jimmyjoemeeker2
Jimmy Joe Meeker the second
jimmyjoemeeker2

But she was returned in 1977:

There’s no reason for him to feel bad and his co-workers by that story were being rather mean. His job was to mark people who have purchased tickets present to board the flight and hand them a boarding pass. Not screen them. Not go through their bags. Not tell them they can’t fly that day. He marks them present,

Those aren’t typically rubber mallet black.

Hammer must have made a better headline.

Ethical standards and government edicts are not necessarily aligned. If people held to their ethical standards government wouldn’t be able to find people to fight its foreign wars.

Executives and others at the larges banks violate federal law all the time. The bank pays a fine that amounts to a small percentage of the profits and nobody goes to prison.

Guilty pleas are often because of the way the court systems work. It’s often better than playing the odds. Especially in federal criminal court. By stacking charges and other techniques it’s very very unlikely to beat a federal rap in court. Guilt doesn’t even matter.

First what we are realistically talking about here does not amount to a real crime. It’s simply an offense against a state edict. However large corporations especially expect engineers to go against state edicts for the sake of the project.

For instance when I worked for megacorp they expected engineers to hand carry

We don’t really see the beginning. Impossible to say how he was parked considering that the vette is already tied up to the truck. How far was it dragged before video started rolling if any?

“A private security company has a duty to their employers, those that contract with them”

A private security company can be sued per any contract they may have with the people purchasing their services. We are compelled to purchase security services from the government’s police departments under a set of perceptions of their duties. However they have no actual enforceable duty to the end customer that pays

No compass?
Automation and all but shouldn’t they check the compass twice an hour or something?

I think you have a different idea of what duty is. In this respect, it’s being held accountable to provide the services people pay for or at least the ones they think they pay for. If you’re being robbed and there is a cop across the street watching it, he doesn’t have to rush over to your aid. He can stand there and

You don’t discern a point because it’s pretty clear you can’t grasp the concept of contribution to the bottom line. You wrote all those paragraphs and made no valid point what so ever and then narrowed yourself down to this one guy abandoning your ‘it’s part of your job’ argument.

Patronizing? You’re the one being patronizing. The rah rah company team that’s your job clap trap. And the cute negotiate better you add this round.

I think we have a different idea of merit. Because it’s not making the company millions, it’s playing the social game successfully. And I agree that in the USA you don’t need family connections to build that network. However you aren’t getting anywhere without building it. You’re better off playing golf with the right

Cops have no such duty to protect, prevent, or anything else that the taxpayers think they pay for. Government courts so ruled ages ago.

I haven’t heard of suicides. I’ve heard of at least one outburst leading to firing and know people who just quit to become consultants, start their own company, or something else entirely. I think it mostly leads to meltdowns of one form or another rather than suicides. Suicides are things people do when they feel

A professional athlete is paid based on the TV and ticket revenues he generates for the company why shouldn’t an engineer be paid based on the bottom line impact he makes? Remember the athlete is just an employee. Without the brand, the league, the stadium, etc he is even less able to generate income than the