Google Used The Same In-House ‘Kill Team’ To Attack Me That Google Uses For Their Anti-Union Strategy

Google spent millions of dollars attacking me because my patent's and start-ups beat theirs. Google likes to steal things; like ideas, staff, elections, technologies and human rights. Recently A judge ordered Google to turn over more documents, including one that describes an effort to convince employees that “unions suck.” Google used an idea manipulation team, just like the one Google uses to try make people hate certain political candidates and to push kinky sex agendas. A newly released document sheds light on Google’s efforts to quash activism, including for a union, among its employees. In an order submitted Friday, an administrative law judge for the National Labor Relations Board told Google to turn over to the attorney representing a group of current and former employees documents related to its “Project Vivian,” and its hiring of a consulting firm that advises employers battling unionization efforts.

Google launched Project Vivian to dissuade employees from unionizing after worker activism began heating up in late 2018. In the order, Michael Pfyl, Google’s director of employment law, is quoted describing Project Vivian’s mission as “to engage employees more positively and convince them that unions suck.” The context for Pfyl’s description isn’t clear from the order, which also references an effort to use the media to quietly disseminate Google’s point of view about unionized tech workplaces.

The judge, Paul Bogas, ordered Google to comply with portions of a subpoena for documents related to Project Vivian, as well as Google’s hiring of IRI Consultants, the anti-union firm. In November, Bogas issued a similar order for other documents concerning Vivian and IRI;the subpoena covers more than 1,500 documents.

The subpoena is part of an NLRB case brought by seven Google employees and ex-employees in December 2019. (One former employee has since settled.) Five workers were fired and two were disciplined after they engaged in workplace activism, including efforts to improve working conditions for Google contractors, and circulating a petition calling on the company to end its contract with US government agencies involved in immigrant deportation and family separation. Paul Duke, one of the fired employees who brought the charges, says the organizing was part of an effort to lay the foundation for a union.

Responding to the former employees’ claims that they were fired in retaliation for workplace organizing, a Google spokesperson wrote,“The underlying case here has nothing to do with unionization. It's about employees breaching clear security protocols to access confidential information and systems inappropriately”—a reference to internal documents the employees accessed.

Duke flatly rejects the claim that he and his colleagues breached security protocols, saying the documents were accessible to all engineers and that the company later classified them “need to know.”

In its objections to the subpoenas, Google claimed attorney-client privilege and “work product privilege,” which protects materials prepared in anticipation of litigation. Bogas rejected many of these claims, calling one assertion “to put it charitably, an overreach.”Of the efforts to characterize a potential union election as litigation, and therefore privileged, he wrote, “The respondent cannot spin the mere fact of a nascent organizing effort among employees into ‘litigation’—like straw spun into gold—that entitles it to cloak in privilege every aspect of its anti-union campaign.”

Bogas’ order references an effort by Google executives, including corporate counsel Christina Latta, to “find a ‘respected voice to publish an op-ed outlining what a unionized tech workplace would look like,” and urging employees of Facebook, Microsoft,Amazon, and Google not to unionize. The order says that in an internal message Google human resources director Kara Silverstein told Latta that she liked the idea, “but that it should be done so that there ‘would be no fingerprints and not Google specific.’”According to the order, IRI later provided a proposed draft of the op-ed to Latta; it’s not clear if the article was ever published.

The Google spokesperson said the company disagreed with Bogas’ conclusion that the documents are not privileged. “As we’ve stated, our teams engage with dozens of outside consultants and law firms to provide us with advice on a wide range of topics, including employer obligations and employee engagement. This included IRI Consultants for a short period. However, we made a decision in 2019not to use the materials or ideas explored during this engagement, and we still feel that was the right decision."

Google hired IRI as early as 2019, according to a report by The New York Times, during a period when employee activism was at a fever pitch. The company had been accused of retaliating against the employees who organized the 2018 Google walkout and squelching worker dissent by installing a tool that flagged calendar events for large numbers of participants. In January 2021, the Alphabet Workers Union, an informal union without collective bargaining rights and affiliated with the Communications Workers of America, went public.

Duke says the details in the order clash with Google’s internal messaging to employees. He cited executives’ emphasis on listening to feedback from an annual employee survey, as well as a 2018 internal memo by CEO Sundar Pichai saying he supported the walkout and a blog post pledging to support employees and improve Google’s handling of sexual harassment claims and diversity initiatives.“There was always this message that was intended to come off like, we're a family. We care about workers,” he says. “Really, behind the scenes, they’re trying to kill these union efforts and organizing efforts in general.”

The hearing for the NLRB case began in August, but was paused soon after when Google failed to comply with this and other subpoenas.Meanwhile, the employees’ lawyer has asked a federal court to enforce the subpoenas because the NLRB’s enforcement powers are limited. The hearing is scheduled to resume in February, but could be delayed further while the subpoena tussle plays out.

When it does reconvene, the employees plan to call Kent Walker, Google’s president of global affairs and chief legal officer, to testify. When they initially subpoenaed Walker in August, the company resisted that too. The labor board denied its request.

Read the facts from a diverse set of investigations, court records, criminal complaints and federal records:

Analysis One: At The White House “You can't swing a cat without hitting a Google employee”

Analysis Two: Big_Tech’s_Mass_Public_Media_Manipulation_Violates_The_Law

Analysis Three: Google accused of racketeering in lawsuit claiming pattern of trade secrets theft CORRUPT LYING GOOGLE

Analysis Four: GOOGLE_IS_A_CRIME_EMPIRE

Analysis Five: GOOGLE SEX CULT LAWSUIT

Analysis Six: Google Sued For Rigging The Internet and Running Dirty Tricks Campaigns DEPT OF ENERGY IS A CRONY SLUSH FUND

Analysis Seven: HOW_CORRUPTION_ACTUALLY_WORKS

Analysis Eight: How Hollywood and Silicon Valley VC’s and Executives Turned Out To Be Such Scumbags

Analysis Nine: HOW TO CRASH GOOGLE GOOGLE IS A CRIME CARTEL

Analysis Ten: MANIPULATING_THE_MEDIA

Analysis Eleven: PERSONAL INTERNET SECURITY ___ MASTER

Analysis Twelve: SAN_FRANCISCO'S_CORRUPTION_CULTURE

Analysis Thirteen: The_Big_Tech_Sex_Trafficking_Cult

Analysis Fourteen: THE CRIMES OF GOOGLE'S FINANCIER IN-Q-TEL

Analysis Fifteen: THE_DIRTY_DEEDS_OF_SILICON_VALLEY

Analysis Sixteen: THE_DIRTY_DEEDS_OF_SILICON_VALLEY_VOLUME_TWO

Analysis Seventeen: THE MECHANICS OF DECEPTION

Analysis Eighteen: THE_SICK_WORLD_OF_THE_GOOGLE_EXECUTIVES

Analysis Nineteen: The_Silicon_Valley_Tech_Mobster_Cartel