A friend notified me that one may for the first time receive a jail sentence in South Africa for fraudulently claiming qualifications one doesn't have. This is vital legislation. But here are some of the real situations I have come across in ministry:
• Qualifications may be nearly impossible to track down. For example, a doctor states a qualification, but her professional body refuses to provide the details. It's then a big world in which to find those details.OBSERVATION: As I posted this, I took the opportunity to check the second point. The attorney concerned had erased his statement from the Internet.
• There may be considerable obfuscation. For example, an attorney states that he is a member of "a medical team", but it's not the standard definition, rather a team of lawyers tasked with medical issues.
• Or one doesn't personally claim the qualification. For example, a bishop states that a priest has a qualification, but the university closed down and the priest will say nothing.
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