The introduction rationale of the Foreign Agents Registration Act of
1938, which aims to disclose activities carried out by individuals or entities
acting on behalf of foreign interests, aligns with my perspective on how the
social system should operate. I believe in recognizing and acknowledging the instincts
of human self-interest, and that the social system must be constructed by
acknowledging these human instincts to transform various behaviors and customs
currently existing in the negative realm to the positive realm. This journal
will bind the gap between FARA, the social system, and human nature. It aims to
connect these three elements that were not previously explored in past papers
or journals. The study primarily focuses on societal advancement by examining
the introduction rationale of the FARA system, deepening into both the
motivations and psychological factors driving its implementation, while
connecting this rationale to a shift in leadership perspectives to abandon
utopian ideas about humanity and acknowledging human instincts, moving towards
a healthier society.
References
[1]
Giaretto, L. (2019). The Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme Act: What’s It about?
[2]
MIT Sloan (2023). Analyzing the Dynamics of Legacy Preferences in College Admissions: Institute for Work and Employment Research. https://mitsloan.mit.edu/centers-initiatives/institute-work-and-employment-research/analyzing-dynamics-legacy-preferences-college-admissions
[3]
Ng, Y. F., & Draffen, C. (2020). Foreign Agent Registration Schemes in Australia and the United States: The Scope, Risks and Limitations of Transparency. The University of New South Wales Law Journal, 43, 1101-1136. https://doi.org/10.53637/PFTH6729
[4]
O’Hara, F. R. (1965). The Foreign Agents Registration Act—The Spotlight of Pitiless Publicity. Villanova Law Review, 10, 435-456.
[5]
Rose, D. C. (2000). Teams, Firms, and the Evolution of Profit-Seeking Behavior. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.224438
[6]
Sari, D. P., Triyuwono, I., Rosidi, & Kamayanti, A. (2015). Human’s Behavior towards Income in the Perspective of Mother Teresa. Procedia—Social and Behavioral Sciences, 211, 977-983. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2015.11.130
[7]
Velasco, J. C. (2020). You Are Canceled: Virtual Collective Consciousness and the Emergence of Cancel Culture as Ideological Purging. Rupkatha Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities, 12, 1-7. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v12n5.rioc1s21n2