I still couldn't believe it. My dad has to pay $14,000 for the bike accident even with insurance, and now he has to pay even more because of me. I went to the ER back in April due to severe acid reflux, and stayed there for approximately 3~4 hrs. Blood work was taken, I was given pepcid and a painkiller, and I had on an IV drip for 2 hrs. The doctor pressed my stomach using his fingers to detect any irregularities (fortunately to which there are none). I sat in a wheelchair for only an hour because of how terrible the pain was. We drove ourselves to the hospital, no ambulance called. It was between 12 AM to 3 AM—there weren't all that many people, except for a few who had emergencies, but there are more staff than patients. When we got home, they sent us the bill: **$9,000**…
It’s easy, right?
Background Check
I have not had a job that asked for it yet, but I am assuming some time down the line this will happen. When I first started my career, there were 2 jobs that I had that I was very much mistreated (underpaid and workplace bullying). If my background check asks for all of my previous employments, can I omit them provided that I did not put them down on my resume?
Check out this amazing propaganda…
https://sifted.eu/articles/tech-companies-negotiate-salaries/ I get articles like this all the time due to the fact that I'm a manager for a large corporation and my professional social accounts. It's pretty gross. I received one a few months ago in which the title was 5 things to offer employees besides a higher wage. I'm required to constantly take classes for professional development and let me tell you it is all taken from political propaganda playbooks. I openly laugh at the 22-30 year old dipshits “teaching” these classes. There needs to be a nationwide strike for 2-4 weeks to make the walls come tumbling down.