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Yes!!!! What are you a bum?
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Some medical conditions like scoliosis can be mistaken for 'bad posture'. And there are unhoused people with perfectly good posture, so not sure what classism has to do with anything. https://www.keckmedicine.org/is-it-bad-posture-or-scoliosis/ [quote]Yes!!!! What are you a bum?[/quote]
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lol.. IF that is her excuse sure, fine, however, no medical condition requires sox and feet on the table and pj pants. So while I hear your point, it goes way past the posture to her whole self presentation being lazy, unprofessional and seriously badly thought out.
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You sound like a true loser.
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Enter children who don’t understand business at all. Where loafing around like a slob is something to be proud of.
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Ha! Well, I'm 38 years old and I never went to business school, but I understand that Bungie is a successful business, and they have a very relaxed dress code.
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How about we care about substantial things, you know, the things OTHER than appearance. How about we care what they said? What they showed us? Sure, that may be the way business works, but that sets a horrible standard for the rest of the world. If someone can dress anything up and make it look good because people care about the appearance rather than what they tell us, or what they do, then we get a broken society.
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how you present yourself tells alot about how you work. You say we should care about what they showed us.. She did show us something, her overall attitude, sloppyness and seemingly uncaring attitude. This can filter into the actual product.
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Humans have the physical capability to care about certain things more than others, you know. Which is to say you can care about your work without caring about your appearance.
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As a general rule, caring about your work and actually doing a good job are also mutually exclusive. Just because you care about doing a good job, but, dress and act like a slob, generally provides the out put more associated with your appearance and less on your amount of caring.
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[quote]As a general rule, caring about your work and actually doing a good job are also mutually exclusive. [/quote] So... you agree with me? I'm not sure the point you're trying to make here.