Where's WYK been, and what trouble is he making?

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I like how extreme right-wingers are always banging on about crime being their main concern when often times they are the ones criming:

https://www.thejournal.ie/reichsbue...-right-citizens-of-the-reich-5939656-Dec2022/
Citizens of the Reich - because Nazis did such a great job making Germany great again. A great rubble pile. And that was back when Murica was as right wing as it got. Try that stupidity today and drones will literally be circling 24-7.
 
So I got the job. Just got to see what my situation is here now. Some photos from today. There were a LOT more folks than are in these photos. I took them during lulls to show off some of the city.

Look at that a payphone in city centre Dublin:

173217099.bfc83f6b.JPEG



Whatever how much I had to walk today, these poor horses were prolly on their feet for 10 hrs straight. This is in front of Steven's Green:

173217101.a5abd93c.JPEG



Christmas busking on Grafton Street:

173217102.b69b69d0.JPEG


O' Connell bridge over the Liffey:

173217103.4892e279.JPEG


I swear I got a 20 year old photo of this news agent in my pbase somewhere:

173217104.4ed27ad6.JPEG



James Joyce himself overlooking the noodle bar I visited Blade Runner style:

173217105.dd02f0a7.JPEG


I really wish he wouldn't litter, though.
 
I like how extreme right-wingers are always banging on about crime being their main concern when often times they are the ones criming:

https://www.thejournal.ie/reichsbue...-right-citizens-of-the-reich-5939656-Dec2022/
Citizens of the Reich - because Nazis did such a great job making Germany great again. A great rubble pile. And that was back when Murica was as right wing as it got. Try that stupidity today and drones will literally be circling 24-7.
Living in Portland, crime is out of control and i would expect vigilante behavior at some point. There are unfortunatly, no moderates, and woke and ultra liberism do not work. Lack of any consequences will gain you out of control crime. Police resonse is little if any and late if at all. Even some anti gunners now want guns. Its pretty scary. In my job,im saturated in it,mental illness, drugs, human trafficing. All can be easily witnessed hourly.
 
I see they are hiring firefighters... I'm a bit old for that nonsense, tho. But I might pass the pack test after all the tennis I been doing.
Thanks for the heads up!
If they're only listing fire positions today, look again regularly. There's a bunch of new funding so there's a bunch of new positions being created which may not have been posted yet. It's all very governmental.
 
So I got the job. Just got to see what my situation is here now. Some photos from today. There were a LOT more folks than are in these photos. I took them during lulls to show off some of the city.

Look at that a payphone in city centre Dublin:

173217099.bfc83f6b.JPEG



Whatever how much I had to walk today, these poor horses were prolly on their feet for 10 hrs straight. This is in front of Steven's Green:

173217101.a5abd93c.JPEG



Christmas busking on Grafton Street:

173217102.b69b69d0.JPEG


O' Connell bridge over the Liffey:

173217103.4892e279.JPEG


I swear I got a 20 year old photo of this news agent in my pbase somewhere:

173217104.4ed27ad6.JPEG



James Joyce himself overlooking the noodle bar I visited Blade Runner style:

173217105.dd02f0a7.JPEG
I'm assuming you already know to take the bus into Dublin? Cause... driving is a terrible idea lol. (ask me how I know)
Get me a shot of Oscar Wilde if you get a chance.
 
Living in Portland, crime is out of control and i would expect vigilante behavior at some point. There are unfortunatly, no moderates, and woke and ultra liberism do not work. Lack of any consequences will gain you out of control crime. Police resonse is little if any and late if at all. Even some anti gunners now want guns. Its pretty scary. In my job,im saturated in it,mental illness, drugs, human trafficing. All can be easily witnessed hourly.
I mean, the cops in portland have always been an issue, now they are expected to actually do their job and produce evidence while not beating the S out of people, so they just don't show up instead... Seattle is about the same story, cops whining incessantly about not being allowed to do their jobs, what they really mean is they want to lock innocent folks up without evidence, and not suffer any consequences for it, but the one makes a better sound bite.
 
I'm assuming you already know to take the bus into Dublin? Cause... driving is a terrible idea lol. (ask me how I know)
Get me a shot of Oscar Wilde if you get a chance.

