Termyn8or
Posts: 18681
Joined: 11/12/2005 Status: offline
|
FR - jumpthrough on page 3 People think differently than I obviously, and here is another way; People have read me brag a bit about my last job. I guess it is still my job but I don't get forty hours - in a fucking month ! That's the industry and I will have to adapt. However I am not on the books. When my pay requirements for going on the books were discussed that was out the window. So being officially unemployed for the last few years I earned what, a quarter million or so ? But there is no paper trail. I got the balls to say that becasue there really is no paper trail. However I have worked on the books and have left companies on good terms,. First of all off the books or not I can get any kind of reference I want from my current "employer", the one preceeding, and one from about 20 years ago or so. They will all say anything I tell them to say. The place now is a hole in the wall but has been in business for over three decades. The previous has been in business since 1976, and the other one has been in business for even longer and is a really high end place. Any of these references could drop me into my dream job easily. All of them together are a home run, a grand slam in fact. What's more if you got old phone books you can get references from all kinds of companies. Just look for the ones in the old book that are not in the new book. But don't junp into doing that, you need to do some research first. But my dream job does not exist. Now let me clue you in on a couple of things. Nobody can prove you've been unemployed unless they get their hands on your UIC or welfare check and even that is not conclusive proof. The IRS cannot give out your information to any private entity, although that may be changing, it hasn't yet. That means you can lie. Now here's the thing, I, if my dream job existed, could walk in there nd say I used to make a million bucks a year, but then they expect to see an Armani suit, and at least a Jag in the parking lot. But they cannot tell at all what you ever made, whether you told the IRS or not ! If the IRS tells them and you find out you just go to court and you collect $100,000 for EACH AND EVERY occurence of wrongful disclosure. Too much of that and you don't need their fucking job. A side benefit of that is when you apply for credit. Print your own W2 or 1099s. Here is the catch now, and it's a big one - If you use this technique to get credit and default on whatever you were supposed to pay, that constitutes felony fraud. See, I know people who have done that, but they didn't default so there is no fraud, therefore no case. There was no wrongful gain. I've also known alot of people who made more side money than they did at a regular job. So all this bias, like many of the inequities in the world seem to fall on the most honest and upstanding of our people. Damn shame. You know, if you know me I am totally fucking honest, but when it comes to business with the suits, they better be grateful I leave them their shirts. My people are one thing, but out there in the rat race all I care is if I can get caught, and some things are really fucking wrong and I won't do them. But these written down regs and bullshit, I have tried to care less about that bullshit but I just can't. You been out of work for two years and got a half decent job prospect I can tell you how to get that fucking job. I can even supply references. I can also find out if any of your real refernces are talking bad about you and fix that. Not a problem. If you're in need of some shit like this mail me. You can't put the details out here in public. T^T
|