Corolinth wrote:
If I had been fired three times, I would reevaluate my outlook on my firings and question whether there was something about me that led to this happening repeatedly. I'm sure I could come up with a rationale as to why each individual incident was a bullshit firings, but three is a pattern and the common link is me.
I understand, evil greedy corporations only care about money are asking me to work like a slave for no pay, and they're going to fire me and replace me with some sucker who will work long hours for no additional compensation. I get it. However, if I could've completed all that work in eight hours, I'd still have a job. That's the opposite of being fired.
I am curious. Do you feel you're worth a certain salary because you have a college degree? A lot of people our age feel that way. It seems that we never had it adequately explained to us that the more a company pays you, the more they expect to get out of you.
The last time I got fired was in 2010. I've had a steady job for over three years now and am not, as far as I know, in danger of being fired again. I decided to take an unpaid internship for a year and scrape by in absolute poverty in order to get my HTL certification mostly because I was sick of the absolute **** treatment I was getting from employers in general with just my bio degree.
Also, when I say they often gave me tasks that were impossible to complete during my shift, I mean they were often literally impossible. As in, at 3:30 they'd call me over and said they just put a PCR run on the thermal cycler, and they wanted me to mass the DNA when it was finished. It was a three hour completely automated program. If I were to protest that I got off at 5:00, they'd initially seem to be fine with it, but within a few days I'd find myself written up for some kind of safety or ergonomics violation. One time they wrote me up for not holding the handrail as I was walking down the stairs. Another favorite strategy to force unpaid overtime was to schedule time on a piece of shared equipment, and have some of my job duties require that equipment, but only have the scheduled time overlap with my actual shift by a small amount. Like, I would get in at 8:30, and they'd have it reserved from 6:30 to 9:30. So I'd be expected to complete a 3 hour task in one hour, provided I showed up on time. When I complained about this, I was told I was expected to negotiate some kind of arrangement with the other people scheduled on that piece of equipment to get more time. My manager knew full well that in the absurdly hypercompetitive environment was fostered there, there was absolutely no way the other research groups would ever give up any of their scheduled time even if they weren't using it, as they would jump on an opportunity to cockblock their competition.
This was at Monsanto, by the way, you're probably familiar with them, as they are absolutely 100% the epitome of the sociopathic, greedy corporation that views all their employees as expendable numbers on a balance sheet. One time, after filling out my timesheet honestly after receiving direct orders to not go home until a specific task was finished, I was actually called into a private meeting with my manager where he said, "We only have the budget to pay for 40 hours. Just put that down every week. You don't want be known as the guy that obsessively watches the clock all day, do you? Because that's definitely the impression I get when you put exactly 6:17 down on here. There's no need to obsessively get it down to the exact minute as you're walking out. Just write in 5:00 and don't worry about it if it takes a little more or less time every day, it will all work itself out."