Trivial things that make you annoyed beyond expectations?

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My understanding is that all whites in America come from immigrants , they certainly are not natives
True but that doesn't mean they are native Irish or Yorkshire or whatever when their ancestors have been living there for centuries! And we are ALL immigrants whoever we are; the first people left wherever - east Africa is a good guess - and went all over the earth, some of them didn't go far away then maybe turned round and went back, so just who is native to where is very debatable.
 

Ming the Merciless

There is no mercy
Location
Inside my skull
That's a good rule. My last employer was global though so most team meetings were inconvenient to at least some of the team. Global teams suck.

That’s because most companies haven’t taken advantage that being global offers. Asynchronous working. Got a problem , 4:30pm UK time, let the USA team pick it up, and it may be solved when you come in. Either by the USA team or say Asian team. Treat things as a relay and not a mass start.
 
That’s because most companies haven’t taken advantage that being global offers. Asynchronous working. Got a problem , 4:30pm UK time, let the USA team pick it up, and it may be solved when you come in. Either by the USA team or say Asian team. Treat things as a relay and not a mass start.
That would be a great idea if only it was organised like that. Usually it's down to one person globally to do the task. Cost cutting to the maximum.
 

DaveReading

Don't suffer fools gladly (must try harder!)
Location
Reading, obvs
It’s even in everyone’s calendar as ‘mandatory meeting-free hours’.
In one company I worked for, you were in big trouble if you woke up the admin manager between 1pm and 2pm.

And the president of our US office would lock himself in his office at lunchtime with his secretary.
 
Location
London
People who are entirely American - born and brought up there, carrying US passports, parents ditto - yet who say blithely 'I'm Scottish' or 'I'm Swedish/Polish/Spanish/whatever'. I recently even heard 'I'm a Yorkshire woman'. From someone who has never been to Europe - let alone Yorkshire! - in their life.
Any idea why they do this?
Can't help but wonder if it's some odd mix of theatricality, insecurity and feeling that they somehow lack an identity.
 
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