..
Printable View
..
https://bigmemes.funnyjunk.com/pictu...92_7171448.jpg
*
https://memeworld.funnyjunk.com/pict...46_7171691.jpg
*
https://bigmemes.funnyjunk.com/pictu...96_7170805.jpg
*
https://memeworld.funnyjunk.com/pict...88_7171133.jpg
*
Dude... let it go.
https://bigmemes.funnyjunk.com/pictu...c7_7170266.jpg
*
We did not deserve Joe, nor have we lived up to his standard
https://bigmemes.funnyjunk.com/pictu...dc_7172260.jpg
*
https://bigmemes.funnyjunk.com/pictu...86_7171982.jpg
*
...and yet, we have lost what made us great to begin with.
https://bigmemes.funnyjunk.com/pictu...bf_7172102.jpg
That last one is very on point. Just listened to a podcast today about how the reason the tea got dumped was just because everyone was smuggling tea and Britain lowered the tariffs on tea so it was just as cheap as the illegal stuff. Some smugglers dressed as Indians and tossed it all into the harbor to protect their turf.
As someone who is in the middle of job hunting, I can't tell you how much this annoys me. Just yesterday I applied for a job via Indeed and after submitting my resume on file and a cover letter through the Indeed system a window popped up saying "the employer would like you to complete 1 additional task" and when I hit the button it took me to their site where I had to fill out an entire fucking job application. I mean why the fuck are you using Indeed's application system if you're adding your own on top of it? You can simply change the regular "apply" button to "Apply on employer's web site" and we don't have to go through this crap twice.
I generally find jobs on job sites, then go to the company career page and apply directly from there.
This is good, if possible. Unfortunately sometimes recruiting agencies are working the market too and one doesn't know the company. I've found one can circumvent this by googling the exact job requirements as given on indeed, dice, and other sites.
If possible, it also aids in getting looked at vs applying on a job site.
What I HATE about Indeed is they often will "import" your uploaded resume and then you have to undo all the stupidity it grabs.
I once accidentally submitted that I'd worked for Cisco and github.com, because those terms were in a description of technology and tools I'd used in the past. Luckily I caught it and was able to edit the application.