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Maine Human Rights Commission

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Intern for a semester - Recensione dipendente - Dipendente anonimo presso Maine Human Rights Commission

5,0
17 lug 2015
Stagista anonimo
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

I loved the people there and thought the work was very interesting. It was a lot of responsibility for a student to get a stack of cases and have the ability to take on the leadership of fact-finding and resolving the disputes. It was a great choice.

Svantaggi

The building itself isn't that nice. Also, there was not enough staff for the amount of work- but that's government for you.

Esplora altre recensioni su Maine Human Rights Commission

1,0
16 mag 2025
Dipendente anonimo
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

None, they're the worst there is

Svantaggi

If you're considering filing with the Maine Human Rights Commission, let me save you the time: don’t waste your breath, your evidence, or your hope. This agency is not a defender of rights. It is a bureaucratic sarcophagus—a place where truth is entombed, dissent is muted, and injustice is embalmed in procedure. I came to MHRC armed with a mountain of evidence: documented retaliation, medical diagnoses, police reports, court records, and even prior findings of discrimination by this very Commission. Their response? A templated dismissal, blind to fact, deaf to reason, and soaked in cowardice. They didn't just miss the point—they buried it. On purpose. Let’s be brutally clear: the MHRC does not protect the vulnerable. It protects institutions. It protects the status quo. It is a firewall of indifference staffed by professionals who have mastered the art of looking directly at injustice and saying, “not our problem.” Their investigative process is a rigged autopsy—one that dissects your life with rubber gloves and then shrugs at the smoking gun. They will ignore testimony. They will ignore causation. They will ignore trauma. Because in their world, systemic abuse is a scheduling issue, not a civil rights emergency. Worse, they have built a machine that rewards silence and punishes persistence. Speak out, and you're a “problem.” Push back, and you’re “uncooperative.” Demand accountability, and you’re met with the chilling smile of someone who knows they’ll face zero consequences for getting it catastrophically wrong. Let history show this plainly: the Maine Human Rights Commission has become an accomplice to the very discrimination it claims to oppose. It is not a shield. It is not a sword. It is a stage play. A hollowed-out institution that consumes taxpayer money while offering nothing but delay, denial, and dereliction of duty. And when the day comes that this agency is finally audited, dismantled, or sued into reform, let this review be Exhibit A.

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