If takes a thief to catch a thief.

◇ You know who I am. (Humor)
A letter arrived as the newlyweds were busy decorating their new home soon after they got married.
"There's a lot of work. Do you know who I am?Along with the passage, there were two tickets to the latest box office number one.
The couple thought it was sent by a close friend and went to the cinema.
When I came back home after watching the movie, the thief cleaned my house. In the empty room the following note was placed on the table.
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"You know who I am?"
A holiday is a time for someone to rest or go home, but it is also a time for someone to do something illegal. You can prevent regret by looking around again before you fix the barn after the cow is lost. Since prevention is the best way, let's check once more before we leave. Did he leave already? 
◇ The five virtues of a thief (humor)
Identifying and achieving valuable targets is called succes.
The first thing you do when you steal is called a brave
It is called righteous (righteousness) that comes out after sending out a colleague. 
And deciding whether to move forward or not is called "knowledge"
Equal division is called benevolence.
This is called the fifth virtue of a thief, and it is the greatest thief. 


U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt even came up with creative ideas, likening thieves It sounds reasonable. Like the movie "Catch  me if You Can."

In 1934, the U.S. Franklin Roosevelt named financeman Joseph Kennedy as the new chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Reformists vehemently opposed it. Even Jim Palli, a close aide to Roosevelt and a strong supporter of the Democratic Party, protested, recalling that Joseph Kennedy’s wealth-building process was immoral.
Roosevelt neither shook nor withdrew his nomination. There was a good reason for putting Kennedy in charge of Wall Street.
Roosevelt followed through on his intention. 
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"We need to appoint a thief to catch a thief."
◇ 盜名不如盜貨
Stealing and stealing honor is worse than stealing money. - Soonja.
There is a saying in mind that, "To preserve one's life, one must reduce one's greed, and to preserve one's body, one must avoid honor." 

Because excessive greed for money threatens one's own life, and an excessive obsession with honor ruins one's body.
 
* He who smiles when he is hit by a thief has stolen something from the thief. 
- Shakespeare.
* A thief thinks everyone steals
- Danish proverb

#thief

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