I wasn't saying it makes it okay, I really just meant that the outrage seems to be as much about surprise when it doesn't seem all that surprising given how long the rules and subsequent culture has been allowed to develop: institutional corruption is usually more insidious because it gathers a sort of independent momentum of its own that's hard to tackle individually, (and the scale and length of time is undoubtedly what this suggests). I also wanted to point out, a) most people (seem to) have a pretty high regard for their own morals when they've never been confronted with that sort of temptation, (one person I know for example was mouthing off about how awful it was until I reminded him about how he used to use all my used bus/taxi receipts when he was doing his tax returns each year. He was poor at the time but he was also fiddling the system - plus it was public money, b) (as a corollary) the ubiquity of guilt seems more a condemnation of people rather than MP's per se - unless you happen to think they're a really, really weird group of people, (actually, I've met a couple of politicians so even I'm not sure I agree with that statement). Believe it or not, if you've ever nicked post-it notes, toilet rolls, pens, rulers, calculators, cuddly toys, read the newspaper on the lav at work, phoned in sick when you really had a hangover, taken 3 hours for lunch or spent several hours posting on internet blogs when you should be working...you're stealing - in one way or another. It is also an (accepted) system of behaviour in most places of work. You can argue about the scale but it doesn't make it not true. Anyway, still vote on Thursday please - the principle should always rule over the candidates, however depressing that may sometimes seem.