I heard on the news about a cemetery that was defrauding people. What they did was to dig up the plots, take away the corpse, and then sell the same plots to other customers.
Some people, to deal with this issue, suggested better licensing standards. This makes me think, does having better licensing standards solve the problem of bad ethics? If there are better licensing standards, would the management of this cemetery not stop their deception? Some people seem to think so. A corollary to this way of thinking is to say that better educated people have better ethics. Basically, the thinking is that education makes for better character.
If education (or being paid more for that matter) makes for better ethics, why then do some well-educated people commit fraud? It seems to be in the nature of human beings to try to make things work to his advantage. It does not matter whether a person is well-educated or well-paid. Some are just bolder in taking advantage of others, just like the owners of this cemetery were.
The state cannot control people's hearts. The state can only attempt to regulate people's actions, giving positive and negative consequences.
Scriptures say that "The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?" (Jeremiah 17:9). Education or having money does not fix the heart. Do the management of that cemetery really need tougher licensing standards to know that what they are doing is wrong? Education and money does not fix the heart problem, and may even make people better at being deceitful. The solution to the heart problem is a supernatural solution. God has to take away the heart of stone and change it into a heart of flesh (Ezekiel 11:19).