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After Meta removed tampons from menβs bathrooms in company office buildings earlier this month, some employees started coordinating βquiet rebellionsβ by bringing in their own, according to a new report.
In early January, CEO Mark Zuckerberg overhauled a variety of Metaβs internal and external policies, ranging from lifting restrictions on speech to βrestore free expressionβ across his platforms to changing its βHateful Conductβ policy to allow criticism of gender identity.
One internal move that irked woke Meta employees was the removal of womenβs sanitary products from menβs bathrooms, which the company had previously provided for nonbinary and transgender employees.Β
According to The New York Times on Wednesday, βTo protest Mr. Zuckerbergβs actions, some Meta workers soon brought their own tampons, pads and liners to the menβs bathrooms, five people with knowledge of the effort said. A group of employees also circulated a petition to save the tampons.β
The vice president of workplace services reportedly emailed the petition signatories directly.
The email suggested that while it had βnot been the intention of Meta leadership to make employees feel unwelcome or excluded in our offices, at this point we do not have plans to revisit our on-site amenities offerings.β
The email, however, did promise to βshare your feedback with leadership.β
βThe sanitary products were emblematic of the quiet rebellions that Silicon Valley workers have staged as they grapple with the rightward shift of their bosses,β the Times reported, describing the tech giantsβ embrace of Trump and attendance of his inauguration as βa major departure for a tech industry that has typically leaned left and liberal.β
But while company leadership is normalizing relations with the president in the public eye, employees, according to the outlet, are engaged in βsubtle acts of defiance.β
βThe quiet dissent underlines who wields the power in Silicon Valley these days: the bosses,β the Times observed, noting that this βsubtle resistanceβ is a stark contrast to tech employeesβ more public protests during the first Trump administration.
The Times claimed that according to an internal poll, one question that Meta employees wanted to ask of Zuckerberg at an upcoming company Q&A was how women at Meta could provide βmasculine energyβ to the office.
During an interview with Joe Rogan on Jan. 10, Zuckerberg had argued that βmasculine energyβ is a positive force.
The Times reported the company changed how employees could participate and βsaid it would βskip questions that we expect might be unproductive if they leak.ββ