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#1
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![]() Tom Sixkiller wrote: This one is reallyyyyyy old!! Don't tell AP that - it just hit the Verizon site news this morning. George Patterson Battle, n; A method of untying with the teeth a political knot that would not yield to the tongue. |
#2
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G.R. Patterson III wrote:
Don't tell AP that - it just hit the Verizon site news this morning. http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercu...ey/8185305.htm This is a perfect example of why certain people should be banned from any role in policy-making whatsoever. Not knowing what water is? Inexcusable ignorance. - Andrew |
#3
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"Andrew Gideon" wrote in message
online.com... This is a perfect example of why certain people should be banned from any role in policy-making whatsoever. Not knowing what water is? Inexcusable ignorance. Many people, even those with college educations, do not understand that for most chemical compounds, the name actually means something. They see "dihydrogen monoxide", and it sounds like every other noxious chemical they've ever heard of. It doesn't occur to them to look at the individual parts of the name. Nor would they necessarily recognize two hydrogens and one oxygen as water (even though they almost certainly have heard of "H2O"). This is a sad fact of human existence. Most people stumble through life in a fog. It's pointless to call it "inexcusable ignorance"...it's one of the few constants in the world. I wish things were different, but wishing it won't make it so. Just think what we as humans could accomplish if the entire human race applied the same sort of intelligence and critical thinking that the handful of people who have really made a difference throughout history have. On the bright side, just look at what we've accomplished with so many idiots running around. That's testament, IMHO, to the robustness and adaptability of humanity. I think in the long run, we'll be okay, even if we take the five steps forward, four steps back approach. Back to the original thought...what IS inexcusable is a person making policy without properly researching the facts. That's justification for firing, if you ask me. It's one thing to forgive someone for stumbling through their job in a fog. It's another entirely to allow them the opportunity to continue doing so. Pete |
#4
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... Back to the original thought...what IS inexcusable is a person making policy without properly researching the facts. That's justification for firing, if you ask me. It's one thing to forgive someone for stumbling through their job in a fog. It's another entirely to allow them the opportunity to continue doing so. The paralegal said she was fooled by Internet sites devoted to dihydrogen monoxide. Why? Originally they were researching material for banning Styrofoam containers because these contaminate the creek. How would anyone come up with the DHMO sites just researching Styrofoam containers? It sounds more to me like the paralegal was fed up with the anal-retentive city council and included the bit about dihydrogen monoxide in a deliberate attempt to embarrass them. |
#5
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
... [...] How would anyone come up with the DHMO sites just researching Styrofoam containers? Because one of the classic Internet hoax emails specifically mentions DHMO used in the production of styrofoam. I'm not excusing the behavior, but it shouldn't be a surprise to anyone, nor do I think there needs to be any more complex an explanation than that given by the paralegal. Pete |
#6
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... It sounds more to me like the paralegal was fed up with the anal-retentive city council and included the bit about dihydrogen monoxide in a deliberate attempt to embarrass them. I don't think embarrassing them would take a deliberate act. |
#7
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Yeah, but there is a new one born every minute... The great Scientist P. T.
Barnum discovered that... On blaming the paralegal: Never send a boy (girl?) to do a man's job... denny "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in Tom Sixkiller wrote: This one is reallyyyyyy old!! |
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