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by grzm
3503 days ago
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"the law was in favor of his opinion at the time, therefore there was nothing reprehensible at the time." What is legal is not the same as what is moral or ethical. Figuring out how to tolerate dissent is an issue I think a lot of people are trying to figure out right now, as your statement is pointing to. |
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He may have good reasons to think that, which aren't forbidden by law. It was legal, it is moral for some people, it is ethical for others, what about we let him do his job of managing a technical company? Companies shouldn't be forced to fire people who are considered as "witches" by the people, as long as they're competent in their job. It takes a huge amount of time to train CEOs and keep replicas on hot standby in a company, if the company has to second-guess the people's opinion about the politics (or sexual life) of CEOs, it's bad for the economy. And if we practice a witch hunt at every level of companies, it quickly goes unethical. See this quote from GitHub's new Diversity Director:
> "Some of the biggest barriers to progress are white women"