Co-Founder and Partner @empathiHR where we help businesses mitigate their risk of workplace misconduct claims by establishing their Affirmative Defense.
Today I reviewed our call logs and investigation summaries for the month of May. The industry with the most complaints resulting in investigations with adverse findings continues to be automotive. Yet, they only make up 35% of our customer base.
EmpathiHR is the risk mitigation solution employers use to protect their company and their employees by managing complaints of misconduct through a consistent, documented process , from issue detection to investigation to resolution , saving HR significant time while establishing the company’s affirmative defense.
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@ClintFiore Garbage. My wife carries cards with her in her purse, fun date night game at dinner (we’re those people) or with a kid or two.
https://t.co/zJVTdA4DLS
@robsmithonline Second-Generation Marine myself and having fought in Iraq across two deployments, I 100% agree. My oldest is 17 and we’re looking at all options except the military right now. I know a lot of OIF/OEF vets who are aligned on this viewpoint.
People are fallible — churches are no exception. I'm proud of the ministries that recognize this and put real processes in place to protect their staff and volunteers.https://t.co/p44jvD6R3X
1. I disagree with how ICE is deporting non-felons.
It's cruel and ineffective.
We can simply fine business owners for hiring illegal aliens and negate the entire reason people are illegally immigrating to America: a paycheck.
2. I ALSO think these misguided protesters should stay home if they can't peacefully protest and stay out of ICE's way.
As I said in this tweet last year, when this chaos started.
It was inevitable that someone would get killed for doing something really, really insane -- like driving your SUV into an officer after they told you to get out of the car.
3. Finally, I think our leaders are pouring gasoline on this fire when they should be preaching peace and unity.
That's all I have to say.
David Friedberg Explains The Slow Spiral of Socialism
“Government programs create an anchor. They are a shackle.”
“This is the spiral of socialism.”
“The government programs that are meant to provide support to people require an increase in taxation. That revenue has to come from somewhere.”
“That taxation ultimately leads to an attrition of economic value in that region.”
“Then you have to increase taxation more, and you end up in the spiral.”
“And we're seeing this now, not just in New York where Mamdani’s proposing to increase taxes, but across the entire West Coast.”
“We talked about the 5% billionaire tax. So yes, that's a problem for rich people. Great. No one gives a sh*t about us.”
“But where does this go?”
“In the proposed billionaire tax, it actually gives power and authority to the California State Legislature that they can actually redo this wealth tax at a different level and a different rate in the future.”
“Think about what that does. It now gives property seizure rights to the California State Legislature to set a value level, so anyone now that's got over $100M net worth, and then it becomes over $10M, and then anyone with $1M net worth, and the state can take 5% of your assets every year.”
“Very quickly it becomes the process by which socialism and the socialization of assets that get seized by the government is realized.”
“Once you're hooked on the government for some sort of benefit, it's very hard to unhook yourself.”
“And it definitionally becomes a spiral. That's what leads to socialism.”
“And we have seen it time and again. It's not a big revolution. Socialism emerges slowly.”
“Gavin Newsom yesterday on stage at DealBook, talked about redistributing wealth. Ro Khanna is talking about redistributing wealth.”
“This is becoming the Democrat party line, and they're going to end up trying to seize this moment to take these socialist principles.”