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	<title>Wirearchy &#187; 2005 &#187; May &#187; 08</title>
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	<link>http://blog.wirearchy.com</link>
	<description>You know more than me, we know more than you, and wherever this all going, we're going there together.</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 17 Nov 2008 08:46:54 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>One Of The (Good) Reasons Corporations Have Policies About Peoples&#8217; Behaviour &#8230;</title>
		<link>http://blog.wirearchy.com/2005/05/08/one-of-the-good-reasons-corporations-have-policies-about-peoples-behaviour/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.wirearchy.com/2005/05/08/one-of-the-good-reasons-corporations-have-policies-about-peoples-behaviour/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 May 2005 02:35:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I posted not too long ago saluting Robert Scoble for his public stance regarding Microsoft&#8217;s support of anti-discrimination legislation .. and I would do so again regarding his inital blog posts about the issue elaborated below.
But I&#8217;m increasingly of the opinion that he has gotten himself all wrapped up in his super-hero cape.
Dave Rogers of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I posted not too long ago saluting <a href="http://scoble.weblogs.com">Robert Scoble</a> for his public stance regarding Microsoft&#8217;s support of anti-discrimination legislation .. and I would do so again regarding his inital blog posts about the issue elaborated below.</p>
<p>But I&#8217;m increasingly of the opinion that he has gotten himself all wrapped up in his super-hero cape.</p>
<p>Dave Rogers of the Groundhog Day has evidently been conversing with Scoble on the issue, and pressing him to clarify his stance and actions.  <a href="http://homepage.mac.com/dave_rogers/GHD05-05.html#note_2126">He&#8217;s written a good post about his and Scoble&#8217;s interaction</a>, and his conclusions drawn from the exchange of questions and responses.</p>
<p>Organizational dynamics is part of the core background and experience I possess - my <i>authority</i>, if you will, and specifically I have done training and consulting in harassment and discrimination-in-employment policy, the complaint and investigation procedures, and so on. I worked for three years for Canada&#8217;s equivalent of the EEOC, giving managers training in harassment and employment discrimination, and for 15 years as an compensation, organizational change and development consultant (and eventually people strategy) for one of the big-dog consulting companies .. so I&#8217;ve managed many related projects, offering guidance and expertise).</p>
<p>Dave Rogers picked up on the thing that I too found myself wondering about .. what Scoble is suggesting he&#8217;ll do with his blog is essentially the same thing that all sorts of people have always worried about re: harassment claims and accusations of discrimination-in-the-workplace.</p>
<p>Many many managers have legitimately worried that someone with a grudge can just pick up and accuse them of harassment (and sometimes this has happened).  And in no way does this impinge upon the legitimate issue wherein many people are in fact harassed by people above them in hierarchies, in many workplaces in North America, western Europe and around the world.  That&#8217;s exactly why many companies have well-honed policies in such matters .. and all should have, imo.</p>
<p>It is NOT appropriate for Scoble to play cop, prosecutor, judge and jury all by his lonesome (especially in public) any times he thinks he sees or has heard of someone sneezing the wrong way, and methinks that he has let blogging and himself go to his head (while I do agree that blogging and hyperlinks can and do subvert hierarchy .. and I believe I am value-neutral about hierarchy, but against stupid and strata-defined positional hierarchy that abuses that status).</p>
<p>That said, I do think he initially blogged appropriately re: Microsoft&#8217;s initial public-relations problems and their (probably) inappropriate withdrawal of support for that contentious legislation, calling them on it   .. but it was by then a public issue.  I think he did the right thing initially.  Thereafter, he got wound up in his super-hero cape.</p>
<p>There clearly is a role for HR departments and policies, as well as effective and honest leadership, and fundamentally appropriate management education and coaching.</p>
<p>Blogging inside companies, and to some degree external-facing, will come to be part of the ambit of these professionals, and none too soon.  The dynamics of corporate blogging resemble very closely the issues found at the core of the disciplines of organizational development and internal corporate communication (not to mention knowledge management and organizational learning).</p>
<p>In my opinion, corporations should have become more intelligent and less manipulative of the human component of their operations some time ago.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m guessing (well, actually betting given the coming generations of digital natives) that blogging will hasten this need.</p>
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		<title>Your Country And Welcome To It</title>
		<link>http://blog.wirearchy.com/2005/05/08/your-country-and-welcome-to-it/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.wirearchy.com/2005/05/08/your-country-and-welcome-to-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 May 2005 17:36:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Earlier this week at the University of Texas in Austin.
