rSlash - r/Antiwork "I DON'T CARE YOUR SON IS DYING! GET TO WORK!"
Episode Date: August 25, 2022https://www.youtube.com/rslash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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Welcome to our slash anti-work, where OP quits so hard that his boss calls the cops on him.
Our next reddit post is from PostermicPoster.
I used to work at a cell phone carrier store front, I'd been there five years.
I was salesperson of the month multiple times and always had good numbers.
I had a new boss who was brought in as a store manager as part of a college new higher program,
despite many in-store employees being
way more qualified. Eventually, after this new higher ran off many of the veterans, I was
left to open the store one morning by myself while the manager was on the floor greeting
people. She had the biggest heart on for micromanaging and would always stand over my shoulder
being critical of how long it would take me with each customer. She didn't have any work experience, so there's that too.
She would never open her own register.
Well, this time I had about a dozen different customers needing help, and they were all
lined up waiting and pissed.
My boss comes over while I'm trying to go as fast as possible and says in my ear,
you're taking too long, you need to move faster!
I explained that each customer has specific needs,
and I have to make sure they're completely satisfied
to avoid a bad review call and get written up again.
My manager did not take the hint,
so I turned around and asked her to come with me
for a second to the back.
She followed me and immediately said,
What's the deal?
I said, I think I'm done here.
I cannot work like this to which he said,
if you leave, you know you can't come back.
To which I simply said, what a poor choice of response.
I took out my store keys and handed them to her,
much to her surprise, and then just walked out of the store.
I turned around and leaned on a public rail
and watched through the window
as she tried to deal with all the customers and I smoked a cigarette. She then went to the back,
pausing, helping the customers, and called the cops on me. She tried to tell them I was
loitering and I wouldn't leave. She also told them that I was harassing the business.
The cops arrived and I told them the truth and they told her I did nothing
wrong because I was allowed to be on public property. As she rolled her eyes of the cops,
I reminded her that she was taking too long and the customers need her. I watched for another 10
minutes and left. Have that. Yeah, I may be petty, but she can f-write the hell off. Okay, so obviously
she was like a terrible manager and she deserved to get screwed over.
But like at the same time, I kind of feel like upper management is to blame because why bring
in a fresh college higher when you have qualified skilled employees who actually understand
the business already working there.
Like it's so weird for me when companies don't promote from within.
Why spend more money on someone who may or may not be good when you can just promote someone who is already good and then make everyone happy?
Posted to R-slash India. Should I start shaming cashiers for not saying thank you for shopping
during checkout? I'm not sure if this is just my location, you guys can chime in as well.
But I can literally count on one hand the number of times I've been thanked for spending
my money at my local supermarket or any other retail establishment for that matter.
Gas stations, bookstores, salons to name a few during the last few years.
I thought that Indians were supposed to be hospitable people.
Why am I being excluded from that experience?
I'm almost tempted to snap back at whichever old hag ends up working the cash register
the next time I'm out shopping and calling her out for not thinking a customer, aka me.
I'm sure that it's part of their standard operating procedure.
There's no reason these people get to just tell me the final amount and then mentally
tell me to f off.
What are your guys' experiences shopping around the country?
Is it better where you are? Edit, 40 minutes after posting this thread, it now only stands at 5% upvoted and falling.
What a pity.
Either you guys don't care about being treated fairly, or we have loads of entitled cashiers
amongst us.
I am f'ing done!
As someone who used to work as a cashier, I can confirm, we do mentally tell you to go
F off.
Our next Reddit post is from Thoreauway.
I work for a mid-size law firm that hired me as an IT specialist to handle all of their
digital evidence for trials.
The law firm was in the process of changing their evidence-managing system to cloud-based,
and they wanted me to be the only person with admin access to the cloud.
Everyone else would be limited to view only and would work on a local network drive.
Sounds great, but I quickly realized this was the only task they expected me to perform
in my eight hour shift.
This was in no way an eight hour job, so I was stuck finding busy work at the office
most of the time.
Then COVID happened, and I was asked if there was any way that I could work from home. I set up a remote workstation, and that's when the real fun began.
