Yeah this is a bit belated, but I don’t care.
In your now closed thread, Posers hooted off the board, you point out as an example of posters who are clueless, inept, or otherwise stupid, our previous exchange in the now defunct “Do cell phones really screw up hospital equipment?”
Specifically, you say…
Since the cell phone thread where the disagreement originally arose, and the thread where you now mention how “boggled" you are at my stance is closed too, about the only way I can counter your… ::it’s hard to tell what it is really, but it’s something, since you include it as an example of a dipstick poster:: is to address it here, in its own thread.
This isn’t a rip, a criticism, or anything like that, since to this day I don’t think you grasp what it was I arguing about in that thread. This is more of a clarification thread where I get to point out what I was saying and why, any why because of that, I think your feeling that I was deluded-- both then and now- is not only wrong, it’s flawed.
Put simply, my argument is that in their current form hospital policies regarding cell phone use are not only misguided and misleading, but they’re downright silly when you look at the actual risks they pose to patients. Furthermore, any risk to patients that can directly be attributed to cell phone is infinitesimal at best, and isn’t reason alone to enforce the policies (* By the way, where you got “vanishingly small” is beyond me, because I never said that. When you quote someone for the purpose of trying to show how stupid they are, it’d help if you at least got what they said right, dickweed).
It was a simple argument, and one I feel, and felt, strongly about in that thread. Since my view in that was the minority, and I was the most vocal of the opposing bunch, the burden of proving, or at least disproving the prevailing thought on the matter, fell on me.
No problem there—I provided cites, statistics, and people more knowledgeable in the area than I am who support the notion that the policies and signs are misleading (Or BS, in my terms). If that wasn’t good enough, I even provided a cite where it’s shown that the FCC itself has relaxed it’s stand on the matter, to the point that they neither condone nor advocate the policies.
If the most anal-retentive regulatory body in the US isn’t too concerned, than neither am I.
So I argued and argued away on the matter, providing cites, stats, and expert opinion on the matter whenever I could.
You, on the other hand, stuck to the notion that any threat to hospital equipment as the direct result of cell phone use was reason enough to enforce and continue the policy.
When that alone—you’re preconceived idea on the matter- wasn’t enough, you pull out an anecdote from your past, “I’m an AV technician in a hospital, and while I don’t work with medical equipment, I’ve personally had experience with cell phones interfering with our wireless mike system in meeting rooms.” *Do cell phones really screw up hospital equipment
Again, and as I said in the original thread, whoopdee fucking doo. You work in hospital and it once affected your mikes. How the hell does that relate to the topic of cell phones endangering patients, and the need for the policies? It doesn’t. All it does is corroborate the fact that cell phones can cause electromagnetic disturbances.
And to that extent, so what? I didn’t argue that they didn’t. I argued that the justification for the hospitals polices and regulations that imply that they do, is erroneous, or as I put it then, BS.
The cites I provided back up that stance-- in laboratory experiments, tests have shown that “Of 33 medical devices tested, only 4 showed disruption of critical function due to cell phone emissions at a distance of 25 cm or greater. Although other cases of electromagnetic interference were observed, these were not critically disruptive and mainly occurred when the transmitters were at full power and placed 5 cm or closer to the medical device.” Electronic Words.comYou’d have to be damn near on top of the most screwed up monitors for the equipment to malfunction. And even then, the severity of the malfunction is questionable (In terms of it being used as a reason to ban cell phones in hospitals).
Why that part of the argument you never address, or even counter by providing one cite, or one expert that says that the threat is real, is beyond me because it was my central point-—the threat doesn’t necessitate the need for the broad policies banning cell phones in hospitals.
Don’t you think that you and others should have been offered one-- just one- cite or expert that rebukes my cites and stance? Because that would have gone farther to dispel my stand and my contention than, ‘Well I work in a hospital and it once screwed up our wireless mikes, so I know it does something. Besides, studies have shown it affects equipment. Who cares that it wasn’t much, or that it could never really happen in the real world, any risk is reason enough for the policy.’
And you call my position, and the way I argued it, “mind boggling”?
Boggle nothing. I came out and argued the point the only way it should have been argued—with facts, evidence, and expert opinion.
All you offered up was irrelevant personal experience and preconceived ideas based on… I don’t know, irrelevant personal experiences?
Stupid, silly, mind boggling dumb argument my ass. I did was I was supposed to do.