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handoflixue 2 hours ago [-]
Sorry, three employees had a talk with HR?
That's it?
That's the whole story?
No one was fired? No laws were broken?
I'm not one to give HR the benefit of the doubt, but it is actually quite reasonable for them to find out about something like this and call people in to make sure they're aware of the rules around stuff like "don't represent your personal stance as an official Amazon stance".
And, surprise, if they represent themselves as Amazon, they CAN actually be fired, so it would be perfectly truthful to say "HR said they can be terminated" and also "HR did absolutely nothing illegal"
Traubenfuchs 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
CrimsonRain 3 hours ago [-]
And the employers should have the backbone to resign if they don't agree with the direction of the company. Bunch of clowns.
voakbasda 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah, I am genuinely confused how anyone could think otherwise.
xyzsparetimexyz 2 hours ago [-]
Even when it's illegal to do so?
Traubenfuchs 1 hours ago [-]
As shareholder, I trust Amazon leadership and their legal counsel to make the right choice for shareholder value. Whether what they do is illegal or not does not matter to me. Short term legal costs and backlash is probably favorable to letting the actively disengaged employee mindset grow.
watwut 3 hours ago [-]
Absolutely not. There are literal law protecting employees in such situations. Sensible companies allow people use their lawful speech and be active in local politics.
Traubenfuchs 1 hours ago [-]
> Sensible companies
What's sensible? How do you measure it? I was only talking about shareholder value. At scale, the costs of breaking laws are business expenses.
mbmbn 2 hours ago [-]
I’m not sure about the law protecting them or not, but it’s deeply hypocritical from their part.
It’s just people used to virtue signaling that aren’t willing to pay any price, no matter how small, for what they defend. They really think they are up to something when all they do is speak and “look good”.
If they think their company is doing something really problematic, then resign.
watwut 32 minutes ago [-]
Nah, there is nothing hypocritical about it. And complains about virtue signaling are usually just people disagreeing but not wanting to say it out loud. There is nothing wrong with virtue signaling anyway. It is certainly better then "vice signaling", "cynism signaling" and "look how smart I am that I dont care signaling".
> that aren’t willing to pay any price, no matter how small, for what they defend.
And there is absolutely nothing wrong with not wanting others to harm you. It is entirely absolutely ok to avoiding unnecessary harm to you. There is no virtue in allowing others to mistreat you.
> If they think their company is doing something really problematic, then resign.
People who try to create change are better then those who passively resign staying silent. You don't have to become jobless before you push for legislation that limits what companies have to do.
You are just trying to create rules that will silence and punish people you disagree with. That is weak.
That's it?
That's the whole story?
No one was fired? No laws were broken?
I'm not one to give HR the benefit of the doubt, but it is actually quite reasonable for them to find out about something like this and call people in to make sure they're aware of the rules around stuff like "don't represent your personal stance as an official Amazon stance".
And, surprise, if they represent themselves as Amazon, they CAN actually be fired, so it would be perfectly truthful to say "HR said they can be terminated" and also "HR did absolutely nothing illegal"
What's sensible? How do you measure it? I was only talking about shareholder value. At scale, the costs of breaking laws are business expenses.
It’s just people used to virtue signaling that aren’t willing to pay any price, no matter how small, for what they defend. They really think they are up to something when all they do is speak and “look good”.
If they think their company is doing something really problematic, then resign.
> that aren’t willing to pay any price, no matter how small, for what they defend.
And there is absolutely nothing wrong with not wanting others to harm you. It is entirely absolutely ok to avoiding unnecessary harm to you. There is no virtue in allowing others to mistreat you.
> If they think their company is doing something really problematic, then resign.
People who try to create change are better then those who passively resign staying silent. You don't have to become jobless before you push for legislation that limits what companies have to do.
You are just trying to create rules that will silence and punish people you disagree with. That is weak.