Via dailyKos, the rest of the article.
It was in response to Coulter&#8217;s bizarre explanation that marriage was in place not to &#8220;make people happy,&#8221; but to further an outright incomprehensible notion of some type of patriarchal system that she wasn&#8217;t able to articulate very well (she [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Earlier this week at the University of Texas in Austin.</p>
<p>Via <a href="http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/5/3/234357/7289">dailyKos, the rest of the article.</a></p>
<p><i>It was in response to Coulter&#8217;s bizarre explanation that marriage was in place not to &#8220;make people happy,&#8221; but to further an outright incomprehensible notion of some type of patriarchal system that she wasn&#8217;t able to articulate very well (she mentioned something about men caring for women uber alles, but offered little more of substance) and eventually abandoned to get to her point that gay marriage is evil.</p>
<p>It was after this that a question was posed &#8220;What about marriages where men just fuck their wife in the ass?&#8221;</p>
<p>Some in the audience laughed. Some quite probably rolled their eyes. I myself was a bit taken aback and left wondering if the questioner couldn&#8217;t have expressed himself differently before he sauntered away from the microphone.</p>
<p>And, then, I heard a cry: &#8220;Hey! What are you doing? Let him go!&#8221;</p>
<p>The police (who were there in full force that evening to protect Coulter from the fatal threat of banana creme) had taken the questioner by the arms when he attempted to leave the auditorium after signaling to his friends that he was leaving. Two officers grabbed him and with an undeniably excessive amount of force pushed him out of the very same auditorium that he was exiting on his own.</p>
<p>I immediately jumped out of my seat in the back and was near the front of a crowd of 20 or 30 students and activists that were shouting &#8220;LET HIM GO!&#8221; at the two police officers, only one of which whose name and badge number I remembered-Gabriel 427. We rushed out of the auditorium following the man who was being detained for exercising his first amendment right and surrounded the officers, all the while shouting and attempting to un-arrest our newly discovered friend.</p>
<p>He was eventually led out of the building, with the crowd right behind. We were more enraged and vocal about his detention than he himself. He did not resist arrest in the slightest.</p>
<p>They led him around to the back of a van where he was pinned face down on the cold, dirty concrete, away from the eyes of his concerned compatriots and the lens of the television camera that arrived.</p>
<p>What they did to him for the five minutes that he was isolated from the rest of us is a mystery.</p>
<p>We demanded that the officers explain what he was being charged with. None of them replied. We asked politely. They stood steadfast.</p>
<p>We threatened bad press and lawsuits with professors at our side. They didn&#8217;t flinch. We asked them who they were serving and protecting by arresting an invited, ticket-holding guest, who was told to ask a question and then did. They didn&#8217;t have an answer.</p>
<p>He was eventually put into the back of a squad car and driven away. We followed as far as we were allowed by the suddenly vocal police officers. Following us was the local CBS affiliate&#8217;s camera crew.</p>
<p>At one point I explained to an officer that his action this evening was in direct contravention of the United States of America. I told him that he was duty bound to respect law and order and that by arresting someone who had acted in accord with the Constitution of the United States of America, he had abrogated those very same principles. I stood directly in front of him, stopping his stride and asked to his face who he was protecting and serving by arresting a man who had not broken any laws.</p>
<p><b>He walked on by.</b></i></p>
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