In about a week, I was able to write, debug, and perfect a simple script that performed
my entire job. It essentially scans the on-site drive for any new files, generates hash
values for them, transfers them to the cloud, then generates hash values
again for fidelity.
In court, you have to prove that digital evidence hasn't been tampered with.
I clock in every day, play video games, or do whatever, and at the end of the day, I
look over the logs to make sure everything ran smoothly, then clock out.
I'm only at my desk, maybe 10 minutes a day.
For a while, I felt guilty guilty like I was ripping the law
from off, but eventually I convinced myself that as long as everyone is happy, there's
no harm done. I'm doing exactly what they hired me to do. All the work is done in a timely
manner and I get to enjoy my life. It's a win-win for everyone involved.
Down in the comments, we have this post from Blo from blob the builders. Think of your wages as a
subscription service to your automation program LOL. Big companies love subscription services, right?
Our next reddit post is from novelty account. We had a visit from all the important managers
yesterday. It was really just one of those checkups where they tried to catch you doing something wrong.
And at one point the HR lady went around to everyone and told us about the pizza that she brought
for the employees that she had left in the break room.
Yeah, yeah, I know that pizza is not enough,
but this pizza was from a locally famous pizza place
and we were all looking forward to having someone
or breaks.
By the time that anyone got a break,
there was no pizza or even pizza boxes in the break room.
The front of house staff confirmed that our district manager took all five boxes of
pizza when he left.
This dude makes $250,000 a year and he sold the only little thing that we were looking
forward to that day.
Pizza?
Well he sounds like a pizza s*** to me.
Our next Reddit post is from Brilliant Parking.
I started a new job two months ago.
I do field plumbing service. It hasn't been going well, and on Friday I decided to put in my two
weeks notice. Well, I guess that giving notice was a bad idea, because things on the employer side
got real and professional real quick. My direct boss had a meltdown when I told him calmly and professionally that I was quitting.
He told me to f off and hung up on me. I took that as me being fired. Their problem was that I
had their f-30 work truck. They demanded that I bring their truck back to main headquarters three
hours away without giving me a ride home. Yesterday I emailed them and told them to come get their truck.
I had the police come over and declared the vehicle abandoned. They would tow it in 24 hours. The big boss
and the boss who told me to f off had to drive all the way out to my place on Sunday to get
their truck before it was towed off of my property. Our next reddit post is from dish soap
on a sponge. I'm a PhD student who has just started mystery shopping for some extra cash.
I can't believe some of the interactions
I'm supposed to have with these employees.
Here's an example.
I got an assignment for Best Buy.
I'm supposed to be interested in a streaming box
like Roku, Fire, et cetera,
and ask an employee for help.
The employee that I interacted with was super helpful.
I told him about my TV and what I wanted
while pretending not to know much about technology.
He said that honestly, it didn't matter which brand I bought,
and that he found one particular brand
to be pretty user-friendly, which was great for new people.
But otherwise, it was just okay to get the lowest cost one.
He made sure that I understood how it plugs into my TV,
ensure that I have a way to connect it, and make sure that I was taken care of.
But that's not what he was supposed to be evaluated on at all. He was supposed to push
me towards one brand in particular, tell me about every single feature of that one specifically,
push me to have someone come out and install it for me, make eye contact, smile, introduce
himself by name, make sure every single streaming
box they offered by them was in stock, etc.
If anyone asks, he totally did all those things.
And I'm just not going to be a mystery shop or any more.
So my son is on life support, and I told my boss 48 hours before I was supposed to work
again that I wouldn't be able to work until my son is off life support.
And this is what she tells me.
OP writes,
Hi Don, this is Crystal.
I'm just letting you know that my son is still on life support.
So until he's out of the bad, I just won't be able to make it to work.
I can let you know if he starts to get better, so that way I can return to work with no problems.
That isn't how we do things, so I'll accept that you're quitting.
Okay, so how do we do things when my child is on life supports?
I never said that I was quitting, so I take it that you're firing me.
If you can't come to work, then that's you quitting.
No, it's not.
I'm letting you know that I can't come to work due to my child's life being on the line.
