rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance Boss: Why Don't You Quit?! Me: LOL OK
Episode Date: November 27, 2022https://www.youtube.com/rslash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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Welcome to our slash malicious compliance where OP does exactly what his boss tells him to do.
Our next reddit posted from the anecdotus.
I was working for a startup engineering firm working as a piping design engineer,
but since it was a startup firm, we didn't have a lot of manpower and the ones that we had weren't very qualified either.
I was one of the very few people qualified enough to handle a team of my own.
The boss trusted me with almost everything.
I was like the second in command after the boss, only because I was managing a lot of things
on the side as a voluntary basis.
Things like paycheck balancing, client meetings, quality assurance, documentation, and other
stuff that he really should have hired someone else to do.
I was just good at it, and he took full advantage of it
by giving me things to do that were never under my job description. One day, he had the bright idea
that we should revamp our website to attract more clients. He gave this project to his nephew
who had just graduated from college as a developer of sorts. After a week or so, the nephew came up
with the first draft of the website, and the boss was fairly disappointed because it didn't look anywhere near to what he expected. He then called me in
and asked me to find out anything about website design. At the time, I was very much interested in
this kind of stuff and I was doing an online course to learn about it more so I told him I could
see what I would do. I spent the next full week making a proper information architecture, wire frames and color guidelines that the net you could
pick up and build the website from scratch. By the end, the website looked
futuristic and the boss was pretty happy. But during that week, my other extra
responsibilities were put in a backlog and they just kept piling on. I knew that
I'd be able to cover everything once I was done with the website, so I didn't
pay too much attention to it.
The next week, my boss caught up with the backlog and called me into his office.
He started yelling at me for all of my responsibilities that I didn't attend to.
I calmly told him that I had been working on his website, and it wasn't a big deal.
I told him that I would clear out the backlog as soon as possible.
But he still wasn't happy. He asked me why I spent so much time doing something that isn't
even my responsibility. I told him that I was learning about user interface design and I was
pretty much interested to learn more. The boss snapped and told me that I should quit and
pursue my hobby as a living. He said, only then will you understand how lucky you are to have a job that pays.
I got kind of offended because one, he doesn't pay me the worth of all the things I do for
the company.
And two, he knew that I could do the work.
But still, he took this as an opportunity to discipline me.
I stepped out of his office, went to my desk, put in my resignation, and went home.
He called me a couple of times and asked me to not quit, and then he asked my co-workers
to call me to convince me to come back.
I wasn't having it.
It's been two years now.
I decided to pursue user interface design as a career, and now I'm working as a product designer
in one of the biggest organizations in the country, with a pay that's almost 300% more than what I was getting paid as a mechanical engineer our next red itposis from K-Savs
I'm a 15 year old girl and recently I started getting complaints on the paper round that I work
I work a paper round for extra income since I'm not 16 yet and
Legally in the UK. I can't get a proper job, but I've had this job for two years.
Lately though, about two months ago I got a new house on the round and they've been nothing but a pain in the butt.
Not only is it way out of my way, so pretty much a hassle to get to, but they've been very rude to me too.
Lately, my boss has been forgetting to put magazines into the papers and they've been constantly complaining, resulting in me getting reprimanded. That in itself isn't
bad, but they've yelled at me for not closing their gate properly, getting too close to
their ring doorbell, and waving at their kid from the window in the morning. All small
things that led to this malicious compliance. Five weeks ago, however, they were still
complaining about not getting
a magazine, despite me making sure that I delivered it, and I was just getting tired of it.
The next time I delivered their papers, I knocked.
Bear in mind, I have to get these papers delivered quickly, so it was 6 a.m. at this point.
However, I knocked and knocked until the wife of the grumpy guy opened the door half asleep and looking agitated.
She coughed slightly and in a typical caron voice she goes,
What the hell do you want?
I look at her with fake shock as if I don't know what I'm doing and I tell her,
I'm just delivering the magazine like you asked.
At this moment, she knew that she couldn't complain. Because first, her ring doorbell caught the entire thing, and second, I had physically
handed the magazine to her this time, all undeniable proof.
For the next upcoming weeks, I knocked until they answered the door, making sure to knock
extra loud.
