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672

It is data-driven. Driven by the data about the C-Level stock portfolio based on the property the offices sit on and the tax brakes the city/state gives them to bring people into the are to spend $$$. If you don't go back to the office and eat the goyslop at the local slopshop it will cost the C-Levels $$$.

Archive: https://archive.today/LeMU5

From the post:

>More than 500 Amazon workers reportedly signed a letter to Amazon Web Services' (AWS) CEO this week, sharing their outrage over Amazon's upcoming return-to-office (RTO) policy that will force workers into offices five days per week. In September, Amazon announced that starting in 2025, workers will no longer be allowed to work remotely twice a week. At the time, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the move would make it easier for workers "to learn, model, practice, and strengthen our culture." Reuters reported today that it viewed a letter from a swath of workers sent to AWS chief Matt Garman on Wednesday regarding claims he reportedly made during an all-hands meeting this month. Garman reportedly told attendees that 9 out of 10 employees he spoke with support the five-day in-office work policy. The letter called the statements "inconsistent with the experiences of many employees" and "misrepresenting the realities of working at Amazon," Reuters reported. "We were appalled to hear the non-data-driven explanation you gave for Amazon imposing a five-day in-office mandate,'" the letter reportedly stated. [...]

It is data-driven. Driven by the data about the C-Level stock portfolio based on the property the offices sit on and the tax brakes the city/state gives them to bring people into the are to spend $$$. If you don't go back to the office and eat the goyslop at the local slopshop it will cost the C-Levels $$$. Archive: https://archive.today/LeMU5 From the post: >>More than 500 Amazon workers reportedly signed a letter to Amazon Web Services' (AWS) CEO this week, sharing their outrage over Amazon's upcoming return-to-office (RTO) policy that will force workers into offices five days per week. In September, Amazon announced that starting in 2025, workers will no longer be allowed to work remotely twice a week. At the time, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the move would make it easier for workers "to learn, model, practice, and strengthen our culture." Reuters reported today that it viewed a letter from a swath of workers sent to AWS chief Matt Garman on Wednesday regarding claims he reportedly made during an all-hands meeting this month. Garman reportedly told attendees that 9 out of 10 employees he spoke with support the five-day in-office work policy. The letter called the statements "inconsistent with the experiences of many employees" and "misrepresenting the realities of working at Amazon," Reuters reported. "We were appalled to hear the non-data-driven explanation you gave for Amazon imposing a five-day in-office mandate,'" the letter reportedly stated. [...]
[–] 2 pts

There was no data-driven logic for the batshit insane bullshit these same people complaining about RTO rallied around during (((covid))). They happily wore mask, stood 6 feet apart, talked through plexiglas shields, got (((jabbed))) and alienated grandma to her death in the nursing home without a shred of data-driven evidence any of that would make for a better outcome over. Fuck these faggots. Karma's a bitch.