mox to News • 4 months agoUS Considers a Rare Antitrust Move: Breaking Up Googlewww.bloomberg.comexternal-linkmessage-square108fedilinkarrow-up1627arrow-down18file-text
arrow-up1619arrow-down1external-linkUS Considers a Rare Antitrust Move: Breaking Up Googlewww.bloomberg.commox to News • 4 months agomessage-square108fedilinkfile-text
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•4 months ago Nope, but he IS doing it without his help, so he’s not due any of the credit. He’s her boss and he appointed her, he does deserve credit for selecting her and sticking with her. Yes, SHE is kicking ass based on HER work and HER policy and enforcement choices, not his. And he’s her boss, so he deserves credit for hiring her and backing her.
minus-square@Viking_Hippielink0•4 months ago He’s her boss and he appointed her, he does deserve credit for selecting her and sticking with her. Other people selected her in spite of him and he relented and he’s refrained from firing someone without cause. Neither of those are achievements and just because he’s the boss doesn’t mean that he gets to take credit for HER work. And he’s her boss, so he deserves credit for hiring her Nope, see above. and backing her. Do you have any source on him actively backing her, beyond just not firing her without cause?
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink5•4 months ago any source on him actively backing her Yes, she’s his subordinate
minus-square@Viking_Hippielink-2•4 months agoThat’s not actively backing her. You have a very distorted view of the relationship between a boss and an employee. Hiring her for a job she’s qualified for on the advice of others and then not firing her is a passive lack of opposition at best, NOT active support.
He’s her boss and he appointed her, he does deserve credit for selecting her and sticking with her.
And he’s her boss, so he deserves credit for hiring her and backing her.
Other people selected her in spite of him and he relented and he’s refrained from firing someone without cause.
Neither of those are achievements and just because he’s the boss doesn’t mean that he gets to take credit for HER work.
Nope, see above.
Do you have any source on him actively backing her, beyond just not firing her without cause?
Yes, she’s his subordinate
That’s not actively backing her. You have a very distorted view of the relationship between a boss and an employee.
Hiring her for a job she’s qualified for on the advice of others and then not firing her is a passive lack of opposition at best, NOT active support.