. “But you never lose your honesty.”


THE PHONES WE GOT BACK, CITY BY CITY

Rank City Country Phones Recovered
(out of 30)


1=Ljubljana Slovenia29

2=Toronto Canada 28

3=Seoul South Korea 27

4=Stockholm Sweden 26

5 = Mumbai India24
Manila Philippines 24
New York USA 24

8=Helsinki Finland 23
Budapest Hungary 23
Warsaw Poland 23
Prague Czech Republic 23
Auckland New Zealand23
Zagreb Croatia 23

14=São Paulo Brazil21
Paris France21
Berlin Germany 21
Bangkok Thailand 21

18=Milan Italy 20
Mexico City Mexico 20
Zurich Switzerland 20

21=Sydney Australia 19
London UK 19

23=Madrid Spain18

24=Moscow Russia17

25=Singapore Singapore 16
Buenos Aires Argentina 16
Taipei Taiwan 16

28=Lisbon Portugal15

29=Amsterdam Netherlands 14
Bucharest Romania 14

31=Hong Kong China 13
Kuala Lumpur Malaysia13

http://www.readersdigest.ca/mag/2007/08/cellphone_article.php

alex_lz2005 : 2007-07-25#2
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

来看看。。。

bbjj : 2007-07-25#3
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

发现中国人多的地方收回的电话少,香港台湾新加坡马来西亚,反而印度都比这些地方好,这值得每个中国人反省一下,假如这个测试放在国内,能收回多少台呢?

dewlily : 2007-07-25#4
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

总的感觉,欧洲还是文明一些。

crystal_clear : 2007-07-27#5
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

第一名(找回手机29个)的是南斯拉夫小城市卢布尔雅那, 人口只有267,000; 第二名的多伦多(找回手机28个)人口是5.4 million; 第三名的是韩国的汉城(找回手机27个)。

crystal_clear : 2007-07-27#6
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

纽约排第五可能有冤情。 被采访的纽约人Derrick Wolf说他听到地上的手机响担心是炸弹。。。

去年读者文摘做的全球城市调查“How polite are we”纽约第一, 多伦多第三。

crystal_clear : 2007-07-27#7
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

第一名(找回手机29个)的是南斯拉夫小城市卢布尔雅那, 人口只有267,000; 第二名的多伦多(找回手机28个)人口是5.4 million; 第三名的是韩国的汉城(找回手机27个)。
感觉这里的韩国人绝大多数很厚道~

紅袖添香不讀書 : 2007-07-27#8
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

感觉这里的韩国人绝大多数很厚道~


韩国人夜郎自大的思想比较滑稽,但是人的素质还凑合,特别是最近的年轻人,都挺好。

crystal_clear : 2007-07-28#9
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

韩国人夜郎自大的思想比较滑稽,但是人的素质还凑合,特别是最近的年轻人,都挺好。
“韩国人夜郎自大的思想”-- 怎么讲?

crystal_clear : 2007-07-28#10
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

香港以(找回13个手机)垫底。 一个身穿制服的保安手里抓着手机, 嘴里说“什么手机?我没看见手机。你去失物招领处找。”

紅袖添香不讀書 : 2007-07-28#11
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

“韩国人夜郎自大的思想”-- 怎么讲?

看看南北韩的历史吧,比中国的都邪乎,都是万年大历史,韩国人创造了地球和人类文明。:wdb20:

而且朝鲜本来是个弱小民族,却喜欢搞种族主义,说朝鲜人是最优秀的民族,相当排外,韩国人就出于这种思维,把汉城的拆那汤给平了。

本来朝鲜半岛就是条走廊,大陆国家出海要经过,海洋国家登陆也要经过。所以,朝鲜半岛被老毛子,中国,日本,搞的很少有安宁的日子,很惨。所以他们这种心态也不难理解。

跑题了。抱歉。

crystal_clear : 2007-07-28#12
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

看看南北韩的历史吧,比中国的都邪乎,都是万年大历史,韩国人创造了地球和人类文明。:wdb20:
还真没有读过韩国历史书, 不过现在的韩国是一个基督化程度很高的国家, 偶在这里见过的韩国人很踏实正直。

紅袖添香不讀書 : 2007-07-28#13
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

还真没有读过韩国历史书, 不过现在的韩国是一个基督化程度很高的国家, 偶在这里见过的韩国人很踏实正直。

你信教就觉得韩国好,可是韩国有很多著名的邪教,都自称是基督,有的势力很大。具体的我就不说了。

我基本同意你对韩国人的评价,我也是接触了一些韩国小孩,觉得的确素质说得过去。但是,韩国文化我是很不以为然的。

crystal_clear : 2007-07-28#14
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

你信教就觉得韩国好,可是韩国有很多著名的邪教,都自称是基督,有的势力很大。具体的我就不说了。

我基本同意你对韩国人的评价,我也是接触了一些韩国小孩,觉得的确素质说得过去。但是,韩国文化我是很不以为然的。
偶信主以前就接触过韩国人(基督徒), 觉得他们不一样。后来偶信主了, 也认识了更多的韩国人, 基督徒与非基督徒都有, 觉得信主的韩国人与不信住的韩国人不一样。

韩国今天的经济腾飞与中国不同之处在于, 他们的社会道德社会风气没有象中国一样沦丧。韩国人有一种精神, 可以从他们的足球队身上体现出来。

沿路美景 : 2007-07-30#15
回复: How Honest Are We? -- 多伦多排名世界诚信第二

好文,学习了!