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Ok..
In article .com, wrote: You're really a pill. I tried to give you a compliment and as typical for an idiot, you took it for an insult. You said "we non-stupid ones have campaigned...." I suppose you aren't included in that group. Silly me. I have to admit you lost me there. I re-read your previous post and mine, and can't find where you tried to give me a compliment ("that's really nice to know"?), OR why Ok... well, I was *trying*, but not hard enough. See my post to Scotty. (I dunno, if you want to talk about my IQ, SAT"s, Mensa membership, my twenty-year career as a software developer/architect or anything else to back up my being non-stupid, that's a separate discussion, hopefully you'll just take my word for it and we can keep talking about boating issues.) I will as long as you don't tell me your a member of Mensa. :-) I don't think it's necessarily the best place to start. All boaters should have to take some sort of safety class, but the licensing part of it I'm not sure adds that much to it. Here's where I can help you, or clarify what I was talking about before. The heart of NY state's pwc "licensing" requirement is that you have to take an eight-hour basic boating safety course (it's not a license per se that you get, but a boating safety certificate that shows you passed the test at the end of the course - demonstrating that you have been exposed to, and demonstrated at least a minimal retention and understanding of, the basics of boating safety). So I think we're actually in agreement here, right? You agree I agree with the boating safety part. So, I guess, yes. with me (and the pwc industry and community at large, for what it's worth), precisely that, as you say, "All boaters should have to take some safety class," that is exactly my position. Kewl. As far as the "licensing part" and what it "adds to it," I think I'm just looking to make someone take a test to demonstrate that they actually did take the class, and absorb the material satisfactorily. If we're going to mandate that all boaters take a safety class (and I"m really pleased to hear that you agree with me that we should), I think you'd agree that we need some way of verifying that they have, and paid some attention to the information. I think the latter part is a tough road to travel. People take driving tests and pass, but they're still terrible drivers and don't necessarily remember the rules for longer than it takes to get from the exam to their car. I think that the best one can do is to have people take the class. After they take and pass the class (which would be a pretty low standard, unfortunately), that's probably all you can do. I'd be happy to hear a suggestion about how to actually confirm that they got it or that they continue to get it. Are you suggesting that they have to do this on some regular basis? Not being too serious, I'd like to see a driving test before you can operate a boat. I'm glad we've slogged through the rougher parts of this chat, I think we've found a lot of common ground and I appreciate your softened, eminently reasonable and flameless tone in the post below as well. Well, I screwed up. Don't hold it against me. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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