![]() ![]() ![]() Other millennials have decided to write an open letter in response to Ben-Ora open letter, which in turn has led to more open letters responding to open letters. Williams added that she and Ben-Ora "are worlds apart in the concept of work ethic" and had a problem with her "asking for handouts from strangers while you sit on your ass looking for cushy jobs you are not entitled to while you complain about the establishment, probably from a nice laptop." Williams also criticized Ben-Ora for not working harder for a better paying job in San Francisco, a city known for having a high cost of living. "It sounds like you've hit some real post-Haitian earthquake style hard times, so maybe some advice will help while you drink the incredibly expensive bourbon you posted on your Instagram account and eat that bag of rice, which was the only other thing you could afford," Williams wrote in her letter Saturday. Williams criticized Ben-Ora for complaining about only being able to live on rice when she seems to spend her money on other things. The response to Ben-Ora's firing and her letter prompted responses from other millennials and non-millennials alike, including freelance writer Stefanie Williams. "Because I can't afford to buy groceries."īen-Ora told The Washington Post Tuesday that she was fired from her job hours after posting the letter. Not because I'm lazy, but because I got this 10-pound bag of rice before I moved here, and my meals at home consist, by and large, of that," she wrote. ![]() "I haven't bought groceries since I started this job. Eat24 is the food-delivery service under Yelp.īen-Ora, who lives in the Bay Area, said in her letter that she gets paid $733.24 bi-weekly, but most of her check goes toward her $1,245 rent, among other costs. ![]()
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