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Posted By Martin Mulholland Whilst I am occasionaly amused by funny safety-related annecdotes on this forum I do get particularly bored and frustrated by those who insist on writing a "blog" of their daily life.
I am not interested in what people have had for tea or what they are doing this weekend.
Set up an internet blog if you like - but on this forum - KEEP IT SAFETY
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Posted By Philby' M,
Fridays are for finishing off, winding down and letting off steam...I, for one agree that Mon-Thurs the forums should be for business, but leave our Fridays alone...
In any case its usually easy to spot a laugh or moan from a serious request...and I do like to catch up on past relationships / acquaintances etc
Philby
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Posted By Philip McAleenan Does the proliferation of Friday rants, humour etc. mean that industry can reduce its need for and expenditure on safety bods by 20%?
wkd ;-)
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Posted By gham Does this forum not get enough of a scalding from the moderators. I think that there is only enough room for one group of AUG enforcers and this message has already been noted by the Moderators lets leave it to them to decide what stay and what goes, if you have a problems complain to the moderators about it that's what they are there for.
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Posted By Gilly Margrave All this seems to have conme as a response to a letter in SHP. It seems to me that the complaint was not about a bit of harmless wibbling but about personal and belittling comments made by some posters who seem to regard themselves as arbitors as to who may or may not have an opinion.
Gilly
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Posted By Bill Morrison Whatever next, safety people having a sense of humor and bit of fun on Fridays, where could it end?
Bill
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Posted By Robert K Lewis I suppose to "Keep it to safety" requires us to know where safety starts and ends. Is it purely a technical set of standards and related comments/questions? Or is it a much broader issue which includes what makes us better practitioners, what drives our attitudes and behaviours or how the home and the work interact? All are solid CPD topics which may be taken up by any who wish to do so or left as undesirable fare for our particular tastes.
I find some of the Friday issues inane and irrlevant but I choose to then ignore them. Sometimes however the de-stressing urge to make a response to a thread has to be satisfied. Life is a rich mix of the thrilling, the boring, the exciting and the totally non-understandable - But should that be curtailed?
Bob
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Posted By Paul Hay Totally agree Gilly. There is nothing pleasant about sniping or nasty remarks (learn to spell, should you really call yourself a safety practitioner if you need to ask a question like that etc. etc.), but to suggest that we shouldn't talk about anything that isn't safety related or have a laugh occaisionally confirms what a lot of people think about us.
I for one quite like to hear what Merv is having for tea, out of jealousy if nothing else (as I munch on my ham sarnie and wotsits!!)
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Posted By gham Spot on
I've still got the receipt for my tweed jacket and I've cancelled the order on my Volvo c70, I'll trade in the 75 for something else more exciting (Type R Grrrrrr) and I'll take my Diploma and Post Grad off the wall in the hall. Nanny State (not Just the State)
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Posted By AlB You mean, you lot actually laugh? Where am I going wrong?
:)
I'm now also wondering what Merv is having for his tea.
Oh, and by the way, I regularly use this forum to learn about safety and health issues, but I'm attracted to it BECAUSE it contains some non-safety related replies (I agree about the snipes though - no need).
Shall we dance around a campfire now and sing merry songs? It isFriday after all.
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Posted By Descarte Not wihtout wearing your nomex flame resistant overalls!
other brands are available :D
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Posted By warderic Congratulations Martin, you have achieved what you set out not to acieve, a group of people talking about everthing except safety and why not.
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Posted By Clairey O I find the non safety comments help to rid the stereotypes - the typical image of elbow patched practioners at 20 paces dueling with their clipboards.
After all we are human, and do have a little bit of humour in us somewhere.
Frankly - i'm just jealous of Merv's dinners.
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Posted By Andrew Cartridge Martin
So according to you, we should all conform to the Jeremy Clarkson sterotype of Health & Safety prehaps?
Well I for one have no intention of conforming.