Bus ain't no cadillac, tho. One of the drivers was purdy aggressive. He musta been in a hurry.
I got a lil bus pass and everythang, so I'm good.
I coulda got a pic of Oscar as he was nearly across from those horses. That's how much I suck at street photography.
I'm still up because those noodles are keeping me up!
173217674.da4f7754.JPEG
 
I mean, the cops in portland have always been an issue, now they are expected to actually do their job and produce evidence while not beating the S out of people, so they just don't show up instead... Seattle is about the same story, cops whining incessantly about not being allowed to do their jobs, what they really mean is they want to lock innocent folks up without evidence, and not suffer any consequences for it, but the one makes a better sound bite.

The problem is sensible people who are well-adjusted aren't attracted to that job. There are a near infinite amount of better jobs out there. You have to be able to ignore the danger and risks for the power and prestige. That is the sort of person that tends to be a cop more often than not. The exact sort of person you do not want as a cop. Many of which are ex-military. So yeah, you could say it's the system, or society. In any case, it is a big ask to have a good cop.
 
The problem is sensible people who are well-adjusted aren't attracted to that job. There are a near infinite amount of better jobs out there. You have to be able to ignore the danger and risks for the power and prestige. That is the sort of person that tends to be a cop more often than not. The exact sort of person you do not want as a cop. Many of which are ex-military. So yeah, you could say it's the system, or society. In any case, it is a big ask to have a good cop.
first, isn't it like 3am there?
Second cops don't even have like a really dangerous job, not even top 10 (or 20) of most dangerous jobs, they just talk themselves up like it is the most dangerous thing ever, which yeah sure potentially getting into a gunfight is a thing, but pizza delivery guys get in more gunfights every year then cops so? (like a lot more) Its really just a bunch of **** heads on a power trip. Least they can do is like you know, process evidence correctly? Or like check the local pawn shops on a weekly basis for stolen goods? maybe go through the literally thousands of unprocessed Rape Kits
MURICA...

Instead they spend their time looking for recreational drugs (or planting them when they don't find any) and harassing folks that are driving just a little too fast, then getting all agro and pulling firearms because the driver dared to question their authority...
Sorry... this got wildly political... Blue Lies Matter after all
 
Something that impressed me about my time In Ireland and England to a point, you hardly ever see any Police (Garda Publacta) sp? (translated at the Public guardians, or Public Guards..
Its partly because of a more caring society in general, but also neither country has incentivized the "drug war" so its just not as big an issue, not to mention the Prison pipe line we have here in the states
 
Something that impressed me about my time In Ireland and England to a point, you hardly ever see any Police (Garda Publacta) sp? (translated at the Public guardians, or Public Guards..
Its partly because of a more caring society in general, but also neither country has incentivized the "drug war" so its just not as big an issue, not to mention the Prison pipe line we have here in the states

After seeing how the British Police and Military acted during the hundreds of years they have been here and especially the last 100, the Republic decided to go a different route with their police force. They made them citizens. Wiki explains it better than I can:

The service was originally named the Civic Guard in English,[9] but in 1923 it became An Garda Síochána in both English and Irish. This is usually translated as "the Guardians of the Peace".[10] Garda Síochána na hÉireann ("of Ireland", pronounced [ˈɡaːɾˠd̪ə ˈʃiːxaːn̪ˠə n̪ˠə ˈheːɾʲən̪ˠ]) appears on its logo but is seldom used elsewhere. At that time, there was a vogue for naming the new institutions of the Irish Free State after counterparts in the French Third Republic; the term "guardians of the peace" (gardiens de la paix, literally 'peacekeepers') had been used since 1870 in French-speaking countries to designate civilian police forces as distinguished from the armed gendarmery, notably municipal police in France, communal guards in Belgium[11] and cantonal police in Switzerland.

