Posted on 03/14/2013 2:05:19 PM PDT by nickcarraway
No worries. I agree hero/heroic is overused and understand how sensitivities develop toward those things, as I have my own list of grimace worthy buzzwords...
Don’t get me started on “alleged gunman,” the many varied “coexist” bumper stickers, or oxymorons like “Senate ethics committee” and “journalistic integrity...” I also won’t go off about the grammar in the subtitle. I don’t always adhere to the rules of proper grammar, but I do try to avoid throwing the cow over the fence some hay.
Oh, I agree about all of your examples.
Don’t get me started on the grammar. When we are posting on the fly here, I excuse us FReepers for ungrammatical sentences and typos. What really infuriates is what passes for writing by so-called journalists these days. Most of them have the composition skills of an average 3rd grade student and the reasoning facility of a trout.
You do realize you now owe all trout an apology... Especially those surfing the ‘net.
;-)
The need for stress leave may have been perfectly justified, because the charity doesn't appear to be very charitable:
>>> Marshallsea said the club welcomed him back from the trip by handing him his walking papers. <<<
:) Pretty sure the trout try to avoid the net.
Since he was fired for cause, I assumed that he was breaking some rule or another.
On my part it was pretty much a knee-jerk response to my experience that shows me how cheating for personal gain is so common from the ghetto tenements to the fake farmers to the halls of congress.
The article, unfortunately, leaves a lot up to the imagination and doesn’t provide enough pertinent details.
My impression was that the employer saw the video and were working with the idea he was on medical leave for physical reasons, rather than mental. It may have been their knee-jerk reaction to fire him. He may not have wanted the stress/mental aspect known to his employer, and the doctor may have provided paperwork that was ambiguous regarding the nature of his medical leave. Based on another poster’s comments on this, stress leave can be frowned upon and a career killer.
Whether he was cheating the system or not, pretty much between him and his doctor.
I don’t normally need a doctor’s excuse for work issues, but sometimes have needed one in order to put a temporary hold on a gym membership. I prefer a generic one that doesn’t provide all the gory details. That would be my preference for one needed for work, as well. I think the employer can request additional information from the doctor, but HIPAA sometimes precludes how much is relayed. If he had a generic medical leave excuse to go on holiday, his employer may have just assumed he was physically unable to work, rather than it being a stress/mental health issue.
You are correct that cheating the system for personal gain is extremely pervasive in today’s society. I can see why it is easy to think it was the case here. And, I’m not saying it _wasn’t_. At the same time, I can see how he could have legitimately been taking leave and how his employer might have assumed it was for physical, instead of mental, reasons.
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