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regardless of finishing order, and the like. . the huge
distortions of language which mean that Pam Geller
is the villain, not the killers with their assault rifles,
cause the low-info-voters to identify victims where
there are actually thugs. . cultural change, sir. -- j
.
like the flu. -- j
.
online name is gamer998877? -- j
.
bureaucratic Ds and Rs through political correctness
and the like -- Big Brother coming to fruition right
in front of our eyes. -- j
.
.
.
Use it accordingly ;)
Edit; cheesy grin added
Her comment: “I start my new job today, but I absolutely hate working at day care.” This is not a case where she disliked a particular kid, a specific person, or a specific aspect of a job. She hates working at day care. Period. If you, as a teacher, hated working in a school (college, etc.), would you still think of yourself as a good teacher? Obviously, the interviewer did not pick that up, either because the person was a poor interviewer or because she was a good liar. Wouldn't you, as either an employer or a parent of the kids there, prefer to correct that error?
Now, you may consider taking care and educating small kids as a non-critical function, but many people, I am certain, will disagree with you. Especially those whose kids are at the day care center and those whose livelihoods depend on trouble-free, litigation-free and police-free functioning of that establishment. However, let's take an undeniably critical function, like surgery, for example. So, you're scheduled for a critical surgery, with certain associated risks. You don't know the doctor, since the doctor is new at the hospital. So you go home, do some internet searches, and find out that the doctor's FB page has this statement: "I start my new job today, but I absolutely hate being a doctor." No doubt, in order to not appear biased by anything (facts included) and to not allow your colleagues to judge you, you, of course, will show up for that operation on Monday morning and let the surgeon prove that biases are unfounded, right? Oh, yes, do let us know how that works out for you, would you?
I've disliked students yet still teach them well. I've disliked coworkers yet still coached them well. And I've hated several jobs I was really good at. I've written good apple and scripts in languages I detest.
This, among other things, has taught me to not make such unfounded negative assumptions about someone's qualifications.
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