This (article) is an ongoing spectacle in my neck of the woods where a CEO who has been paying its supermarket workers a livable wage, plus some stock options and a 401k got fired because the board didn't believe the chain was making enough money.
The fact is, the chain was making enough money to support its workers, executives while maintaining low prices for its customers. The board was just upset that they weren't making as much profit as the other supermarkets in the region.
Now, there's backlash from not only the workers, but from the customers as well, who have organized boycotting campaigns and other forms of protest, demanding the CEO's reinstatement.
As the article states, a lot of this has to do with some bad blood among the executives and the board, and the ousted CEO's demise is almost reminiscent of Mustafa's in the Lion King, betrayed by someone who thought he should be heir to the throne. Still, it's an interesting developing story, and something which is gaining some (but not enough) attention.
The fact is, the chain was making enough money to support its workers, executives while maintaining low prices for its customers. The board was just upset that they weren't making as much profit as the other supermarkets in the region.
Now, there's backlash from not only the workers, but from the customers as well, who have organized boycotting campaigns and other forms of protest, demanding the CEO's reinstatement.
As the article states, a lot of this has to do with some bad blood among the executives and the board, and the ousted CEO's demise is almost reminiscent of Mustafa's in the Lion King, betrayed by someone who thought he should be heir to the throne. Still, it's an interesting developing story, and something which is gaining some (but not enough) attention.
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