Proserpina
Senior Member
All trolling (Hi Bali!) aside, the LEGAL question has been answered.
I really haven't noticed the bias, Bali.My ex said she was going to financially ruin me. Should I have had her arrested?
I'm astounded that the advice given here for men amounts to hell, fire, brimstone and damnation. While advice for the other gender is sugar and spice and all things nice.
I agree. It's none of OP's legal business. You now see why hearsay evidence is not admissible in court. If this rumor went down the line a couple more people (which it has right here on this forum) it would turn into more of a whopper than it already is.All trolling (Hi Bali!) aside, the LEGAL question has been answered.
You sound like the boss that everyone hates.And EVEN IF he accessed his work email from home on his own time, it's still a termination offense. Regardless of whether he is male or female.
Rule of thumb: If you want to send threatening emails to your ex and not have it affect your job, use your personal email.
Well then you must be a Republican or a family court judge. They are the only ones I can think of that want stupid laws enacted and selectively enforced.I don't write the laws, Bali, I just tell you what they are. The law says you can be fired for using your work email for personal matters (and particularly this kind). Whether I would actually fire someone for it is immaterial.
What selective enforcement? Employers don't enforce the laws.Well then you must be a Republican or a family court judge. They are the only ones I can think of that want stupid laws enacted and selectively enforced.
There is no law saying that folks can't use their work email to send personal emails.If everyone with an employer email account said they didn't send a personal email at anytime in there life, the whole damn work force would be subject to termination.
Huh?In your mind this is payback to that scoundrel of a husband who you think is threatening to disclose some pictures of his wife. For all we know the pictures might be of her wearing a small size dress when her size is XXXL.
cbg said these things, attack her/him not me.What selective enforcement? Employers don't enforce the laws.
There is no law saying that folks can't use their work email to send personal emails.
Huh?
No, CBG did not say those things. CBG made statements that you then applied your bias to in order to spit out a meaning that would help support your delusion(s).cbg said these things, attack her/him not me.
cbg most certainly did say those things and you even gave them your stamp of approval. Talk about delusional!No, CBG did not say those things. CBG made statements that you then applied your bias to in order to spit out a meaning that would help support your delusion(s).
Well then you must be a Republican or a family court judge. They are the only ones I can think of that want stupid laws enacted and selectively enforced.
If everyone with an employer email account said they didn't send a personal email at anytime in there life, the whole damn work force would be subject to termination. In your mind this is payback to that scoundrel of a husband who you think is threatening to disclose some pictures of his wife. For all we know the pictures might be of her wearing a small size dress when her size is XXXL.
And EVEN IF he accessed his work email from home on his own time, it's still a termination offense. Regardless of whether he is male or female.
Rule of thumb: If you want to send threatening emails to your ex and not have it affect your job, use your personal email.
What selective enforcement? Employers don't enforce the laws.
There is no law saying that folks can't use their work email to send personal emails.
Huh?
See below from cbg that you "liked". You overlooked that post or forgot to delete it.This is what I "liked":
Then I said:
Then you said that CBG said those things.
Ok, where?