I have no choice as I'm currently unemployed and beggars can't be choosers. I have no savings, no insurance. But one thing struck me. During the interview they asked me a total of SIX TIMES if I do more than I'm paid for. The questions basically made 2 statements and you have to choose which one you agree more. So they'd say “You set achievable and reasonable goals” VS “you are motivated by challenges”. Stuff like that boils my blood because it's basic brainwashing. They stated it six different ways. I can't remember all of them but one was “Do you regularly go above and beyond your duties?” and another was “Do you set high expectations for yourself?” and another was “Do you always try to do more than what is expected of you?” I counted the same question six times and my answer remained the same every time. Amazon.…
Category: Antiwork
My employee doesn't have reddit. I run a small restaurant. I hired a server a few weeks back and I over heard him complain he never got paid for training and first few days at his last place. They kept giving him the run around about how it was in the mail. It had been over 2 months and the back pay was around $300. I told him it was illegal to withhold wages and I printed up a Texas workforce complaint document and told him on his next day off go in and ask for a written check, with this document in hand. Ask for your check and tell them they have to write you one or you will fill out the complaint there, sit at the bar and fill out the form in front of them, get names of the managers and district managers then leave. I told…
1250 word supporting statement
I've mostly worked in blue collar jobs and I want a remote job. Mostly because I want to do the bare minimum working from home so I could spend the rest of my time gaming or web surfing. The problem is I'm trying to find jobs that require no prior experience or degree to apply. I do have some experience, I did go to college for a few years but mostly to get a degree in history. I didn't do so well so I dropped out. I am a fast typer, have a decent computer setup, and have MS office skills. I'm looking for mostly typing type jobs with very little interaction other than emailing my co workers or boss. How do you find a job like this?
I have been working this part time job since my junior year of college. The hours sucked but the work was somewhat relevant to my field. Currently I am taking 19 credit hours and simply did not have the time for the job anymore, the hours were overnight and evenings on the weekend. I sent my notice in on Sunday, the upcoming weekend I was scheduled to work overnight, I could not do this as I have two projects due the following week, I told my manager this three weeks ago and he decided to continue having me work that shift. He did not want to be flexible so I quit. Fast foward to this monday, I receive a call at 7am. The managers boss calls me and starts to berate me, “What you did is so dissapointing.” Also, “This makes me question your character as you can't be reliable.”…
They have a snack rack for employees who can not afford lunches. I’ve seen it filled with Ramen, apple sauce, and pop-tarts. You know whatever the Manager finds at the dollar tree that week. It was often times empty Also they do not provide utensils. At least not at the location I worked at. Here’s an idea, maybe pay your employees enough to be able to afford lunch.
My review that got rejected on Indeed.
I started working on Jan 27th of this year (2022) and it's been a rush of no training, I stock shelves but they said I'm not “Fast enough” so they are going to move me to door greeter because “you're a talker and you like to be around people”, I have no other options, I may have to move in with a friend of mine who lives with his parents and has a spare couch in the basement, I feel like a loser, door greeters are the most redundant position and all I do is check receipts of TVs and high dollar items like Printers or electronics…I get insulted by customers. One even told me to “just off yourself” What do I do?
I am a high school teacher who teaches law. I’m planning a new unit on employment law in the coming weeks and I want to start the unit with a lesson about legal lies that businesses frequently tell employees. I’m thinking about things in the vein of “you can get fired for discussing pay.” The overall goal is making sure teens are aware of their individual employment rights. Any recommendations on topics/lies I should add to the lesson would be greatly appreciated.