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MaxRide454 karma

I spent 3 years aboard ships in the US Navy.

We got food poisoning at least once a year (Shitting yourself and puking at the same time!), once our RO (Water) unit broke and we spent a month at sea with no laundry and VERY limited showers, I've seen drinking fountains put out brown water (from rust), fire in an ammo mag (Thankfully it was empty!), ships power outages, VERY bad weather (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AGEpBjcZ4s <-- I was on board for this), all sorts of other shit.

Dude. The crew members on that ship saved your ass. A fire on board is NO JOKE. Before anyone rags them about cold hotdogs and no toilets--Think about this: The staff on that ship saved everyone from the shitty choice of "Would I prefer drowning or should I die in the fire?".

Just saying. I think they did a great job. If the ship was shitty and caught on fire--Management's fault. The crew still got the fire out and their ship back to port which is all that matters. Count your blessings--It could have been a LOT WORSE.

MaxRide99 karma

I have a pilots license...Guess how much shampoo I can carry in my Cessna? AS MUCH AS I FUCKING WANT.

MaxRide2 karma

On the CDC guidelines for handling of Ebola infected bodies sent out to healthcare professionals who handle remains, they felt the need to define the word "Cremation".

In your opinion, what percentage of healthcare professionals who work with bio-hazardous human remains don't know what a cremation is?