Of her experience, the lovely temp datawhore has written:
"When David and I first moved to SF, I was working as a temp
secretary. I hated being
a secretary anyway, I hated the data entry and phone
answering etc, but these architects also made me
make them coffee. I wasn't good at any of the stuff
I had to do there. They sneered at me as though I
were somehow inferior (and I was an inferior
secretary) and although I was supposed to be
temp-to-hire, they started interviewing other
people for the position.
I walked about a mile and a half to work there
every day, and a mile and a half back home. (Home
was a tiny room in the National Hotel on Market
Street). I felt like I was too poor to take the
bus, and the walking was good for me. But I had
to walk through SF's financial district and I
hated that. It was so grimy and self-important.
I'm self-important too, but I'm not grimy.
One day while I was at work I got totally fed up
and called the temp agency. I told them I wanted
a better position. They said sure.
How ridiculously
easy.
Then I deleted all the files pertaining to one
of the architects' major clients. The fuckheads
didn't have anything backed up. Later they called
the temp agency and tried to cause trouble, but
I got paid despite them.
It was while I was working at this job that I
wrote my Manifesto."
The purpose of the People's Entropy Research Front is to disseminate, deconstruct, and ultimately defenestrate this Manifesto.
To read the Manifesto, click here.
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To join, infiltrate, critique, or harass the People's Entropy Research Front, click here.
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