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On Wed, 18 May 2005 06:41:56 -0700, Frank Gilliland
wrote: On Wed, 18 May 2005 07:49:36 -0400, Dave Hall wrote in : snip Speaking of 'media bias', are you keeping up-to-date on the status of one of your staunchly anti-gay, conservative Republicans that happens to be the mayor of my home town? http://www.spokesmanreview.com/jimwest/ No, I'm more interested in the criminal activities surrounding the associates of the democratic mayor of Philadelphia in a "Pay to play" scandal. It is, after all, more regionally relevant for me. http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/10995886.htm Gee Dave, after all your sermons about morality -- you don't care about a pedophile that not only used his government office for cyber-sex but promised internships to young boys in exchange for 'dates'? What happened to your morality, Dave? Did it suddenly get lost because West is a conservative Republican? Geeze Frank, don't get your panties into a bunch here. This has nothing to do with my "morality", only that you live 3000 miles away from me and, as such, the events which occur there take a back seat in the local news to events which are also occurring here. I was simply not aware for what you were referring. Your "Jim West" is a scumbag, plain and simple. Being a republican does not excuse him from human flaws or the consequences of acting out on them. snip All I can say is that I sure wish I had the tools of the internet and computers back when I had to do term papers. The task would have been much less tedious and actually somewhat interesting, and fun. Where did you go to college, Dave? And BTW, what was the name of that tech school you claimed to have attended? Give me one good reason why I should tell you. Who does the majority party represent if not the majority? Is this a loaded question? Where does the Constitution require, or even suggest, that religious influence should play any role in the government? Where does the Constitution require or even suggest that religious influences should NOT play any role in the government? How does gay and lesbian marriage infringe on your rights? It is not a matter of infringing on my "rights". It's matter of tarnishing an institution that is based on religious practices. The government has no right to do such. The only thing the government can or should do is offer a civil union option, to provide gay couples the same civil rights and responsibilities as straight couples when dealing with secular issues. You, a big advocate for separation of church and state, should understand where the line is drawn here. If you advocate that church doctrine should not be infused into the workings of the government, then the converse is also true. Otherwise you are practicing hypocrisy. I have no problem with secular civil unions. I have a big problem with gay marriages. Dave "Sandbagger" |
On Thu, 19 May 2005 06:44:10 -0400, Dave Hall
wrote in : snip Dave would know that already if he actually attended college. Heck, you can earn a college "degree" these days without ever setting a foot in a classroom. Sure. Just send a few bucks to a PO box listed in an advertisement in the back of Rolling Stone magazine. But 20 years ago, that just wasn't the case. You had a certain amount of credits that you had to earn, and a required course curriculum. Yes, it was possible to do it in less than four years, but that required an overly ambitious fast-paced schedule. Most people are not up for that. It depends on the person. For some people, three hours a day in the lecture halls is mindbogglingly slow. For others the challenge is overwhelming. The trick is to choose classes each quarter/semester that make the most efficient use of study time required -outside- the classroom. And not to waste your time at keggers. Also, some colleges and most Universities offer equivalency tests as well as credits for prior experience directly related to the field. I cut down my time by almost a full year by testing out of first-year electricity courses, math all the way through calculus, and was given credits for being a radio tech in the USMC. Night school allowed people to avoid many of the "nonsense" courses, which were unrelated to your major, that the full time day programs usually required you to take. Those "nonsense" courses have very legitimate purposes. Suppose your major is electrical engineering. You need to study economics so you can do a cost/benefit analysis for a design project, as well as be able to run a business if the opportunity arises. For the same reason it's a good idea to study a little business law and accounting. There is no substitute for good communication skills, -especially- English composition, and because my objective required strong communication skills I decided to minor in the field. Along the same lines, a few courses in humanities and history are also a very good idea since a lot of current events either revolve around cultural differences and issues, or require some understanding of the history surrounding the events. Etc, etc, etc. You pick any course required for a BS and I'll explain how and why it's related to your field of study. Or is it that you don't like the idea of a liberal education because it's 'liberal'? But the people who took the night school route usually were, like me, working full time during the day, and could not take as many courses per semester and, consequently, it could take close to 8 years to earn the B.S. If that's the way they choose to do it then that's their choice. I worked my way through college while working at night -- bartending. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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On Thu, 19 May 2005 06:50:17 -0400, Dave Hall
