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FedEx Loses Suit In Wrongful Dismissal Case
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<blockquote data-quote="XEQaF" data-source="post: 4031965" data-attributes="member: 76117"><p>I think you are once again mired in your own confusion about what virtues mean to an individual. All those reasons people give are pragmatic and measurable indeed but when someone mentions morals that means they view a situation that goes against a value base they have set for themselves. There may be some truth to that "excuse" which can not be understood by someone with a fixed mindset. Either way 'advancement' doesn't always mean climbing the corporate ladder.</p><p></p><p><strong>The</strong> Peter principle states that <strong>a</strong> person who is competent at <strong>their</strong> job will earn <strong>promotion to a</strong> more senior position which requires different skills. ... <strong>The</strong> "Peter Principle" is therefore expressed as: "In <strong>a</strong> hierarchy every employee tends to rise to <strong>his level of incompetence</strong>."</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="XEQaF, post: 4031965, member: 76117"] I think you are once again mired in your own confusion about what virtues mean to an individual. All those reasons people give are pragmatic and measurable indeed but when someone mentions morals that means they view a situation that goes against a value base they have set for themselves. There may be some truth to that "excuse" which can not be understood by someone with a fixed mindset. Either way 'advancement' doesn't always mean climbing the corporate ladder. [B]The[/B] Peter principle states that [B]a[/B] person who is competent at [B]their[/B] job will earn [B]promotion to a[/B] more senior position which requires different skills. ... [B]The[/B] "Peter Principle" is therefore expressed as: "In [B]a[/B] hierarchy every employee tends to rise to [B]his level of incompetence[/B]." [/QUOTE]
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FedEx Loses Suit In Wrongful Dismissal Case
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