T-Mobile Removes DEI Programs Just In Time For FCC To Approve Mergers.
10 replies (most recent on top)
@te You're the main reason to punt H1B's. Writing a sentence in English, without using AI should be your next goal.
https://youtube.com/shorts/MOg15ziVofw?si=TaWNBayQg5fhkfHO
no undercover china company gonna change this mr. We gonna have fareness. Also we gonna f every mikey. If you dont' be gonna have mnkey....it is hard acore. We love to bleend every india mother. we do it die. love the new world wordl you like to have a free be and don't any drawbacks
Because they are majority owned by Deutsch Telekom, which is a German company.
@h3 T-Mobile is a US Public Company, with the majority shareholder being DT. So tell me again why we don't see them on the Fortune lists?
@fa Since T-Mobile is majority owned by DT they will never show up in the fortune lists since those included only US public companies and T-Mobile does not qualify.
@fa T-Mobile does not appear in the top 100 of the Fortune 500 for 2025—but it does rank somewhere between #101 and #200, based on its ~$81 billion in annual revenue
@eh I saw one reference they were #49. However in some areas, they don't show up at all in either F50 or F500. Meaning the larger financial industry still thinks they're a load of BS.
@aq what rank is Tmobile on the F50 list?
This is the unfortunate world we live in. T-Mobile is a fortune 50 company and is behaving like one