rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance "I don't take orders from GIRLS!" "OK, then you're fired"
Episode Date: July 5, 2020r/Maliciouscompliance In today's episode, OP is a young woman working for her grandfather's company. A new male hire comes in, and OP has to train the new employee on safety regulations. For some reas...on, the guy flips out when OP starts the training and screams that he doesn't take orders from little girls. Hey dude, maybe it's not a good idea to scream at the company owner's granddaughter. When the CEO found out, he let his daughter fire the guy! Instant karma! If you like this podcast and you want to see more, follow my podcast for daily Reddit content! 🔔 Subscribe: https://bit.ly/2E3A8i6 💬 Discord: https://discord.gg/VD6eYD3 🎧 Podcast: https://link.chtbl.com/rslash ⚓ Send me a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rslash 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rslashyt/ ♪ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rslash0 🛒 Merch: http://bit.ly/rSlashMerch 🎁 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rslash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to our slash a podcast where I read the best posts from across Reddit today's subreddit is our slash
malicious compliance and next a word from our sponsors our next Reddit posts is from just add the slash this happened when I was 15
post from just at the slash. This happened when I was 15. My mom was, let's be real, she probably still is, a mentally, emotionally, and physically abusive narcissist. Some highlights
are when she was teaching my twin sister and I to read at the age of four or so. It was
around 2am and my sister was having trouble learning, so my mother's solution was to beat
her with a sandal every time she got a flash guard wrong.
The same thing happened when my mother had me transcribe an essay she had written to my
handwriting when I was seven.
Every time I started a letter from the wrong position, like starting a capital M from
the bottom line, she would beat me with one of her Berk and stocks.
This too happened later at night, so when I got too delirious from the exhaustion and
pain, she would drag
me by the neck and literally throw me into a cold shower to wake me up so we would more
easily continue the waking nightmare. When I was 13, I told her I wanted to live with my dad,
they're divorced, and she told me she didn't care what I did after I turned 18.
I later figured out that this was because the child support stopped at age 18. I later figured out that this was because the child support stopped at age 18. Anywho,
fast forward to age 15. Our relationship was understandably strained. We had had guests
and she liked to use guests as a way of controlling our behavior through shame. It's easier
to be an angsty teenager when your grown up friends from church aren't watching and
judging everything you do. This makes it easier for her to pretend to be a firm but loving mother all while slipping
in sideways comments like velvet daggers.
Well, I decided I wasn't going to subject myself to the whole thing and spent the day outside
in the woods nearby.
We lived in the mountains and at the time it was less than a hundred feet from the house.
When I saw a guest sit left I went to go back inside.
My mother, perhaps unhappy at being denied a
day long emotional abuse routine, told me I wasn't welcome, and that I should leave. My 15-year-old
brain heard her words and knew that she only meant for a little while, but it also recognized
that it failed to specify any time frame at all. So I hiked a couple of miles to her friend's house
and asked if I could spend a couple days there. When my friend's dad found out that I was there and why he
was pissed and said I could stay as long as I needed. I didn't go home that evening or
the next. My mom became concerned and contacted law enforcement to report me missing. This
is a big deal for several reasons. We lived in the mountains on a national park so it
was a very real possibility that I had been attacked by a wild animal. Become injured
while hiking, drowned, or been kidnapped. Nobody knew of my mother's abusive tendencies
or the squalor and neglect my sister and I lived in. Most importantly, the law enforcement
was the local park rangers which she worked with daily. Law enforcement immediately contacted my
dad side of the family to see if I turned up there or contacted them. They promptly freaked the
F out and came to my house with lawyers on standby. Law enforcement then hired dogs to track my
scent and then everyone freaked out because the dogs tracked me to a nearby river where my trail
died because the dogs couldn't pick up my scent anymore. Over the next couple of days, there were people going in and out of my house, rangers, lawyers, my family, etc. And several
noticed the overpowering scent of cleaning chemicals, but only a lawyer considered why a
clean house would wreak of chemicals. And regarding this section, OP later added an edit
regarding the chemicals. The house was normally trashed.
