Google has free food and hard to imagine: gay male eroticism in photography and film from their beginnings to stonewallnap pods—but several employees say it also has hostile managers.
Meredith Whittaker and Claire Stapleton were both organizers of the Walkout for Real Change in November, during which 200,000 employees "walked out" to protest sexual misconduct, "golden parachutes" for the accused, and other forms of discrimination at Google.
On Monday, the two Google employees sent out an internal letter detailing the ways management has allegedly retaliated against multiple employee organizers, Wiredreported.
The walkout was a watershed moment for employees that resulted in progressive changes to some Google policies. However, in the months since, both organizers have felt their work environments change drastically for the worse, and they report that "several" organizers have had similar experiences.
SEE ALSO: San Francisco Google employees walk out in protest of sexual harassmentGoogle refuted the claims, stating that "there has been no retaliation here," according to a spokesperson. But the organizers' stories — of getting demoted, sidelined, and isolated by management — paint a picture of the divisions within Google around employee activism, and what it feels like to speak out for change at one of the most powerful companies in the world.
"Retaliation isn’t always obvious," Whittaker and Stapleton wrote. "It’s often confusing and drawn out, consisting of icy conversations, gaslighting, project cancellations, transition rejections, or demotions. Behavior that tells someone the problem isn’t that they stood up to the company, it’s that they’re not good enough and don’t belong."
They also invited employees to attend a "Retaliation Town Hall" Friday, where people can share their own stories and organize against retaliation.
"If we want to stop discrimination, harassment, and unethical decision making, we need to end retaliation against the people who speak honestly about these problems," the organizers wrote.
"Retaliation isn't always obvious."
Google is refuting Whittaker and Stapleton's claims, and standing by the actions of management, while maintaining that it investigates all allegations of retaliation.
“We prohibit retaliation in the workplace, and investigate all allegations," a Google spokeswoman said. "Employees and teams are regularly and commonly given new assignments, or reorganized, to keep pace with evolving business needs. There has been no retaliation here.”
Whittaker and Stapleton see it differently; both felt that their work as employee organizers impacted their treatment by management. Supervisors recently informed Whittaker that she would have to abandon her work on AI ethics both inside and outside of Google if she wanted to keep her job. Stapleton was demoted and told to go on medical leave, even though she was not sick. She re-gained her position after bringing on a personal attorney to investigate the issue.
In addition to the personal blowback the two faced, the organizers said that retaliation is a part of the culture at Google — a strong statement that contradicts the company's former reputation as a hub for honest and open employee feedback. The two write that the 350+ testimonials gathered during the Walkout show that "a sad pattern emerges: people who stand up and report discrimination, abuse, and unethical conduct are punished, sidelined, and pushed out. Perpetrators often go unimpeded, or are even rewarded."
Google employees may not be unionized, but their internal organizing follows a broader trend of tech employees mobilizing to make changes in their work place, and an increase in unionization in knowledge industries, like media and academia. Google says that it has a policy against retaliation. Retaliation for engaging in "protected activities," such as reporting workplace discrimination, is prohibited by national labor law.
In tech, employees don’t seem to regard the Bosses as untouchable celebrities anymore. And if these reports about retaliation at Google are true, that's probably for the better.
classpass learns the hard way you can’t just ‘figure out the business model'A Cubs fan paid $47,000 for two World Series Game 7 ticketsDude makes terrible mistake, gets a Cleveland Indians 'Champs' tattooHere are a bunch of grown men crying over the Cubs World Series winThe world's first zeroPeople are heartbroken nobody wanted to pet this sad pit bullAlton Sterling's son spent his 16th birthday with Kanye West and Kim Kardashianclasspass learns the hard way you can’t just ‘figure out the business model'Anthony Rizzo was all of us watching Game 7 of the World SeriesFashion ecommerce star pranks Facebook in the name of tech educationclasspass learns the hard way you can’t just ‘figure out the business model'Mila Kunis writes powerful essay about gender bias in HollywoodCarpenter Jimmy builds himself up and breaks himself down on 'You're The Worst'Hillary Clinton watching the World Series is every Cubs fanWatch Dexter Fowler hit the first leadoff home run in World Series Game 7 historyPeople are heartbroken nobody wanted to pet this sad pit bullBeyoncé and the Dixie Chicks made the CMAs crowd hoot and holler with 'Daddy Lessons'NASA reveals why New Delhi is blanketed with deadly smogThe Story Behind Chicago Cubs Fans' W FlagsFacebook's mobile business is bigger than ever Translate ancient hieroglyphs with Google's new AI Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones says he's going to leak his interview with Megyn Kelly 7 old shows we're watching right away on Peacock Carl Reiner's last performance is an instant tear Seniors recreating famous album covers is your perfect lockdown escape The Bitcoin address from the Twitter hack is now a registered domain U.S. plans to restrict visas for Huawei, and other Chinese tech giants Apple rumored to develop a medical records platform for iPhone Jeff Sessions saying 'I don't recall' gets remixed into a catchy song 'Teacher of the year' makes a statement for Pride Month in photo with Trump Boomer Phelps' Instagram is the best thing about social media these days How Muslim cosplayers are cleverly using their hijabs as part of their outfits Multiple top Ubisoft execs out amid toxic workplace allegations Ok, so what's the deal with Beyoncé's twins? A ranking of the rumors. Meet White Castle's new robot chef, Flippy Greta Thunberg launches open letter demanding world leaders take immediate action on climate crisis This live BBC radio fail is so spectacularly British 'Louie' the 132 Guy drives his Smart car straight into a store to avoid the rain Starbucks and Lady Gaga team up for 'Cups of Kindness'
2.8278s , 10194.4453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【hard to imagine: gay male eroticism in photography and film from their beginnings to stonewall】,Co-creation Information Network