And straightway hereupon, arose the natural question of
cui bono? -- a question that tended even more than the waistcoat to fasten the terrible crime upon the young man.
'It was process of Evolution, I think, from Primal Necessity, but the fact remains in all the
cui bono. I am, oh, awfully fearful!
When I am presented with yet another conspiracy theory, the first question I ask is: '
Cui bono?', Latin for 'who benefits?' Another test I apply is Occam's Razor, a philosophical device conceived by an English friar, William of Ockham, in the 14th century.
In either case, "
cui bono " (to whom is it a benefit)?
Under the universal principle of
Cui Bono (who benefits), the Jubilee faction otherwise known as Team Kieleweke, which is opposed to the accession of Ruto to power, was quick to defend itself from the assassination talk, even though nobody accused them of being part of the plot.
If credibility is the issue, why not ask that lawyerly question "
cui bono" - who benefits?
Cui bono is most important whenever an incident like Thursday attacks on vessels in the Gulf of Oman occurs.
The investigative author, taking the judicial principle of
Cui Bono (who gains), unravels not only the motivations and the cover-up of the Indian government but also the multifaceted interests of international actors, Israel and the USA.
There is a Latin term in judicial parlance Qui Bono or
Cui Bono, which literally means 'as a benefit to whom'.
'
Cui bono, or who benefit if there are racial strife and ruins?
In these matters it is worth asking
cui bono? Certainly not the alleged perpetrators.
So, too, were questions of
cui bono flattened by the simple equivalence of value and mood: When a Finiliar celebrates, who has profited?