For companies and high-profile executives, speaking out in times of national crisis carries risks. But so does staying silent.
In the wake of Alex Pretti’s death at the hands of federal officers in Minneapolis, a growing number of corporate leaders, employees and Minnesota-based companies are speaking out. Some are condemning the fatal shooting and Donald Trump’s broader immigration enforcement in the state.
But the response has also exposed a familiar tension in corporate America: Powerful executives and public-facing companies often stay quiet until internal and external pressures converge — and until they believe speaking out together matters more than speaking loudly.
“What’s really interesting is that the CEOs do engage when they get to a tipping point, and we’re at one again,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale School of Management professor and author of the book “Trump’s Ten Commandments.”



So do we give the dictator a golden statue with huge balls, or shall we give him another airplane?
And of course when asked, we will deny everything even though the entire world saw us buying our way into the dictatorship
Corporate America should receive the same punishment as the trump admin when this is over