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RBP
11-06-2017, 05:41 PM
A photo of Juli Briskman giving the middle finger to the president went viral. Her employer was not pleased.

WASHINGTON ― You may have seen this photo of President Donald Trump’s motorcade winding down a wooded road last week as a woman on a bicycle pedaled by ― giving the middle finger to Trump.

https://i.imgur.com/I59MbQN.jpg?1

The picture, snapped by a White House photographer traveling with the president as he left his golf course in Sterling, Va., went viral almost immediately. News outlets picked up the story when it appeared in a White House pool report. Late-night talk show hosts told jokes about the encounter and people on social media began hailing the unidentified woman as a “she-ro,” using the hashtag #Her2020.

The woman’s name is Juli Briskman. Her employer, government contractor Akima LLC, wasn’t so happy about the photo. They fired her over it.

In a Saturday interview with HuffPost, Briskman, a 50-year-old mother of two, said she was stunned that someone had taken a picture of her giving Trump the middle finger.

As the photo circulated online, Briskman decided to tell Akima’s HR department what was happening when she went to work on Monday. By Tuesday, her bosses called her into a meeting and said she had violated the company’s social media policy by using the photo as her profile picture on Twitter and Facebook.

“They said, ‘We’re separating from you,‘” said Briskman. “Basically, you cannot have ‘lewd’ or ‘obscene’ things in your social media. So they were calling flipping him off ‘obscene.’”

Briskman, who worked in marketing and communications at Akima for just over six months, said she emphasized to the executives that she wasn’t on the job when the incident happened and that her social media pages don’t mention her employer. They told her that because Akima was a government contractor, the photo could hurt their business, she said.

Virginia is an employment-at-will state, meaning employers can fire people anytime and for any reason. But Briskman said what’s been particularly infuriating is that a male colleague kept his job after recently posting lewd comments on his Facebook page that featured Akima LLC as his cover photo. She said this colleague was reprimanded for calling someone “a fucking Libtard asshole” on Facebook, but was allowed to delete the post and keep his job.

“How is that any less ‘obscene’ than me flipping off the president?” she asked. “How is that fair?”

Akima did not respond to requests for comment via email and phone.

Asked what she was thinking when she saw Trump’s motorcade roll up next to her, Briskman said it was a gut reaction to flip him off.

“He was passing by and my blood just started to boil,” she said. “I’m thinking, DACA recipients are getting kicked out. He pulled ads for open enrollment in Obamacare. Only one-third of Puerto Rico has power. I’m thinking, he’s at the damn golf course again.”

“I flipped off the motorcade a number of times,” she added.

Briskman, a Democrat, said she plans to look for a new job with an advocacy group that she believes in, like Planned Parenthood or PETA.

Despite getting fired, she said she has no regrets about the attention her public show of displeasure with Trump received. In fact, she said she’s happy to be an image of protest that resonates with many Americans.

“In some ways, I’m doing better than ever,” she said. “I’m angry about where our country is right now. I am appalled. This was an opportunity for me to say something.”

UPDATE: 11:54 a.m. ― Akima’s website went down later Monday. Here’s a screenshot.

https://i.imgur.com/LcXcQm5.png

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/woman-flips-off-donald-trump-fired_us_59fe0ab4e4b0c9652fffa484

Muddy
11-06-2017, 05:57 PM
:haha:

Teh One Who Knocks
11-06-2017, 06:14 PM
I thought you didn't like things like this RBP? :-k

RBP
11-06-2017, 06:38 PM
I thought you didn't like things like this RBP? :-k

I generally don't, you are correct. And this was clearly free expression, so it's very questionable - but that's not how the world works right now. The employer's first answer of "social media policy" is bullshit, but the second answer of "we're a government contractor" is more valid.

I worked on federal contracts and with OFCCP on hiring requirements. If I would have publically expressed my opinion of affirmative action, I would have been terminated also.

Muddy
11-06-2017, 07:40 PM
http://i63.tinypic.com/s4nzfs.jpg

Hal-9000
11-06-2017, 10:28 PM
I generally don't, you are correct. And this was clearly free expression, so it's very questionable - but that's not how the world works right now. The employer's first answer of "social media policy" is bullshit, but the second answer of "we're a government contractor" is more valid.

I worked on federal contracts and with OFCCP on hiring requirements. If I would have publically expressed my opinion of affirmative action, I would have been terminated also.

I had the same question as Lance, but you've explained the middle area.

To cloud things further, during my driving lessons our teacher who was a retired cop, told us that giving someone the finger was a form of assault and you could be charged. Each time I've brought this up online, it gets met with scorn and derision. The ex cop was certain about his factoid.

Being older now and seeing people give other people the finger repeatedly in pictures online, it makes me think if the act was against the law, we would have quite a few people being charged.

Hal-9000
11-06-2017, 11:11 PM
aaand after some googling it's not against the law in the US to give someone the finger, even police. Some areas are attaching it to 'free speech', but that's a misnomer because it's a gesture and the fight is on over that part of it :lol:

RBP
11-07-2017, 04:12 AM
aaand after some googling it's not against the law in the US to give someone the finger, even police. Some areas are attaching it to 'free speech', but that's a misnomer because it's a gesture and the fight is on over that part of it :lol:

I have no qualms in saying it is free expression in the US. Poking someone in the eye with the finger would be assault. :lol:

lost in melb.
11-07-2017, 02:51 PM
Buried in the article..."she had violated the company’s social media policy by using the photo as her profile picture on Twitter and Facebook."

See ya later :bye:

PorkChopSandwiches
11-07-2017, 05:04 PM
In a Saturday interview with HuffPost, Briskman, a 50-year-old mother of two, said she was stunned that someone had taken a picture of her giving Trump the middle finger.


Really???

RBP
11-07-2017, 06:17 PM
Really???The whole thing seems really contrived to me. Way too many coincidences.

:tinfoil:

PorkChopSandwiches
11-07-2017, 06:38 PM
:lol: