rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance Pay Me Less? Guess I'll Work Less 🤷
Episode Date: September 30, 2021r/Maliciouscompliance In today's episode, OP overperforms at his new job because he's chasing a promotion! During his first yearly review, his boss tells him that they don't give out big promotions fo...r people in their first year, so OP doesn't get a promotion. OP decides that if they're going to pay him a minimum wage salary, then he's going to deliver minimum wage work! He stops doing all of his boss's work, and his boss's life immediately becomes miserable. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to R-Slash, a podcast where I read the best post from across Reddit.
Today's subreddit is R-Slash malicious compliance, where OP gets a speeding ticket from a cop,
and then ruins that cop's day.
Our next Reddit post is from Boston Pilot.
Years ago, I got a speeding ticket in Worcester, Massachusetts.
It was a typical speed trap where they sit at the bottom of a steep hill,
knowing that lots of people will exceed the very low speed limit because, you know, gravity.
It was BS, so I decided to fight it and at least make them work for their $100 fine.
I read everything I could find on fighting radar tickets, and one strategy was to check
whether the police department had proper FCC documents on the radar they used.
If they don't, the radar info is inadmissible, and
you'll probably win your case. I went to the Worcester Police Station and found the
records department down in the basement. I showed them my ticket, and I explained that
I wanted to view the paperwork for the radar that I used to record my speed. I had to
wait a couple of minutes, but some official came out and sternly informed me that civilians
don't have access to that information. CUME ALITIOUS COMPLIENCE!
I asked a few people how you request records for a court case, and it turns out that, at
least in Massachusetts, that's one of the things a sheriff's office does.
So I went to them, paid them 50 bucks, I know, on a $100 ticket, but I've always enjoyed
tilting at windmills, and I described the documents that I required.
I have to admit that, by the time I had to go to court,
I'd kind of forgotten about the Sheriff's Department,
but I did notice this police officer sitting
in the audience section with all the other people
fighting tickets.
This guy was not your typical police officer though.
He was wearing a very fancy uniform
and his hat had all kinds of gold braids on it,
and he did not look happy.
Traffic court being traffic court it was all kinds of disorganized with a bunch of citizens
sitting around waiting for things to start.
And of course the proceedings plot along at a snail's pace.
Finally my name is called after about 30 minutes, and this police officer comes over to
me and explains that he's in charge of the entire record division for the Worcester
Police.
He also said that he was something like a captain or a lieutenant, I forget which.
And he has the radar records in his hand for me to examine, so I look as documents
over, and everything seems to be in order, so I thank him.
He's visibly angry about having to spend his morning sitting in traffic court over a
$100 citation. It was totally worth the $50 bucks. To this day, I don't know whether
someone at the Sheriff's Department was just messing with the police department by naming
the top guy in the records request, but I thoroughly enjoyed the experience. Don't want to let
the citizens see your records? Fine. I would have loved
to have been there when the Sheriff's Department showed up to serve the head guy with a court order.
Oh, and by the way, I lost the case. OP, I think that's what you call a
peric victory. You may have lost the court case, but you made the boss of the cop who gave you
the ticket, suffer, and that made it well worth it. Our next reddit post is from G Mindy.
I'm a 26 year old guy, and I started my first job after college three and a half years
ago.
I was hired with a group of 25 people.
I used to run a lot of clubs in college, and I had this, I need to finish my job as
best as I possibly can, attitude when I first joined.
I was good at what I did, and I put in considerably more work
than other people who joined with me.
Another huge motivation behind this,
was it since my initial pay wasn't good enough,
I went into impress with my work
and get a really good raise at the end of the year.
So throughout the year, I kept working late hours,
often staying for over 10 hours in a day.
The way our work dynamic was set up
was I was only under my manager
and we were both supposed to share the work on their projects. And slowly and steadily, my
manager started noticing that I was taking on extra stuff and he started offloading his
work on to me too. Now I was essentially doing my own job and half of my manager's job
as well. And I reduced the time it took to do those jobs by about 40%. I was stressed and
overworked, but I was getting exceptional weekly ratings, so I felt like it was worth
it. How naive I was. Yearly review time came, and I went to my one-on-one with my manager.
