Anonymous wrote:Just tell har that it made you uncomfortable. My CFO assigned us “spirit animals” and had a Redskins mug and Lanyard. She is not Native American. I sent a note to HR and preato the mug and lanyard were gone and now we have “mascots”
Anonymous wrote:This is blowing my mind.
She's only been on the job for 2 weeks; this is her first week solo without shadowing the person she replaced. She ran her first meeting this morning, which included one of our longtime clients, but seniority wise in the company, she was the highest person on the call. It wasn't just said once, either. The first time she said it, everyone around the table kind of gave each other side looks, like, 'did that really just happen?' She then said it again a bit later and someone on the conference call did the awkward throat clearing and moved the conversation forward.
I grew up in a family with a SN relative, so the r-word is not in our vocabulary at all and it's always striking to hear someone say it. Usually it's teens, but to hear an adult say it in a professional setting is just... wow.
Do I email our client and apologize? Do I let someone higher than this person know? Do I speak with her first privately? Is this just something you tell HR about and let them deal with? Position wise, she's the new Controller and the meeting was made up of the senior members of our finance team as well as this longtime client. I just feel embarrassed she was the main representative from our company on this call and was so unprofessional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was the context of the use? The word "retarded" in and of itself is fine to use.
Example:
The blockage in the pipe will retard the flow of water. Or The blockage in the pipe retarded the low of water.
The def is: to slow up especially by preventing or hindering advance or accomplishment, in addition to the disparaging one we all object to.
What you can't say is something like "that's just a retarded thing to do".
oh wow, PP. thanks for telling us that there's a non-offensive way to use the word! all of us are just way too stupid to know that.
thank GOD you're here.
Plenty of people get cranked up over stupid things on DCUM--OP didn't provide any context, everyone jumped to a conclusion, includiing you, retarded bitch.
Wow, you're right, it isn't nice.
Anonymous wrote:I just used it with a completely new group of people. "Apologized" for saying it and it was met with "it's okay, it describes it perfectly, but nobody knows what word to use instead now". I can work with this group of people, such a relief, no need for the fake filtering.
Anonymous wrote:Just tell har that it made you uncomfortable. My CFO assigned us “spirit animals” and had a Redskins mug and Lanyard. She is not Native American. I sent a note to HR and preato the mug and lanyard were gone and now we have “mascots”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was the context of the use? The word "retarded" in and of itself is fine to use.
Example:
The blockage in the pipe will retard the flow of water. Or The blockage in the pipe retarded the low of water.
The def is: to slow up especially by preventing or hindering advance or accomplishment, in addition to the disparaging one we all object to.
What you can't say is something like "that's just a retarded thing to do".
oh wow, PP. thanks for telling us that there's a non-offensive way to use the word! all of us are just way too stupid to know that.
thank GOD you're here.