SpaceX fires employees who condemned Elon Musk's behavior in open letter: Report
SpaceX employees have denounced Elon Musk's behavior in an open letter sent within an internal company chat system. A day after the release of the document, SpaceX reportedly fired several employees who helped in its distribution.
The letter, first reported and seen by The Verge, criticized the CEO's Twitter presence and the recent allegations of sexual harassment made against him, which Musk has denied.
According to a report by The New York Times, SpaceX's president and chief operating officer, Gwynne Shotwell, confirmed in an email that SpaceX "terminated a number of employees involved."
"The letter, solicitations and general process made employees feel uncomfortable, intimidated and bullied, and/or angry because the letter pressured them to sign onto something that did not reflect their views," Shotwell reportedly wrote to employees. "We have too much critical work to accomplish and no need for this kind of overreaching activism."
In the full email, published by The Verge, Shotwell said the company had "launched an investigation" into the letter and that several employees had indeed been fired.
"I am sorry for this distraction," she wrote. "Please stay focused on the SpaceX mission, and use your time at work to do your best work. This is how we will get to Mars."
Shotwell has previously emailed employees saying she "personally" believed that the reported sexual harassment claims against Musk are false.
The SpaceX employees who penned the open letter said their words were a collaboration between "employees across the spectra of gender, ethnicity, seniority, and technical roles." In particular, the letter took aim at the company's CEO and his public actions.
"Elon's behavior in the public sphere is a frequent source of distraction and embarrassment for us, particularly in recent weeks," they wrote.
"Elon's behavior in the public sphere is a frequent source of distraction and embarrassment for us."
"As our CEO and most prominent spokesperson, Elon is seen as the face of SpaceX — every Tweet that Elon sends is a de facto public statement by the company. It is critical to make clear to our teams and to our potential talent pool that his messaging does not reflect our work, our mission, or our values."
The letter continued to speak about SpaceX's "extraordinary accomplishments" and technical achievements, which the authors said are at odds with the company's "promotion of diversity, equity, and inclusion" and claimed employees were experiencing "unequal enforcement of our oft-repeated 'No Asshole' and 'Zero Tolerance' policies."
The document was reportedly circulated in an internal Microsoft Teams channel with over 2,600 employees. Employees were asked to sign the letter either by filling out a survey or by scanning a QR code. According to The Verge, many employees agreed with the letter, some expressing embarrassment over Musk's tweets and behavior. The number of signatures accumulated is not known.
SEE ALSO:Elon Musk feels 'super bad' about economy, wants to lay off 10% of Tesla workforceThe letter then cited three action items, requesting time to speak through these points with the company's executive team within the next month. These included "publicly address[ing] and condemn[ing] Elon’s harmful Twitter behavior," asking that SpaceX "explicitly separate itself from Elon's personal brand." They also asked for clarification on the company's aforementioned "No Asshole" policy and its "Zero Tolerance" sexual harassment policy.
Mashable has reached out to SpaceX for comment.
SpaceX employees have recently been told by Musk that they must spend at least 40 hours in the office, or face the prospect of unemployment. The NYTsuggests that Musk has been "rarely challenged by his own workers."
Musk, who is also the CEO of Tesla, recently acquired Twitter for $44 billion, in a deal which has proved to be controversial. The deal is yet to go through, with Musk stating he could not move forward until Twitter provides data regarding its cluster of fake/spam accounts; the company has said this information will be handed over. Just yesterday, Musk met Twitter employees and hinted at potential layoffs.
TopicsSpaceXElon Musk
-
Our galaxy might crash into Andromeda. What would happen to Earth?David Hockney's painted 'Vogue' cover is a soothing moment in your dayIt looks like Waymo is about to expand its selfHere's the terrible reason even married people are having less sex'Please find her': Man dies amid 25Duplantis 'feels close' to setting new recordWatching Hugh Jackman voice a fight scene is both hilarious and awesomeSpurs sign defender Pedro Porro from SportingBest smart home deal: The Amazon Smart Thermostat is just $63.99Martinez fires Inter second
下一篇:Google is bringing AI summaries to ‘Files’ so you can find your docs quicker
- ·Number Representations in Computer Hardware
- ·N. Korean leader Kim may visit Russia for talks with Putin on arms deal: report
- ·Apple funded study finds Apple Watch can detect irregular heart rate
- ·US striving to stop NK's potential weapons support to Russia 'wherever we can': Blinken
- ·2016's $400 GPU vs. 2019's $400 GPUs
- ·Facebook shares news desert data to improve local news
- ·Ford goes all in on autonomous vehicles with new factory
- ·Instagram rips off yet another feature from Snapchat
- ·Flying spaghetti monster and unworldly life filmed in deep sea footage
- ·N. Korean leader Kim may visit Russia for talks with Putin on arms deal: report
- ·“文理兼优”水晶梨,只待蜜果收获时
- ·Facebook shares news desert data to improve local news
- ·US Open 2024 livestream: How to watch US Open tennis for free
- ·[EXCLUSIVE] 'Free North Korean detainees': Activists target Hangzhou Asian Games
- ·Russia proposed three
- ·Premier League clubs spend $1 bln in January transfer window
- ·The Weird, Wonderful World of Water Towers
- ·[EXCLUSIVE] 'Free North Korean detainees': Activists target Hangzhou Asian Games
- ·[EXCLUSIVE] Lawmakers to submit resolution urging China to free N. Korean escapees
- ·10 million participate in 2016 rallies
- ·“大体老师”的故事:以生命点亮生命
- ·'Iron Fist' reviews: Does the show live up to to its Marvel predecessors?
- ·Independent counsel seeks to put Choi's daughter on Interpol wanted list
- ·Blinken says N. Korea
- ·Google is bringing AI summaries to ‘Files’ so you can find your docs quicker
- ·Jack Dorsey is recruiting his own personal bitcoin posse
- ·Yoon, US Senate's armed service committee chief discuss alliance, N.K. threats
- ·Rights experts from 17 countries demand release of North Korean escapees in China
- ·Breonna Taylor's death shouldn't be an insensitive Twitter meme
- ·US striving to stop NK's potential weapons support to Russia 'wherever we can': Blinken
- ·NCT member Taeil leaves band over sexual offense allegations
- ·Reims coach Still takes on PSG
- ·British newspapers want Facebook and Google investigated over fake news
- ·Samantha Bee's tweet about Trump and 'A Day Without A Woman' totally nailed it
- ·How 3D Game Rendering Works: Texturing
- ·Djokovic is no 'villain', says Azarenka