You know we say that a lot but it is not necessarily the case. In my state and others I've dealt with, when you are disqualified for certain reasons you are disqualified until you have met a certain work requirement. Considering that the OP seems to become unemployed more often than the norm a disqualification might well hurt.It never hurts to apply. The way I look at it, if you apply you might be approved and you might not. If you don't apply, you definitely won't.
If you apply and you're not approved, you're no worse off then if you never applied in the first place.
I see your point but since no one except the unemployment office can give him an ironclad yes or no as to whether he will qualify, and he can only get that by applying, he's still down to two choices; apply, or don't apply.You know we say that a lot but it is not necessarily the case. In my state and others I've dealt with, when you are disqualified for certain reasons you are disqualified until you have met a certain work requirement. Considering that the OP seems to become unemployed more often than the norm a disqualification might well hurt.
This is the most comprehensive answer to this question. I completely agree with you. It seems to me that it is really better to find a good company and you won't get in trouble even worse in the future.Defamation occurs when one person tells another a false statement of fact about you that damages your reputation. So if a statement of fact about you is true, that's not defamation. And if the statement is opinion rather than fact, it is also not defamation. True statements and opinion can certainly hurt your reputation, but those statements you can't do much about, at least not with any legal action.
Here the statements made about you were apparently true. You made mistakes in not submitting timely reports, etc. Since those statements are true, they are not defamatory. Your complaint is not one of defamation, but that you made the mistakes because the company did not provide you sufficient training/guidance on what you were to do. That may be true, but that's not something for which you may successfully sue. Some companies suck and just throw new employees into the fray without much training or guidance and expect you to either already know what to do or pick it up on your own. That's not illegal. Just poor management. Maybe getting fired from this job will long term prove a blessing — you may get a new job with a company that doesn't suck and be much happier.
This thread is from 2020.This is the most comprehensive answer to this question. I completely agree with you. It seems to me that it is really better to find a good company and you won't get in trouble even worse in the future.