My mother kept an untrained dog and the carpet was soaked with dog feces and urine.
The few times we had guests, we would have to crawl around the dog's potty spot and clean
it up and make the house smell good.
My mom freaked out when she realized that Rangers and CPS might come around.
She did a deep clean at the house before reporting me missing
because she couldn't afford to have them realize
what they were walking on.
Law enforcement started to canvas the nearby woods
and neighborhood.
My friend's dad came to me and asked if there
was somewhere else I could stay.
He told me that he wouldn't kick me out,
but didn't want to have to lie to the police
or let the dogs on his property.
My friend and I figured we would just go camping
for a week or so, but instead, I looked at my dad's side of the family and called and they picked
me up right away. Understandably, everyone had questions. When I told them what was happening,
the lawyers horrified, pounced. A judge issued an emergency change of custody and prevented
her from gaining custody until she underwent a psychopath and therapy, which my mother
would never allow. The rangers equally horrified, and therapy, which my mother would never allow.
The rangers equally horrified,
completely shunned my mother,
and she eventually lost her job.
She was only allowed to live in the park
because she worked there,
so she was kicked out of her house.
My friends, fathers and trackers
remember that the local community in churches
and they shunned my mother too.
She lost her job, her house, her church, and her friends.
All because she told me to leave, and I did.
And down to the comments, OP explains
that he completely cut his mom out of his life
after this moment.
She hasn't even met any of her own grandchildren.
And based on this story, I can't say
I blame OP for doing that.
Our next Reddit post is from Next Flatline.
My neighbor's three year old first some reason was always running around barefoot until
2 a.m. and then again from 5 a.m.
You could feel the apartment shaking when the kid was stomping and the parents didn't
seem to do anything about it.
I didn't consider complaining since I grew up in an apartment and I could get used to
the noise with time.
I was actually happy that I could listen to loud music and the neighbor wouldn't mind
since they were also noisy.
Well, to my surprise, and a few days I get a very angry building manager telling me that
the neighbor complained I was too noisy.
Even though I was careful to never make noise between 9pm and 10am.
Of course, I then complained about the stomping and got told that the other apartments also
complained about that, but neither he nor the police could do anything about natural noises
coming from living in an apartment.
Well, from then on, every night and early morning I would play very loud and very dirty
adult videos.
And whenever I had a guest, I would tell her she could be as noisy as she wanted.
Every time, I could hear the stomping halting right away and after two months, they moved out.
Our next reddit post is from Bed of Pillows. Our supervisor introduces a new project management tool to the team.
Our team is only three people and we don't need a giant professional software solution.
Both of us underlings point this out, but the supervisor insists.
We worry about it being a waste of time, and the supervisor says it'll be worth it.
We ask for clarification about what exactly do we need to enter into the new tool,
and the supervisor says everything. Everything?
Absolutely everything you do should be entered and checked off.
My coworker underling gets a gleam in his eye.
I understand. So we enter everything into the calendar. Leave home for work, entered, arrive at work, entered, sit down at desk, entered, and so on.
And every time we accomplish a task, we log on to the program and market as complete. Coffee, check, write an email, check.
And every time we do this, the program automatically sends an email to the supervisor that the
task is done.
To the supervisor's credit, he took it well and laughed about the overwhelming emails.
And it was only a few days later that he dropped the program and we went back to the way
it was before.
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Our next credit post is from Plithorism.
So I used to work for my grandparents on an oil farm in Texas.
I was 17, freshly graduated from high school, and I moved from the Midwest to Texas to live
with my grandparents and work in the oil farm they worked for doing some easy data entry.
The building was essentially a 10 building on the job site where my grandma and I, the
only two office workers besides my grandfather who was the foreman, worked.
