• @darthelmet
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    384 days ago

    I wish people wouldn’t just resign as a protest. Stay around and do your job terribly. Don’t make it easy for them.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      4 days ago

      The problem is that when you have a direct order to commit a crime, the choice is:

      • resign
      • be fired and escorted out a few minutes later
      • do the crime

      Being fired is a few minutes later isn’t preferable to resigning, though a few people have.

      Stick around and sabotage is something you can do when you’re not directly ordered to do something criminal.

        • @[email protected]OPM
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          114 days ago

          Tradition in the US is to resign. Last time we had a lot like this, Nixon wound up resigning because he didn’t think he had the support in Congress to avoid conviction when impeached.

          • @[email protected]
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            4 days ago

            oh boy do I have a tower in paris to sell you. people are going to have to learn how to say no if they want to get rid of trump lol.

            the whole point of these orders are to identify the people who have a back bone and get rid of them. following tradition is literally the worst stance to take in this situation.

          • @[email protected]
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            4 days ago

            Nixon wound up resigning because he didn’t think he had the support in Congress to avoid conviction when impeached.

            And this part, quite literally is how we got Fox news…

            Roger Ailes had said “if we had a friendly media then Nixon would never have had to resign.” Now they have their fox, the propaganda flows and keeps Republicans from ever having to face consequences. The lies cover their actions and they never face proper pressure. :(

      • @einlander
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        73 days ago

        Also being fired puts all your benefits at risk. Might as well resign and keep your pension then be fired “for cause” and potentially lose it.

    • @[email protected]
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      134 days ago

      That’s pretty much every conservative employee during a Democrat’s run at office.

      Resigning is stupid and what they want so they can replace them faster.

    • @[email protected]
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      53 days ago

      Do you mean as in civil dissobedience (so that the administration are forced to fire you or accept that you aren’t going along with facism) or as in sneak ops sucking at your job to slow things down?

      I like both ideas! I’m sure plenty do them as well, but maybe get less attention/coverage than high prifile resignations.

      • @darthelmet
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        23 days ago

        Mostly the 2nd one. I imagine just refusing openly as an individual will have about as much impact as just resigning, but if you can gum things up a bit? Maybe that adds up. I suppose another alternative is non-individualized refusal: a strike. Same theory as any strike applies: it’d be hard for them to fire all of us at once without shooting themselves in the foot. I suppose in either case though, this only really applies if the gov wants them actively doing something bad rather than just trying to gut the department.

    • venotic
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      34 days ago

      Some people who have dignity for themselves, would rather serve their position honorably and be mistaken because they’re human. They don’t want to do their job poorly that directly violates their own work ethic and the duty they have sworn to uphold.

      Resigning in this case is basically saying “I will not be told how to do my job because you don’t understand how it works and I will not let you use my job as a means to play political theater”.

      • @Sanctus
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        34 days ago

        “By opening up my position to embed more loyalists who will use it for political theater anyway”

  • @someguy3
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    4 days ago

    Couldn’t she investigate and find everything was perfectly fine?

    *

    Cheung, a long-time DOJ employee, had been asked to shepherd an investigation into an Environmental Protection Agency funding decision during the Biden administration and then use DOJ’s powers to freeze that funding.

    Looks like it had more to do with the second part.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      244 days ago

      She did. Per the article:

      While Bove’s office insisted that it had, citing a Project Veritas video, Cheung and others didn’t believe the evidence on hand was enough for a grand jury investigation, her letter and additional sources told CNN.

      She said after the pushback, the Justice Department instead wanted to freeze assets in a bank related to the Biden-era EPA funding.

      Project Veritas content is seriously compromised much of the time; it’s often undercover video which is selectively edited to produce something misleading. You can’t use it as evidence without getting the rest of the context.

      • @[email protected]
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        164 days ago

        They also went to jail for this shit. How they are still around is a testament to how moronic people are.