4.9 • 10.6K Ratings
🗓️ 23 September 2021
⏱️ 19 minutes
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r/Maliciouscompliance OP has a blue collar job laying pipe at a large corporation. His white collar boss gets pissed off at OP because OP dared to enter the white collar worker building to retrieve some important blueprints. His boss bans OP from the building forever, which means that none of the workers have the blueprints to lay any of the pipes. The workers have nothing to do for a month, which results in a staggering $2,000,000 in wasted labor costs.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to R-slash, a podcast where we read the best post from across Reddit. |
0:04.0 | Today's subreddit is R-slash malicious compliance, where OP listens to his boss and costs the company $2 million. |
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0:47.0 | Today's episode is sponsored by Anchor FM. Anchor FM now allows creators to make video podcasts. |
0:53.2 | Obviously, I'm a huge, huge fan of video podcasts. I started R-slash by making videos on YouTube, |
1:00.0 | and I firmly believe that video content helped my channel succeed. If you're thinking about |
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1:15.7 | podcast for free. Our next reddit post is from T-toxie. I was working on a construction job as a |
1:21.6 | pipe welder for a company that's currently building nuclear reactors for the US Navy. |
1:25.8 | And the way this company was set up, it had two distinct classes of employees. |
1:30.5 | The craft employees are the ones who actually do the work. Everyone including laborers, |
1:35.8 | machine operators, pipe fitters, and welders. This will become important later. |
1:40.2 | The second class of employees are staff employees, so salary employees, supervisors, engineers, |
1:46.4 | welding inspectors, section superintendents, etc. Our crew worked great for a few months. Until our |
1:52.0 | supervisor got a better offer somewhere else and quit one day, leaving our leading hand to try |
... |
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