The laws and regulations are vastly different from country to country, region to region, state to state. If you don't say where you're located, most of us will assume America and give you bad info if that's not right.
I can only affect my small world that I can reach out and touch. I've thought about all the different ways to change the direction we're going and I only came up with this. I think we're not seeing that we can take capitalism for our generation and pass on better values to younger generations. I'm a millennial and after reading my final article on how yet another politician wants to fix the debt by taking from my SS and generations after me I'm done with the older people stealing from us then turning around to bite the hand that feeds them. It always comes out of us. Their mistakes are our burdens. I don't think we need to do business with the older generations anymore. We're now the core earners in this country so I said to myself, “let's start a business to remove the older generation from my…
I feel like this should be illegal, but man, like. I can't find anything that suggests it is. Mom was diagnosed with cancer recently, it's not great but it's not like, super life-threatening. We almost kind of wish it was. (We don't, by the way. She got lucky.) She has doctor's appointments, she has scans she has to do when time opens for her to be able to do them on short notice. The type of cancer she has is 'aggressive' so the docs are doing everything they can as quickly as possible. Her work originally told her she could take a leave of absence. But because the treatment plan is suggesting it'd take like 18 months to complete, they suddenly were like “Whoa we can only support a leave of absence for 6 months”. Then they told her that she could work 20 hours a week and kinda take…
John Deere
The multi-billion dollar company I work for just asked me to volunteer my 30-minute, unpaid lunch to make donation bags for United Way. Which they will likely use as a tax write off.
Solidarity.
The facts of Denmark.
Hello everyone. I'm coming over from the Danish subreddit r/denmark because we've seen an influx of hopeful Americans hoping to immigrate to our small pearl in the north. Thanks and all of that, but I thought i'd lay out some facts and fix a few common misconceptions about Danish Society which you might want to consider before handing over your passports. Q: Who are you? A: Well, I'm a Dane, I was born in Denmark and have lived here for almost 3 decades. I'm an adult, at this point. I've taken a masters degree in Denmark, worked in Denmark for almost 2 decades and know how to operate a google search query. Q: Okay, whatever. Is it true Denmark's work culture is the best in the world? A: I MEAN. Depends on your definition, but let's dive into some facts for a start. Work Week First of all, the common…
I have been working for this company for a year so I asked them a 33% raise so they just fired me told me to leave within two months but they told me train this new guy before I leave so I asked them If I should leave after completing my two months or in between, they told I can leave if I get any other opportunities. Should I just leave today or wait and train the new dude?? Ps: I don't need to work for a 6 months I have saved up some money