Oh well.Ahhh..... but it's in the email we all got!
I spent 30 years in public service and then another 8 after retirement. I posted a meme, not a critique of public servants.Oh well.
It just struck a nerve when I read your enlightened view of those of us who work in public service.
I've seen folks do some amazingly bizarre (and dangerous!) things, so I'll believe the image is real. If it's not, it's close enough to be believable.I wonder if it is a real photo or photo-shopped.
Looks like he is attaching the escutcheon plate so the wiring must be complete. It is said you can't argue with success. He must have know a little physics because of the steep angle of the ladder. One the other hand, I suggest that the ladder should have been almost vertical, the bottom straps should be two rungs higher on the ladder and the top straps would be better secured at the bottom of the spindles rather than at the top near the railing.
I wonder if it is a real photo or photo-shopped.
LOL, sadly Jim, that is true. I have managed a few "short cuts" and what, in the Army we euphemistically called "field expediencies," in the past, some of which worked and some of which were painful lessons.Rocky, this sounds like the voice of experience?
Good judgment comes from experience.LOL, sadly Jim, that is true. I have managed a few "short cuts" and what, in the Army we euphemistically called "field expediencies," in the past, some of which worked and some of which were painful lessons.
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