Only if you view rules as pointless adversaries to be beaten. But often rules exist for good reasons to keep people safe and keep interactions fair and trustworthy.
Bending rules isn't something that you should take inherent pride in, and personally, it always lowers my opinion of such people.
Self dealing is very much breaking the rules. Sure, maybe the powers that be let it slide, but it is not playing fair.
Edit: in fact, when the musical chairs stopped and the IPO failed, there were lawsuits about the self dealing. So long as people were making money the board were willing to look the other way.
This is a lazy take on morality. Neumann enriched himself from wealthy, supposedly sophisticated investors. So sad. He took (not stole, took) from the rich (which they willingly handed over), gave to himself, and walks around free with no criminal prosecution to speak of.
We might disagree on what constitutes “bad people.”
How about the ”context” that those investors were investing in his company which had hundreds or thousands of employees who also had stakes in its financial health? And he stole the company’s money from those stakeholders and handed it over to himself personally?
How many degrees in Advanced Moral Gymnastics do you need to figure that one out?
We just disagree on morality and the subjectivity of truth and human opinion (see Søren Kierkegaard's philosophy writings for more on this), that's all, no gymnastics required.
Bending rules isn't something that you should take inherent pride in, and personally, it always lowers my opinion of such people.