- Change Starts Now
The Movement is Growing
We’re building something bold in Florida’s 25th. Here you’ll find the latest news, stories from the trail, and the momentum behind Michael Carbonara’s fight for freedom, prosperity, and safety.
What are the 4 corporate social responsibilities?
Carroll’s four-part model—economic, legal, ethical and philanthropic—remains the simplest useful map for corporate responsibility. This piece shows how to move from those categories to concrete, auditable KPIs, how to map them to GRI/ISSB/CSRD, and how to operationalize measurement so your CSR claims stand up to scrutiny. 1. Carroll’s four CSR layers are economic, legal, ethical and philanthropic—use one or
What are examples of doing the right thing?
This guide gathers practical examples of doing the right thing in everyday life, the workplace, and business—plus a concise R-R-C-A-R decision framework, three short case studies, and checklists leaders can use immediately to make ethics visible and verifiable. 1. Returning a lost item or reporting a safety concern are simple examples of doing the right thing that build community
What does the Bible say about doing the right thing? A Practical, Relationship-Centered Guide
This article explores what the Bible teaches about "doing the right thing." It explains Scripture’s relational ethic—love God, love neighbor—and translates biblical principles into practical habits, civic responsibilities, and faithful routines you can begin today. 1. Micah 6:8—"do justice, love mercy, walk humbly"—is the Bible’s compact summary of public and private morality. 2. The Good Samaritan (Luke 10) reframes
What is a word for someone doing the right thing? — Clear choices and when to use them
Choosing the right adjective for someone who "did the right thing" changes how readers interpret motive, scope, and tone. This guide explains six common options—virtuous, conscientious, principled, ethical, altruistic, and righteous—shows when each fits, and gives quick examples you can reuse. 1. The term "conscientious" is ideal for workplace praise—use it to highlight reliability and careful follow-through. 2. "Altruistic"