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I suppose they might mean it differently Isaac Send a noteboard - 28/02/2010 07:41:17 PM
i'm not sure why this is in there, but a job posting i found says:

"Person must be ... self motivated, diligent, litigious..."

so... they want me to sue them for something? or disagree with their work? i'm not sure what they want here. although, if that's what they want, i can reject authority with the best of them :|


Probably, in that context, they are saying they want someone who plays by the rules and - especially if this is a management position - knows how to avoid sticking themselves in a situation where they might get sued by an employee. I think they're misusing the word, but my guess is they mean they want someone who's work relationships are more likely to be distantly polite that buddy-buddy and who tends to deal with worker problems in a more legal than emotional context... not a good choice of words even for that, but unless the job opening is for a paralegal or someone who specifically deals with employee gripes, that's probably the gist.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein

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Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
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is "litigious" a quality you want in an employee? - 28/02/2010 07:16:15 PM 243 Views
I suppose they might mean it differently - 28/02/2010 07:41:17 PM 179 Views
i guess i can sort of see that - 28/02/2010 07:48:49 PM 140 Views
Never work for someone less competent than you. - 28/02/2010 08:08:08 PM 136 Views
Was it an ad to be a legal assistant for a personal injury lawyer? *NM* - 28/02/2010 09:04:01 PM 43 Views
no - 28/02/2010 09:31:43 PM 128 Views
I was only suggesting it as a joke. *NM* - 28/02/2010 10:26:48 PM 44 Views
No, nor is illiteracy one you want in an employer. - 01/03/2010 01:15:40 PM 144 Views

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