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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld a lower court's decision blocking the Trump administration from terminating 19 career intelligence officers at the CIA and Office of the Director of National Intelligence who were involved in diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) roles. “The Agencies have never suggested that any of the Intelligence Officers engaged in workplace misconduct or that the terminations were motivated by performance concerns. Rather, the Director of the CIA stated affirmatively that the decisions to terminate the Intelligence Officers were taken to ‘effectuate the directives in' DEIA Executive Order” signed by President Trump, the majority wrote in its opinion. U.S. Circuit Judge Nicole Berner, writing for the majority, said that among the promises of the U.S. Constitution's Fifth Amendment "is the requirement that no person be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . . This promise of due process has been construed to require federal government agencies to adhere to their own binding regulations."
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Human Times
UK
CNBC reports on companies that have walked back their hiring plans after rapidly changing their minds that artificial intelligence can “do it all,” to focus more on human capital. Ford has rehired hundreds of experienced human engineers to work on quality issues that automated systems couldn’t fix, and Commonwealth Bank of Australia and IBM are also said to be refocusing on human capital after making layoffs while investing in AI. IBM replaced its HR functions with AI that handled around 94% of routine requests but was unable to meet the other 6%, which included ethical dilemmas. “Budgeting on ‘tech to replace humans’ without investing in training or upskilling left teams unprepared to leverage AI,” a report from Intuition Labs observed. “Notably, among companies pushing automation, many later ‘regretted’ layoffs, having cut the very people needed to oversee AI,” it added.
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Human Times
Europe
German chancellor Friedrich Merz has proposed new rules requiring workers to obtain a sick note in person on their first day of illness. The change aims to enhance productivity in Germany's stagnant economy. "The number of sick days is too high," Merz said. "We are creating a set of tools that will enable those involved, both employees and companies, to correct this." The new rules would replace a system whereby employees can get a note by phoning a doctor and do not need to do so until their third day of work. Frank Werneke, the head of the services sector union Verdi, said Merz was creating "a culture of distrust of employees." Doctors also oppose the change. "Our practices would be flooded with patients who don't need in-person care and would be better off in bed," said the German Association of Family Physicians. Meanwhile, Merz announced a €10bn tax cut for middle-class families to stimulate the economy and support his coalition government. Families earning €60,000 annually will receive over €600 in tax relief. This will be funded by raising the top tax rate from 45% to 47%.
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Human Times
Middle East
Women taking weight-loss drugs are more likely to land a job, according to research by Harvard University economics professor Rebecca Diamond, who found that the employment rate for women who weren't working before taking the medicine rose after about eighteen months. Those women who were already working weren’t more likely to get a better job, she said. “What does not change for women is equally informative. The arrangements that do not respond are the ones already in place, where any first impression occurred long ago and where weight is one characteristic embedded in a much richer stock of information,” Diamond concluded. Single women taking the medication were also more likely to get married or start living with a partner, the research found.
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