wrote in : On Wed, 18 May 2005 09:54:03 -0400, (I AmnotGeorgeBush) wrote: Dave Hall, N3CVJ wrote: Now, let's take a closer look at this, and expose just why these answers that you gave are highly unlikely. You once claimed that you were in the military in the mid 80's, then worked for a while. Then you went back to school (presumably because you had trouble finding a decent job). Now a BS program requires a 4 year course study at a minimum. Frank was in the military (can earn you college credits) and it doesn't take 4 years minimum to get a BS degree. It is often done in 3 or less. For engineering? We're not talking about liberal arts here. In fact, there are many who do it in less time. Many major universities and schools have BS programs that take less than 4 years. Name them. EWU, UW, WSU, OSU, USC..... pretty much most of them. And also list what the student has to do in order to cram 4 years worth of work and study into "less than" 4 years. Work hard. A B.S. degree requires a certain amount of credits and certain required courses. So either you have to take more classes in less time, or you are somehow "getting around" certain required classes. Or simply don't waste your time partying, buckle down and study. That starts to bring up Frank's earlier analogy of the "new" 2 year Bachelor's degree, That was -your- analogy, Dave. And it's irrelevant to this discussion since the concept of a "2 year degree" was to offer a BS after completing only half the current academic requirements. This topic deals with completing the current academic requirements in different amounts of time. and how the "old" 4 year degree would be worth more by virtue of more time spend in the classroom. Not "time", Dave -- the amount that is learned. If you really need an analogy, just look at the requirements for an Extra-class ham license. The code test is down to 5 wpm, which more than a few hams feel has "diminished the value" of their license. You used the "2 year degree" analogy as an argument against gay marriage when you -should- be using it as an argument against dropping the code requirement. But I don't hear you screaming about that at all. Regardless, if a person can complete a 4 year BS program in 2 years, more power to him. But that's not the same as cutting the cirriculum in half in order to reduce a 4 year program to only 2 years. That's the same as dumbing down the course..... in fact, it's not just the -same- as dumbing down the course, it -IS- dumbing down the course. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
On Thu, 19 May 2005 07:01:51 -0400, Dave Hall
wrote in : On Wed, 18 May 2005 06:41:56 -0700, Frank Gilliland wrote: On Wed, 18 May 2005 07:49:36 -0400, Dave Hall wrote in : snip Speaking of 'media bias', are you keeping up-to-date on the status of one of your staunchly anti-gay, conservative Republicans that happens to be the mayor of my home town? http://www.spokesmanreview.com/jimwest/ No, I'm more interested in the criminal activities surrounding the associates of the democratic mayor of Philadelphia in a "Pay to play" scandal. It is, after all, more regionally relevant for me. http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/10995886.htm Gee Dave, after all your sermons about morality -- you don't care about a pedophile that not only used his government office for cyber-sex but promised internships to young boys in exchange for 'dates'? What happened to your morality, Dave? Did it suddenly get lost because West is a conservative Republican? Geeze Frank, don't get your panties into a bunch here. This has nothing to do with my "morality", only that you live 3000 miles away from me and, as such, the events which occur there take a back seat in the local news to events which are also occurring here. Gee, so a couple gays getting married in San Francisco should be about as unimportant as the mayor of Spokane, huh? I was simply not aware for what you were referring. Your "Jim West" is a scumbag, plain and simple. Being a republican does not excuse him from human flaws or the consequences of acting out on them. That's it? That's all you have to say about the subject? No diatribe about how it diminishes the credibility of your own mayor? No sermon on how his sexual perversions are a moral abomination? Instead you refer to his homosexuality and pedophilia as "human flaws" when you have consistently referred to such behavior in much stronger language? Hey, it's not like I'm suprised -- it's ok to call Kerry a criminal when there has been no trial; but Bush, who was tried and convicted of a DUI, is guilty of nothing more than a "civil infraction". And all the while it was -you- that said that anyone who breaks the law is a criminal. So instead