| I feel the same way after a very meaningful 20 years in the federal government, still very invested in my work there and relationships. I'm very lucky that I left for a higher paid job in the private sector but I am absolutely grieving and bitter about how my federal career had to end. |
Welcome to the new world where we will have a non-functional government. Welcome to the world where what few protections working people had are now stripped away and civil servants who enforced regulations and checks on corporate greed are no more. No more consumer financial protections, no more worker safety protections, no more environmental protections— just corporations on the take running rampant and squeezing every dollar out of you in return for ever worsening products and services. Enjoy no regulation of food and drugs and a totally broken healthcare system where only the rich get decent care. You need to take your ignorant opinions and go away. |
Thank you for replies on the health insurance. |
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I have worked in the private sector for 30 years. 99.99% of people cheering for this carnage against Fed workers are folks in the private sector. Private sector workers are bitter, cynical, and just haters. Fed workers are not blame for the shitty work conditions and dehumanizing treatment that private sectors find themselves in.
I have never in my life seem this kind of hatred from one group of an American workers towards another. It's very sad. And don't get me started with the lie that innovation come from the private sector. I urge anyone to do simple search about the critical work that government scientists have contributed to so critical foods. We have some really good people with Phds from the best universities in this country who could have gone on Wall Street, big pharma or professor etc ...These people are invisible. The amazing economists at the commerce department or aviation experts at FAA, etc...NASA etc. Sorry I am just pissed. So OP is right to be sad. |
| Oops typo meant fields not goods |
| Another fed who left after 18 years because I couldn’t stomach it anymore under Trump 2. My job was very secure and I was extremely busy, but doing work I no longer felt proud of or good about. My agency’s mission went from acting in the public interest to political targeting and being instructed to act illegally. The office became extremely toxic. Life is too short. |
| OP, I feel this. I'm still on the inside but am very conflicted about what to do. There are not easy answers and it's unclear how this will play out, but there is significant damage that will take decades to rebuild. |
I’ve worked with a ton of federal workers at different agencies. I went into these jobs thinking the majority were good people who wanted to help the country; over time I came to realize that those employees are a small fraction of the government employees out there. The majority I worked with were lazy and incompetent. Unfortunately as many have mentioned the ridiculous way this was handled won’t help to keep the good ones and eliminate the bad ones; probably the opposite as the good ones have marketable skills. |
| I worked in the federal government for almost 8 years and only 2 years were good. On paper- I loved the idea of the mission but the reality was much different. Plus I got stuck in a pay depression. I think the government employees are romanticizing their former roles. Yes, trump sucks and being a federal employee right now sucks- but it wasn’t that great before |
Sounds like DOJ but it could be DHS |
1 in 6 federal employees are/were doctors and nurses. They'd like you to learn what real work is. |
| I was sad about leaving a university job for the private sector. Had worked there for many years. There are a couple aspects I still miss, but after a year or two it became: holy cow, the private sector is awesome, I would never go back to dealing with the insane bureaucracy that characterizes university life. |
[twitter]
I’m not a fed but this makes me so happy to see. I felt horrible for you all. Well, I still do, but I’m glad your situation has improved. |
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Here's a good one. We were told we were safe in a RIF, and we were. After months of anxiety, everyone was so relieved.
Then, a week later, they decided to announce a workflow change. Essentially 40% of our current workload will be shifted to another office. F these people, truly. |
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I've been a fed for many years, so a few months ago, when they offered the DRPs, I felt it was too soon to jump at the first sign of trouble.
I decided to give it some time, wait for the dust to settle, and switch divisions within my agency to see if there'd be any improvement by moving around. Several weeks into my new role and nearly seven months into this administration, I have no doubt that I want to leave altogether. I simply can't shake the apathy, nor can I change my perspective or ignore the damage that's been and is being done. There's nowhere to run within the four walls that is safe; everything is corrupted. With that, I am glad I didn't make any quick/rash decisions, but if they offer early retirement to my group (25 years), I am going to take it. |