You gotta love it....
Whooter's World-Where Child Abuse is Comparable to Special Sauce!
If you twisted it a little it could be viewed as child abuse if you wanted to see it that way. But my intention was to show that the process used at CEDU doesn’t necessarily follow the employees to their new jobs.
...
And my point, is that we are talking about people here. We are talking about their habits, their view of life, their orientation, their personal philosophy.
Going from being a harmful person by nature who hurts kids, to being a good person, who actually has a positive impact on their lives, is just a tad bit more of a career adjustment then the extreme effort required to abstain from putting special sauce on burgers.
You are right. A person from McD's would try to get a job at Burger King, because they are very similar.
You are almost making the argument, yourself.
Helpful verse harmful is not similar. It is an extraordinarily huge difference. A lot bigger then special sauce.
In a more sensible metaphor, Burger King and McDonalds would both be CEDU programs, with slight differences. For example different ways of fucking with people.
Now, Programs would be the food industry at large, and perhaps, a helpful, beneficial program would be like a 4 star restaurant or something to that effect. I don't think too many 4 star restaraunts would hire someone based on their fast food experience, but just as you said, another fast food place would hire them, where all they have to learn is to replace a big mac with a Whopper.
This all sounds kind of silly, but it's not. This is a far more realistic metaphor and the one that you are attempting to use is misleading.
And even yet another more accurate way to look it- Bearing in mind, the reputation of the CEDU programs.......
If you opened a food establishment of any type, would you hire employees of an establishment known for poisoning people, and feel completely like all is well, and good, because in your new establishment, poisoning people is not part of the new system that you have trained them in?
Paul St. John