Maybe, but I could see a dereliction of responsibility in there that is becoming more and more common in my opinion, like processes fall from the sky and employees are just there to follow them and if they fucknup it’s never their fault.
Maybe the right mindset if you are working at subway but I find it offensive for an engineer.
Mind you I truly believe in processes, but everywhere I worked processes came from the engineers themselves, often after something went wrong we write a process to prevent a reoccurrence.
Except for Nathan. Nathan would throw his arms up and say “someone should do something”. Fuck Nathan.
The argument here is having a good process can prevent bad actors (e.g. bad employees) from causing harm due to incompetence or malice.
Maybe, but I could see a dereliction of responsibility in there that is becoming more and more common in my opinion, like processes fall from the sky and employees are just there to follow them and if they fucknup it’s never their fault.
Maybe the right mindset if you are working at subway but I find it offensive for an engineer. Mind you I truly believe in processes, but everywhere I worked processes came from the engineers themselves, often after something went wrong we write a process to prevent a reoccurrence.
Except for Nathan. Nathan would throw his arms up and say “someone should do something”. Fuck Nathan.