At my job my manager’s stepping down and my team lead just quit. This is the second time this has happened to me in two years here which is nice considering I don’t have to do any pointless 1:1’s. Other than them, we’ve already lost 4 people last month and another guy’s leaving by next week. The time’s good to switch jobs apparently.
Give it time. Soon enough he’ll hire a reputation management company, shave his beard, show up for Dancing on the Stars, then SNL will put him in a sketch as Waluigi.
Just because your company is in the office doesn’t mean others are. A lot of us are still remote / hybrid. Especially in the mid size companies.
San Francisco’s SoMa district, arguably one of the nations most important tech hubs, is still a ghost town full of empty of empty offices and “for lease” signs.
My point was more about timeline. Is my company’s RTO mandate from 2022 part of the 3%? 8%? How are they counting? The article wasn’t very clear to me so I must be missing something.
Sure the couch thing is now of a rumor (that he purportedly repeated often over the years), but there are actual pictures of the thing with him and geese. Dude is WEIRD.
Death by heat, fungal infection or plague. Take your pick, it could happen if you’re incarcerated in this Mississippi prison. It’s a good thing we don’t have some sort of constitutional amendment barring cruel and unusual punishment, isn’t it?
SCOTUS soon to rule that if heat, vermin, and disease are common enough, they’re no longer “unusual” and therefore comply with “originalist” interpretation of the Constitution that specifies that a punishment must be both cruel and unusual to be unconstitutional.
SCOTUS has gone back and forth over the years on whether a punishment must be both cruel and unusual for it to be prohibited. A simple legal reading would be a logical and, meaning yes it must be both cruel and unusual, and since in Mississippi, this is probably the usual, it would be allowed.
Personally, I’m fine with unusual punishments, if they fit the crime. I recall a case where a guy was sentenced to wear a sandwich board with some message on it for a while, which is certainly unusual, but it had relevance to the crime. But nobody should be sentenced to cruelty, as here or in the plantation labor stories we’ve been hearing about recently.
Ever since the pan. Everything was already terrible, but then the hinges broke. The crazy really took over. And this is where we are. Fucking stochastic terrorism with heaps of actual terrorism. They just don’t have any boundaries anymore. Or sense of decency. Or shame. Fuck the right.
Oh no! It seems like he couldn’t answer this question truthfully with his wife present. Now, a secret family isn’t so secret anymore if you tell your wife about it, is it?!
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