このスレッドは他のスレッドから派生: オリジナルの投稿を表示
Just get a job people.
It's so easy, even Patrick Bateman will tell you how!
[quote][to Al, a homeless person]
Patrick Bateman: Get a god-damn job Al. [/quote]
It's really not that hard. It's your fault that you are unemployed, everyone tries to shift the blame to 'The Economy' 'The rich' 'Thanks Obama' but in reality the only person you have to blame is yourself.
Don't blame the housing market bubble crashing, don't blame all the money being pumped out of your country in foreign aid, don't blame the tax cuts for gigantic corporations like Starbucks.
Blame yourselves, you bunch of workshy lazy bastards.
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5 通の返信So it's my fault no place is hiring part time in my area? It's my fault no employer wants me because of my class schedule when I can work four and a half out of the seven days of the week? It's my fault I don't have experience when they all want experience for an ENTRY-LEVEL position? There are other circumstances for unemployment other than "Laziness" you know.
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Obvious sarcasm tags are obvious but being a lifeguard I am literally never out of work. I have past experience, and a beautifully clean work record, I can always get a job. I can always fall back on it, should the need arise.
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3 通の返信Well technically it's the owner of the bar that I worked in's fault, and I can't find another job, not even in Tesco D':
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1 返信[spoiler]the bad thing is that half the people that took you seriously also agreed with you[/spoiler]
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I like the way you talk XD But some people genuinely couldn't get jobs in the USA during the Great Recession (my sociology book calls it that lol). For instance, my dad was in the middle of becoming quite wealthy and had 12 employees in his business (about half of those full-time), then the crash hit, people stopped buying his units, and he had to lay everyone off. His business died and now he's a consultant. So, it didn't turn out terrible for him, but his employees, and those of similarly gutted businesses, suddenly flooded the job market. Now days it's not quite as bad, but it's still hard to find a job paying above minimum wage, and a college degree is quite important for anything that pays better than stocking shelves. And poverty where I live has always been a problem, so there are parents out there who are taking two or three part time jobs each, making it crazy hard for teens and young adults to get into the market. But that's all in the United States of MURICA, so IDK how it is across the pond.