Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
No factual question. A lot of countries/cultures, it's not offensive to eat fish at work. Including my own.
This is what was posted:
That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
“Where is she from?” is a question that’s fine. Please explain how the last statement (not question) isn’t racist.
Weirdo. Carry on Karen.
So you’ve been called out—stating the OP’s co-worker can’t be from the US because they cook smelly fish. And your response is to insult the person who called you out. Classic jacka$$ move.
Anonymous wrote:Please help! It has been six months already and I am ready to blowup any minute. Management has told her not to warm fish in the share kitchen, but she does not listen period. I am seriously ready just to quit today.
Anonymous wrote:If my company told me I couldn't warm up my fish, but everyone else could warm up their food there would be a lawsuit.
If it was just some co-worker I'd tell them to leave the rock they've been hiding under.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
No factual question. A lot of countries/cultures, it's not offensive to eat fish at work. Including my own.
This is what was posted:
That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
“Where is she from?” is a question that’s fine. Please explain how the last statement (not question) isn’t racist.
Weirdo. Carry on Karen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
No factual question. A lot of countries/cultures, it's not offensive to eat fish at work. Including my own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
No factual question. A lot of countries/cultures, it's not offensive to eat fish at work. Including my own.
This is what was posted:
That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
“Where is she from?” is a question that’s fine. Please explain how the last statement (not question) isn’t racist.
Weirdo. Carry on Karen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
No factual question. A lot of countries/cultures, it's not offensive to eat fish at work. Including my own.
This is what was posted:
That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
“Where is she from?” is a question that’s fine. Please explain how the last statement (not question) isn’t racist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
No factual question. A lot of countries/cultures, it's not offensive to eat fish at work. Including my own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is terrible. Where is she from? Def not born/raised in thsi country
Racist much?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t see what the big deal is. She likes fish. Maybe she’s pescatarian! Your food probably smells to her! Be nice to others!
Disagree. We can all agree that there are some scents that are particularly intense for communal spaces—fish, burnt popcorn to name a few. Just as it’s not okay to wear really strong perfume, there is an expectation that co-workers take heed to minimize intense food odors.