Mr Hate Coffee
Veteran
Also for all those worried and scared.... you do realize this is done every single day. There are people paid big money to “improve” your resume. You got house moms putting down home duties on resumes and shyt. You got secretary’s and front desk people calling themselves “executive office management” and “executive assistant”. You got people who can type a report in word, suddenly writing “trained in ms office”
Resumes are all about fukkery. We have college directors being thrown out for lying about attending Harvard. CEO’s being fired when their past comes back up to bite them. People being told “just add the keywords from the classified ad, into your resume, and they’ll call you in”
You better quit with this color in between the lines bullshyt. The world is hustling and moving and shaking and rotating out here. You better get in where you fit in and get what you can
College coaches doing it too. Remember this:
Notre Dame Coach Resigns After 5 Days and a Few Lies
Five days after naming George O'Leary its new head football coach, the University of Notre Dame announced today that O'Leary had resigned suddenly after admitting to falsifying parts of his academic and athletic background.
For two decades, O'Leary, 55, formerly the coach at Georgia Tech, exaggerated his accomplishments as a football player at the University of New Hampshire and falsely claimed to have earned a master's degree in education from New York University. Those misstatements followed him on biographical documents from one coaching position to another until finally reaching Notre Dame, one of the most coveted and scrutinized jobs in college football.
O'Leary's undoing and the university's humiliation took place in a matter of days, beginning with a series of telephone calls placed this week by The Union Leader in Manchester, N.H., a newspaper trying to report a feature article on O'Leary. What it discovered was that former coaches and players at the University of New Hampshire could not remember O'Leary playing there, even though biographical information in various media guides at teams he later coached claimed he had earned varsity letters there from 1966 to 1968.
When Notre Dame officials contacted O'Leary, he admitted the inaccuracies first about his playing career, then about the master's degree. Both he and university officials agreed he should resign, and in a span of 36 hours O'Leary tumbled from the high point of his career.
The audacity of cacs.

dat white privilege.
