Message from @ManAnimal

Discord ID: 640568275020939285


2019-11-03 15:05:28 UTC  

ME still get labs ofc

2019-11-03 15:05:32 UTC  

but, again

2019-11-03 15:05:41 UTC  

they get a lot more into it with the theory

2019-11-03 15:05:56 UTC  

whereas METs primarily focus on labs and application

2019-11-03 15:06:08 UTC  

In truth, if I wanted to cuck to the BAR, I could become an attorney and make lots of money, but it'd kill my soul.

2019-11-03 15:06:22 UTC  

that being said, they aren't even necessarily better than MEs are at even application in the end

2019-11-03 15:06:26 UTC  

yeah, that is one of the main reasons I went for the EIT then the PE; to account for that ambiguity outside the area where they knew our school

2019-11-03 15:06:52 UTC  

because it is always better to learn the groundwork and theory, as that helps you learn the application a lot more easily once you do

2019-11-03 15:07:09 UTC  

well, it's BEST to learn both AT ONCE

2019-11-03 15:07:14 UTC  

true

2019-11-03 15:07:37 UTC  

Guys

2019-11-03 15:07:39 UTC  

Fellas

2019-11-03 15:07:42 UTC  

that's why i liked our program; we had to design from scratch, simulate, build, test

2019-11-03 15:07:43 UTC  

Gurls

2019-11-03 15:07:45 UTC  

I just learned something amazing.

2019-11-03 15:07:45 UTC  

sheilas

2019-11-03 15:07:47 UTC  

soup to nuts

2019-11-03 15:07:58 UTC  

The British are actually the real Jews https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Israelism

2019-11-03 15:08:23 UTC  

Oof.

2019-11-03 15:09:37 UTC  

there are many issues when attorneys that mainly deal in civil law try their hand in criminal law

2019-11-03 15:09:57 UTC  

@Marushia Dark can I drag someone out of my property for trespassing

2019-11-03 15:10:05 UTC  

cuz I feel like the law around that is ambiguous

2019-11-03 15:10:10 UTC  

mainly, in criminal law the state lets the husband testify as if he owned his wife's property

2019-11-03 15:10:10 UTC  

I've gotten different responses

2019-11-03 15:10:18 UTC  

doesn't work like that in civil law

2019-11-03 15:10:19 UTC  

But yeah, MA, going back to our earlier conversation, if you wanna know the law, it's this simple and this hard: "Do no harm." Everything else stems from that. What is harm, exactly? Well, that's what you have philosophy and ethics for.

2019-11-03 15:10:45 UTC  

from what I understand, even security guards have to call a real cop to actually drag someone out

2019-11-03 15:11:16 UTC  

> mainly, in criminal law the state lets the husband testify as if he owned his wife's property

Yes and there's a reason for that. Marriage is a property contract. A corporate merger.

2019-11-03 15:11:40 UTC  

you are trying to apply a 'head in the clouds theory' to real life practice; morals and ethics rarely enter into it

2019-11-03 15:11:46 UTC  

just generalize it to property contracts in general honestly

2019-11-03 15:11:47 UTC  

is it legal or is it not?

2019-11-03 15:11:59 UTC  

Legal and lawful are two different things

2019-11-03 15:12:04 UTC  

correct

2019-11-03 15:12:21 UTC  

and morality isn't a function of the state

2019-11-03 15:12:31 UTC  

I'd still like an answer to my question

2019-11-03 15:12:50 UTC  

I don't waste my time in the weeds of legality when I can take the high ground of law and morality.

2019-11-03 15:13:12 UTC  

wait, your statement above contradicts mine

2019-11-03 15:13:26 UTC  

Coolitic, it depends. You have the right to tell them to leave, and if they refuse, you can use escalating force, but the law asks you to do the most reasonable course of action in pursuit of that

2019-11-03 15:13:33 UTC  

ok