Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (Full Version)

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[Poll]

Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school?


Yes. You are bad.
  13% (3)
Only if there is a breath test app you must download.
  18% (4)
Hell no! Party on, Dude, and crank the tunes!
  18% (4)
It is if you are driving, and doing the school on your iphone.
  50% (11)


Total Votes : 22
(last vote on : 10/9/2012 2:04:10 AM)
(Poll will run till: -- )


Message


TheHeretic -> Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/22/2012 1:59:44 PM)

If we calculate the cost of the school (a lovely scam), and how I value my Saturday time, this still works out better than having the car insurance go up.




LadyPact -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/22/2012 2:17:06 PM)

Rich, I gotta ask. Why on earth are you doing online traffic school?




TheHeretic -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/22/2012 2:24:21 PM)

I got my very first speeding ticket, LadyP. Not a car around for miles at that time of the morning, but it seems they really do patrol by aircraft, on that stretch.




TimeLimited -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/22/2012 2:42:42 PM)

Kansas and Iowa are famous for that. I had to laugh when a former boss was monitoring the air to ground communication one time.
On a different occassion, I was on the Kansas portion of US Hwy 36. I came over a hill to see a single wing aircraft too close to the ground pacing the car going the other way. I wasn't sure if it was going to land until I figured it out. To their credit, that portion of US Hwy 36 was posted speed enforce by air patrol. Made a believer of me.




JstAnotherSub -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/22/2012 2:54:25 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic

I got my very first speeding ticket, LadyP. Not a car around for miles at that time of the morning, but it seems they really do patrol by aircraft, on that stretch.

Damn, traffic class for first speeding ticket?

That definitely deserves a drink.




Winterapple -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/22/2012 10:51:36 PM)

Traffic school for a speeding ticket? WTF?
Online traffic school? WTF?
Drink, smoke em if you've got em.




littlewonder -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 12:22:40 AM)

There has to be more to this story. I've never heard of traffic school for something as minor as a speeding ticket. If so then the rooms must be awfully packed!




ShaharThorne -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 5:02:40 AM)

Depends on how fast he was going...




TheHeretic -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 7:38:20 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: littlewonder

There has to be more to this story.


Sorry, but no. I was exceeding the posted speed limit, as I have been known to do on wide open roads, a time or five hundred in my life, and couldn't talk my way out of this one. The officer was kind enough to knock 15 mph off what the radar said, when he wrote it, but he wrote me one all the same. I paid it online. My last ticket was for an illegal turn, about 6 years ago, but I was running on a Class-A license then, and wasn't eligible for this option.

I'm not an expert, but California seems to have two tiers of traffic school. There is a 12-hour course that people get ordered to take, and the 8-hour voluntary one I did. I paid the court an extra fee, paid the school their fee, and when my certificate of completion is delivered to the court, the simple infraction and single point on my license won't be sent to my insurance company. It's a scam, as I said, but it will save me money in the long run.

The only "rest of the story" is that I grabbed a cold beverage to sit down with, gave myself a grin with the visual of somebody doing online traffic school from a mobile device while driving, and decided to share. Judging from the poll results, a few people found it funny. [:D]





LookieNoNookie -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 7:42:51 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic

If we calculate the cost of the school (a lovely scam), and how I value my Saturday time, this still works out better than having the car insurance go up.


I think you're okay drinking while doing the class online Heretic, but I'm leaning towards advising you not to do the course on your smart phone, while drinking, driving in any areas with marked school crossings.




LookieNoNookie -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 7:59:48 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TheHeretic


quote:

ORIGINAL: littlewonder

There has to be more to this story.


Sorry, but no. I was exceeding the posted speed limit, as I have been known to do on wide open roads, a time or five hundred in my life, and couldn't talk my way out of this one. The officer was kind enough to knock 15 mph off what the radar said, when he wrote it, but he wrote me one all the same. I paid it online. My last ticket was for an illegal turn, about 6 years ago, but I was running on a Class-A license then, and wasn't eligible for this option.

I'm not an expert, but California seems to have two tiers of traffic school. There is a 12-hour course that people get ordered to take, and the 8-hour voluntary one I did. I paid the court an extra fee, paid the school their fee, and when my certificate of completion is delivered to the court, the simple infraction and single point on my license won't be sent to my insurance company. It's a scam, as I said, but it will save me money in the long run.

The only "rest of the story" is that I grabbed a cold beverage to sit down with, gave myself a grin with the visual of somebody doing online traffic school from a mobile device while driving, and decided to share. Judging from the poll results, a few people found it funny. [:D]




I'll tell you what's funny about California testing.....

About 10 years ago I was studying for my California contractors license. At the time, we did work in 27 states, all but California allowed "reciprocal" licenses (we're in Washington State). If you had one in "this" state" and "that" state allowed reciprocal licensing, they'd give you one in theirs. California, you had to take a special class for it.

