- Oct 11, 1999
- 7,804
- 1
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Since I'm still unlucky in my job hunt, I decided to go for a telemarketing job that I might be able to get..however its a full time job..not a contract. I won't be able to work from Sept-on wards due to school.
Now a friend of mine has that job, but he lied about not going to school...and plans on quiting come Sept.
Now if the lady asks me about my schooling and such, I'll probably have to say that I don't goto Unversity and fabricate a whole bunch of info and change my resume around as well. That's moral dilemna #1, since I feel bad about lying to get the job, and then quit in a few months.
Moral dilemna #2: I hate telemarketers with a passion, and I don't like it when they call me. So I'd feel bad to do the same thing to other people, I'd be a hypocrite. However, the pay is pretty good.
One hand..I'm probably goign to be lying to customers anyway...so whats wrong with lying to get the job? That's my reasoning anyway. But then, I'm doing something I'm against...which is telemarketing.
Now a friend of mine has that job, but he lied about not going to school...and plans on quiting come Sept.
Now if the lady asks me about my schooling and such, I'll probably have to say that I don't goto Unversity and fabricate a whole bunch of info and change my resume around as well. That's moral dilemna #1, since I feel bad about lying to get the job, and then quit in a few months.
Moral dilemna #2: I hate telemarketers with a passion, and I don't like it when they call me. So I'd feel bad to do the same thing to other people, I'd be a hypocrite. However, the pay is pretty good.
One hand..I'm probably goign to be lying to customers anyway...so whats wrong with lying to get the job? That's my reasoning anyway. But then, I'm doing something I'm against...which is telemarketing.