for which he's likely to pay a fraction of what those asian dictatorships are paying MrE and the CVC.
Why Mateschitz was given this xtravagant present this very summer? Well, that's for you members to figure out.
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marcush. wrote:As I understand Daimlers Compliance and rules of conduct do not make a difference between acused ,prosecuted or convicted .I will source the relevant paperwork later on and try to put some light to this
Daimler Integrity Code wrote: We Stand for Fair Competition and Obey the Law.
We are committed to ensuring fair competition in our markets and to obeying applicable anti-trust and competition laws. We prohibit illegal agreements and coordinated behaviour that intends to or may limit competition. If we discover such agreements, we immediately terminate them and impose sanctions.
In our global activities and when opening up new markets, we are also required to obey further laws and regulations. These include:
–Foreign trade legislation, including export control regulations
-Tax and customs duty laws
–Money laundering laws
–Anti-terrorism laws
[...]
We Live by this Principle: We Do not Give or Take Bribes.
We do not do business at any cost. We only want to win contracts in a fair and legal manner. The Daimler Group does not tolerate unethical or corrupt behaviour by its employees or business partners and will take action against it. Decisions based on corruption are immoral, distort competition, harm the company’s assets and reputation and go against the common good.
We pay special attention to ethical behaviour in our contact with political parties, public authorities and their officials both at home and abroad. Under no conditions do we grant payments, favours or other monetary contributions to civil servants, public employees or employees of governmental organizations in order to win contracts or gain advantages for the Daimler Group or other individuals. We do not waiver, even when benefits are expected or ”common” for official duties. We also do not try to influence specific business dealings with private enterprises by making illegal payments.
In our business dealings, we always pay special attention to avoid even the mere appearance of an impropriety, such as an attempt to influence our business partners or customers.
The Daimler Group provides information and conducts regular audits to ensure corrupt behaviour is exposed, stopped and punished.
We want to use our market influence to lead the way in fighting corruption. We are convinced that fighting corruption strengthens our good reputation in the world and ensures us sustained economic success.
WhiteBlue wrote:I don't see "in dubio contra reo" somewhere in the code.
I'm personally convinced that Ecclestone is guilty as hell, but for the law he is not guilty until found so by the court. I can voice my opinion and I can appeal to CVC to suspend him immediately but Nobody can break legal contracts until a guilty verdict is passed.
Mercedes are in the championship with their team, their name and brand. They have no option to withdraw from the championship without risking a breach of contract. The price may be absolutely staggering even for them if they break their contract. The 100m to McLaren will look like loose change compared to what they are going to face in damage claims.
I believe there will be no action from Mercedes until legal facts are established. Words perhaps, but no action.
What a strange coincidence indeed?marcush. wrote: ...but rest assured this all is going to boil up all too soon and only the teams recent turnaround has helped to keep the flame smaller than expected.
So Bernie and co will hope for a very competitive Mercedes AMg team in the coming months but please not a championship ...as this would be a fitting scenario to stop there and then.
Very good thoughts marcush. I've suspected for awhile that Wolff and Lauda showing up had nothing more than to do than to have a succession plan in place should a Daimler exit be needed quickly. Since they bought up the majority of the Aabar shares combined, they likely will step in to buy the outstanding shares in MGP if needed. If that needs to happen, we'll likely see Wolff divest fully of his Williams shares that he continues to hold onto.marcush. wrote:WhiteBlue wrote:I don't see "in dubio contra reo" somewhere in the code.
I'm personally convinced that Ecclestone is guilty as hell, but for the law he is not guilty until found so by the court. I can voice my opinion and I can appeal to CVC to suspend him immediately but Nobody can break legal contracts until a guilty verdict is passed.
Mercedes are in the championship with their team, their name and brand. They have no option to withdraw from the championship without risking a breach of contract. The price may be absolutely staggering even for them if they break their contract. The 100m to McLaren will look like loose change compared to what they are going to face in damage claims.
I believe there will be no action from Mercedes until legal facts are established. Words perhaps, but no action.
Maybe it will cost 500mill ,i don´t think it does make a difference at all to Daimler.Read again .No contract or business is worth risking reputation as a clean business.
I believe putting Wolff and Lauda in placw has opened them a possibility to bail out in short time if necessary.They borrowed time when Zetsche got his reelection sorted this year but rest assured this all is going to boil up all too soon and only the teams recent turnaround has helped to keep the flame smaller than expected.
So Bernie and co will hope for a very competitive Mercedes AMg team in the coming months but please not a championship ...as this would be a fitting scenario to stop there and then.
I think it has to do with kudos among the uber-wealthy and beautiful crowd in the vip-area, while both Ferrari and MercedesGitanesBlondes wrote: ...
No, I think F1 needs to realize it only has longevity when privateers are involved...which to me is what makes Bernie's need for Mercedes rather head-scratching.
I think that goes for nearly every team. In fact the only teams that has properly survived F1 is Williams, Mclaren and Ferrari.GitanesBlondes wrote:I don't see what is so attractive about having works teams anyway, it never ends well no matter what.
If my memory serves me well, the policy during MrM's reign was initially to attract the big manufacturers, like Honda, Toyota,WhiteBlue wrote:It is an chicken and egg type problem. Do you have manufacturers come and go because the constructors and Bernie run unfriendly policies or do they run unfriendly policies to reduce the competition from manufacturers? I suspect the latter is correct.
Good points.xpensive wrote:I think it has to do with kudos among the uber-wealthy and beautiful crowd in the vip-area, while both Ferrari and MercedesGitanesBlondes wrote: ...
No, I think F1 needs to realize it only has longevity when privateers are involved...which to me is what makes Bernie's need for Mercedes rather head-scratching.
are associated with the good life in that arena, McLaren is not quite there yet and Red Bull is a soft-drink for the riff-raff.
If you look at where MrE finds investors for his races nowadays there's plenty of the former kind among the clientele,
riche nouveau if you wish, people who find it less than xciting to mingle with folks in Sauber- and Toro Rosso-wear.
The three-pointed star is hard-currency everywhere, from middle-east dictators to russian oligharcs and NJ-mobsters.