Post by Anne Terri on Feb 18, 2010 10:39:33 GMT 1
''February 18, 2010 God's Living Bible – The Third Testament – God's New Revelations – God's Lessons For Living – Human Protection - 911/100
Dispatch Centers- Language Barriers and Mutual Aid (God Through Anne Terri)
1.What price do you place upon a human life?
2.As a dispatcher in a center for human protection, you are asked to protect others who are in trouble.
3.How can you do this, if you are having problems with bad attitudes within your centers?
4.Mutual aid, for those of you who are not aware, is when a center from one district helps a center of dispatch from another.
5.It is usually when the disaster, or accident crosses the line where your center dispatches.
6.For example, an accident spans an intersection, where the two countries, states, or counties come together.
7.A line may exist on the map, but a line should not exist between dispatchers.
8.Loose your private squabbles between you, and send help.
9.It does not matter what side of the street the vehicles are lying upon, but that there are people hurt, and in need of an ambulance.
10.Send Help.
11.If you are in Europe, you are facing language barriers.
12.The problems with these language barriers, exist from years of history and wars between you.
13.If you can not understand the other dispatcher, when a disaster occurs, or is imminent, you are in trouble.
14.For example, two trains are approaching each other at high speed, on the same track.
15.A head on collision is imminent.
16.What do you do as a dispatcher, if you have seen this about to happen on your active map?
17.You call the dispatcher in the next country, for their train is quickly approaching your area.
18.What happens when you speak Flemish, and they speak French, and they either can not understand you, or refuse to do anything to help you?
19.You watch the two trains collide, and many lives being lost, due to your language barriers.
20.This is based on a true incident, which happened several years ago.
21.And it was not even in two countries, but in Belgium, where two territories of Belgium refuse to come together over language disputes.
22.The French and Flemish Territories refuse to merge.
23.They not only block roads to important areas within the country, but also refuse to send documents to others who need to be able to read them in their own language.
24.This has caused major government problems, and left Belgium without a government for over a year.
25.The mediator during the meetings, which attempted to bring them together, walked out in disgust.
26.You need one mutual language, a universal language which both dispatchers understand.
27.This is about human protection; this is about saving lives.
28.This is part of the answer to saving the world.
29.Work together, come together in Peace.
30.AMEN''
Dispatch Centers- Language Barriers and Mutual Aid (God Through Anne Terri)
1.What price do you place upon a human life?
2.As a dispatcher in a center for human protection, you are asked to protect others who are in trouble.
3.How can you do this, if you are having problems with bad attitudes within your centers?
4.Mutual aid, for those of you who are not aware, is when a center from one district helps a center of dispatch from another.
5.It is usually when the disaster, or accident crosses the line where your center dispatches.
6.For example, an accident spans an intersection, where the two countries, states, or counties come together.
7.A line may exist on the map, but a line should not exist between dispatchers.
8.Loose your private squabbles between you, and send help.
9.It does not matter what side of the street the vehicles are lying upon, but that there are people hurt, and in need of an ambulance.
10.Send Help.
11.If you are in Europe, you are facing language barriers.
12.The problems with these language barriers, exist from years of history and wars between you.
13.If you can not understand the other dispatcher, when a disaster occurs, or is imminent, you are in trouble.
14.For example, two trains are approaching each other at high speed, on the same track.
15.A head on collision is imminent.
16.What do you do as a dispatcher, if you have seen this about to happen on your active map?
17.You call the dispatcher in the next country, for their train is quickly approaching your area.
18.What happens when you speak Flemish, and they speak French, and they either can not understand you, or refuse to do anything to help you?
19.You watch the two trains collide, and many lives being lost, due to your language barriers.
20.This is based on a true incident, which happened several years ago.
21.And it was not even in two countries, but in Belgium, where two territories of Belgium refuse to come together over language disputes.
22.The French and Flemish Territories refuse to merge.
23.They not only block roads to important areas within the country, but also refuse to send documents to others who need to be able to read them in their own language.
24.This has caused major government problems, and left Belgium without a government for over a year.
25.The mediator during the meetings, which attempted to bring them together, walked out in disgust.
26.You need one mutual language, a universal language which both dispatchers understand.
27.This is about human protection; this is about saving lives.
28.This is part of the answer to saving the world.
29.Work together, come together in Peace.
30.AMEN''