The National Park Service is huge. He likely wouldn’t be able to be a Park Ranger or an equipment operator but he could probably get a job at like $15 an hour as someone who drives a truck or golf cart around and empties trash cans and cleans restrooms
Anonymous H replied with this 2 years ago, 1 hour later, 11 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,259,766
@previous (J)
Thanks for providing a reason. It was too much to ask of Kook, apparently. Although asking anything of her appears too much, so I guess I'm the fool for having ever expected otherwise. Can one be trolled without the presence of a troll? Appears so lol.
Anyway, he has no relevant job experience or education. Not to mention his personality disorder(s), alcoholism, and the fact that women seem quite uncomfortable around him. Not exactly the combination I'd want in someone I hire to clean restrooms in remote wilderness locations. But who am I to know!
Anonymous J replied with this 2 years ago, 11 hours later, 22 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,259,835
@previous (H)
The first part of your response is just jerking off about kook.
Relevant experience or education? Personality disorders? Alcoholism? So you either just hate ninjj or you literally have no work/life experience.
Literally what relevant education or experience is needed to clean toilets in the wilderness as you put it?
@previous (J)
Few employers will hire a 30-something-year-old if they don't have relevant work experience even for jobs like cleaning shit off toilets. They don't tend to care about experience for 18-year-olds. But after you reach a certain age, they will. "What have you been doing for the past decade?" Oh, nothing? Get the fuck out.
Anonymous H replied with this 2 years ago, 4 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,259,887
@previous (E)
No, it's arguably an assessment of one's character. For someone that is 18, grades can stand in. For someone that's pushing 30 and beyond lol, high school grades mean little, and work experience will have to stand in.
My brother in law is an attorney and has represented many employers in situations like this, not in California, but the legislation is similar where he practices. These laws are rarely clear cut.
> something that the federal government in Californias would not engage in.
You thought wrong. It's an easy exercise in using google to find studies showing various forms of "discrimination" or implicit biases happen everywhere, possibly for everyone.
Anonymous J replied with this 2 years ago, 1 hour later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,259,940
@1,259,865 (H)
No one in their 30's has been able to do "nothing" for work unless they are middle to upper class in family background. Even then there's enough shit jobs that have familial ties that will vouch for employment.
Anonymous H replied with this 2 years ago, 22 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,259,947
@previous (J)
Ok, sure, believe whatever you want. If defending a (nearly) middle-aged man with a serious personality disorder and a host of other problems is your thing, then more power to you. Clearly he needs more support structures in his life (and then some), so don't let me stand in the way.
Meanwhile, the rest of us living back in reality ought to be a little concerned for him and, perhaps, not be so eager to blindly cheer him on in applying for jobs and positions he's in no position to get, much less keep.
The few people who have met him irl either bailed on him at the soonest opportunity, or are no longer in contact with him whatsoever. But we didn't need a god damn field agent to get that bit of insight into his life. Even based on his own self-reports, no female his age wants to be voluntarily around him.
Anonymous H double-posted this 2 years ago, 2 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,259,961
@1,259,950 (J)
Him being an incel, having shit job after shit job after shit job, having no meaningful education, and having people bail on him or worse, isn't psychoanalysis, you drooling retard.
Anonymous J replied with this 2 years ago, 1 hour later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,259,977
@1,259,961 (H)
Well now that you've summed it up, it just seems like a bad faith analysis honestly. What meaningful education would matter for any kind of entry level job? Sure an employer might want some kind of explanation for gaps in employment but a worker is a worker. Speaking of the real world, everyone always complains about people not wanting to work, but yikes you seem to actively be seeking ways to discourage someone from applying to again, an entry level position
Anonymous H replied with this 2 years ago, 8 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,259,984
@1,259,977 (J)
There's nothing bad faith about any of it. It's all just the honest truth.
> Speaking of the real world, everyone always complains about people not wanting to work
I've never complained about that.
I'm not seeking to discourage him from improving himself. I'm seeking to discourage him from working on what is, as of now, a superficial issue for him.
Anonymous H replied with this 2 years ago, 24 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,260,007
@1,259,997 (J)
Don't be upset. If your situation is similar to what we're talking about, you too can improve your life. One of the first steps is to step away from the hugbox and take a long, sober look at where you are.