of condemning people in your own camp with your own standards, you simply use softer words. How nice. Liberal pedophile: guilty of a moral sin. Conservative pedophile: victim of a human flaw. You're a trip, Dave. snip All I can say is that I sure wish I had the tools of the internet and computers back when I had to do term papers. The task would have been much less tedious and actually somewhat interesting, and fun. Where did you go to college, Dave? And BTW, what was the name of that tech school you claimed to have attended? Give me one good reason why I should tell you. Because if you don't then your claim has no credibility, and I will be reiterating that fact for as long as you post in this group. Who does the majority party represent if not the majority? Is this a loaded question? Not at all. Bush and the Republicans ignored the voices of the vast majority of Americans when they tried to meddle in the Shiavo case. If they were not acting on behalf of the majority of Americans then what was their motive? IOW, who does the majority party represent if not the majority? Where does the Constitution require, or even suggest, that religious influence should play any role in the government? Where does the Constitution require or even suggest that religious influences should NOT play any role in the government? You claimed that the Constitution included words that defined this country to be a Christian state. Where does it say anything of the sort? How does gay and lesbian marriage infringe on your rights? It is not a matter of infringing on my "rights". That's absolutely correct, Dave. It's matter of tarnishing an institution that is based on religious practices. Which has absolutely nothing to do with the government or the Constitution. The government has no right to do such. The government cannot prevent people from practicing their religion as they see fit, even if their religion includes a definition of marriage that's different than your's. The only thing the government can or should do is offer a civil union option, to provide gay couples the same civil rights and responsibilities as straight couples when dealing with secular issues. You can call it a "civil union" if you want. They can call it a "marriage" if -they- want. That's -their- right. It's not -your- right to prevent them from exercising -their- rights. You, a big advocate for separation of church and state, should understand where the line is drawn here. If you advocate that church doctrine should not be infused into the workings of the government, then the converse is also true. Otherwise you are practicing hypocrisy. I agree, the government should not impose upon any religion. How does gay marriage impose government upon religion? I see your point, Dave. But what you refuse to accept is that marriage is not exclusive to religion. It may have been formally defined under religion, but I wasn't there so I don't know for sure. Regardless, the concept of marriage is not only secular but universal. And as I have pointed out several times before, the Christian definition of marriage is, at best, poorly defined. I have no problem with secular civil unions. I have a big problem with gay marriages. You don't want homosexuals to be able to walk down the same street that you do. You are a bigot. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
From: (Dave=A0Hall)
On Wed, 18 May 2005 09:54:03 -0400, (I AmnotGeorgeBush) wrote: Dave Hall, N3CVJ wrote: "Now, let's take a closer look at this, and expose just why these answers that you gave are highly unlikely. You once claimed that you were in the military in the mid 80's, then worked for a while. Then you went back to school (presumably because you had trouble finding a decent job). Now a BS program requires a 4 year course study at a minimum." - Frank was in the military (can earn you college credits) and it doesn't take 4 years minimum to get a BS degree. It is often done in 3 or less. For engineering? Stop assuming, but since you did, I will lay odds years working in the engineering field can translate into credits applied toward a related degree. Credit for real work experience was conceived in the eighties and took off in the nineties. We're not talking about liberal arts here. In fact, there are many who do it in less time. Many major universities and schools have BS programs that take less than 4 years. Name them. There's that hypocrisy....(sigh),,you know, your refusal to answer for your unsolicited and unbelievable claims haunts you so, which is why you have lost all credibility. You provide for nothing these days, Dave, yet find yourself on all fours begging others for confirmation of things the generally educated public already know to be valid. Try your own state's "bitch" of the Ivy League, Penn State. Look under "fast track" and if you still can't find it, I'll place you in touch with an admission's counselor who can try and make you understand such a concept that is lost upon your forty-plus year old self. And also list what the student has to do in order to cram 4 years worth of work and study into "less than" 4 years. Simple. Summer classes is but a single method. But again, you are assuming it takes 4 years work -and- study,,,it does not. Your answer