[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

All of this just solidifies, in my mind and those who can think critically outside of a herd mentality, that this is fabrication. The accusations made didn't happen in a family behind closed doors, they happened out in the open. Do we think that the LTT facilities don't have cameras covering every square inch? Get with it. They record everything, I'm sure. This person didn't go to the police because there probably isn't anything to go to the police about.

Unless we're all to believe that everything that happened was in the one place where cameras never went, every single time? That none of it occurred on any kind of technology that would or could be audited, right?

Use your brain brochacho. These are the fabrications of someone who is mentally unstable. Not of a victim. Unless... a victim of their own mind.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

It absolutely matters. The employee chose to take accusations public, rather than following appropriate channels of either the corporate HR or legal authorities. I don't know how it works up there in Canada, but these accusations get taken seriously in the U.S.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

Me too, though I'm not female. I've seen some of my female friends treated poorly - by clients, though, never my org. I just don't think it happened to this person. The fact that, well, they'll share the whole story to the world right now - but never told anyone else while it was occurring? Seems sketch. Doesn't jive.

That whole notion of, "I was embarrassed and couldn't tell anyone" to suddenly pronouncing accusations to the whole world over social media; as opposed to the legal authorities... seems damned sketchy to me.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

Yeah. It just seems far too fabricated. For someone who is willing to share their life on social media, it seems very strange that they wouldn't have told a single person they know about it. Then, all of a sudden, other accusations arise and - oh yeah, look at all the things that happened to me! Too many things to never have been mentioned.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 year ago

Well said. I'm not sure I believe this former employee either. I read the "reasons they left," and it's simply too unbelievable. It sounds like more of a personal cry for help than a legitimate accusation. The more I read, the more buzzwords for media I saw. And every community is reacting as those buzzwords intend.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 year ago

Yeah, spot on. This is just stupid and dangerous. And apparently for folks who don't understand gravity.

As you said, hot oil... dripping down a spoon handle.... directly towards another flame.....

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 year ago

The first line, "Two and a half years ago, Americans of good conscience... "

I'm sure this won't be a biased article.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 42 points 1 year ago

They’ve show their true colours.

For me it was the CEO's comments.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

I'm a dev / data engineer. Often I hear the argument of, "but Android allows you to...."

I don't want to. Doesn't matter what the end of the sentence is, I don't want to. I love tinkering, but not with my phone. :D

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

Loved that game. There was a flash version, too, but I can't recall the name. I used to play both at the same time as Motherload. What a great soundtrack lol

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

Most first world countries will issue boil warnings when there may be a necessary reason. Ie) water main work or other contamination.

Iceland should be fine. In fact, I think they have some of the cleanest water around.

[-] theroz@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 year ago

I think that the mystery is cause for the news coverage, along with the unique aspect of the sub. I'd like to think that a missing submarine of migrants would get the same attention but.... not sure.

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theroz

joined 1 year ago