32 upvotes, 5 direct replies (showing 5)
There's also a perception out there that Reddit's Management (not the day-to-day Admins exactly) aren't good people.
That's not a perception, it's the reality. Reddit's management are not good people. There's simply no reasonable debate to be had about that.
A good management would never have fired that girl like that. They would have detected that they had a problem, sought to resolve it, or else then planned for a smooth transition by introducing another employee. They didn't do that. Fuck it, they fired her. Why? Because she had ethical concerns. So they just fucking tossed her in a bin with zero planning or forethought. Those are the actions of an entitled asshole, not a competent managerial team.
And you know what, that's sad. Good people are not that hard to find. Assholes are a dime a dozen. And Reddit is run by a whole bunch of assholes.
Comment by Binky216 at 06/07/2015 at 22:31 UTC
10 upvotes, 1 direct replies
Keep in mind, none of us are really on the inside of this issue. By all accounts, it sounds like there's an issue here. How would we REALLY know from our position.
Comment by thatnameagain at 06/07/2015 at 22:29 UTC
7 upvotes, 3 direct replies
Why? Because she had ethical concerns.
What were these concerns? Where were they mentioned?
Comment by X_Irradiance at 06/07/2015 at 22:24 UTC
3 upvotes, 0 direct replies
Definitely. I've seen entitled assholes do this very thing at companies I've worked at.
Comment by TPHRyan at 06/07/2015 at 23:49 UTC
1 upvotes, 2 direct replies
Fuck it, they fired her. Why? Because she had ethical concerns.
Source?
Comment by Binky216 at 07/07/2015 at 00:41 UTC
0 upvotes, 1 direct replies
I can't confirm that. We're outside the bubble. I don't KNOW these people, I've never seen these people or talked to these people. I know that the public PERCEPTION of these people is currently pretty bad and that perception can ruin a company's reputation just as bad as facts.