| Scott Berry 2005-06-27, 5:55 pm |
| Yes but it isn't right for you guys to pick on he/she either. I worked as a dispatcher years ago and I am totally blind. Yeah granted numbers and letters can get confused easily but you could do the same things. You could accidentially give somebody to
many cc's of something then what?
In article <ghh611tl8clvrjsgeag2as4rs01agnbsnh@4ax.com>, smakky@spam.com says...
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 22:52:40 -0700, Notan <notan@ddress.com> wrote:
>Carey Gregory wrote:
>
>Kinda makes me wonder if it isn't just another troll call.
>
>Notan
His post would have passed a spell checker, but his grammar is
atrocious. So is his choice of wording. It reads like how Bugs Bunny
talks.
Hey PT:
Youse got a rite a paper bout how a parimutuel must got a be a good
communicator skills man. Other wise doctors and other over educated
people what works in the hospitals are gonna think he is a dummy end
day will think he is rap-resents a hole buncha people who are just
like dat.
EMS people have been constantly struggling to convince docs and nurses
with degrees and advanced degrees that we are educated and competent
professionals. Despite these efforts, many of them still think we are
nothing more than trained monkeys or semi-skilled labor. That's why
the third service or "civilian employee [of a uniformed service]"
wages generally suck, professional paramedics and EMTs get lumped into
the same bargaining unit as hospital porters, some ER staff are
condescending and many employers put "spank before substance."
Bottom line: at this point you may want to seriously consider paying
somebody else to write it or going to a Sylvan Academy for year or two
of tutoring before you consider paramedic school.
Steve
|