Bitterly firing an employee right after they hand in their two weeks notice is probably the least professional thing a boss can do in that situation, and that's exactly what happened to redditor u/Brilliant-Parking359, whose boss ended up screwing himself over by sacking his employee out of anger right after they quit. u/Brilliant-Parking359 still had the company truck in their possession, and bossman expected OP to drive three hours to deliver the truck even after he'd told OP to 'f*** off.' Needless to say, OP did no such thing.
u/Waytooboredforthis shared their own experience working for big babies: "When I was working for ServiceMaster by Twins, literally all management all the way up to the owners were some of the shittiest people I've dealt with. I remember after my coworker quit (after 6 days in a row of us driving back and forth to Athens, AL [8 hour drive total] to work 8 hour shifts), the guy right below the owners was in the area, so he stopped by my shop to retrieve coworkers uniform. He started talking while I was working on the truck and I just remember thinking how inappropriate the whole conversation was, anytime he referred to my coworker, instead of using his name, he'd say, 'the fucking p*ssy.'"
"I love you problems when I'm not you. So satisfying." added u/Slazman999.
"Yes if they honored his 2 weeks they could very well have made him responsible to return the truck depending on the company policies and laws but the second they said fuck you it became their responsibility" said u/hollyock.
"After being fired OP likely would not be insured to operate the company's vehicle anymore either." said u/doctorcornwallis.
"You're absolutely right." agreed u/mellonians, "'I shall not be compelled by the company to break the law'"
"Power move" replied u/retro_pollo.
Visit r/antiwork for the original thread.