This morning, however, the husband answered the door and he'd looked defeated. He flat
out looked at me and apologized and said, we get it! We're sorry about the complaints!
Please stop knocking so early and just get the paper through the door. After doing that
round of papers that morning, nothing felt more satisfactory than the sweet taste of malicious
compliance. I may be underpaid, but it was all worth it to see that guy's face.
Our next Reddit post is from Papagalio.
I was using a storage company to keep my stuff over the summer.
And they already messed up the first part of the delivery,
so I wasn't having high hopes for the time
that I was supposed to get the rest of my stuff back.
I had sent seven boxes to the company,
but I received a quote for eight boxes instead,
and the surplus they charged on it was quite a lot.
I wrote to them asking,
why is there this extra box?
And they never replied to me to say they would look into it
or cancel the charges for the eighth box that didn't exist.
I called them every week,
and the line was bogged up every
time and I emailed them nearly every day because the situation was just so
stressful. They kept saying the extra charge was because I stored an extra box
and they can't do anything about it. Despite me being explicitly clear in all
my correspondence that there was no eighth box. Now that they've asked me for
confirmation that I received all my boxes, I said that after two months I still haven't received my final
box. I got my delivery charges refunded as a goodwill gesture. Not that I would go back
to them ever. But the satisfaction now lies in the ID that they're tramping around the
warehouse trying to find a box that doesn't exist. If they still haven't found the nonexistent box
by month three, I might just as well
demand reimbursement for no loss on my part.
Our next reddit poster from saucer.
I worked for a university IT department
as a student worker for a little over four years.
We had a sister department, the media center,
who loaned out laptops, projectors,
and other technology to professors as needed.
In my fourth year of employment, I was on a first name basis with nearly all the employees
of the university, including the head of the media center.
We'll call her Karen, because obviously.
Karen was the queen of her kingdom and had quite a few obnoxious rules in place, but most
importantly, was an iron-clad employee ID policy for checking out
laptops. Under normal circumstances, I completely agree with this policy, however, this was
not a normal circumstance. We got a call from her at 440 on Friday, 20 minutes before we
closed, that a laptop she was trying to loan out to a very important professor wasn't able
to log into the network,
and she requested that we come look at it.
Sure thing.
I make the 10-minute walk across campus from our office to the media center with my toolkit.
When I get there, I see the professor and Karen and I ask to see the laptop.
She says, wait, OP, you need your name badge. Where is it?
Oh, it's on my jacket in my office, Karen. I forgot to grab
it rushing over here. I chuckled a bit.
Deadpan, she says, OP, you can't work on this until you go get your badge.
Karen, I thought this wasn't emergency. Do you need me to fix this right now?
Yes, of course, but we still need to always follow policy.
Fair enough, policy is incredibly important.
I'll go get my name badge.
I left the office and tracked the 10 minutes back to my office.
Then I picked up the phone and called her.
Hey, Karen, just letting you know that because it's 520
and policy states that student workers
can't work after hours, I'll have to come back Monday.
Have a great weekend.
She fumed at me for a few minutes until I essentially hung up on her.
Policy is VERY important.
Our next reddit post is from 13F.
So once upon a time, I was a McDonald's employee. They always put me on drive-through because
I was white and spoke fluent English. Yes, that's pertinent. Literally everyone was Hispanic,
and only like two people besides me spoke fluent English.
So I always winged at ingredient customers
and they always liked me.
They'd ask about me when I was off,
give me little gifts for brightening their day, et cetera.
One day my manager came up to me with a script
and demanded that I spoke from it.
I repeatedly did not use it.
Eventually my manager got frustrated
and threatened me with a writeup if I didn't read from it. Eventually, my manager got frustrated and threatened me with a write-up if I didn't
read from it.
Here comes the malicious compliance.
There was a typo in the script that referred to McDonald's as McDonald's.
So I'd repeatedly say it, and because everyone has a headset, they'd all hear it, and
the staff would chuckle because most could read English, and they all understood the script.
My manager was not amused.
She told me that I had to say McDonald's and I reminded her that she demanded I read
from the script exactly what it says.
I got sent home that day and they cut my hours.
Still, I feel like I won.
Down in the comments we have this story from remote hovercraft.