An individual officer is called a garda (plural gardaí), or less formally, a "guard", and is typically addressed as such by members of the public when on duty.[14][15] A police station is called a garda station. Garda is also the name of the lowest rank within the force (e.g. "Garda John Murphy", analogous to the British term "constable" or the American "officer", "deputy", "trooper", etc.). A female officer was once officially referred to as a bangharda (pronounced [ˈbˠanˠˌɣaːɾˠd̪ˠə]; "female guard"; plural banghardaí). This term was abolished in 1990,[16] but is still used colloquially in place of the now gender-neutral garda.[15]

Coloquially, as a slang or derogatory term, they are sometimes referred to as 'the shades'

Most of the police are unarmed. The ones that are go through a very tough process. However, if there is real trouble, the Republic does not have the same posse comitatis act the US do. They can bring in the military, like they did with IRA trouble back in the day. And even to this day, the military help to handle bank and institutional transfers - complete with Steyr AUG machineguns, P7's, mp5's, etc, as in this photo I took in Clonmel, Tipperary during a Permanent TSB cash xfer(and I am sure they were thrilled I was taking photos):

147858090.BLM9K14S.jpg


You are right about the Garda presence. In places like Dublin and Cork and Waterford etc. you will see a few. And they may have check points for vehicle reg/insurance/alcohol/drugs etc. But there presence here is nothing like it is stateside. When I see a Garda vehicle I am usually surprised(no one calls them cruisers or squad cards here or black and whites or whatever). Crime in general is mostly petty here. If you want violent crime, you usually have to be in a bar at closing time to find it, or a member of a gang. And you most definitely will find it that way - some of the Irish still like to drink and fight.

We haven't legalized drugs here just yet, but cannabis measures are being put forth with large public support. Which is odd, as Ireland is a very conservative country as far as Europe is concerned. Even my wife, who does not go to church, is very spiritual. I'm personally a bit too educated to believe in ghosts or magic myself. But weed is usually only confiscated here anyways. It's nearly legal as it is, and the Gards often ignore it.

Hell, when I was in England in the 2010's, we had just finished working a particularly hard day on an estate and were in the car park in freaking Slough of all places, with our equipment van, smoking dope and drinking. I somehow managed to notice the cops(and the Brits do seem to call them nearly all the names we do, plus some). I told the guy that had the joint to scuttle it fast. The cops came to us and they must have definitely smelled the weed, and one took the can of Scrumpy Jack from my hands and said, 'It's not a crime to drink this at home, but it should be. Please don't drink this in public' and he handed it back to me, looked us all over and could see we were all dressed in our tree-worker gang attire, just covered in sawdust and oil and sweat and whatever, and decided we had a hard enough day as it is and he bid us farewell and told me he liked my accent.

Where was I? Oh, the drugs problems here aren't as bad as stateside far as I can tell. I mean, if you go to some of the worst council housing estates, it can be rough for sure. But what keeps crime from exploding, indeed in Europe as in Ireland, is the education system is decent all the way up through a very affordable college level, with good vocational training and apprenticeship programs available. I nearly enrolled in a furniture making program simply to get the connections and experience. It woulda been 12 months and about 1200 bucks with the cert and job placement included. And if you are poor, or from a poor family, that fee is waved. People need an opportunity for upward mobility. Otherwise, they may find other ways to pass the time...
A friend of mine enrolled in a caregiver school and is now applying for nurse. It cost him very little and they helped him find a good job.
 
Damnit, I got the Publacta part wrong... it has been 2 decades... and I only seen like 2 maybe 3 Garda the entire time...
One at a car accident (surprisingly rare... considering the speeds and road conditions...)
The other for sure was parked along side the road possibly napping...
Its almost like socialized health care and higher education fights crime.... but that would be nearly almost kinda if you squint and are more then a little illiterate and gullible to be like Communism
 
Damnit, I got the Publacta part wrong... it has been 2 decades... and I only seen like 2 maybe 3 Garda the entire time...
One at a car accident (surprisingly rare... considering the speeds and road conditions...)
The other for sure was parked along side the road possibly napping...
Its almost like socialized health care and higher education fights crime.... but that would be nearly almost kinda if you squint and are more then a little illiterate and gullible to be like Communism
Car accidents better be rare here(and they are). You have to take 12 lessons(12!), test to get a permit to take those lessons in the first place, and then pass a very strict driver's test within a year of completing those lessons. They also do not let Americans transfer their licenses. I have to take 6 lessons and pass the test. Because I could just pay to insure myself on my US license, I haven't bothered...yet...but I will eventually have to. Here's an example of the test, note the video is 25 minutes long. What always gets me is the reversing around a corner requirement. I mean, you will eventually have to do it here because the streets are so crowded and there are a lot of cul de sacs. But on a test for young drivers, that's where many lose points. Still, this is a good example of how crowded the streets can be here in even a rural area. In Dublin, it's rough. Cork is much easier to drive.