can never be correct when your equation is wrong from the beginning. A B.S. degree requires a certain amount of credits and certain required courses. So either you have to take more classes in less time, Ka-Ching! Give the man an affirmation for hitting on but a single example that invalidates his original remark. or .you are somehow "getting around" certain required classes. That starts to bring up Frank's earlier analogy of the "new" 2 year Bachelor's degree, and how the "old" 4 year degree would be worth more by virtue of more time spend in the classroom. Dave Hall Jr. N3CVJ "Sandbagger" You came full circle from denying it takes place (BS in less than 4 years) to not only acknowledging it happens, but giving your own examples. See what you are capable of when others force you to think. You sometimes just need a little kick of motivation. |
From: (Dave=A0Hall)
On Wed, 18 May 2005 06:41:56 -0700, Frank Gilliland wrote: On Wed, 18 May 2005 07:49:36 -0400, Dave Hall wrote in : snip "Speaking of 'media bias', are you keeping up-to-date on the status of one of your staunchly anti-gay, conservative Republicans that happens to be the mayor of my home town? http://www.spokesmanreview.com/jimwest/ " No, I'm more interested in the criminal activities surrounding the associates of the democratic mayor of Philadelphia in a "Pay to play" scandal. It is, after all, more regionally relevant for me. http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/10995886.h tm Philly is the scumbag capital of the country. They have nothing to be proud of in the last twenty five years. Jobs, crime, housing, education,..all past the brink. Medical care is the only thing that is even half decent in that area, and even that is a joke when all is taken in to consideration. "Gee Dave, after all your sermons about morality -- you don't care about a pedophile that not only used his government office for cyber-sex but promised internships to young boys in exchange for 'dates'? What happened to your morality, Dave? Did it suddenly get lost because West is a conservative Republican?" Geeze Frank, don't get your panties into a bunch here. This has nothing to do with my "morality", only that you live 3000 miles away from me and, as such, the events which occur there take a back seat in the local news to events which are also occurring here. I was simply not aware for what you were referring. Your "Jim West" is a scumbag, plain and simple. Being a republican does not excuse him from human flaws or the consequences of acting out on them. Except when those flaws belong to Bush, then those consequences go out the window and people like you blame the demos for his incompetence. snip All I can say is that I sure wish I had the tools of the internet and computers back when I had to do term papers. The task would have been much less tedious and actually somewhat interesting, and fun. Chances are you would have cheated. "Where did you go to college, Dave? And BTW, what was the name of that tech school you claimed to have attended? Give me one good reason why I should tell you. Because you lost all credibility for all your claims for many valid reasons. In the past, your claims were suspect at best, with a chance of being correct. You removed all doubt with your hypocrisy. Your claims now are now on par with what is to be found on www.snopes.com.... David HAll Jr. N3CVJ "Sandbagger" |
From: (Dave=A0Hall)
On Mon, 16 May 2005 18:17:40 -0400, (I AmnotGeorgeBush) wrote: The history of the earth's climate is well documented back to the begining of the earth's creation...grammar school basic earth and science taught this. Carbon dating confirms much and plays a large part of the techniques used to arrive at such widely accepted and mainstream taught scientific facts. Again, we know what the climate was, but not conclusively how it got that way. It's called weather. Weather coupled with other events. There are many good theories, but that's all they are. Changing the topic from one of you learning how global warming is defined, studied, and confirmed to another serves only to solidify your pain in ebing incorrect. Like I told Frank, science can tell us that, for instance, it was once tropical in Montana, and that Glaciers covered much of the northern United States during different time periods. This proves that the earth's climate has vacillated in a fairly wide range. But what this DOESN'T tell us is how much of the current global warming cycle can be attributed to natural cyclic climatic changes, and how much of it is a direct result of man made pollution. Sure it can, and does. The amount of many chemical releases in the atmosphere are man made. Many are not man made. Exactly, which is why it is extremely difficult to make a positive determination as to the percentage of man's contribution to the total amount of global warming. It's not difficult at all. I just taught you that the concentration of such gases, such as methane gas, is but a single method by which is measured. Some are both. However, science has methods of measuring each,,including natural occurring vs. manmade chemicals,,,such as methane gases. Yes, and that "science" is in much dispute right now as there are many scientists who do not accept the findings of