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<blockquote data-quote="Snattlerake" data-source="post: 3677405" data-attributes="member: 44288"><p>Born and raised on farm in Oklahoma. College degree in Law Enforcement. Twenty years wearing badges in Oklahoma and Kansas, running patrols, and investigations. National Guard and reserve Fist Lt. MP School, never in an MP unit. Medical service unit, and Mechanized Infantry.</p><p></p><p>Retired from that and became a low voltage technician. Moved back to Oklahoma for Siemens and was the only service technician for the state for four years. I was called by the vice president of a fortune 100 company to go to a service call in North Carolina one night. My "flight" was waiting on me at the airport. I got to N.C., fixed the problem with the spare parts I brought with me and was done so fast the sent me to two more calls and was back the next day. My boss called me and asked if I wanted to be their troubleshooter so between the daily service calls I was on a plane once or twice a week fixing stuff. </p><p></p><p>I got really tired of that and moved back to the farm working for the local electrical co-op as the security manager on a handshake agreement for certain monies that I accomplished but was never compensated for. Well, $4.00 gas with three family members driving to OKC every day and I was done. Moved back to OKC as a project manager for a low voltage company. Quit that and started as an ATM technician but I was always in Arkansas. After 20 years and between all my accumulated injuries surgeries, heart bypass and pain management, I'm DONE!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Snattlerake, post: 3677405, member: 44288"] Born and raised on farm in Oklahoma. College degree in Law Enforcement. Twenty years wearing badges in Oklahoma and Kansas, running patrols, and investigations. National Guard and reserve Fist Lt. MP School, never in an MP unit. Medical service unit, and Mechanized Infantry. Retired from that and became a low voltage technician. Moved back to Oklahoma for Siemens and was the only service technician for the state for four years. I was called by the vice president of a fortune 100 company to go to a service call in North Carolina one night. My "flight" was waiting on me at the airport. I got to N.C., fixed the problem with the spare parts I brought with me and was done so fast the sent me to two more calls and was back the next day. My boss called me and asked if I wanted to be their troubleshooter so between the daily service calls I was on a plane once or twice a week fixing stuff. I got really tired of that and moved back to the farm working for the local electrical co-op as the security manager on a handshake agreement for certain monies that I accomplished but was never compensated for. Well, $4.00 gas with three family members driving to OKC every day and I was done. Moved back to OKC as a project manager for a low voltage company. Quit that and started as an ATM technician but I was always in Arkansas. After 20 years and between all my accumulated injuries surgeries, heart bypass and pain management, I'm DONE! [/QUOTE]
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