4.9 • 10.6K Ratings
🗓️ 27 October 2021
⏱️ 14 minutes
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r/Maliciouscompliance If this subreddit has taught me anything, it's that you should be extremely careful when you say, "So sue me." A real estate company learns that lesson the hard way when they refuse to remove OP from a no-renters list, which makes it extremely difficult for OP to find housing. They tell OP "so sue me," so that's exactly what OP does! The judge blasts the real estate company's lawyers for their incompetence and order them to comply with OP's request immediately.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to our slash a podcast where I read the best post from across Reddit today |
0:04.1 | subreddit is our slash malicious compliance where someone says so sue me and O.P. says okay this podcast is supported by anchor FM |
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0:55.3 | I started our slash by making videos on YouTube and I firmly believe that video content helped my channel succeed |
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1:15.1 | Our next reddit post is from new bromance back in 2015. I worked for a pretty dismal call center |
1:21.9 | It was an outsourced center that handled customer support for a lot of UK retailers |
1:26.4 | Staff turnover was really high the vast majority of workers were on temporary contracts and the company held the promise of |
1:34.1 | Permanent contracts over their head to keep them working after working there for about two years in February |
1:39.4 | I was offered a permanent contract because they wanted to put me on the team leader program |
1:43.4 | The pay was slightly better and the job security was better the only major difference was how holidays were handled |
1:50.0 | People who were on temporary contracts were paid for any unused holidays at the end of the working year in April |
1:55.5 | People on permanent contracts had to either use their holidays or lose them |
1:59.9 | I had just over three weeks of holiday saved up |
2:02.7 | So the day I accepted I booked three weeks of vacation in March |
... |
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