The book was massively thick so I figured I better take this seriously.

I closed my office door for a week, no calls, studied like a banshee, then 2 days prior I holed up in a hotel a block away from the testing facility and buried my nose.

Came in to take the test, 2 hour test, all on computers, multiple choice....here was one of the questions (few were more difficult than this):

"You are using an electric saw outside. There's a tear in the plastic covering on the cord and you can see there are bare wires exposed and the electric cord is sitting in a puddle. It starts to rain.

Do you:

A) Continue using the saw and remain outdoors?
B) Stop using the saw and immediately go indoors until the rain has stopped?
C) Talk to your supervisor about the next best course of action?"


Of course, nowhere did it say:

D) Get a new fucking cord you imbecile, or get the current one repaired, don't EVER let it sit in a fucking puddle while in operation and don't use electrical equipment of any kind, in good repair or not, outdoors, in the rain.

I was done in 20 minutes.....63 questions.

I got up....first guy out the door, I look back and see all these people sweating bullets and think "Oh....I surely fucked up.....look at all these people still taking the test....fuck".

As I'm leaving, I get handed a paper test that I'm to take and then mail it back to the State of California. Maybe 15 simple questions.

I answer them all, it's one of those folding, no stamp "mail anywhere" thingies....and I suddenly see that on the very last page are ALL the answers for this little paper test.

I take it back in and hand it to the lady and say..."uhhh.....you are aware that this test I just took has all the answers on the back page?", she then said "yes Sir, it's a self correcting test...perhaps you missed the section where it says on the very first page that you are to take the test, see which ones you got right and then send us the results".

The next guy to come out of the computer test came out an hour later. He looked worried, asked me how I thought I did and suddenly realized.....I probably passed.





TheHeretic -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 8:12:22 AM)

Lookie, the hardest part of this was finding enough bandwidth in our wifi for all the devices I had going on my desk.

Now the traffic school I want to take is the Sheriff's pursuit driving course, but until the economy picks up enough that we can start going to the charity auctions again, I won't get a chance to bid on that certificate.




GreedyTop -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 8:17:02 AM)

I wanna take a sheriffs driving school test (yanno, where ya actually drive the cars, like on skid pads and such...)




DaddySatyr -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 8:33:50 AM)

Lookie, in my profession the New Jersey test is supposedly so tough that if you hold a license here no other state will deny you a reciprocal license (for a fee, of course). I have only gotten licenses in a few other states but, now, you and Rich have me curious and I think I am going to have to check into the California process.

Rich, I have been a proponent of the loosening of certain driving laws for some time. Since we were in Junior High School health class, we've been taught that different drugs (yes, alcohol's a drug) affect people differently.

I'm old enough to remember a time when a lot of drunk drivers used to just ask for a jury trial and get acquitted because there was no breathalizer. No one was there to witness the FST so no one knew if the guy was fucked up or not.

That was in a time before just about every patrol cruiser in the country had video and audio recording devices. Now that we do, people who are "sober as a judge" are still held to a standard that would make spinster aunt Mary drunk as a cooter. It stinks on ice.

Also, I've always believed that the speed limit represents the highest possible speed that the lowest skilled driver could safely maintain on that particular road under the worst of conditions.

Fuck 'em. They're screwing up your Saturday. Not only do I suggest an adult beverage but maybe you could get the better half to sit with you and make the process somewhat more enjoyable as well?



Peace and comfort,



Michael




GreedyTop -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 8:41:55 AM)

I have yet to find a state that WOULD NOT reciprocate a drivers license.


That is across the country, north, south, east or west.

I have NEVER had a state deny me a reciprocal license because another state wasn't "enough". All I have ever had to do was turn in the previous license, and meet basic standards (no outstanding warrants/ etc.).
And that has been true with my truck driving/any other endorsement license since the early 80s.




DaddySatyr -> RE: Is it wrong to drink, while doing online traffic school? (9/23/2012 8:53:36 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: GreedyTop

I have yet to find a state that WOULD NOT reciprocate a drivers license.


That is across the country, north, south, east or west.

I have NEVER had a state deny me a reciprocal license because another state wasn't "enough". All I have ever had to do was turn in the previous license, and meet basic standards (no outstanding warrants/ etc.).
And that has been true with my truck driving/any other endorsement license since the early 80s.


I'm sorry. I know you missed the point of my post and I think also of Lookie's. I know I was speaking of my insurance license when I said:

quote:

ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr

Lookie, in my profession the New Jersey test is supposedly so tough that if you hold a license here no other state will deny you a reciprocal license ...


and I'm pretty sure Lookie was speaking of a contractor's license?

Either way, I'm sure neither of us was talking about a license to drive a car.



Peace and comfort,



Michael




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