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-MIKE- -MIKE- is offline
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Default At the BORG - What Would You Do?

Larry C wrote:

I ask for the manager and I tell him the
story. He checks the system and says the transaction messed up and it
didn't go through. He then proceeds to get a cashier to run the
transaction and walks away. No "thank you for being honest", "how about
a free orange apron", etc. He just walked away.

I sign the slip and I say to myself "the next time I buy a nail gun
compressor setup and the transaction messes up I will donate the 300
bucks to charity before I come back here." BTW the guys picture is no
longer in the person in charge spot on the wall of the that BORG.

Larry C


Please don't take this as a insult to you, Larry. It's more a
commentary on the direction our society in general seems to be heading.

This is a symptom of a growing problem that seems to get worse with
every generation. Most guys in here seem to be the 40 and over crowd.
The latter half of the generation X seems to be the last generation that
doesn't feel slighted if we're not praised for simply doing the right
thing.

Anyone younger was brought up having their egos coddled like a bottle of
nitroglycerin. No one could be told they were "wrong." Everyone got a
trophy just for participating. Now adults in the workplace, they have
to be praised and rewarded just for showing up to work. An average job
is now considered excellent. The internal satisfaction of finishing an
assignment isn't enough to satisfied the ego of one who's self-esteem is
a house of straw, built by years of superficial, unearned praise. They
must now receive awards for simply finishing an assignment, regardless
of the quality of work. The bare minimum is seen as the goal, instead
of the starting point.

So now, we feel insulted if no one makes a big deal out of the fact that
we were simply honest. What used to be the baseline from which we'd
assess one another's character, has now become something we expect to be
exalted as extraordinary.


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-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
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