OT JoeTechnician licensed engineer or not?
"basskisser" wrote in message
om...
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
...
"basskisser" wrote in message
om...
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
...
And you would be the one full of ****. You can be an engineer in
most
states without registration. As a communications engineer, there is
no
registration required in most states. Just can not call yourself
"Registered Engineer" "Professional Engineer" "Consulting Engineer".
"Software Engineer" is OK, "Electronics Engineer" is OK, etc.
Seeing
asskissers response to burning no oil in normal operation, I would
not
use
him or his employer in any capacity for any civil engineering needs.
Odd
that my Diploma says "Bachelors of Science in Engineering". Never
been
in
an engineering job in the computer world that required I get the PE.
Bill
Bill, name calling is SO school girlish. It really does nothing to try
to bolster your point.
The company that I contract for does only heavy industrial structural
engineering, therefore you can't hire us. You know nothing of my
engineering capabilities, and never will. Therefore, it is simply
stupid to pretend that you do. Now, you are again WRONG. In MOST
STATES, you can NOT use the word "engineer" in your name, your
company's name, or any advertisement, UNLESS you are a licensed
engineer. Period. Need more proof? I've already posted Georgia's.
I do not give a rat's ass for Georgia's regs! In Calif, just can not
call
yourself a "Registered, Professional, or Consulting Engineer". If you
were
not so stupid, you would learn that fact.
Bill
So, you contend that, because in MOST states, you can not call
yourself an engineer, but in CA you CAN, that I'M the one that's
somehow "stupid"?? Haahaaahaa~~~~
No, you still can not comprehend! You can call yourself an engineer in any
state. Just not a P.E. or R.E. or a Consulting E. How may people have been
arrested or fined for calling themselves "Sanitation Engineer"? You can not
sign off a design for a public project. And Communication Engineers are
exempt by law from the titling requirments.
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