Gosh, darn it do be tricky to articulate though. I’ll give you that.

    • @alphanerd4OP
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      301 month ago

      Hard Disagree.

      You should scrutinize wage theft.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        When you send the email to ask about the error and they send you this clearly incorrect calculation, you are scrutinizing wage theft. Clearly a mistake.

          • @Stovetop
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            1 month ago

            What?

            What does this have to do with left or right? This is just plain and simple wage theft, which should never have occurred in the first place if the business was competent. They’re not, apparently, and it makes one wonder what other critical calculations they must be bullshitting.

            • @[email protected]
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              -41 month ago

              Even competent businesses are made up of humans who make mistakes. This is a very dumb way to steal wages. Assuming this entire situation is even real, this looks like the HR person isn’t very good at math. Accounting could have catched it, but at the same time many businesses have almost no guardrails or proper procedures for this kind of stuff, especially smaller more traditional ones. Not out of malice, but because resistance to change.

            • @[email protected]
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              -111 month ago

              I was agreeing with Plebcouncilman. They did scrutinize. They got a response, they’re idiots. I have to assume they corrected it. If not, by all means, raise hell but how exactly do wages negate Hanlon’s razor?

      • @[email protected]
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        111 month ago

        This would be an exceedingly rare form of wage theft, and would require HR to be much smarter than the average HR

      • Lem Jukes
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        91 month ago

        Thats not what Hanlon’s razor is about. Hanlon’s razor just states that people are more likely to be stupid than cruel. You can scrutinize wage theft without immediately jumping to the conclusion that the hr worker is maliciously altering your paycheck for the companies gain.

    • hissing meerkat
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      151 month ago

      Weird, the employment law I’m familiar with goes to automatic triple damages for failing to pay any part of wages on the first day they are unpaid for any reason, almost as if the law there decided long ago that Hanlon’s Razor doesn’t apply to the situation because wage theft is the norm, not the mistaken exception.