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by jtolmar
2486 days ago
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I'm certainly one of those people. What is the boundary between "politics" and "not politics?" Who gets to decide? Your employer probably has more effect on your day to day life than your government does. Why would you be allowed to debate what the latter should do but not the former? |
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It's common sense. Anything that revolves around government, elections, laws, etc.
> Your employer probably has more effect on your day to day life than your government does. Why would you be allowed to debate what the latter should do but not the former?
I meant the exact opposite (I forgot that politics could be taken to mean "office politics" or "company politics"). Getting involved in government politics or activism is your role as a private citizen, not as a company employee. Regarding "company politics" (work hours, office arrangement, project management methodology, managerial decisions, coffee machine model, etc.), I guess it's up to your employer to decide what is up for debate.