Comment Re:IAAL, imagining a deposition... (Score 1) 1127
So, was I just imagining this sort of thing would make a lawyer salivate, or is that actually what is happening?
So, was I just imagining this sort of thing would make a lawyer salivate, or is that actually what is happening?
Well, you can hope to have moved on to a new job by the time the eventual lawsuit(s) hit the news.
Somewhere, a labor law attorney is locking and loading his briefcase...
My thoughts exactly...
M4n, your signature compels me to post this link: http://www.cracked.com/funny-5691-vuvuzelas/
I've done tech support for an attorney who works in employment issues, and he loves finding comments like yours in emails during the discovery phase. It's entertaining to watch a middle-aged man jump out of his chair to dance around, fist pump and yell "Cha-ching!"
I go to work to get paid for what I do, not to relive the glory days of the college fraternity that I never joined.
Your post points out why (in a pragmatic way) more women are needed in management: it makes it hard for bad female employees to claim sexist treatment when they are justifiably written up or otherwise disciplined (or, "counselled", as some HR departments like to say).
Personal anecdote (my cool story, bro): At a previous job of mine, I had the experience of a new manager coming in after I had been there for a year. She was the first female manager for that unit, and she was tough. A compliment from her for good work consisted of a quick nod, but screwing up got you chewed out. It was a bit of an adjustment for me from my previous manager, but since I did a decent enough job, I didn't have much trouble. The substandard programmer who skated by under the previous manager because she was hypersensitive to criticism and he was afraid of a lawsuit was gone. Quickly. About a week after that, the guy who capitalized on having gone to the same college as the previous manager instead of debugging code was gone, too. The order was critical, it turned out. It was hard for the guy to claim sexism when the employee fired before him was female.
About the "previous job" part: When the project I was working on was completed, and the pink slips started landing, the new manager gave me a glowing letter of recommendation. She wasn't effusive with praise in the normal course of operations, but she was efficient and appreciated employees that generated minimal drama. That showed in the letter.
An excellent example of the mindset that gets escorted out of the building, clutching at pink slip and a cardboard box full of its possessions, sputtering, "W-what did I do?"
When you have 200 people standing in line waiting to get on an airplane, Voight-Kampf'ing everyone is a non-starter.
And al-Qaeda doesn't even accept replicants as members...
Somehow, I'm picturing the eye builder from Bladerunner when I think about reverse-engineered irises.
I guess someone wants us to forget Indiana Jones 4.
Mother of God... it all makes such horrible, horrible sense now...
I expect many breakings of the fourth wall...
Somebody please mod this up. JLU was surprisingly excellent.
I wouldn't mind a Question television series if AMC produced it at the same level of quality as Breaking Bad or Mad Men.
The program, called Viral Peace, seeks to occupy the virtual space that extremists fill, one thread or Twitter exchange at a time. Shahed Amanullah, a senior technology adviser to the State Department and Viral Peace’s creator, tells Danger Room he wants to use “logic, humor, satire, [and] religious arguments, not just to confront [extremists], but to undermine and demoralize them.” Think of it as strategic trolling, in pursuit of geopolitical pwnage.
So does this mean that I'm promoting peace when I post YouTube comments?
The hardest part of climbing the ladder of success is getting through the crowd at the bottom.