Blind-_-Tiger
Blind-_-Tiger t1_japumso wrote
Reply to comment by HoopOnPoop in A man set himself on fire on UC Berkeley's Sproul Plaza by DrTreeMan
That’s not proven, the reporting that no one helped Kitty Genovese wasn’t being truthful (and I’m bummed Watchmen 2 hasn’t corrected this). There are multiple ways you can help someone. If that way is filming someone who asks to be filmed in protest and that’s the route you decide to take especially if there are many people around and so many options and suddenly you’re thrust into a crazy scenario recording that scenario might be helpful later, or it might not, hard to say because HEY THAT GUYS ON FIRE. QUICK DO SOMETHING. MAYBE. Maybe they’re terminally ill and they want to die like this. Maybe this is some stunt, maybe he’s mentally ill but can’t be admitted against their will until there’re a proven danger, best to document that. It’s an uneasy calculus and filming people in distress like when they’re with the police is not always the worst option.
Blind-_-Tiger t1_j30qw93 wrote
Reply to comment by thought_first in Salesforce to cut staff by 10% in latest tech layoffs by ChocolateTsar
For those wondering why 10%, Neutron Jack Welch probably magicked this number up in the 80’s and managers have used it ever since:
“DAVIES: Manager of the century - wow. You know, apart from closing plants that he deemed too expensive or moving operations overseas, he had an idea that even with the workforce that you have, you should regularly rank them and cull the bottom what, 10%, right?
GELLES: He had a euphemistic name for this practice. He called it the vitality curve, but it was known internally and more broadly in the public as stack ranking or, even more sharply, rank and yank. And the idea is this. Managers, he said, needed to rank their employees. Twenty percent get an A grade. Seventy percent get a B grade, and 10% get a C grade. And if you're in that 10%, you're out of the company. He did that for 20 years inside GE, which led to thousands and thousands of layoffs. And it became, because he was so influential, dogma in corporate America.”
From NPR’s Fresh Air: https://freshairarchive.org/segments/short-term-profits-and-long-term-consequences-did-jack-welch-break-capitalism
Blind-_-Tiger t1_japuv2a wrote
Reply to comment by HoopOnPoop in A man set himself on fire on UC Berkeley's Sproul Plaza by DrTreeMan
https://time.com/3791176/malcolm-browne-the-story-behind-the-burning-monk/ it’s a thing, now you know