I was a McDonald's manager for overnight, and one time this new crew member kept
taking orders like, welcome to McDonald's, how may I make help you today? Eventually,
they changed all the words to have Mick in front of them. Are you going to be paying with
Mick Cash or Mick Card? And some of the customers would respond with,
Mick thank you. I didn't stop him. Our reddit post is from I Love Dubstep. I'm fishing at the park right now.
The guy next to me walks away and his pole starts bending over.
I didn't see wherever he went, so I go to set his hook for him and he shows up out of
nowhere like a ninja.
I miss the fish and he says, bro, just mind your business and leave people stuff alone.
I tell him he's right, apologize and go back to my own fishing pole.
He gets his line back in the water and disappears again about 15 minutes later, leaving his
pole standing up on the back of his chair.
His drag clicks a couple of times, so I turn to see where he went.
This douchebag is like 60 yards away.
Then I hear the line start to zip out of his fishing pole.
The line is peeling off his reel,
and I almost pissed myself
because keepers usually don't bite at 12, 30 in the afternoon.
I know what's coming, so I put my headphones in
and mined my own business,
but I give the pole the side eye.
The reel reaches the end of his line,
and I watch his fishing rod just launch into the lake,
and the guy just watches it go
bye-bye in the distance.
He comes rushing back, but by then, of course, it's too late.
He gets my attention so I take my headphones off and he yells,
Dude, I know that you saw my pole getting hit.
I said, really?
Where'd it go?
In the effing water, my fishing pole is gone.
I tell him, aw man, that sucks. I
wish I was just over here minding my own business.
Our next reddit post is from Nameless and Quiet. I'm a bridal consultant at a very popular
bridal salon in my town. I have many years of experience and I love what I do. Most of
the bridal gowns in my shop are special order, meaning that they must be ordered before they're made by the designer, and lead times can be anywhere from 4 weeks to 8.5
months.
Not everyone knows this when they come shopping for a gown.
That's the whole point of me being there.
I make sure that we can get the dress in time, that any desired customizations or alterations
are possible, and that the price is within the bride's budget.
Well, when this particular bride and her mother stepped into the store, they went immediately
to the racks and started ripping through the neatly hung gowns.
I introduced myself, explaining that I would be their consultant for the appointment.
The bride had a fairly short engagement, four and a half months, and I knew that only
some of the gowns would be available in time.
As I tried to explain the process to her and her mother, she sharply cut me off and told
me, just let a shop and leave us alone.
I was stunned to be spoken to so rudely, so I did as I was told, I left them alone.
Even when I saw them looking at dresses twice her budget, that wouldn't arrive until
months after their wedding.
I never took any of the gowns back to a dressing room or asked her if she'd like to actually
try them on.
Even when they stood by for a while, clearly waiting for me to take her back to the dressing
rooms, I just continued on with my other work as if they didn't exist.
Eventually, they realized that I had no intentions of acknowledging or helping them in any way,
and they left without getting to try any gowns on.
The owner asked me about it after they left, and I told her the whole story.
She laughed and said, good for you.
Our next red-aposis from Sparnesta.
This happened a couple of months ago in our neighborhood.
There's a pretty rundown house on our block with some really inconsiderate neighbors.
They have a large travel trailer that's too big for their driveway, and sticks out
one foot onto the sidewalk when it's parked.
It's not really an issue because there's plenty of room to walk around it.
But the kicker is, they always park it on their half of the driveway so it completely blocks the sidewalk.
They live in a corner house, so it's dangerous for a family to walk in the street around a blind corner because the sidewalk is inaccessible.
Multiple neighbors, including myself, have asked them multiple times to pull their car
into the driveway or park it on the street to leave the sidewalk accessible.
They always say they will, but nothing changes.
Well, apparently, they got into a shouting match with one of the other neighbors over it,
with the offending neighbor telling the other neighbor that if they don't like it,
to call the city. Well, the other neighbor did just that. The city came out and
wrote a ticket for the SUV blocking the sidewalk and also wrote them up for the trailer that was
too big to fit in the driveway, which forced them to store it in a rental place for 350 bucks a month.
That was our Sashmolicious Compliance and if you like this content be sure to follow my
podcast because I put out new Reddit podcast episodes every single day.
month. That was our slash malicious compliance and if you like this content be sure to follow
my podcast because I put out new Reddit podcast episodes every single day.