Quote:
Originally Posted by Senator Clay Davis
I'm guessing a company isn't putting out knowingly false releases. I'm guessing the release you saw mentioned something to the effect of "Individual X is leaving us" or "Individual X is no longer with us", something with enough ambiguity that the words fired or resigned are not mentioned. Because quite frankly, its insanely unprofessional and incredibly bad form to talk openly about the specifics of an employees departure, particularly in a general company wide e-mail. This is why HR departments exist, to avoid these errors.
The PMO press release straight up says resigned. So basically what you're saying is the PMO knowingly puts out false/misleading information to the general public. What a great alternative.
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The PMO press release says he resigned. Why would they embarrass him and say he was asked to resign? No reason whatsoever so that is why there was no mention made of it.
Also, why did he resign unless forced to? Again, no reason whatsoever.
This is a stupid argument over semantics.