May 19, 2024

Ultra Woke Google Claims Company Is Not Place to ‘Debate Politics’ After Firing Anti-Israel Radicals

After terminating 28 people who participated in anti-Israel sit-ins at different Google sites, Google CEO Sundar Pichai has taken a comical approach against using the ultra-woke company’s practices for political disputes and protests.

According to The New York Post, Pichai made it clear that Google’s offices are not a place for individual politics or destructive behavior in a 1,200-word memo sent to Google’s world workforce late on Thursday. The letter comes in the wake of 10-hour sit-ins staged by workers at Google’s offices in New York, Seattle, and Sunnyvale, California, as part of a “No Tech for Genocide Day of Action ” protesting the company ’s$ 1. 2 billion “Project Nimbus ” contract with the Israeli government.

Sundar Pichai, the head of Google ( Denver Angerer/Getty ), is masked up.

Pichai wrote, “Google is a business, and not a position to act in a way that disrupts co-workers or makes them feel uncomfortable, to attempt to use the business as a private platform, or to fight over problematic issues or debate politics. He added that the company’s goal is to organize and make the world’s information “supersedes everything more” and that it should be done so. ”

No Tech For Apartheid, a group that has criticized Google’s response to the Israel-Hamas war and the” Project Nimbus” contract, which provides cloud computing and artificial intelligence services to the Israeli government and military, is a group owned by the fired employees.

Google Vice President of Global Security Chris Rackow also called out the pro-Palestinian employees, stating that their behavior was “unacceptable, really destructive, and made co-workers feel threatened. ” He added that such actions violate several firm policies, including the code of conduct and policies on abuse, discrimination, retribution, standards of conduct, and work concerns.

Read more at the New York Post here.

For Breitbart News, Lucas Nolan is a reporter covering issues of free speech and online censorship.

Source