This Person Is Debating Whether To Tell Their Coworker That Management Is Considering Firing Them, And The Internet Can't Decide

You've probably heard of Ask Reddit, where people can ask the internet pretty much anything they want. Well restaurant servers have their own sector of the site called Tales From Your Server where service industry employees can share horror stories, advice, encouragement, etc.

Group of people accepting an award at the Emmys, one man is saying, I just love restaurants so much
Fox / The Emmys

Recently, u/Familiar-Feedback801 the asked r/TalesFromYourServer page, "Should I tell my coworker they're planning on firing him?"

Here's the situation: Familiar-Feedback801 has been working at a fine dining restaurant for years, and they're about to exit stage left. However, before leaving they got some interesting information, "Our management has been very unstable. I found out they plan on firing some of our staff because they're 'lazy.'"

Joey Tribbiani from Friends looking confused, wearing a sweater and apron, with the text, Did I do something wrong

Before you answer, the user shared some important information about their own employment situation to add some context. "I have plenty of references, so I'm not worried about that. I also know he would never tell anyone it was me who told him. It's just one of those awkward things where I don't know if it's my place, in case it's 'all talk.'"

A person stands with their back to the camera, wearing a shirt that reads "NOT YOUR WAITRESS." Their hands are raised
Baroness von Sketch Show / CBC Gem

Responders were split, and presented some solid reasons why:

"If he is a friend or acquaintance you care for, absolutely. I will always be more loyal to people than a company or a restaurant," user SimplyKendra wrote.

A waitress on a TV show talking to a coworker. The text reads, If I got mad about every ignorant thing that gets said to me, I couldn't work here
Starz / Sweetbitter

Those who voted yes in regards to telling their coworker agreed that employees should look out for each other.

An older man in a white shirt and black bow tie gives a thumbs-up while holding a piece of paper in what appears to be a rustic setting

"Yes, I would tell him if I were you," user sixhundredkinaccount agreed. "But if you want to protect yourself try telling him anonymously. Maybe leave a note in a place he’ll find it."

A waitress on a tv show looks quizzically at someone off-camera. Text reads, How do we make it happen
ABC Network / A Million Little Things

Some people like user thatburghfan suggested ways to tell him that were just safe enough to leave the job unscathed.

"I would just tell him you overheard that they were going to make some staffing cuts. That should be enough info to get the point across," they said.

Then there's user draizetraine who thinks this isn't even a conversation, "Why wouldn’t you tell him?"

On the other hand, there were people like user Mackhealth1 who had a very detailed answer to draizetraine's question, and suggested the original poster stay as far away from this situation as humanly possible.

A woman frustrated while seated at a table. Text overlay says, I JUST CAN'T

Speaking from experience, user zzzongdude added: "This is the right thing to do, but I've had situations where I warned another employee about the possibility of getting fired because I heard a manager talking about people possibly getting fired... and he went around telling everyone I was threatening him... I think it's better to just stay out of it."

And finally, there were people who acknowledged there's a lot of grey area here, and begged Familiar-Feedback801 to move cautiously.

Dwight Schrute holding his finger to his lips in a "shh" gesture

"It all depends on your relationship with this coworker. I've been on the other side of this where I was about to be fired and my coworkers, some of whom I was extremely close to, kept their mouths shut fearing retaliation," user JG307 wrote.

"I get where they were coming from now, but at the time it was an incredibly hurtful betrayal. Not that they didn't choose me over their own jobs (I would never ask that of anyone) but that they didn't trust me to take the heads up and still protect them."

Tell us what you would do in the comments. Do you owe your coworker a heads up, or is it better to be safe than sorry?

H/T r/TalesFromYourServer

Some replies have been edited for length and clarity.