Hercules56
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2013
- Messages
- 17,176
Hard to even keep focus on the number of moves you make with goal posts.
Unfortunately necessary since some folks want to play word games.
Hard to even keep focus on the number of moves you make with goal posts.
What is workplace violence?
Workplace violence is any act or threat of physical violence, harassment, intimidation, or other threatening disruptive behavior that occurs at the work site. It ranges from threats and verbal abuse to physical assaults and even homicide.
Unfortunately necessary since some folks want to play word games.
Unfortunately necessary since some folks want to play word games.
There is exactly one ‘folk’ playing word games.
I think Darat is making a good fist of it too, but there you go….
Using the wrong pronoun is not an act of physical violence and therefore can never justify a criminal charge of assault. There are no laws on the books that would allow such a thing.
....for now.
"I called my coworker a "jerk" and I was fired for engaging in workplace violence"
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"I called my coworker a "jerk" and I was fired for engaging in workplace violence"
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"I called my coworker a "jerk" and I was fired for engaging in workplace violence"
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"I called my coworker a "jerk" and I was fired for engaging in workplace violence"
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Unfortunately necessary since some folks want to play word games.
I couldn't see the text you quoted in the link. Is it real or are you making up quotes so you can be offended by them?
Be fair. You’re the one redefining the word, thereby playing the word games. CU Boulder was clearly using the non-physical form of the word. Most people here understood it as the non-physical form of the word. You’re the one conflating it and swapping definitions.
There is no shame in not knowing something. The problem comes when it is shown to someone and they reject it despite the evidence.
Not gonna play word games, sorry.
Sounds right to me.
Now obviously every situation is different but in general terms - who wants to work with an actually demonstrated jerk? Certainly in the UK calling your colleague a jerk once (outside of camaraderie/humour/so on) would generally not be grounds for being sacked for gross misconduct but probably subject to some disciplinary action. Keep doing it and you will - eventually - be sacked for "calling my coworker a jerk". Equally certainly in the UK misgendering your colleague once (outside of camaraderie/humour/so on) would generally not be grounds for being sacked for gross misconduct but probably subject to some disciplinary action. Keep doing it and you will - eventually - be sacked for "misgendering my coworker".
I would be very surprised if it was much different in most countries.
It might be much different in some workplaces here. I worked 40 years for the federal government. We had codes of conduct, a unionized work force, and fairly detailed conditions for termination. In that environment, such behavior would follow the path you describe.
In much of the US (perhaps most), there are no real employment contracts, or at least when they exist they describe hours work and amount paid and not much else. In those jobs, it is the sole judgment of the employer that decides if you continue to work. One can be fired for calling a co-worker a jerk. One can be fired for complaining about a co-worker calling them a jerk.
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What is workplace violence?
Workplace violence is any act or threat of physical violence, harassment, intimidation, or other threatening disruptive behavior that occurs at the work site. It ranges from threats and verbal abuse to physical assaults and even homicide"
That's true, but with the caveat that making the employer making the wrong choice carries a substantial risk of being sued. At-will employment makes illegally firing people pretty easy, and often workers do not know or are not willing to exercise their rights, but the employer siding with an employee creating a hostile work environment rather than the victim is a great way to lose a large amount of money.