
In your opinion, am I legally, morally or ethically bound to do anything else? My inclination is to mind my own business especially since I have no proof.
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Although I did ask him to think about what will happen when the instructor eventually gets caught, I think it's unlikely they would invalidate every license from the instructor unless they had proof that EVERY class he/she taught was substandard. Even then, I think it would be unlikely.Av8rtx wrote:Under the circumstances you did the best you could. You could possibly remind your friend, that when the instructor finally gets caught, every license issued under following his instruction is likely to become instantly invalid at the very least. IMO
http://www.amazon.com/How-Win-Friends-I ... 0671027034" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;bdickens wrote:Personally, I think you are legally, morally and ethically bound to get some business of your own so you can go mind it.
I don't think winning a friend was one of his goals in making that post. Although I wouldn't have phrased it that way, to a large extent I agree with him.wgoforth wrote:http://www.amazon.com/How-Win-Friends-I ... 0671027034" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;bdickens wrote:Personally, I think you are legally, morally and ethically bound to get some business of your own so you can go mind it.
bdickens wrote:Deleated Personal attack. Please review the rules.
lrpettit wrote:I don't think winning a friend was one of his goals in making that post. Although I wouldn't have phrased it that way, to a large extent I agree with him.wgoforth wrote:http://www.amazon.com/How-Win-Friends-I ... 0671027034" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;bdickens wrote:Personally, I think you are legally, morally and ethically bound to get some business of your own so you can go mind it.
If you notice in my original post, my inclination was to not to do anything more and it still is. I've looked at some of your previous posts and I understand that you don't believe a person should have any obstacles to exercising their 2A rights (including having to take a CHL class). At some level, I agree with you. However, I don't think members of society can choose what laws to obey and which not to (although I don't always comply with speed limits so I guess I'm a hypocrite). I question a person's ethics who would willingly commit a Class A Misdemeanor to save a couple of hours of training time. I really don't understand why an instructor would do it. There are some circumstances where I would provide information to help the police find a criminal. This isn't going to be one of them. However I do think it hurts the CHL community when this is tolerated, especially when he goes around bragging about it. It'll hurt the CHL community even more if does something stupid because he wasn't trained in TX law properly.bdickens wrote:lrpettit wrote:I don't think winning a friend was one of his goals in making that post. Although I wouldn't have phrased it that way, to a large extent I agree with him.wgoforth wrote:http://www.amazon.com/How-Win-Friends-I ... 0671027034" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;bdickens wrote:Personally, I think you are legally, morally and ethically bound to get some business of your own so you can go mind it.
Yeah, it's the truth and sometimes the truth hurts. If you want to get down to the very root of what is wrong with our country, it is people who can barely run their own lives running around telling others how to run theirs.
So someone else distilled someone else's 10 hour class down to 5.
Does it injure you? No.
Does it cause damage to your property? No.
Does it take money away from you? No.
Then it isn't your business. What is really important here, that someone is forced to endure 10 boring hours in a hot, stuffy classroom, or that he can pass the test?
The idea of reporting a condensed CHL class makes me think of a cop busting someone for spitting on the sidewalk while the bank across the street is getting robbed.
Or perhaps use the lawfully required alloted time to train the best you can.bdickens wrote:Train to time, not to standard.