My manager told me that while I have one of the best performance ratings in the company,
they're not allowed to give new people a huge
raise. And so I received the same raise as others who joined at my time, but who were doing the bare
minimum. I was pissed. I told my manager that since the company has declared me average, that he
should expect average performance from now on. He laughed at me, thinking I was kidding. I wasn't. Starting the next day.
Every task I had that I would normally finish in two hours, now needed eight hours. I would
not stay in the office for more than the agreed upon eight and a half hours. I wouldn't
finish up my lunch quickly to get more work done. I would no longer do any of my manager's
job for him. Oh, the client is asking for a document that I normally take one hour to prepare.
Sorry, an average person takes four hours to do this job.
So I'm going to keep this document with me for the next three hours while I figure out
how to update the table of contents.
It takes three clicks, by the way.
Oh, is there something you need after work hours?
Sorry, but it'll have to wait until tomorrow.
Complain started coming in quickly about the delays and deliverables.
My manager started spending a lot of his time frustrated because he wasn't very good
to begin with, and now I wasn't taking up his workload. I spent that entire year working
two hours a day while I spent the rest of the time listening to music, browsing Reddit,
and watching my manager struggle. I left that job at the end of the time listening to music, browsing Reddit, and watching my manager struggle.
I left that job at the end of the year for a job that paid three times the salary.
Some details of our projects get published online, and last I checked, my manager was running
seven to eight months behind on some of the projects.
And from what I heard from some of my friends in the company, my manager didn't get a raise
last year.
Our next Reddit post is from Kilted Turtle. This story is from the 80s. I was the East Coast expert on the network
gear for a big mainframe company. I was associated with a manufacturing plant, but I did customer
side visits to help field engineering either install or fix installations that weren't working.
Whenever we went to a customer side, we had to wear a suit and tie. Since I often worked in
computer rooms, I never wore white shirts because of the dirt issue.
Normally, I would just wear a button down shirt of a different color, like blue or pale green.
So, I flew to Boston to work with the sales rep to configure a system that we were trying
to sell to a big bank.
The sales rep says there's a minor change.
First, we have to go to a mandatory sales rep meeting, hit by the regional VP of sales. Fine. I get there. And there's a
sea of white shirts and ties. And then me and my colored button
down shirt. I sit in the fifth row. The room has about 50 sales
reps. The regional VP gets on stage doing his best. Excite the
troops to go out and sell millions speech. The audience claps and cheers.
Mid-Sinnons.
The VP sees me and stops.
Hey you, where's your white shirt?
I look around and figure out that he might be talking to me so I point to myself.
Yeah, you in the blue shirt.
All of my staff.
Everyone that works for me wears a white shirt.
Okay, good to know. Thanks.
Thanks. Get out and do not come back until you're wearing a white shirt.
You want me to go and not come back unless I'm wearing a white shirt?
Yes, get out now.
So I get up, walk to the aisle, turn and say,
Hey, do you know who I am?
No, I don't effing know who you are, and I don't effing care.
Out!
Super.
Then for the rest of you, I'm OP, the East Coast expert in networking product, and I work
for the director of engineering there.
So I don't work for that guy, and it's unlikely that I'll be back since I don't know
no white shirts.
I left and flew back home to frantic voicemails from the sales rep about his customer.
The next day, I dropped by the director of engineering's office to give a trip report.
He says, so, OP, you were a big hit at the sales meeting.
The VP of sales called to apologize and he wants you to come back.
Nope, not gonna happen.
He comes here wearing a color shirt
and apologizes to me and I'll consider it.
He is not going to do that.
Fine, then I'm just not traveling to that region.
I'll talk to people on the phone.
I could do my job that way just fine
and I walked out.
I called the sales rep and said we'd work over the phone
but I was not coming back.
He wasn't happy, but he understood.
A week later, the receptionist calls me, and I have a guest.
I go to the lobby, and there's my director and the regional VP of sales wearing a blue
shirt.
Best apology ever!
So back in the 80s, network stuff was crazy expensive.
The networking part of the deal was worth $1 million
tying customers into existing mainframes,
and along with the new mainframes they ordered,
it would be $4 to $5 million altogether.
