> I don’t want to work at this company anymore so I quit, I just don’t feel like working here anymore
Seems ok for the employee to quit “at will” so why not for the employer?
It’s sincere, I don’t think people are thinking through what they’re asking for
I’m not particularly “vindictive” but these are the kinds of cases where capital punishment / death penalty seem justified
You just can’t do it like that, because you woke up grumpy that particular morning
That should be fine though, that’s freedom of association, why force people to work together who don’t want to do so?
the “valid reason” is you don’t like them, why would we want to force people to work together who don’t like each other?
I do think it’s good to create a healthy culture that respects workers, but I don’t understand why being able to fire an employee is a bad thing
Imagine you’re not allowed to fire people you don’t like who you think are doing a bad job at work
“press X to doubt”
> you deserve to die because of bad things (a) parent(s) do(es)
element / matrix instead
none
It happened with some companies in recent years I think due to more people working remotely and they decided they might be able to try to capitalize on such capability as an “extra feature” but I think there are some plans that include it in their package (as it was previously, before being decoupled)
haha, sounds impossible, right?! It becomes possible because you put your fingers between two vertical keys, so you can do it with the 4 fingers on each hand on the home row keys (asdf jkl;) - try for example putting a middle finger between “E” and “D” on a keyboard and pressing them both at the same time
edit: you could hit more keys by putting your finger in the middle of four of them
bank attack on encryption?
media bias being called out too much
there’s also graphene and a few others or linux phones I guess
redundancy is key
This doesn’t give a balanced overview of the positives of Brave, for example they have Tor integration which is interesting: https://brave.com/tor-bridges/
> a correct understanding of Catholic doctrine allows for change over time
> dogma : a fixed, especially religious, belief or set of beliefs that people are expected to accept without any doubts
looks like Francis is wrong, and not a Catholic nor a pope