Printer Bandit
Lifer
- Mar 16, 2005
- 13,856
- 109
- 106
Dear Diabetics,
Please wear your bracelets. Also, if your sugar is low and you are in line for food, please tell the people in front of you about your situation and maybe they will let you go in front. If they are being cunts, go up front and ask to see a manger to see if you can get served first. If not, grab a apple juice or a soda from the fridge and ask if you can buy that atleast and then leave and go eat somewhere else.
Sincerely,
A Diabetic
Our resident you-know-who hasn't posted here yet though.Holt shit ATOT.....this many posts without someone ignoring everything else and giving the OP shit about eating at Subway?
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People dial 911 every day, every minute, every second. Are you looking for a medal?
What's wrong with Subway? As fast food goes it's pretty good food at a decent price.
Went for lunch at Subway. Was sitting at a table eating my sandwich, looked over just in time to see a guy in line pass out and hit the floor...hard. Head bounced off the tile floor, made a horrible sound like a bowling ball hitting concrete. Another customer and I ran over to him, he was unconscious but breathing. Got out my cell and called 911 while kneeling next to him. While talking to the 911 operator, the blood pouring out of the back of his head made itself apparent, making a big puddle on the floor around his skull. He woke up and stared at me, but didn't respond when I talked to him, then his eyes rolled back and he was out again. Listening to the operator, the other customer and I moved his head just enough to get a towel against the back of his head, applying constant pressure. Then he woke up again, and this time started talking. He absolutely insisted that we let him get up, which 911 told me "don't let him." He was actually being rather difficult and agitated with us, kept forcing himself up into a sitting position no matter what we did, blood continuing to gush out and soak the towels.
Eventually paramedics showed up and took over. He gave them a hard time too, refusing to go with them, insisting he was just going to go home, still fading in and out of consciousness. Who knows if he's delirious from the head injury or just a dick (only kidding). Eventually they inform him he has no choice but to go with them and off they took him. They never said a word to us other than to ask "what happened" and then they were gone.
So that was my lunch! How was yours?
In all seriousness, today was the first time in my life I've ever dialed 911, and I'm grateful for the super quick, professional response. I know that seems like a given, but today helped me not to take our emergency response system in this country for granted. Cheers to the folks in that industry!
People dial 911 every day, every minute, every second. Are you looking for a medal?
People crap in threads every day, every minute, every second. You're not special either.
I called 911 for the first time a week or two ago. I was on my way back from work, on some podunk two-lane highway in a part of the state where nothing interesting ever happens, when I realized the guy 100m ahead of me was completely drunk. I had been wondering about them but I got definitive proof when they went off the road completely, and again a little later when they got in the left lane for no reason and stayed there, while going over a large hill, for half a mile. It took a little while but a trooper did get to us and pulled them over. I have no idea what happened after that, but after seeing their driving I doubt the conversation with the trooper went very well at all.
The moment you dial the second 1 of 911, they and the paramedics are "in charge". Sounds like it did work out well.
Sound of a head hitting concrete isn't one you will forget.
Did you finish lunch?
Thank you for just not walking away or ignoring the situation.
People dial 911 every day, every minute, every second. Are you looking for a medal?
Texting 911 and having the track GPS coordinates from the phone would be nice.
Problem is they've pretty much removed all the phones from everywhere (that I've been) so its hard to call 911. Unless you happen to be in/near a business that's willing to make a call for you.
It would be nicer if cell phone cameras and microphones were always on so police and paramedics wouldn't have to wait until someone took their phone out and dialed or texted 911. They would be aware of the emergency as if they were physically present.
You say what?
It would be nicer if cell phone cameras and microphones were always on so police and paramedics wouldn't have to wait until someone took their phone out and dialed or texted 911. They would be aware of the emergency as if they were physically present.
It would be nicer if cell phone cameras and microphones were always on so police and paramedics wouldn't have to wait until someone took their phone out and dialed or texted 911. They would be aware of the emergency as if they were physically present.
You say what?
Right now police and paramedics only are aware of emergencies when somebody does a positive action to notify them. If phones were passively enabled to always be monitoring, police and paramedics would be queued in to accidents as soon as they happen.
Im guessing some sort of audio or visual signatures would need to be satisfied before the authorities would be aware, but like a car accident can have a pretty distinct sound, or gunshots, or a bunch of people saying, "are you okay" could help police and paramedics do their jobs more quickly and efficiently, and ultimately save more lives, and protect the children.
1984 has been here for a while already.
