• @[email protected]
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    1281 year ago

    How will the logistics of this work? Are there fast-food restaurants that would accept a privileged Karen with anger management issues as a member of their team? After all, they have a business with tight margins to run, and this sounds like a huge liability.

    • @[email protected]
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      11911 months ago

      Free labor, and keep her away from customers. Cleaning, prepping, whatever. If she causes problems, she violates probation and serves the rest of time in prison. Give the store an incentive to deal with her. With thin margins, I’d take those odds. Fuck threatening to fire; if you fuck up, you go back to prison. “Now clean the damn fryer’s like your freedom depended on it”

        • Nepenthe
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          2511 months ago

          While it is funny, I don’t think that the punishment for her in this article will really amount to much. If she had the kind of empathy necessary to relate that experience with what she put others through, she wouldn’t have done it in the first place.

          Whatever customers like herself that she comes across, I think it’s a 50/50 whether she spends her time doing nothing but exacerbating problems and causing regular scenes or siding with “her people” and breaking rules, stealing, etc. out of spite.

          Agree with MrShankles it has to be under threat of breaking probation to even work. Ultimately, she needs more reform than just receiving identical abuse in turn.

          • @[email protected]
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            4211 months ago

            Lots of people only experience empathy for other people when they are directly involved or confronted with those people.

            Like all those stories of homophobes who reform after learning a loved one is gay. They need their nose shoved in it before they could even picture someone elses viewpoint, but if you do that then they do empathize.

        • @[email protected]
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          511 months ago

          Let the Karen deal with the Karens

          It’ll be like dragon ball, but with more screaming.

      • @SocialMediaRefugee
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        011 months ago

        Prison for throwing food? Shitty behavior yes but wtf. She’s got 4 kids too.

        • @EatYouWell
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          1111 months ago

          It’s battery, and the fact that she thought it was a reasonable course of action means that she needs to be given a bit more than a slap on the wrist fine.

          I know people might say anger management therapy would be better, but these types of people will never admit that they were in the wrong in the first place. They’ll twist things into a persecution complex.

          Making her walk a mile in their shoes is an exceptionally good way to address this kind of behavior, and it’s an alternative to jail time.

          But, it’s not like she would be given years in prison for it. It’s basically like a forced timeout. Hell, even 2 weeks in jail might be enough to change things.

        • @[email protected]
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          411 months ago

          She isn’t going to prison. She is getting jail time. If she were that concerned about her 4 kids, she shouldn’t go around assaulting fast food workers.

        • Flying Squid
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          311 months ago

          If this is how she treats people she doesn’t even know, how do you think she treats her kids?

    • @EatYouWell
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      1111 months ago

      Many, many fast food restaurants are super short staffed because no one wants to do the job at the current market rate. If she actually tried she could find one in a day.

      Also, fast food margins really aren’t that tight.

      • Cethin
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        111 months ago

        As long as this is only for this one case I’m ok with it, but I really don’t want to see this become a trend to force people to work for these companies who are unwilling to pay willing workers a sufficient wage.

        • @[email protected]
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          511 months ago

          It was an optional punishment that she chose over doing 90 days in jail. I don’t fear it becoming a trend since most people don’t assault fast food workers in the first place.

          • Cethin
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            111 months ago

            Yeah, but even as an optional punishment, and punishment for a crime shouldn’t be made to benefit corporations.

    • @[email protected]
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      1011 months ago

      The article says she has yet to find the job.

      Good luck finding someone to hire you for only two months as punishment for abuse. I’m sure they’re scrambling for predetermined extremely short term employment from a toxic pile.

    • @OmenAtom
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      411 months ago

      Id guess working “fast food” in the commissary