Basically, when the new hires would come in that had missed the initial hiring round,
I was the one who would make sure that all their paperwork was in order and that they had
all of their OSHA classes finished.
And if any safety training hadn't been done, I would just put in the VHS to confirm
on a written copy that they had finished it under my instruction.
This went on for two months with no issue until one fateful day.
Our regular Florida man, record and all, came in as a new hire and came to my office to
finish his new hire paperwork.
Once he was in my office, I found he had no safety training to speak of, and I informed
him his next day or two would be spent in my office watching safety videos. All of this was paid, of course.
He immediately flew into a rage, screaming about how he wouldn't have some little girl
teaching him how to do his job. And again, I was a 17 year old female at the time, I now
identify as non-binary, and was only going through company standards
and OSHA rules with him.
I went to my grandfather who was my boss at the time, obviously very confused and uncomfortable,
and unsure of how I should proceed, to which my grandfather said, you want to fire him?
Cue my excitement!
My grandfather follows me to my office, and I as a 17-year-old, get to fire
this grown man sitting in front of me. I start directing him to gather his things and
leave as he starts up a huge fit, yelling and cursing at me before he noticed my grandfather
standing in the door with his gun holstered on his hip. My grandfather usually kept his
gun locked in a safe on the ground or in his truck. I hadn't realized until after he pulled it out just for me. And then,
the guy very quietly got up and left. It was the most satisfying moment of my life.
I like this response from Starfleet auxilary. To be fair, it was be fired by you or be fired
on by Granddad. I think you made the right career move.
Also, your grandpa sounds like an awesome guy. I think most managers in that situation would have
fired the guy himself, but the fact that he allowed you to do the firing is so sweet.
It's very clear that your grandpa has your back. Our next word it posted from K-Ridge Comics.
Back when I was in nursing school, we were supposed to wear black non-porous clothes, toad footwear, with non-skid souls for
clinical rotations that weren't crocs. Most of my fellow female students were classic nursing
clogs like desksos and senitas. I tried wearing clogs like this in the past and had rolled my ankles
too many times to recall, so I decided to not go that route for shoes.
I'm a military spouse, a vet myself, and have a four-mentioned sucky ankles, so my footwear of
choice was a pair of black leather tactical combat boots. As a show of support, and to make
sure I always look sharp at clinical, my hubby always shined up and agedressed my boots every
evening before clinical the next morning. The boots always look professional, they were comfy as hell, I could bump my toes into
beds without breaking a toe, and I could wear them all day without having back pain,
foot pain, or rolling an ankle.
The same could not be said for my classmates, wearing more traditional shoes like clogs.
During the first week of my first semester, I had an old school nurse as my clinical instructor. I say old school because she believed female nurses should still be wearing crisp
white uniforms with the stupid starch hats and that her profession lost prestige when
we transitioned to scrubs. This instructor got such a bee and her bonnet about my boots
and decided that my boots were out of regulation that she threatened to take it up to the director
and have me tossed from clinical, thus failing the program.
There was nothing in the handbook specifically stating, I couldn't wear boots since it
just stated footwear which was black, well maintained, non-skid, and non-porous.
Check, check, check, check.
Furthermore, the pair of boots that I wore were meant to be worn by EMTs, so they were waterproof, blood-borne
pathogen-resistant, puncture-proof, oil-proof, nonskid, and had reinforced toes. They were
just as expensive as dance-go-clogs and could handle lots more abuse. I knew I was in the
clear, and so I decided to keep on wearing them. The day after the instructor commented on
the inappropriateness of my boots, she did a uniform slash shoe inspection to make sure we were appropriately attired.
I, of course, was wearing my nicely polished combat boots.
She failed me for the day based on my boots, so I politely objected, stating that my boots
fell well within the definitions of acceptable footwear in the handbook.
