mattmmille
Well-Known Member
Heading for the coffeemaker now.
I'll just leave this here in @Billy-Klubb ('s) absence.
Coffee while pondering a moral dilemma. Told by my direct supervisor that I should do what one outside sales person wants, no matter if its right or wrong and detrimental to the company or a complete waste of time. Said sales person is better connected then I am. I for one have far too much conviction to just roll over on my work ethic over politics. You pay my check, but this doesn't give you some sort of mystical power over me. So as I sit here and drink my coffee, I wonder if I hit the send button on my resignation letter.
Wonder if I'll just mull this over while on vacation.
Dang man, that is tough. Is there anyone else that you could talk with about this issue? Your supervisor may be doing something that upper management does not know about and would disapprove of. I would at least try to work out the issue before leaving.
The sales person is connected with upper management, not my direct supervisor. He was just letting me know that if I don't do exactly what she wants there will be serious implications, something that one of my co-worker knows first hand. Thus the dilemma.
Coffee while pondering a moral dilemma. Told by my direct supervisor that I should do what one outside sales person wants, no matter if its right or wrong and detrimental to the company or a complete waste of time. Said sales person is better connected then I am. I for one have far too much conviction to just roll over on my work ethic over politics. You pay my check, but this doesn't give you some sort of mystical power over me. So as I sit here and drink my coffee, I wonder if I hit the send button on my resignation letter.
Wonder if I'll just mull this over while on vacation.
Coffee while pondering a moral dilemma. Told by my direct supervisor that I should do what one outside sales person wants, no matter if its right or wrong and detrimental to the company or a complete waste of time. Said sales person is better connected then I am. I for one have far too much conviction to just roll over on my work ethic over politics. You pay my check, but this doesn't give you some sort of mystical power over me. So as I sit here and drink my coffee, I wonder if I hit the send button on my resignation letter.
Wonder if I'll just mull this over while on vacation.
Damn. Have you been asked to do questionable things in the past from this sales lady?
My opinion would be to express your disagreement with the ethically suspect practices in a medium that can be used as evidence and say that for those reasons you wont be doing said activities. Resignation may be extreme, but is always an option. Dont let work make you do something ethically/morally/or legally suspect.
Remember, it is far easier to find a new job while still employed, and not having a paycheck kinda cuts into your brew supplies funding.
Edit: TLDR, Get it in writing. Everything from you not agreeing to compromise your morals to them telling you to do something you dont agree of.
I'm going to take the week to mull it over. But I'm fairly certain I'm done here lol. I won't be party to something like this nor will I change what I believe to be right because somebody else is better connected then I am.
Anybody hiring? lol
Whats your trade? If you are willing to move to the DC area I may know some openings.
This is a great idea. Get everything in writing and refuse to do anything that goes against your ethics. I would also start looking for other work in the meantime. The worst thing they could do is fire you, but at least then you would get a severance package.![]()
Coffee, then a big bowl of chicken ramen with cut up fries in it.
Hey, I missed the old days, alright? I even used to wrap meat & cheese sammiches in foil, then toss it on the rear deck of my Pinto back then to bake in the hot sun. Redneck toaster oven! Let it do that while I was in class. Anyway, the oil & salt on the fries gives the soup a nice flavor & uses up left-overs!:rockin:
I would try. Not too sure since I applied to go to the NHC this year. That would be an expensive few weeks overall.Too bad it's tomorrow or I would try and get down there to meet up for a beer! Think about checking out Just Brew It at the start of Asheville Beer Week. 50+ homebrewers and 100+ beers.
Push it to the end of the month and parlay it into a vacation, kind of long, and go to NHC!Coffee. Another fun day ahead of me. SWMBO just was given an opportunity to go to San Diego in may for a conference. Trying to come along with her or at least have her be my beer mule.![]()
Think about it, don't hit the send button. Document everything and do as others say, get things in writing if you can. When the issue moves up to management and you have no one else to go to, HR is the place to be. At the very least you can explain that you're put into a position where you feel your work environment will become hostile if you do not do as your told. When there is a threat there, whether it was carried out or not, you have a right to speak to your supervisor. Again, if you cannot, then you should go to HR. Your supervisor knowing about this and not doing anything is putting the company at risk as well. If you quit because of this and decide to take legal action, your company cannot claim they did what they could. Do you have a company manual that goes over things like the ethics policy and harassment?Coffee while pondering a moral dilemma. Told by my direct supervisor that I should do what one outside sales person wants, no matter if its right or wrong and detrimental to the company or a complete waste of time. Said sales person is better connected then I am. I for one have far too much conviction to just roll over on my work ethic over politics. You pay my check, but this doesn't give you some sort of mystical power over me. So as I sit here and drink my coffee, I wonder if I hit the send button on my resignation letter.
Wonder if I'll just mull this over while on vacation.
But getting fired does not usually result in severance packages. Laid off, yeah maybe if the company does that. Mine used to do a great one, now it's down to 2 weeks tops or something like that.This is a great idea. Get everything in writing and refuse to do anything that goes against your ethics. I would also start looking for other work in the meantime. The worst thing they could do is fire you, but at least then you would get a severance package.![]()
I would try. Not too sure since I applied to go to the NHC this year. That would be an expensive few weeks overall.
Push it to the end of the month and parlay it into a vacation, kind of long, and go to NHC!
Think about it, don't hit the send button. Document everything and do as others say, get things in writing if you can. When the issue moves up to management and you have no one else to go to, HR is the place to be. At the very least you can explain that you're put into a position where you feel your work environment will become hostile if you do not do as your told. When there is a threat there, whether it was carried out or not, you have a right to speak to your supervisor. Again, if you cannot, then you should go to HR. Your supervisor knowing about this and not doing anything is putting the company at risk as well. If you quit because of this and decide to take legal action, your company cannot claim they did what they could. Do you have a company manual that goes over things like the ethics policy and harassment?
But getting fired does not usually result in severance packages. Laid off, yeah maybe if the company does that. Mine used to do a great one, now it's down to 2 weeks tops or something like that.
View attachment 259614 because why not @ 9:45 am!!
View attachment 259614 because why not @ 9:45 am!!