[REPOST] Lawyer has to convince judge of no jurisdiction to return deported man but achieves the opposite
abff08f4813c @ abff08f4813c @j4vcdedmiokf56h3ho4t62mlku.srv.us Posts 5Comments 1,044Joined 11 mo. ago
abff08f4813c @ abff08f4813c @j4vcdedmiokf56h3ho4t62mlku.srv.us
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Liberals won Terrebonne, Que., riding by 1 vote — but this woman's Bloc ballot wasn't counted
Lawyer has to convince judge of no jurisdiction to return deported man but achieves the opposite
Serial killer victim called Buffalo Woman identified as Ashlee Shingoose: AFN chief
So I meant to write in the above comment that while not every case of quiet quitting is malicious compliance, and not every case of malicious compliance related to employment is the same as quiet quitting, there is definitely room for overlap - a situation where one is both quiet quitting and performing malicious compliance. I thought that this was such a case.
After reading https://static01.nyt.com/newsgraphics/documenttools/e285ec96adf8d443/5868d536-full.pdf I'm backing away from that. What the new whistleblower report seems to allege is that Reuveni was ordered to make statements to the court that he knew were wrong and misleading, and he outright refused - which is honourable but it's non-compliance rather than malicious compliance.
He also actively sought to confidentially relay the situation to folks higher up on the food chain in order to get them to push back against this, which is probably too much effort to count as quiet quitting.