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What's the difference between blackmail and extortion? | ||
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shu, Why not ask a lawyer? As I understand it, extortion is demanding money with menaces; if I were to hold a gun to your daughter's head and demand $1M or I'd shoot her, that would be extortion. Blackmail is demanding money with threats of revealing something incriminating against you; if I were to ask for $1M or I'd tell Kalleh about your affair with your secretary that would be blackmail. EDIT: Whoops! Kalleh, don't read this! Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Shu, it definitely wouldn't be worth $1M! Save the money for us, and we'll work it out! Shu and I were reading the newspaper together, and I read their description of an "extortion" that took place in Chicago. The headline, though, read, "Builder Pleads Guilty to Hospital Blackmail." Since they seemed to find the 2 words to be synonyms, I asked Shu what the difference was...thus the question. Here is what happened. According to Arnie's definition, it is "extortion" and the "blackmail" headline was wrong. "The head of a suburban construction business admitted Monday that he delivered an ultimatum last year to officials of Edward Hospital in Naperville: Hire his firm or have their plans to construct a hospital in Plainfield rejected by a state oversight board." Then..."On Monday, he pleaded guilty to one count of attempted extortion in connection with the Edward Hospital project." | |||
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Blackmail is a variety of extortion but not all extortion is blackmail. I'd agree that the headline used the word 'blackmail' wrongly. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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From the OED Online:
Tinman | |||
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