And you wonder why he is an idiot ...

They shouldn't hire people with just a public school education...

HUH?

I'd be willing to bet it was some illiterate college educated idiot who stenciled that sign, and it was the public school educated guys who laughed when they hung it.
 
HUH?

I'd be willing to bet it was some illiterate college educated idiot who stenciled that sign, and it was the public school educated guys who laughed when they hung it.

That could be. Maybe an engineer from India... Every one of those I've worked with had serious shortcomings...
 
That could be. Maybe an engineer from India... Every one of those I've worked with had serious shortcomings...

One of the CNC guys (smart kid, actually) we hired was dumbfounded when I showed him one of these

PXL_20200929_120924231_1024x1024.jpg


he said he never saw one of them before. I learned how to read them when I was in HS.
 
Maybe you overlooked the most important part of the link:

Delaware's transportation department and its contractor, Kiewit Infrastructure Company, say the sign was always meant to be temporary and has been replaced. Very cryptic.:thinking:

One should question the quality control department (probably headed by a college grad) at the Kiewit Infrastructure Company for screwing it up the first time. Pretty expensive screw up, one would assume...
 
One should question the quality control department (probably headed by a college grad) at the Kiewit Infrastructure Company for screwing it up the first time. Pretty expensive screw up, one would assume...

And the funniest irony of it all .... said street leads to hojo's house.
 
They shouldn't hire people with just a public school education...
better than hiring hillbilly dropouts like you, dumbfuck. did you even go to school? speaking of bad spellers-

'Covfefe'

In late May, the White House released a statement saying one of Trump's goals during his trip to Israel was to "promote the possibility of lasting peach" in the region.

The slip of the fingers was one of several bizarre mistakes in the press release. A few lines above, the White House misspelled the "Sepulchre" in Church of the Holy Sepulchre, inserted a superfluous apostrophe in the word "Israelis," and left a "d" off "coupled."

Yates was gearing up to testify before a Senate subcommittee about her role in the dismissal of former national security adviser Michael Flynn when Trump chimed in.

"Ask Sally Yates, under oath, if she knows how classified information got into the newspapers soon after she explained it to W.H. Council," Trump said on Twitter.

The offense here is "council" — a perfectly valid word, but not in this context.

About a week later, Trump stumbled over the same word, this time adding a unique twist — he spelled it "councel," which is wrong in any context. Merriam-Webster corrected the record once more.

President Trump's most infamous typo occurred in December, when he described the Chinese seizure of a US Navy drone as an "unpresidented act."

After the spelling miscue was widely mocked online, Trump deleted the tweet and replaced it with a correctly spelled version four hours later.

In March, Trump brought political discourse to a halt with a stunning claim — that President Barack Obama had wiretapped his office in 2016.

"How low has President Obama gone to tapp my phones during the very sacred election process. This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!" the president tweeted.

The unsubstantiated claim was widely criticized, and FBI Director James Comey later testified that "the department has no information that supports those tweets."

Trump's official inauguration poster contained a glaring usage mistake, albeit one that plenty of English speakers commit.

"No dream is too big, no challenge is to great," the text on the poster read, superimposed over a picture of a beaming Trump.

It should have said "no challenge is too great." The fact that the first part of the sentence contains the correct too suggests this mistake may have been a simple typo.

About halfway down the list, the word "attacker" suddenly morphed into "attaker," which appeared more than 20 times. The list included the terrorist attack in "San Bernadino, CA," a misspelling of San Bernardino. And at one point Denmark is spelled "Denmakr."

Critics blasted the White House for publishing the hastily prepared list — and for not using a spell-checker.

"Thr coverage about me … gas been so false and angry"
—Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 28, 2017
This head-scratcher from January had critics wondering whether Trump proofread his tweets at all before launching them into the Twittersphere.

Trump's presidency got off to a rocky start, orthographically speaking. Just a day after assuming the office, the president tweeted that he was "honered to serve you, the great American People, as your 45th President of the United States!"

After Twitter users not-so-kindly pointed out the botched spelling of "honored," Trump deleted the message
 
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