Education is not just affordable, but it's also set up differently than we have stateside.
In most of Europe, you are out of 'high school' by 16. And colleges are more like our private colleges stateside, so the base requirements aren't quite as plentiful. You mainly only study your major without too much social studies, philosophy, or history requirements. So you can graduate in 3 years. That's right, by the time your average American is enrolled in college, a European can be nearly graduated and working. And, yes, your average college-educated American is actually better educated than your average European due to a four year system in most public colleges. I mean, I was an industrial design major, a science degree, and I have done required courses in philosophy, history, an extra English course that was completely not necessary but required(college level technical writing), and a required economics course. That's like half a year of adjacent material most European and private US schools do not require. I didn't really need the English as I had taken it in HS.

I suppose it could be worse. By the time your average Irish citizen is 16, they would have 8 years of Irish. I mean, it's a good idea to teach it since this is Ireland and all, but very few Irish are fluent in Irish. I am told it's because they lack interest, are lazy, or it isn't taught well. But it is just stunning to me that I took only 2 years of German in HS and College and I can easily interact and find my way around Germany. But your average Irish person can not easily converse in Irish after years of it. So something is going on with that. My last German course was 2 hrs twice a week of 100% German conversation, no English was ever allowed, and the less German you could talk the more often they tried to converse with you. And it was at dinner time and we were allowed to bring in food or had food there. So I was often told 'Du frisst'. So maybe it's lack of interaction, I dunno.

Our HS system is nearly set up as day care by comparison. Most European systems would have you vocationally trained by 16 and into 1-2 years of professional apprenticeship by the time your average American has graduated HS.

A Danish friend of mine graduated HS at 16 and went into a carpentry trade school for 2 years, which included apprenticeship. He is the guy that did those oak stairs in the Waterford Estate I showed you. In Denmark, you not only do not pay for the school, but you also get a stipend to pay for room and board if you have to move closer to the school, or are simply given room and board. Yes, taxes are higher there, but the education level and employment is also high. Taxes invest in your country's future.

Now, having said that, my HS did a decent job with their wood shop and auto shop. I was a halfway decent mechanic and welder by the time I was 18, and that work bench I made I didn't use any plans and just winged it.

However, I only worked a few years in my major as the internet exploded whilst I was in the bay area of California at the time since that's where my college was. Companies were so desperate to hire, they took on a 24 year old me who only knew Unix because I was working on CAD systems at the time, and paid me the modern equivalent of $60K starting salary plus benefits to baby sit internal email and storage systems. It was a crazy time. I recall free vending machines, in house coffee shops and cafe's that were free, and work-sponsored housing etc. Good times. My bro still works up there as he also went to a California college, too. He IPO'd with a huge online gaming company recently and makes well into the six figures now as well as loads of stock. So the American dream is still out there.
 
Car accidents better be rare here(and they are). You have to take 12 lessons(12!), test to get a permit to take those lessons in the first place, and then pass a very strict driver's test within a year of completing those lessons. They also do not let Americans transfer their licenses. I have to take 6 lessons and pass the test. Because I could just pay to insure myself on my US license, I haven't bothered...yet...but I will eventually have to. Here's an example of the test, note the video is 25 minutes long. What always gets me is the reversing around a corner requirement. I mean, you will eventually have to do it here because the streets are so crowded and there are a lot of cul de sacs. But on a test for young drivers, that's where many lose points. Still, this is a good example of how crowded the streets can be here in even a rural area. In Dublin, it's rough. Cork is much easier to drive.




