Every few months our store does a new fundraiser, and we have to ask customers at the end of each transaction to donate to whatever charity we’re doing at that time. I hate doing it, because I feel like our multimillion dollar retail company should just donate the money itself anyway, but that’s beside the point. Tonight our store manager told us that tomorrow we’re starting a new one for ‘Autism Speaks.’ I know ‘Autism Speaks’ is a shitty organization that isn’t actually using the money they collect to help people with autism. They aren’t even classified as a charity and they have a horrible history of where there funding goes. What should I do instead when my bosses tell me to ask customers to donate to the “charity?”
Month: April 2022
work-life balance in a sci-fi dystopia
Saw this, and wanted to share. Apple TV+'s 'Severance' Nails How Absolutely Inhuman Our Work Culture Is
Saw this at Sams club today…….
I think that there is this notion that if you live off something like a basic income or state support that you are somehow not “pulling your weight”. But I think this assumes that all jobs “pull weight” or are helpful. In fact most jobs are totally useless (bureaocratic BS jobs) or outright harmful (gambling, selling alcohol, selling many BS medications, military, selling ads – like facebook and google, etc). At the very least having a “job” propagates the psychological helplessness of your class, especially if you are being abused by some asshole manager, which is often the case across all industries. Convincing someone to pay you, or being part of someone else's abusive structure is not “pulling your weight”. In fact fighting this propaganda by not working does more good than taking a job. It moves the needle just that little bit. You are one small statistic, one person…
Hired under false pretenses. Advice
I don't like posting but I am here because I've been mad all day now. I've been in restaurants/ hospitality for almost two decades now. I think I have an exceptional work ethic and that my work history/loyalty shows that. I was at my old job for a decade but due to the growing toxic environment, I thought it was best for a new venture. I applied to a bunch of entry-level positions at a UC (working for the state) in hopes of reaping the rewards of having benefits and getting away from my old job. Important facts here are that I have a lifelong health condition that requires medication and management. I also plan on transferring to this UC as I went back to school a few years ago. I figured I could make connections and they ALSO give generous tuition deduction benefits. Win all around for me except…