Erzengel
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Fixed.
When I'm visiting Florida, there's 2 things I don't eat, pizza and bagels.
Fixed.
When I'm visiting Florida, there's 2 things I don't eat, pizza and bagels.
God bless America!Beauty of capitalism: The chain is absolutely free to do whatever it wants.
Beauty of free speech and media: This man is free to speak out and the media is free to report it to inform the consumer.
Beauty of capitalism 2.0: The consumer is free to boycott the chain and let them take a hit in their pocketbook for this jackassery.
What about pizza bagels?
It is what it is.

I've never watched them, so I'll have to take your word on that.Yes, and that day is called The Tony Awards.
And again....you didn't get my point. And from your posts, I doubt you ever will.People can and do celebrate that every day too you know. And it doesn't mean this day you can't discuss what was going on then, before and after the massacre.
If you think this is me being angry, you are sadly mistaken.The only one doing the cursing, "*****", angry, etc. is you.
Things happen.....Off topic: What the hell does this phrase even mean?![]()
I don't see what Pizza Hut did was wrong. They are a business, they made a business decision that they communicated across the company. Since when is Thanksgiving a moral-based holiday anyway? Typical first-world employee entitlement.
That stated, I would not eat at Pizza Hut because their food is bad, but that's besides the point.
Maybe people who could give a crap about that holiday or cooking a huge meal to celebrate the genocide of a people.
Guess they're not as greedy as some thought.After being fired for refusing to open his restaurant on Thanksgiving, a Pizza Hut manager has his job back.
Tony Rohr, who worked his way up from cook to general manager at the company, was told it was mandatory to keep his Elkhart, Ind., store open on the holiday.
"I just decided I wasn't going to agree to it," Rohr said. "All of these people the whole year had been told they were going to have the day off."
Luckily for him, Pizza Hut stepped in and "strongly recommended" that the local franchise hire him back, saying the company respects "an employee's right to not work on a holiday."
Pizza Hut issued this statement Thursday morning:
As follow up to the situation in Elkhart, IN, we feel strongly that the situation involving our independent franchisee and the local store manager could and should have been avoided. We fully respect an employee's right to not work on a holiday, which is why the vast majority of Pizza Huts in America are closed on Thanksgiving. As a result, we strongly recommended that the local franchisee reinstate the store manager and they have agreed. We look forward to them welcoming Tony back to the team.
Rohr said that in his 10 years with the company, this was the first time any location had asked him to work on Thanksgiving.
Many spots are opening in an effort to squeeze out extra sales from holiday shoppers.
"They just said it was a competitive decision and that everyone was open, so we will be too," Rohr added. "I said, 'Why can't we be the company that stands up and says we care about our employees, and let them have the day off?'"
Rohr said earlier that he had no regrets about pushing back.
"No, not at all," he said. "I'm glad I did that."
I worked at a municipal water treatment plant (that means I made the water safe to drink that comes out of your kitchen sink)...they run 365 days a year...depending on conditions they can run 24 hours a day....holidays were just overtime pay to me. Would I have liked to be off from work that day, sure....but for most of my time there it just wasn't possible. We were always short handed....one time I worked 7 days a week for 4 and a half months straight because we had no one else to take over a shift....one winter in the middle of a giant snow/ice storm I worked the water plant for 3 days straight as the only person there, no one else could make it in.
My situation, as providing a public necessity, was different from running a restaurant that is probably one of many in a city. It's nice to be able to get time off for a holiday....but I can't see losing your job over refusing to work.
http://www.nbcnews.com/business/pizza-hut-manager-fired-after-refusing-open-thanksgiving-2D11665028
Guess they're not as greedy as some thought.
I'm a manager at a grocery store and I have to work tomorrow. Next year, assuming I'm still there, I'll have it off(unless the owners decide to close it). That's how it usually works with me. It sucks working on holidays, but this is my job. I have to deal with it.
Well, this guy taught everyone an important lesson. Just keep complaining and complaining until your dreams come true.