I'm just letting you know ahead of time.
I'm not going to get into this with you here, but I've been more than accommodating with
you during this time, allowing schedule changes and such.
There is no reason that you can't work, and I will not tolerate this drama.
End of conversation.
If you aren't here to work your shift tomorrow, then I take that as you quitting.
Okay, this isn't some eye doctor's appointment or a dentist appointment.
This is my child's life that we're talking about.
He's on life support.
Okay, I'm going to be in contact with corporate.
I never quit my job.
And you can't work because... too much drama.
And by the way, here's corporate's phone number.
Would you be able to go to work and function if your child was on life support?
I don't know up from down, and you expect me to work?
Yes, I would.
I still have bills to pay, and it's something to keep me busy and occupied.
We don't get to just come and go as we please at this company.
I have tomorrow and Monday covered.
Your son is in the best place that he can be.
I have a store to run and that is my focus.
Alright.
So going down in the comments, apparently the manager here got a whole lot of trouble
for this.
The Facebook post got, let's see, 33,000 comments.
That is an immense amount of comments and 100,000 shares and 53,000 reactions.
And the company where this manager works got review bomb down to a Google score of 1.7 out of five stars.
Also, this went viral enough online that the manager got fired.
So the manager kept saying that OP was being too dramatic, bringing too much drama
to the workplace, but it's like that meme. Is it me? Am I the drama? Yeah, lady, it's you.
On this next post, OP was fired, then gets this message.
Good morning. Did you create an order for this week or an inventory? I'm confused. Was my position
eliminated or not? Yes, but you did inventory and prepped an order on Sunday. I was wondering where it was, if at all.
Oh, bless your heart. You don't fire someone and then still contact them to ask questions about the job because you don't know.
After 25 years in the kitchen, I just thought you would have been professional.
In 25 years, I've never had anyone fire me and then expect me to still work.
This top comment from Daytona Carl, you're fired, now get back to work.
Our next Reddit post is from stove hats.
My husband was just fired from the Crocs Distribution Center in Dayton.
If you're under the impression that Crocs cares at all about minorities, you're wrong.
Last week, my husband reported a coworker
for multiple transphobic, misogynistic, racist,
and homophobic comments.
These included complaining about having to stand in line
to clock out behind a group of women in head scarves
and referring to them as, um, I'm not sure if I want to say this word on YouTube,
but so I'll let you imagine what slur he used here. He complained that he had to work with women
in general. Like, I know that we need people, but why did have to be a girl telling someone that
back in his day, he used to, oh jeez, trick these F words into going to a party, drive them into an open field,
and kick the stuffing out of them.
When talking about a trans man that he worked with, he said, she's got titties, she uses
the girl's bathroom, she's a girl.
The supervisor that my husband complained to went straight to the guy who made the comments
and outright told him my husband was the one who complained about him.
The coworker didn't deny any of these comments. He explicitly told my husband,
I don't remember saying that, but I probably did, I say a lot of dumb stuff here. He did,
however, stay late after his shift, wait for my husband in the parking lot and follow him around
in his truck while shouting at him, which my husband reported to HR. HR told him the next day,
well those comments were from a while ago, there's nothing we can do about it now,
and he didn't actually do anything in the parking lot, so if you don't like working with him,
you should think about finding a job. Multiple employees reported this co-worker.
Crocs chose to do nothing about it. Today, my husband was fired. He was told that a co-worker. Crocs chose to do nothing about it. Today, my husband was fired. He was told
that a co-worker overheard him muttering under his breath that if he ever got fired, he
would hurt people. Because people needed to be heard and that women impeded my husband's
work and he didn't like working with them.
Never in a million effing years would my husband ever say anything like that. Who even does
that? Just walks around muttering
crazy stuff under their breath. Nobody does that. Crocs knows that this is BS and they
have no evidence, but they fired him anyway. I am not an employment lawyer, but this sounds
pretty much like retaliation, which I think is illegal, right? Isn't that a federal
offense and I'm making that up? I smell a lawsuit.
That was our slash anti-work, and if you like this content, be sure to follow my podcast
because I put out new Reddit podcast episodes every single day.