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I'm just wondering why people keep mentioning a language barrier; are we assuming that just because she was Latina, she spoke limited English....or do we know that she was not fluent in English?
Ride engineers have been pushing the envelope for years. I heard recently someone died of a heart attack on a ride, but don't know the story behind it. I'd say if anyone has hypertension or heart problems of any kind, they should stick to the tilt-a-whirl.
And most rides have warning signs for what COULD be triggered by taking part in the attraction. If you know you have heart issues and go on a ride, that's on you and NOT the designers and engineers who push the envelope.
I'm just wondering why people keep mentioning a language barrier; are we assuming that just because she was Latina, she spoke limited English....or do we know that she was not fluent in English?
It is always a good thing to keep all possibilities on the table until they can be eliminated.
If it can be determined that there was no language barrier, then one is closer to discovering the true culprit.
In this case, the only assumption would be undertaken by those who assume that there was no language barrier simply because they wish to be politically correct.
Doing such a thing could have future negative consequences.
And most rides have warning signs for what COULD be triggered by taking part in the attraction. If you know you have heart issues and go on a ride, that's on you and NOT the designers and engineers who push the envelope.
Yep, I know, people themselves are responsible for knowing their own limitations.
Quote:
Originally Posted by BigDGeek
Not to me, I don't care where she's from.
I'm just wondering why people keep mentioning a language barrier; are we assuming that just because she was Latina, she spoke limited English....or do we know that she was not fluent in English?
Evidently, it's looking like employee error, because the woman was concerned about the bar not locking in place.
you don't know squat about Texas,...only what you are spoon-fed through liberal talking points. You're just another Texas-bashing troll
I know quite a bit about Texas having lived there. I don't take your liberal spoon-feeding seriously at all. It's just like you to ignore real problems rather than solving them. You're the problem and you don't even realize it. Ignorance.
The source that Harrier posted is more accurate (your source uses the same resources for an earlier year).
Quote:
Originally Posted by lycos679
TX is ranked 79.4 and NJ is ranked 80.8. CA, another majority minority state, is actually below below TX rankings. One of the TX posters linked a report that broke down achievement by race and white students in TX performed as well as white students in MA. I can't find the report though, so I have no idea how accurate it was.
When comparing state educations, it's better to look at actual performance and student success rates rather than ratings based on policy. Spending more or less does not guarantee better education. Other policies don't show better or worse education. So ranking by policy is rediculous. Look at the performance of the students and schools.
For example, in math and science scores, Texas ranks below average while MA, NJ, NH, NY, etc rank above average. This is more telling than perceived policy ratings that your link provides:
TX is ranked 79.4 and NJ is ranked 80.8. CA, another majority minority state, is actually below below TX rankings. One of the TX posters linked a report that broke down achievement by race and white students in TX performed as well as white students in MA. I can't find the report though, so I have no idea how accurate it was.
Why do you think that Wealth-Neutrality, Adjusted Per-Pupil Expenditures, Parent's Income, Parent's Education and other auxiliary factors are more important than actual test scores and academic assessments when ranking a school? None of those factors define the quality of education.
That map was only highlighting ILLEGAL immigration (and that's a slippery number to try to count, anyway). But 12.31 percent of people in Texas speak ONLY Spanish - half the percentage of Spanish only speakers in New Jersey.
Texas has twice as many people who speak primarily Spanish but NJ has four times as many people who speak primarily other non-spanish non-english languages -- including many european languages like Polish and Italian and many Asian languages like Chinese.
Or maybe I'm almost as good as Mitt Romney. Perception.
Mitt Romney is better.
He is a Republican.
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