Keep the fun coming
Andy
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Posted By Saracen11 Hi Martin, you must have some interest in the 'Blogs' to begin with, otherwise you'd simply ignore the titles such as "Friday rant" and click on something more safety related?
Regards
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Posted By artisdeeian Why don't we all put 'Friday fun day' as a kind of STRESS RELIEF for all us safety profetionals where we can let of steam from all the Threads we read or reply to, be they light hearted or not. plus all the stress we get from Incompetent managers and the like.
Ian.
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Posted By Merv Newman artis
I'm with that. I've been trying to be a good boy (ie more professional) since I managed to get two threads locked down in one day. (I thinked I racked up four in a fortnight)
That gives me three days to come up with a decent menu for Friday.
I think I have spent (not wasted) at least half of today on this site. MUST get back to that boring power point presentation. Just as soon as I've got through the other threads. Promise
Merv
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Posted By BB Some people seem to spend much time on the forums, posting, at times, huge diatribes. I often wonder if they ever get time to do any work at all.
Just an impression.
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Posted By Steve B Martin, the majority of use who visit these forums sleep, eat and live safety 24/7 its good to let off a little steam now and again... on none related safety topics for a bit of fun (remember fun its when the sides of your mouth tend to curl up) smiling I think they call it... I am not having a snipe but: I have said it before on these forums if you dont like the topic or you dont have any opinion about a topic... its a free country (almost) dont read it and dont reply...... P.S Its Friday :)
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Posted By J Knight BB,
that's a good point. Me, I use this forum as a way of breaking from the tedium of, for example wriing a food hygiene policy (which is what I'm doing today) as it helps me clear my head and stay focussed. Oh, and of course there are times when I need stuff from people so its important also to spend time giving; on balance I think it aids my productivity rather than otherwise,
John
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Posted By Al.. I agree with Martin. Keep it safety!
This forum is accessible to anyone to read, searchable by Google and is part of the IOSH website. Its content should be health and safety matters only which are addressed in a professional manner and which reflect well on the profession. Part of the current problem, I feel, is that this Forum is called a "Chat Forum" and it is treated as such by some people.
I acknowledge however that there is a need for a place where members can relax a little, exchange ideas, vent frustrations, enjoy each others company etc etc. However this needs to be in a password restricted area which is not going to be trawled by search engines - what we need is a restricted access "Chat Room".
I suggest that this forum be renamed "OSH information exchange" and it be much more tightly moderated. But an "OSH Chat forum" should also be created which anyone can join (not just members) but which is password protected and can be read by only those who have joined. The moderators would exercise a much lighter touch in this area.
Just a thought!
Al
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Posted By Martin Mulholland From what was a bit of a rant on my behalf turned into a lively "debate" and i'm glad that my original post promted one (and so many views as well!).
By the way - contrary to some of the posts; I do have a sense of humour, I think Jeremy Clarkson is a t*ss3r and I do not like conforming to authority.
I am, however, (like us all) a busy Safety Professional and have limited time for reviewing forum entries.
The comments by made today by Al provide an ideal solution to the issue raised - well done Al (my new mate).
On another note (already covered in this forum before) I can't be bothered to do any work of my own these days so can I steal anyone's presentations, Risk Assessments, Method Statements (SSoW, etc.)? Anything accepted.
:-)
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Posted By Diane Thomason Would just like to say I think Al's idea is great. I have often cringed at some of the argumentative threads that have developed, knowing that Joe Public, my bosses and everyone else can read them, and go off thinking that this is the mindset of safety people. But this is not to say that safety people shoudn't have a chat forum - it's just a case of separating some of the (maybe non-safety) free-expression type debates from information exchange.
So I think Al's idea of an info exchange is good - this could be public and used only for requests on safety topics. Then the Chat Forum could be separate, membership/password only, and more free in what can be posted.
I've never liked this forum being called "chat" - as it automaticlly gives the impression of some moronic chatroom!
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Posted By Sam Smith I too think that there is merit in this idea of separating the "chat" from the serious stuff. I wonder how many other professional bodies host a public chat forum similar to this one?
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