others as conclusive. There are still many assumptions being made. Not regarding global warming. Twenty years ago, yes..today, it is widely accepted and taught mainstream. Without a point of reference, it is extremely difficult to positively determine how much we are changing the climate. The point of reference is the richness/ concentration of the gas. Which we cannot positively ascertain because we do not know how much of that gas truly came as a result of man-made pollution versus that which is naturally occurring. But we do. One large volcano eruption, for instance, can drastically effect the concentration of methane .gasses in the atmosphere. Yes, but it does not dilute or enrich what is already there, it simply adds quantity to one or the other. Such an example is very easily taken into consideration and calculations allow for the exact molecular configuration when determining such factors. This is done by the precise and absolute measuremtn of related contributions, such as time of eruption, length of eruption, velocity of eruption, etc., etc. _ An example can be the amount of methane in a predetermined air sample. Higher concentrations of the gas can be attributed to manmade releases and emissions. Or a volcano eruption. Methane gas does not have a "tag" which says "man made" or natural. We can only measure the total concentration. =A0 Which is the exact manner in which to tell man-made from natural. =A0It's elementary for anyone with a fair retainment value that took college science classes. Since you called it "elementary", it's obvious that you've never studied it, as it is far too complex a process to be called "elementary". Umm,,no. Go back and reread just what I called "elementary"... not what you felt the need to misrepresent here. By attempting to make this issue simpler than it really is, you also disparage the scientists who do this for a living. It is very simple for anyone who has ever taken college science classes, but gases are introduced in elementary school science. _ Chloroflourocarbons released by the burning of fossil fuels is directly linked to global warming. No argument. But you can't positively determine the rate of global warming that might still be occurring if we suddenly stopped using fossil fuels today. Sure you can. One measures the rate of speed the studied glaciers melt. If they suddenly stopped melting and began growing, the figured equations and calculations are all that's left to give you the answer you seek. Global warming was proved by the continual shrinkage of the polar ice cap confirmed by 24-7 high tech monitoring of such. Villages that reside in the frozen tundra watch their mountains of ice shrink each year. How much of that shrinkage would still be occurring without man made pollution? As you referred, the climate is thought to adhere to cycles, When the cycles suddenly deviate substantially from the norm, it's dedeucedly dedeucedly? Do you mean deductively? Ha,,no I meant "deucedly", as in wickedly confirmed. I was watching the penguin on the Dudley Doright cartoons and my fingers did their own thing.. And you chastise MY vocabulary and grammar....... Huge difference. I admit my mistakes whereas you scream bloody murder or try to ignore yours because of the pain they cause you. _ decided and accepted that something is amiss. First of all, there is no "norm" when it comes to clim`atic shifts. When "deviation from the norm" is used in such a reference, it means deviation from the usual patterns. -You- were first to claim weather patterns in his topic, now you again, self-contradict yourself. Many of those shifts occurred as the direct result of an external random event, such as the asteroid strike which is generally the current accepted theory for precipitating the extinction of the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous period. Not any more. Perhaps when you were i grammar school, but the most compelling andgenerally accepted theory now is they simply died out. The meteor that caused the ice age that was originally thought to have brought about the extinction of such creatures is now believed to have occured many, many years after the dinosaurs have already become extinct. There are other craters all over the planet, as evidence of other such strikes. Yea,,and if you ever were west of the Mississippi, you would have undoubtedly had the chance to see one. There is also evidence of large volcano eruptions, ..in 'patterns' of eras of high activity. which can spew enough particulate matter into the atmosphere, that an "ice age" would likely result. And did. The climatic shifts which occur between these significant events is likely only the result of climatic balance or a normalization from the extremes caused by the random external events. It's also conceivable that over the last billion years, that the solar energy output from the sun could have deviated to some degree as well, which can certainly affect surface temperature here. It's not conceivable, it's been proved the sun's harmful rays have intensified over time. This is because of the damage in the ozone layer. This is called global warming. Again, you come full circle. My work on this topic is done. |
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