***Official Political Discussion Thread***

Hilarious... Someone with a mindset that thinks if you watch enough political television shows, that somehow, the act of sitting on a couch and watching people talk is equivalent to a college degree in Political Science, or real world experience in the public sector of policy and politics.

:lol:
 
bingo.

i done ran thru enough chicks in that field to know.

because da field is so saturated they use da 4 year degree as a quasi filter, but it's not mandatory, plus u can go to school on da field and them sponsor it.

lmao @ you running through a bunch of 2 year degree nurses....you know anyone can buy scrubs b....them chicks lied to you

They can't really lie to you, if you made them up

700
 
Yeah dude is WILDING....now he thinks he knows all about the nursing field and what it takes because he smashed a couple of clinic assistants that he thinks are nurses because they wear scrubs to work and use a stethoscope as an accessory
My mom is a doctor she hirers those "nurses" all the time to just do vitals and put in patient info for 12 dollars an hour. That's probably who dude is dating. The nursing field is very diverse. There are nurses who only work in surgery, ob, and even things like radiology. 

Yeah there is very much a difference, pay, title, attitude etc. I'll pass on another waste of time though.
 
Yeah dude is WILDING....now he thinks he knows all about the nursing field and what it takes because he smashed a couple of clinic assistants that he thinks are nurses because they wear scrubs to work and use a stethoscope as an accessory
My mom is a doctor she hirers those "nurses" all the time to just do vitals and put in patient info for 12 dollars an hour.

those aren't associates degree RN's, those is
phlebotomy technicians...(had my fill of those too)
 
A nursing degree is a bachelors degree (BSN) which means 4 years. You can complete a useless associates degree in 2 years, it requires less credits. Stop trying to project your failures onto other fields.  And many nurses got even further to get an additional degree if they want to become like a PA or lead nurse. 

:lol: Probably doesn't even know the credential differences between RN, LVN, or CNA

I am dying of laughter here
 
Elkin & da clot still wrong about RN's not being full nurses... :lol: :smh:

Wrong? I never called a nurse a CNA b, they are two completely different fields :lol: funny enough a CNA would find it easier to get a job than a nurse with a two year degree....just quit it, get back to politics, a field you know even less about :lol:
 
those aren't associates degree RN's, those is
phlebotomy technicians...(had my fill of those too)

I'm dyin b....you are so wrong man...you don't need ANY type of degree for the job Anton is talking about, those little thots that walk around the right scrubs in bull**** clinics in the Bronx most never took a biology class, they were just trained to regurgitate preliminary questions to a patient and read Blood pressure.
 
Lol I see where the confusion is, Lionblood. A CNA and an RN with an associate degree is not the same thing. One is a nursing assistant. The other is a nurse.
 
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:lol: @ arguing with a nurse about what it takes to be a nurse.

Would be like me arguing with Anthony Bourdain about the right way to cook.

So stupid. So, SO stupid.
 
Yep I can tell you work in a hospital setting. There are certain responsibilities in a hospital that I'm not putting on a nurse with a 2 year degree. Not saying it doesn't happen but they will pick a MSN over that. 


OR, ICU, NICU nurses are the best of the best. Dying critical patients, they really need to know what they are doing. 

Even with a BSN a nurse will have to work on a MedSurge floor for at least 3 years before they can ask to be transfered to the ICU or ER and that's my hospital which is rather small and not even a trauma center...lol

A 2 year nurse is NOT a full blown nurse fam....on paper they can write off RN, but in the real world...they need those two extra years to make it
 
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And NH it takes a hell of a lot more to become an NP than 4 years of nursing school :x please don't ever say that again...lol
 
Even with a BSN a nurse will have to work on a MedSurge floor for at least 3 years before they can ask to be transfered to the ICU or ER and that's my hospital which is rather small and not even a trauma center...lol
 
false.

i work at the biggest childrens hospital in texas and this isn't true at all

but it may be because houston has the biggest med center in the world 

demand is high for a lot of positions
 
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Not true, Ksteezy. I know plenty of ppl who got ER jobs right out of nursing school.

A 2 year nursing school? Hmmm I can't speak for all hospitals, but that might depend on the demographics...some might be more lenient to the idea....but like I said the only 2 year nurses I know of at my place, got the job because they were ER CNA's in the same hospital as they got their associates in nursing and they are currently getting their BSN.
 
those aren't associates degree RN's, those is
phlebotomy technicians...(had my fill of those too)

I'm dyin b....you are so wrong man...you don't need ANY type of degree for the job Anton is talking about, those little thots tha

where did I say u needed a degree to become someone who draws blood and take pressure? go quote it.

I SAID you're a RN (Registered Nurse) with a 2 year degree.

all that other subjective bull **** about delegated responsibilities is irrelevant to da point.
 
false.
i work at the biggest childrens hospital in texas and this isn't true at all


but it may be because houston has the biggest med center in the world 

Guess that varies place to place, your hospital taking RNs with associates and throwing them right into the ICU setting? That's insane :x
 
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