@larryjones Celebrating someone’s death brings into question their ability to make sound decisions. if I am an employer, I wouldn’t be able to trust their business decisions, therefore I need to let them go. Perhaps this explanation will work for when the people sue over being fired.
@Todd_Hodl@MAGAVoice I agree with this, but also add decision making. I need you to make good, sound business decisions. If you are unable to see that celebrating the death of someone is a bad decision, how can I trust you to make good, sound business decisions. I can’t. Therefore you must go.
@MAGAVoice I’ve chosen to look at this is, they’re not getting fired because their views. It’s the poor decision making. If you can’t see celebrating someone’s death outloud, as a bad decision, how can I trust you to make good business decisions?
@scrowder Does it seem that the roommate is somehow complicit in this? Why is the shooter telling the roommate, where the rifle is and that it needs picked up? Seems like the roommate knew it was going to happen, no?
@SethKinggg @getnickwright started the game with our second string offense. We played against Carolina’s first string defense, and then second string, eventually third string. He played very well. Much better than any rookie we’ve had in a long, long time. just first preseason game, but he showed promise.