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#61
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#62
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posted to rec.boats
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On Friday, 23 August 2013 13:44:14 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote:
"True North" wrote in message ... On Friday, 23 August 2013 09:32:34 UTC-3, JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On 8/23/2013 7:55 AM, True North wrote: Isn't that sweet, L'il Snottie coming to the aid of Idiot Snottie. This is why dick binned you... As I understood it, Richard "binned" me because I bothered to waste my time on you and Dickson. ------------------------ I don't have anyone "binned" anymore .... except "slammer". Thank you... good choice. ;-) |
#64
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "F.O.A.D." wrote in message ... On 8/23/13 11:26 AM, wrote: On Fri, 23 Aug 2013 06:42:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 8/22/13 10:01 PM, wrote: Liability Insurance is just a way to make lawyers rich. It figures you want more of it. Maybe we should tell everyone who pays for liability insurance that lawyers get a third to a half of all claims for basically doing nothing but driving up the amount of the claim. That does not include the money the insurance company lawyer gets, effectively making the cost of the claim about 3-4 times as much as the injured party ends up with., Now get out your checkbook and pay that insurance bill, sucker. Uh huh. So I suppose you don't have liability insurance on your car or homeowners insurance in case someone is injured on your property, right? Yes I do and I understand it is mostly lawyer tax Oh, I forgot. You don't like people who studied to get a professional degree. Military trade school is good enough for everyone. --------------------------- As a beneficiary of both, I'll offer my opinion. There's no question that in the civilian job market a college degree in the technical disciplines opens many more doors and can lead to higher incomes. However, some of the military technical schools, particularly in the Navy (sorry Army dudes) are excellent. Some require higher SAT and IQ levels than many colleges. I think the best is having both. I can accurately state that in my case I probably learned more practical applications from the Navy electronics schools than in college, although I'll admit my degree was obtained in bits and pieces over many years in many schools. The degree gave me credentials in the civilian workforce. The Navy gave me the real education that was useful. Looking back now, if I were ever in a situation where my life depended on the actions of a military trained vet and today's typical college grad, I'd much rather have the vet watching my back. |
#65
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posted to rec.boats
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On 8/23/13 1:07 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
"F.O.A.D." wrote in message ... On 8/23/13 11:26 AM, wrote: On Fri, 23 Aug 2013 06:42:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 8/22/13 10:01 PM, wrote: Liability Insurance is just a way to make lawyers rich. It figures you want more of it. Maybe we should tell everyone who pays for liability insurance that lawyers get a third to a half of all claims for basically doing nothing but driving up the amount of the claim. That does not include the money the insurance company lawyer gets, effectively making the cost of the claim about 3-4 times as much as the injured party ends up with., Now get out your checkbook and pay that insurance bill, sucker. Uh huh. So I suppose you don't have liability insurance on your car or homeowners insurance in case someone is injured on your property, right? Yes I do and I understand it is mostly lawyer tax Oh, I forgot. You don't like people who studied to get a professional degree. Military trade school is good enough for everyone. --------------------------- As a beneficiary of both, I'll offer my opinion. There's no question that in the civilian job market a college degree in the technical disciplines opens many more doors and can lead to higher incomes. However, some of the military technical schools, particularly in the Navy (sorry Army dudes) are excellent. Some require higher SAT and IQ levels than many colleges. I think the best is having both. I can accurately state that in my case I probably learned more practical applications from the Navy electronics schools than in college, although I'll admit my degree was obtained in bits and pieces over many years in many schools. The degree gave me credentials in the civilian workforce. The Navy gave me the real education that was useful. Looking back now, if I were ever in a situation where my life depended on the actions of a military trained vet and today's typical college grad, I'd much rather have the vet watching my back. Are there many college grads hiring themselves out as bodyguards? |
#66
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posted to rec.boats
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#67
