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I once had a "friend" (I hated his guts) who lost two jobs on the same day - he drunkenly crashed the taxi he was driving when he was supposed to be at his office job. How have you been sacked?
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 13:33)
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I used to work in an off licence directly underneath the flat I used to live in - I rented a room in a house with a family of five.
Yes, we could drink as much stock as we wanted - but we had to pay for it (full price, too, no staff discount or anything).
I had just closed up one night, on the phone to a girl I liked at the time, when a mate pulled up in his ancient Fiat - so I finish the call and let him in.
"I've got a bottle of vodka!" he explained - "AND some greenery!"
Well, we couldn't really smoke in the house - as it wasn't MY house to smoke in - but I did have the keys to the off licence - and we did used to smoke in the stock room.
So, we drank the vodka, smoked some weed, then got cracking into the beers in the stock room. A literally limitless supply! We were having quite a good laugh, carried on being daft 'till about 3:00 in the morning - then went upstairs to crash out. We were just entering the house when the youngest son - probably 15 or so - enquired "did you see the cops 'round here earlier?"
I said we hadn't.
"Yeah, about two o'clock - two of them sniffing about right outside the offy back doors" he explained.
Christ. Well, they didn't knock on the offy's back door, and there was no sign of them now = no problem.
Went to bed, woke up, my mate left. Eventually went to work again later in the day - when my boss pulls me aside and asks me: "Why was the silent alarm pressed at 1:45 in the morning?"
Turns out - while I was having a much needed piss, my mate was wondering what the unusual switch was on the wall of the stock room, and pressed it. Pressed it several times, in fact, as nothing appeared to be happening. Hence the police turning up and mooching about - luckily we had tidied up all of the massive drugs though, I never got it in the neck for that. Was kicked out of work there and then.
The next week I started a job in the town hall - which eventually paid about £250 a week. This was tax free as I was a student - five times as much as what I was earning in the offy! Socially ruined my weekends, but the drinks were free (absolutely NO stock control), and it gave me experience of working behind a bar, managing staff, and working as a supervisor in a food court in a leisure centre. Great job, terrific pay.
Then I got sacked from that for lending the keys to the squash courts out.
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 19:17, 31 replies)
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HMRC would receive the refund from HMRC and not from the employer.
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 21:56, closed)
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before all this modern toss and HMRC.
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 22:13, closed)
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Nobody asked you to chuck in your witless suggestions.
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 22:33, closed)
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( , Sat 31 May 2014, 7:57, closed)
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My memory is a bit hazy - probably due to the lack of stock control at the bar I worked ..
( , Sat 31 May 2014, 20:12, closed)
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this is typical burden-of-proof shifting as opposed to answering the original question-except it is with another question. I see how it works now. Debating Society champion stuff.
Along with name calling to elicit a hostile response. I didn't spot it at the time. I hope to amend my slack ways in the future.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 0:13, closed)
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( , Thu 29 May 2014, 22:20, closed)
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and to fire shit staff when the stock-taker found the discrepancies.
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 21:59, closed)
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As in more than they could hope to drink. Either that, or their drinking was at a pace that meant the next delivery would replenish the supply before they ran out.
( , Thu 29 May 2014, 23:34, closed)
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that will explain to you in plain terms the hyperbolic usage of literally.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 1:50, closed)
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The problem with using the word literally in that way, is you're not simply reappropriating a word for another use, you're actually using it to mean the complete opposite of what is intended.
"My mum was so angry, she literally killed me!"
No... she figuratively killed you. 'Killed' here is a figure of speech, and the literal meaning of it is completely incorrect.
Now, I have no doubt that the Economist hand-waves its way to forgiving people for using language idiotically, but that isn't going to stop people who know what the hell they're talking about from being dismissive of those mediocre plebs who use these words incorrectly.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 17:03, closed)
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There was so much beer in the stock room, we could not have drunk it all. Hence - LITERALLY limitless.
Although, obviously it WAS limited, as a ratio - it was technically limitless.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 17:45, closed)
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But the point has been made now, so I'll fuck off.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 17:56, closed)
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is incorrect if you didn't write it down at the time.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 21:22, closed)
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So you're saying that you were allowed to buy things. Bravo.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 14:12, closed)
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It was one of the perks of the job being able to buy things.
Wild times, crazy.
( , Fri 30 May 2014, 17:47, closed)
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