The roots of the case date back about two decades, to a period when the company, then known by the name France Télécom, was still part of the government's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. Once a state-run monopoly, the company sold off most of its shares and underwent a process of privatization in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
That process left its employees in an uncomfortable situation: still enjoying the strong employment protections of civil servants, but working for a management structure newly constrained by the marketplace and looking to shed costs to compete.
Even if a defense lawyer knows that their client is guilty and believes that they should be given a harsh sentence, that must not stop them from trying to get their client off with the lowest possible conviction or sentence. The — VagabondSpectre
Make up your mind, Frank: either you want to live in a compassionate society, and one where people are NOT seen as standardized production units that are interchangeable and removable without consequence, OR you can accept a society where employees are superfluous (we are not quite there yet), disposable, and a COST rather than an ASSET -- which is current practice. — Bitter Crank
I once heard that when workers unionize, they just get two asshole bosses instead of one since unionizers tend to be belligerent buttheads.
— frank
Did this pearl of wisdom fall out of your head when you last blew your nose? — Bitter Crank
We weren't talking about whether or not it's right. We were talking about whether it costs the taxpayers money. But since you brought it up, why would you say that being an ******* is wrong? — frank
It's a choice. As a society we choose what we will put up with. Why should potential "efficiency gains" outweigh every other consideration? You could get efficiency gains by forcing kids to work, extending the working week to 60 hours, abolishing retirement. That would toughen us all up too. The question is why would we want that? — Baden
Maybe this will help you rustle people's jimmies.
(1) Countries' legal systems should be able to punish those responsible for working conditions that provably and significantly impede health.
(2) Working conditions that provably and significantly contribute to death and sickness impede health. (1, consequence)
(3) There are many independent reports of working conditions at Orange significantly contributing to deaths and sickness and they should be trusted and treated as evidence. (Premise)
(4a) It is reasonable to believe that working conditions at Orange contributed significantly to deaths and sickness. (3, using the evidence).
(4b) It is unreasonable to believe that working conditions at Orange did not contribute significantly to deaths and sickness (3, using the evidence).
(5) France's legal system should be able to punish those responsible at Orange for the working conditions at their company as they provably and significantly impeded health. — fdrake
It isn't about the skills of the employess or adaption to new organizations and work.I imagine this to be a huge clash of cultures and those workers caught caught in the middle and didn’t have the skills to adapt. That doesn’t exonerate the company but I can’t think of two more diametrically opposed attitudes about work. — Brett
I imagine this to be a huge clash of cultures and those workers caught caught in the middle and didn’t have the skills to adapt. — Brett
In the case of depression and anxiety disorders the cause is likely to be genetic. You can't have a genetic predisposition to having your head ripped off in a combine accident, so agricultural accidents can be easily traced to a lack of safety precautions. Psychological disorders can't be. — frank
Source? — frank
Has France started legally mandating good management practices? — frank
I just pointed out that an abusive environment can produce efficiency gains. It's called bootcamp. It's you who wants to make the positive claim that abusive workplaces create costs for society in general. I'm not seeing it. As BC pointed out, every job has a downside. You get paid to put up with it. — frank
That goes for asshole bosses on the wrong end of a judge and jury. Or one in a world where certain kinds of behavior caused by being an asshole lead to certain kinds of societal punishment and censure.The world is full of assholes. Sooner or later we all have to learn how to deal with that. An asshole boss is an opportunity to either learn how to deal with abuse or grow a spine stiff enough to get yourself out of the situation — frank
Orange was judged as being sufficiently terrible to count as severe harassment, they had a responsibility for their workers' welfare, and these two things together make an enforceable claim that they contributed (bore responsibility) to workers' deaths. — fdrake
Your concern for the workers is a tribute to either your kind heart or the fact that you direct most of your talent into sophistry. — frank
It's better to work with nature and allow small adjustments (which might include 35 suicides), rather than prop up an artificial system that will eventually fail in a larger bloody adjustment. — frank
The fact that the job market was tight indicates that France is overpopulated and some portion of the workers need to move to where there are jobs — frank
It's a little harder see how to apply that in the case of psychological abuse because while asbestos has pretty much the same effect on everyone, moral harassment doesn't. Some people thrive on an emotionally charged environment that includes permission to be abusive (which is provided by an abusive executive.) — frank
In the case of depression and anxiety disorders the cause is likely to be genetic. You can't have a genetic predisposition to having your head ripped off in a combine accident, so agricultural accidents can be easily traced to a lack of safety precautions. Psychological disorders can't be. — frank
The world is full of assholes. Sooner or later we all have to learn how to deal with that. An asshole boss is an opportunity to either learn how to deal with abuse or grow a spine stiff enough to get yourself out of the situation. — frank
When the company became private, the executives struggled to keep the company afloat with their hands tied because the employees kept the protected status they had when the company was government owned. — frank
Exactly. There was a specific and general goal. The assholeness was performed utterly consciously, with a specific objective. It's not simply a personality trait.There's a big difference between an asshole boss with bad management (which, inevitably, leads to bad working conditions) and tailoring management practices to abuse people into quitting. — fdrake
From the point of view of the greenlanders, the red people are monstrous. They're really not. If you could pick them up and move them around, you'd see that they're all the same. — frank
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