And it was not going to fly without some help.
So all those commissions for the sales rep,
the manager, the upper manager, and the VP of sales
were all in question.
So there was a ton of money on the table for them.
They got the deal, and I got a surprise bonus, but I still had to fly to Boston.
Man, you think that people in sales would have a much better understanding of the importance
of being nice to people because relationships matter, but I guess at the same time this
was in the 80s, so the guy was probably just coked out of his mind.
Our next Reddit post is from Mother of Crim.
During half time in our local high school football game, we went to the concession stand
to get some food.
Now I didn't think that it would be an issue because we were sitting with a group of people,
but I laid out my stuff on the bleachers anyway.
However, when we got back, we were met with a group of middle-aged people and a rather
elderly lady sitting in our spot with my stuff tossed to the side.
Now, usually, I'm an extremely nice person to the point that people are always yelling
at me for being too nice and getting taken advantage of.
But this time, I'd had enough.
I stood there for a moment and said, um, this is RC, you took our seat and that's extremely
rude.
The leader of the middle-aged ladies will call her Karen,
snapped back. They said no one was sitting here, so sorry. But then she made absolutely
no attempt to move, twitch my husband said, yeah, you really look sorry. Karen motioned behind
her and said, there's room back there. However, there was only one small section of bleacher
directly behind her and between our entire group. thought about it for a second and I realized that arguing wasn't gonna get us anywhere
And it would just make me look bad. So I smiled at my husband and said, okay, let's squeeze in here
It was like my husband could read my mind in that second and knew exactly what was going to happen
So my husband and I along with with our four kids, squeezed right
behind Karen. As anyone who's ever had kids or has even seen kids, you can probably see
where this went. These kids were running on pure sugar, adrenaline, and school spirit
after a long first week of school. Also, I made sure that my youngest kid, a six-year-old
boy, sat directly behind Karen. Did I mention that the reason we were sitting up front
is because kids can't sit still?
Are kids like getting as close as possible to see the game,
but also enjoy coming back to us to sit and talk for a bit?
In any other situation, I would have made sure
my kids were respectful and courteous of those around us.
I would have put a stop to the screaming
when our team scored,
the jumping up and down to
chant with the cheerleaders and running between us and the fans, but not this night. It-
I think it took Karen all of five minutes to realize her mistake. The cringing from the screams
right behind her, the leaning from side to side when they were standing at the fans blocking her
view, and my six-year-old happily swinging his feet back and forth obliviously to the fact that he was repeatedly kicking the
back of Karen's seat. Karen was getting audibly and visibly annoyed from all
this, and kept giving me dirty looks that said,
can't tell your children, but I would just shrug and then look at my husband and
say, I tried to tell her, one by one, every person in Karen's group got up to leave.
Karen held on the longest, and still only made it about half an hour before she decided
she couldn't take it anymore and left.
Maybe next time, Karen will think twice before stealing seats from kids.
Our next Reddit post is from McConnell.
I worked for a prestigious mill.
We made cabinets, custom moldings, etc.
We made very, very high-end products, and
we worked with companies on tight schedules. I was the only truck driver. The company
was owned by a husband and wife, and the wife did not like me. They had implemented mandatory
lunches for everyone in the shop and building. But due to the uniqueness of my position,
I usually didn't have to adhere to stupid rules like that. I knew that rule was just a way for them to screw over their workers, because a lot of guys were dedicated
and they would work through their lunch break. The wife finally caught up to me one day
and was reviewing my time card and angrily said, I don't care, you don't have any excuse,
you must take a lunch break. I argued the point, saying that some of the materials I was picking
up were critical, but she said that she didn't care. I think now is when I entered the point, saying that some of the materials I was picking up were critical, but she said that she didn't care.
I think now is when I entered the malicious compliance part of this story.
So I drove off to pick up the zebra wood they needed by noon.
And after the lumber was loaded up, I pulled into Burger King and ignored any phone calls
that my manager sent and got back to the shop two hours later.
He was livid because he had three very expensive
workers just waiting around for me to show up. Needless to say, I never had to take a
lunch again. That was our Slash Malicious Compliance, and if you like this content, you can
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