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Post by thefleetsin on Oct 9, 2019 15:16:06 GMT
o.m.g.m.o.
back when the revolution was bolshevik and kings really were seen as these huge pricks the masses were so easily tricked by states of phenomenally large blood-engorged dicks triggering a supposed inbred sense of patriotic bliss while promising a brave new world.
as now we inherit boys who think they are girls because anyone can operate a theater without paying any union dues at all as long as your crocodile tears match the patterns on your padded bedroom walls.
sjw 10/09/19 inspired at this very moment in time by that porcelain looking thingy you're calling a child.
from the 'bizarro series' of poems
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Post by gadreel on Oct 9, 2019 19:34:45 GMT
Baffling to me that anyone would be required to attend an office party. Can’t imagine the point of that. Yeah I mean it depends, my work often has functions during work time, you know like a team lunch or normally the christmas celebration is lunch and some kind of event, sure you dont really have to go, you can stay behind and work, but really since you are being paid the expectation is that you will attend, you certainly can't just go home. (although the clever among us leave early  )
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Post by Toasted Cheese on Oct 16, 2019 11:39:41 GMT
I'm not a religious believer, and I can imagine no worse hell than an office party. If I were under compulsion to attend one, I think that would be a clear signal to me that I needed to start thinking to change jobs ASAP. I know the feeling, but due to my schedule, I manage to avoid the majority of them. Any excuse to have some celebration.
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Post by Toasted Cheese on Oct 16, 2019 11:45:30 GMT
I'm not a religious believer, and I can imagine no worse hell than an office party. If I were under compulsion to attend one, I think that would be a clear signal to me that I needed to start thinking to change jobs ASAP. Why should the burden be on you, the employee, to start thinking to change jobs (maybe not such an easy thing)? What about trying to do something about the compulsion to attend? Some places can make it about being an expectation, due to office social standards and morale. When I used to work at a cinema and they had private staff screenings, it could become a chore just to try and wrangle out of it, and I even claimed once I didn't want to attend because I couldn't stand the actor in the film. I got interrogated by the assistant manger once because I refused to attend the Xmas party. The cheeky thing was, we had to pay to attend the party too and it was offered that they pay so I would attend. I still refused, because I then said it wasn't fair to the others that had to pay.
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