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "F.O.A.D." wrote in message ... On 8/23/13 1:07 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote in message ... On 8/23/13 11:26 AM, wrote: On Fri, 23 Aug 2013 06:42:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 8/22/13 10:01 PM, wrote: Liability Insurance is just a way to make lawyers rich. It figures you want more of it. Maybe we should tell everyone who pays for liability insurance that lawyers get a third to a half of all claims for basically doing nothing but driving up the amount of the claim. That does not include the money the insurance company lawyer gets, effectively making the cost of the claim about 3-4 times as much as the injured party ends up with., Now get out your checkbook and pay that insurance bill, sucker. Uh huh. So I suppose you don't have liability insurance on your car or homeowners insurance in case someone is injured on your property, right? Yes I do and I understand it is mostly lawyer tax Oh, I forgot. You don't like people who studied to get a professional degree. Military trade school is good enough for everyone. --------------------------- As a beneficiary of both, I'll offer my opinion. There's no question that in the civilian job market a college degree in the technical disciplines opens many more doors and can lead to higher incomes. However, some of the military technical schools, particularly in the Navy (sorry Army dudes) are excellent. Some require higher SAT and IQ levels than many colleges. I think the best is having both. I can accurately state that in my case I probably learned more practical applications from the Navy electronics schools than in college, although I'll admit my degree was obtained in bits and pieces over many years in many schools. The degree gave me credentials in the civilian workforce. The Navy gave me the real education that was useful. Looking back now, if I were ever in a situation where my life depended on the actions of a military trained vet and today's typical college grad, I'd much rather have the vet watching my back. Are there many college grads hiring themselves out as bodyguards? ----------------------- Doubtful. They are the first that usually need protection. |
#68
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posted to rec.boats
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On Friday, August 23, 2013 10:18:31 AM UTC-4, True North wrote:
Scott Secord Dickson has been threatening to travel down here for the purpose of ambushing me at my local supermarket and bashing in my head in front of my wife with his hickory stix, for a full year now. He's as criminally insane as his MiniMe in Connecticut. Time to flush him down the sewer. I'm sure you'll feel the same way when you're lying on the ground with a shattered kneecap, ****. You ARE marked. |
#69
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posted to rec.boats
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"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
"F.O.A.D." wrote in message ... On 8/23/13 11:26 AM, wrote: On Fri, 23 Aug 2013 06:42:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 8/22/13 10:01 PM, wrote: Liability Insurance is just a way to make lawyers rich. It figures you want more of it. Maybe we should tell everyone who pays for liability insurance that lawyers get a third to a half of all claims for basically doing nothing but driving up the amount of the claim. That does not include the money the insurance company lawyer gets, effectively making the cost of the claim about 3-4 times as much as the injured party ends up with., Now get out your checkbook and pay that insurance bill, sucker. Uh huh. So I suppose you don't have liability insurance on your car or homeowners insurance in case someone is injured on your property, right? Yes I do and I understand it is mostly lawyer tax Oh, I forgot. You don't like people who studied to get a professional degree. Military trade school is good enough for everyone. --------------------------- As a beneficiary of both, I'll offer my opinion. There's no question that in the civilian job market a college degree in the technical disciplines opens many more doors and can lead to higher incomes. However, some of the military technical schools, particularly in the Navy (sorry Army dudes) are excellent. Some require higher SAT and IQ levels than many colleges. I think the best is having both. I can accurately state that in my case I probably learned more practical applications from the Navy electronics schools than in college, although I'll admit my degree was obtained in bits and pieces over many years in many schools. The degree gave me credentials in the civilian workforce. The Navy gave me the real education that was useful. Looking back now, if I were ever in a situation where my life depended on the actions of a military trained vet and today's typical college grad, I'd much rather have the vet watching my back. I also have both military electronics school USAF and civilian electronics school, NCR computers, and an EE university degree.i hired lots of Cal and Stanford EEs over the years. Most have no practical knowledge. Were not as good of engineers as those with practical training also. And Mr. Luddite is correct. Navy techs were the best! Learned how to fix, and just not swap parts. |
#70
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posted to rec.boats
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"F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 8/23/13 7:23 AM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote: On 8/22/2013 11:19 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: "True North" wrote in message ... There you go with those homosexuals fantasies again. There must be some place in St Thomas where you can work off your 'fustrations'. ---------------------- I hope you realize that the only reason the dip**** "slammer" ever shows up in this newsgroup is because you respond to him. Everyone else either has him filtered or simply ignore his pathetic comments. Do us a favor, will you? Ignore him. Responding to him simply eggs his demented mind on. Donnie could also stop making the juvenile comments on each and ever post which draws slammer out. Note, slammer is only answering don's constant trolls... Just sayin'. *You* are the ranking and also rank expert on juvenile comments here, ****head. That comment is very mature. Not! |
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