and supply chains continue to struggle, how quickly can digitising the paperwork bring costs down? i m going to be asking the big boss of the billion dollar start up tradeshift. wherever you rejoining me from around the world, hello and a warm welcome to the show. the world of work has been through a two year revolution, millions of us were locked out of the workplace during the first two waves of the covid pandemic. companies and workers had to retool to remote working, and many did incredibly quickly. for others medical staff, factory workers, those whose jobs were deemed essential they faced work and pressure like never before. and many seem to have also faced burn out. as workers and employers find theirfeet again, a social media craze could change the way we all work. on video sharing platforms like tiktok, videos like these are being shared by millions of viewers and changing attitudes in the workplace. have a seat, veronica. did you tell everyone in the office abou
i think it s actually going to yourjob, doing what you re required to do, and then going home. you re just not going above and beyond. we know you have had your own journey with this. tell us how you came to quiet quit, even though you don t like the name, tell us how you came to do that, because you then actually did quit yourjob. i did, yes, at the end of 2020, i worked for a for profit university as an admissions counsellor, i was miserable, i hated thatjob, it was super toxic, they were micromanaging to the point where the stress and anxiety was unbearable. if theyjust listened to us, because there were many times that i told them what i was going through, i told them how i felt during the one on ones, and how the fact that they would just tell me everything that i was doing wrong, it made me so stressed and so anxious, they just didn t listen. they would just tell
it is going to take months to get this case ready for trial. well, i m sure you ll keep an eye on it. jeffrey toobin, thank you. appreciate it. have a nice weekend. a little good news for your wallet today. gas prices are falling. you may have noticed the slight drop earlier this week. well, today aaa reports the national average for a gallon of regular gasoline dropped to $3.89. that s about 10 cents less than a week ago. a nice break after a dizzying run-up for sure but you are still paying about $1 more for a gallon than you were one year ago. and for-profit university founded by donald trump which charges up to $35,000 a course is said to be under investigation by the new york state attorney general. sources close to the attorney general tell news organizations that students filed at least a dozen complaints accusing trump s unaccredited school of deceptive and illegal business practices. the attorney general subpoena is just the latest problem for the company that was known
necessarily pointed to something specific. what they found was, last year, they got some intelligence that al qaeda was targeting these oil and natural gas installations in the united states. what they re saying is, some of the information that they just got shows that al qaeda still has a continuing interest right now in going after some of those targets. where is this intel coming from? it s coming from that treasure trove of information that those s.e.a.l. teams hauled out of osama bin laden s compound. we don t know if it specifically came from osama bin laden s journal, but we do know it did come from the effects that were found in his compound. so whenever we hear a warning like this, you wonder is there a specific time or a date where this attack might be possible. do you know anything about that? yeah. that would be what they would call actionable intelligence. in other words, they found out that so an so may be plotting an attack on this date against this ins