- Scandal
A scandal is a widely
public ized incident that involvesallegation s of wrongdoing, disgrace, or moral outrage. A scandal may be based onreality , the product of false allegations, or a mixture of both.Some scandals are broken by
whistleblower s who reveal wrongdoing withinorganization s or groups, most notablyDeep Throat (William Mark Felt) during the 1970s Watergate scandal that involved PresidentRichard Nixon . Falsely alleged scandals can lead towitch-hunt s against the innocent. Sometimes an attempt to cover up a scandal ignites a greater scandal when the cover-up fails. Classes of scandals include:
*Political scandals
*Sex scandals
*Academic scandals
*Sport ing scandals (especiallyOlympic Games scandals)Western world The
United States in the 1950s was swept by a wave ofgame show scandals. Another major type of scandal is a corporate, especially those that involve accounting. A wave of such scandals swept American companies in 2002. Nineteenth-centuryWestern society 's SevenSocial Scandals werefraud ,bankruptcy , unwedpregnancy ,adultery ,homosexuality ,divorce , andillegitimacy .Fact|date=March 2008Dubious|date=March 2008 In the United States, scandals are often referred to with a -gate suffix, particularly political .List of scandals
*Corporate scandals
*Journalistic scandal s
*Roman Catholicsexual abuse cases
*List of Christian evangelist scandals
*List of scandals with "-gate" suffix
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