Message from @Coolitic

Discord ID: 640566761875570688


2019-11-03 15:02:05 UTC  

not MET

2019-11-03 15:02:06 UTC  

yup; and practice 8 yrs professionally before taking it

2019-11-03 15:02:25 UTC  

but not all MET programs are the same

2019-11-03 15:02:29 UTC  

That's why it's called representation. As opposed to the genuine thing. When you use an attorney, you're turning over your person, your rights, to their care. A lawyer is more like an advisor.

2019-11-03 15:02:34 UTC  

some are ME equivalent

2019-11-03 15:02:38 UTC  

fun fact the dprks military budget is smaller than the NYPD

2019-11-03 15:02:42 UTC  

What are MET and EET?

2019-11-03 15:02:52 UTC  

@Marushia Dark can you have someone who isn't certified but you personally know represent you?

2019-11-03 15:02:54 UTC  

Mechanical engineer technician?

2019-11-03 15:02:58 UTC  

Mechanical Engineering Technology

2019-11-03 15:03:07 UTC  

Electrical Engineering Technology

2019-11-03 15:03:13 UTC  

I see

2019-11-03 15:03:16 UTC  

yup; sometimes a 2 yr associates (tech)

2019-11-03 15:03:17 UTC  

basically

2019-11-03 15:03:20 UTC  

I wish I knew more ME

2019-11-03 15:03:22 UTC  

sometimes a 4 yr

2019-11-03 15:03:24 UTC  

And electronicles

2019-11-03 15:03:29 UTC  

the ones with 'T' dont know maths or theoretical nearly as much

2019-11-03 15:03:33 UTC  

wrong

2019-11-03 15:03:36 UTC  

SOME

2019-11-03 15:03:37 UTC  

correct

2019-11-03 15:03:40 UTC  

@Coolitic The courts won't allow it. My teachers and I have tried and they REALLY don't like that. Think of it like this. You're a doctor and know how to save lives, but you don't have a license so you get in trouble if you try to help, even if you're honest and skilled.

2019-11-03 15:03:44 UTC  

want to see my degree?

2019-11-03 15:03:44 UTC  

"nearly as much"

2019-11-03 15:03:53 UTC  

they still know it ofc

2019-11-03 15:03:58 UTC  

but they dont go into it as much

2019-11-03 15:04:06 UTC  

Dem pixie wrangling for computes is such a confusing mess for me, even though I know how every component in the confuser works separately

2019-11-03 15:04:23 UTC  

I took a 4 yr calc based degree; practiced 10 yrs+ as Electrical Engineering

2019-11-03 15:04:26 UTC  

'T' is basically more akin to applied science

2019-11-03 15:04:40 UTC  

my Degree: Electrcial Enineering... Technology

2019-11-03 15:04:41 UTC  

So the best we've been able to do is teach people how to represent themselves and to study the law. That was partly what motivated me to write my books is to seed legal principles into pop culture and have people learn while they're having fun

2019-11-03 15:04:43 UTC  

you learn the application much more than you do the theory

2019-11-03 15:04:47 UTC  

it's like an IT vs a CS

2019-11-03 15:04:51 UTC  

not at all schools

2019-11-03 15:04:56 UTC  

that is a generalization

2019-11-03 15:05:02 UTC  

ofc it's a generalization

2019-11-03 15:05:15 UTC  

some schools add the labs and tech ONTO of the theory

2019-11-03 15:05:21 UTC  

Blessed be your spread of legal help

2019-11-03 15:05:21 UTC  

other schools don't

2019-11-03 15:05:28 UTC  

ME still get labs ofc

2019-11-03 15:05:32 UTC  

but, again