Revealed: The 'offensive' tweets and memes that could get man sacked from Waitrose as he accuses 'woke' bosses of 'destroying' his life
1 week, 2 days ago

Revealed: The 'offensive' tweets and memes that could get man sacked from Waitrose as he accuses 'woke' bosses of 'destroying' his life

Daily Mail  

The tweets and memes Waitrose is using to threaten one of its own employees with the sack can be revealed for the first time today. Wine specialist Ben Woods, 41, is facing the sack from Waitrose's branch in Henley Ben Woods reposted and commented on an image of an umbrella that allegedly looks like Isis bride Shamima Begum Ben Woods's tweet suggesting a horse run away from an obese woman was one that Waitrose included on its list MailOnline understands Waitrose believes it has fair and detailed people policies to safeguard its employees' welfare. He also claimed there was 'no telling what all that synthetic hormone might do the baby' and called the person 'just fat' Many of Ben Woods's tweets could be seen as offensive by some people, although many of his followers support him He also posted a cartoon from the Telegraph that Waitrose would have sold in its own stores Woods posted an image from MailOnline's exclusive interview with the Ulez Blade Runners, who vandalise traffic cameras in London He criticised Labour MP Carolyn Harris for appearing to fall asleep. In another tweet, he asked what his followers told their mother when they were two In this tweet, Ben Woods asked if the burqa and hijab should be banned in the UK and said: 'support the country you live in or live in the country you support' Other tweets included Woods asking if the Palestinian flag should be banned and a video of a woman in a niqab scraping a slit in her car window so she can drive In what may come as a surprise to many, Waitrose did not use any tweets mentioning either Tommy Robinson or Enoch Powell. John Lewis is the parent company of Waitrose Last December he showed his support for Harry Potter writing J K Rowling, joked about men's struggles in 'dealing with women' and said Labour was working for migrants rather than British people Waitrose also included tweets from other people talking about Woods in its 27-page document Waitrose also included a list of replies to unknown posts, one of which said Woods's account has 'nothing whatsoever to do with Waitrose' as well as tweets mocking Woods as having a 'small mouth' Woods is now raising money to support his legal battle against Waitrose with the help of employment lawyer Elliot Hammer from legal firm Branch Austin McCormick.

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