Education is not just affordable, but it's also set up differently than we have stateside.
In most of Europe, you are out of 'high school' by 16. And colleges are more like our private colleges stateside, so the base requirements aren't quite as plentiful. You mainly only study your major without too much social studies, philosophy, or history requirements. So you can graduate in 3 years. That's right, by the time your average American is enrolled in college, a European can be nearly graduated and working. And, yes, your average college-educated American is actually better educated than your average European due to a four year system in most public colleges. I mean, I was an industrial design major and I have done required courses in philosophy, history, an extra English course that was completely not necessary but required(college level technical writing), and a required economics course. That's like half a year of adjacent material most European and private US schools do not require. I didn't really need the English as I had taken it in HS.

I suppose it could be worse. By the time your average Irish citizen is 16, they would have 8 years of Irish. I mean, it's a good idea to teach it since this is Ireland and all, but very few Irish are fluent in Irish. I am told it's because they lack interest, are lazy, or it isn't taught well. But it is just stunning to me that I took only 2 years of German in HS and College and I can easily interact and find my way around Germany. But your average Irish person can not easily converse in Irish after years of it. So something is going on with that. My last German course was 2 hrs twice a week of 100% German conversation, no English was ever allowed, and the less German you could talk the more often they tried to converse with you. And it was at dinner time and we were allowed to bring in food or had food there. So I was often told 'Du frisst'. So maybe it's lack of interaction, I dunno.

Our HS system is nearly set up as day care by comparison. Most European systems would have you vocationally trained by 16 and into 1-2 years of professional apprenticeship by the time your average American has graduated HS.

A Danish friend of mine graduated HS at 16 and went into a carpentry trade school for 2 years, which included apprenticeship. He is the guy that did those oak stairs in the Waterford Estate I showed you. In Denmark, you not only do not pay for the school, but you also get a stipend to pay for room and board if you have to move closer to the school, or are simply given room and board. Yes, taxes are higher there, but the education level and employment is also high. Taxes invest in your country's future.

Now, having said that, my HS did a decent job with their wood shop and auto shop. I was a halfway decent mechanic and welder by the time I was 18, and that work bench I made I didn't use any plans and just winged it.

However, I only worked a few years in my major as the internet exploded whilst I was in the bay area of California at the time since that's where my college was. Companies were so desperate to hire, they took on a 24 year old me who only knew Unix because I was working on CAD systems at the time, and paid me the modern equivalent of $60K starting salary plus benefits to baby sit internal email and storage systems. It was a crazy time. I recall free vending machines, in house coffee shops and cafe's that were free, and work-sponsored housing etc. Good times. My bro still works up there as he also went to a California college, too. He IPO'd with a huge online gaming company recently and makes well into the six figures now as well as loads of stock. So the American dream is still out there.

we have "skills centers" here in liberal commy wa, at 15 i was in a machine shop, and werking part time after school, other wise i probably would have dropped out and found a job anyways, last 2 years of regular school were pretty much just a waste of my time, didnt learn anything new, other then some anger management, but that had more to do with playin guitar with my band that was all homeschooled kids anyway lol.


that and by then id started coming into my muscles, so the a holes were scared of me..

for a small town there sure is a lot if assholes
 
we have "skills centers" here in liberal commy wa, at 15 i was in a machine shop, and werking part time after school, other wise i probably would have dropped out and found a job anyways, last 2 years of regular school were pretty much just a waste of my time, didnt learn anything new, other then some anger management, but that had more to do with playin guitar with my band that was all homeschooled kids anyway lol.


that and by then id started coming into my muscles, so the a holes were scared of me..

for a small town there sure is a lot if assholes

If I had to do it again, I woulda followed my instincts and gone forestry. I wanted to do it after I had spent a summer as a blue card back when.
My mother told me I needed to get a real degree and do engineering for money. So, I tried Industrial Design because I liked making ****.
But I was only on two design teams my whole life. After I took that job in puterz and ended up on a path of unix administration, I had difficulty breaking out.
Eventually I got into Philips who did oncology(cancer) treatment. The money was insane, but seeing people die on a daily basis, and then my mother dying of cancer, basically ruined me and I went back into forestry.

Turns out money wasn't the most important thing in life...
 
FYI Quilcene is the definition of no and where. durts cheap there for a reason. Not a bad area but only thing going is logging, and most of that left town for Shelton or Forks, both over 80 mi away.
I do know a guy that lives out that way, might be able to hook a guy up with a job.
 

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