She literally marched me to the director's office like I was a kid caught stealing cookies,
and demanded I get tossed for the boots, failure to follow program rules, and disrespect because I
objected to her failing me. The program director, upon further close reading of the program regulations,
determined that there was nothing wrong with the boots. They adhered to the standards set forth by
the program, and that they were honestly safer than most of the shoes the other students were wearing because they were waterproof, puncture-proof, non-skid, and had reinforced
toes. She resented my fail and allowed me back in clinical. After that, I heard not a
peep about my boots from any of the faculty for the rest of my program. Fast forward to graduation.
I'd been wearing my combat boots since I started, and I had no intention of stopping.
Especially since many of the vets that I cared for during clinical always reacted positively
to them.
Our nursing pinning ceremony, the event where we receive our nursing school pins and our
officially recognized nurses has an all white dress code.
White uniforms starch white hats, white clothes toad footwear.
The word footwear is key.
The dress code did not state
shoes specifically, and I knew this. The same entitled nersees me in the hall and makes
it a point to tell me that I'll have to get some real white nursing shoes to wear
to pinning since I can't obviously wear my black combat boots because we needed to
have white footwear. I politely smiled, nodded, said that I'd have white footwear, and went on my
merry way. And then, I wore the all white Doc Martin combat boots my infantryman husband brought
me as a graduation gift-depending. The instructor stopped me after the ceremony and complimented me on
actually getting nursing shoes. At which point, I pulled up the leg of my white scrubs and showed her
my boots. The look on her face was priceless.
Our next Reddit post is from Vertigo.
The company I was working for had a fair number of people that traveled almost exclusively.
So while it was a fairly small company, it may be 100 people on staff, across everyone,
I guess we would have about 12 to 15,000 nights in a hotel and over a million flight
miles per year.
That worked out quite well for everyone because they racked up a lot of rewards with hotels
and airlines so their vacations ended up costing them basically nothing.
In addition to that, the company policy was that you booked and paid for all your travel
and then submitted a request to get reimbursed.
So quite a lot of people were also getting insane rewards from their credit card companies
as well. It was considered a perk of the job, even to the point that HR would mention it when
recruiting people, and it helped people put up with some of the other BS policies they
didn't like.
Enter the new controller.
Let's call her Karen.
Karen decides that the company is losing money and implements a new reimbursement system
where everyone gets company cards that they use so the company gets all the credit card rewards.
On top of this, they also partner with a travel agency that everyone has to use to book
their flights, hotels, and rental cars.
The idea is that since all the money and bookings are now in the company's name, the company
gets to keep all the rewards.
This is all great for the company, but it sucks for all the employees because this had
formally been one of the top perks.
It's like each employee gets a several thousand dollar pay decrease.
Cue malicious compliance.
I expect our CEO was like a lot of CEOs and that he hadn't assisted the book to all of his travel and just into an itinerary, so he knew what flights to get on, where to pick up his rental and what hotel to check into. Similarly, when things don't go his way, he's not one for winning the details. He just
wants it fixed ASAP. So, the admin assistant started following the procedures to the
letter. The CEO ends up getting stuck with sucky cars, sucky hotel rooms, and stuck in coach
class because the system either has limits on what choices can be made, or wants to use
reward points to
book, and you can't use those type of rewards for the flight totals, etc. that he's used to.
Additionally, when he'd run into problems, he'd call his assistant and she'd tell him that
she would have to call the travel agent to see what's wrong. And this would invariably occur
outside business hours, so it'd take a day to get an answer. If memory serves, that policy changed last
at all of 30 days before the CEO walked into the controller's office, told her
that it sucked and directed that everything should be put back to the way that it was.
After that, I know of at least a handful of people that ended up taking the CEO's
assistant not for dinner and drinks as a thank you for helping to get things back to normal.
That's always the problem with new management. Every time a new manager comes in, they want to change something so they can prove that
they're doing something useful and different.
When 9 times out of 10, the better solution is, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
That was our slash malicious compliance, and if you like this content, then follow my
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