[Blindtlk] Common college degrees of employment for blind americans
Steve P. Deeley
stevep.deeley at insightbb.com
Fri Jun 4 00:29:50 UTC 2010
Dude, please straighten out your e-mail responces. Your replies are not at
the top of your e-mail messages. What is going on with your system???
Steve
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter Wolfe" <sunspot005 at gmail.com>
To: "Blind Talk Mailing List" <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2010 6:17 PM
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] Common college degrees of employment for blind
americans
> On 6/3/10, Jessica Kostiw <jessicac.kostiw at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Peter,
>> Interesting that you bring up places to live which have great
>> transportation... transportation is something that has been on the
>> forefront
>> of my mind since I recently moved to northern Virginia. If you live
>> along
>> the metro line things are great... if you don't... they are awful! I
>> live
>> and work off the line. I would love to talk and exchange ideas of where
>> you
>> have found to be good places. The ACB put out a list of the best blind
>> friendly places to live about five years ago.
>> The ones I remember were: Lewisville KY, New York NY, Lacrosse WS,
>> Charlotte
>> NC, and Portland OR. I do not believe that transportation should be the
>> only concern, but it is a factor. I just now flew in from visiting a
>> blind
>> friend in Oklahoma City. She is married with a 3-month-old baby. Tanya
>> works as a itinerant counselor for the city. I am amazed at how she
>> makes
>> it work. Public transportation helps, but is not always a necessity.
>>
>> Jessica
>> jessicac.kostiw at gmail.com
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Peter Wolfe" <sunspot005 at gmail.com>
>> To: <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent: Saturday, May 29, 2010 6:45 PM
>> Subject: [Blindtlk] Common college degrees of employment for blind
>> americans
>>
>>
>>> --
>>> Peter
>>> Webmaster
>>> http://www.darkstruggle.com
>>> webmaster at darkstruggle.com
>>> alternative e-mail
>>> sunspot005 at gmail.com
>>>
>>> To list:
>>>
>>>
>>> It's Peter again with another general question about blind
>>> professionals. The last question was about the best city to be moving
>>> to after college with a small family. Now, I've been wrestling with
>>> this decision so I'd like you to really give me some serious feedback
>>> about this matter. First off, I use a speech synthesizer, read
>>> braille, use public transportation and have only a few really strong
>>> points. My major hobbies are history, political science, computers and
>>> programming, traveling, cooking, languages, etc.
>>> My major concern is in deciding what my final major is going to be
>>> in the United States. My cities that I want to move are as follows:
>>> Raleigh, North Carolina, Boston Massachusetts, St. Paul, Ninnesota,
>>> Tallahasse, Florida, Bloomington, Indiania, Denver Colorado, Bolder,
>>> Colorado, San Diego, California, Seattle, Washington, Portland,
>>> Oregon, and or other places unforseen right now. Ultimately I want to
>>> own a small house so the bigger cities are off in the long run. So, I
>>> grapple with tthis issue of whether or not I can do it or not being
>>> blind. I can't see print, mobility minor problems and such things such
>>> as that. But the main thing is whether assistive technology, policies
>>> and procedures can be done in a ever changing world in which we live
>>> in. I would like to move in a place that has a catholic community of
>>> several parishes in the area as I'm going to be going through RCIA
>>> program in the future. Plus the strength of enduring through lots of
>>> computer courses like one that I took that are terribly visual in
>>> theme and job makeup. I'd appreciate any majors in the undergraduate
>>> level like by a weeks time and no later. My current major is social
>>> science/history education and the issue there is with the policies,
>>> procedures, pay and benefits, independence, discipline, maps and
>>> graphs for history and that is it. Unless you guys know of something
>>> else that would help.
>>>
>>>
>>> sincerely,
>>> Peter
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>> blindtlk at nfbnet.org
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>>>
>>
>>
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>>
>
>
> --
> Peter
> Webmaster
> http://www.darkstruggle.com
> webmaster at darkstruggle.com
> alternative e-mail
> sunspot005 at gmail.com
>
> I will quote for you Jessica
> "But the main thing is whether assistive technology, policies
> and procedures can be done in a ever changing world" that is what I
> exactly said. This is why I have exceptional reading ability as that
> equal to a lawyer. I approach things in a multifasceted way. By no
> means am I saying public transportation is the end all be all
> approach. The allogations leveled at me over that issue are insaine. I
> quoteed for you and I'd like to talk to perhaps but I continue to
> support the bigger cities. The thing is that urban areas serve down
> town but then the services as you mention die down where the suburbs
> are. The inner city is cheaper with more crime, and etc. However,
> suburbs have much nicer neighborhoods and have less crime but little
> public transportation.
>
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