Saturday, February 1, 2014
Caring more about animals than people
Here we have WTAP making a big deal out of the fact that a man had 16 dogs in his enclosed pick up truck.
They mention how the "Humane" "officer" took his dogs. They agreed to let him have 4 of his dogs back IF he gets them spayed/neutered. Isn't that gracious? After he pays a "fee" for the "service" with a gun to his head. The rest of them will end up euthanized....because we know that's better than spending the night in the back of a very large enclosed truck with their buddies.
What the story should have highlighted was the fact that the man's house burned down and he didn't have a place to live. He went to spend the night with his sister in Parkersburg. He didn't leave his dogs to roam on his property, he brought his dogs with him.
No mention in the story if the man needed anything, how he was going to make it, etc....you know, your typical "human interest" story. Nope, we have to kick a man when he's down because his dogs are not spayed or neutered.
Pretty sad when the first thing the media can think of for a story in this situation is not about the man losing his house and belongings.
Weird!
P.S. Merriam/Webster needs to add this description as an example: Oxymoron = Humane Society
Another thing I'm seeing: this stupidity is concentrated around large concentrations of people, I.E. cities. If this fellow was in our neck of the woods, or any rural area, I suspect, no one would have thought of calling the police because he had some dogs in his truck, that's normal! This man would have been given donations of clothing and cash to help him out.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Why is it the media are slow to admit that guns save lives

I wonder why WTAP can't just say what happened. Surely they know.....or at least most of the mid Ohio valley know what happened.
They tip-toe around the facts by saying:
"as the investigation continues into the shooting death of a Pettyville man."
"On Sunday, authorities say Christopher Dickel was shot and later died at the Mineral Manor Apartment Complex."
Here's what really happened.
An argument ensued over a girlfriend. A phone call was made to the home (where the shooting later occurred) and a death threat was made on one of the occupants of the apartment.
A gang of thugs made good on their promise of arriving at the apartment and attempting to kill one of the occupants.
To their surprise, after they broke down the door to the apartment, the first one through the door was shot, then shot again because he didn't go down with the first shot (a good reason to own firearms with a larger caliber than 9mm).
The rest of the thugs stepped over the body of their just dead friend and proceeded to fight with the occupants of the apartment.
2 observations on this:- The news "media" hate giving credit to guns saving lives.
- A 9 round 12 gauge shot gun with 00 buckshot would be a much better home defense weapon than a 9mm handgun.
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
WTAP stretching it a bit
WTAP story here
""One of these days, I think they're going to get everything straightened out," said Kenneth Berg."
""Not everybody gets to keep their promises," said Rick Boice. They try, but that's the way things go, sometimes.""
And this one is the most ringing endorsement of all:
""From what I see, he's doing all right," Virgil Berg said."
Yep, that's proof that uncle Ted has the "approval" of Washington County. And they wonder why no one takes the "news" seriously?
Friday, May 29, 2009
Oxymoron, a paid "volunteer"
Paying people to volunteer sounds strange. It's more like paying people to do government approved odd jobs.
We'd be much better off if our government would quit spending us into a debt hole and lower our taxes. We can create our own jobs when the government does not take the incentives away.
Of course, Charlie Wilson wants to give incentives to grow government, not private enterprise.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Level 3 "snow emergency"
Some thoughts on this:
- There is no consistency between the levels in the different counties. Meigs (where men are still men) had no declared "emergency", though it neighbors Athens county which had a level 3, how could that be?
- Athens county has a history of inflating this "snow emergency" level in the past. Once we were in a store in Athens and they started telling us we needed to leave because we were under a level 3 emergency. It hadn't even started snowing yet! So, our new Sheriff is an improvement in this regard. He actually waited until we had winter conditions in ...um...winter. I had a fellow at work tell me yesterday that Athens county is really bad. I asked him how he knew that and he said he heard it on the news that we were under a "level 3". I explained that every time it snows more than 2 inches we are under a level 3 and the news doesn't really understand the history. But since it's on the "news" it must be true. Kirk Greenfield (WTAP's Meteorologist) has taken great umbrage at my comments on WTAP.com about the "snow emergency" inflation in Athens County. His assumption was since Athens County was under a level 3, it must have been a lot worse than other local counties. This is the wrong assumption due to the above comments.
- The County Engineer would always prefer that we don't drive on the roads anytime it snows. The Sheriff needs to take this into account when he makes his decision under pressure from the Engineers office. (Come to think of it, if they could keep those pesky vehicles off the roads all year long, we'd never have a pot-hole problem.)
- There have been times where locals (driving "illegally" in a "level 3") have cut trees out of the road so the county's snow plows can make it through. I also know of an instance where "illegal" drivers pulled a Township truck from being stuck over a snow covered bank.
- We are the ones that have to attend to elderly neighbors who have no power. Generators run on gasoline. Gasoline is sold a various locations. One has to drive to get there.
- One has to drive to cut the trees off of parent's houses.
- One has to drive to take a load of firewood to neighbors who now have no electric, hence no heat.
Have we even thought about the consequences if people actually listened to the Sheriff (it's the county engineer that prods this decision, by the way) when he "declares" a "snow emergency"?
- Most commerce in southeastern Ohio would cease. We have rt 7, 50 and 33 all major highways running through Athens county. If we all followed the "rules" every semi truck (along with every car/truck heading from / to work) would stop at the county lines. How much snow removal would be happening around traffic jams.
- If we all followed the "rules" local elderly people would have died from the cold. We haven't seen the county trucks delivering firewood or meals on wheels delivering meals. Neighbors should be allowed (and if not allowed, do it anyway) to help their neighbors.
- If we followed the rules we'd have people working 24-36 hours because no one comes to work to relieve them.
- In this slow economy we are going to tell people not to go to work unless it's necessary? We don't get paid unless we go to work. Work is necessary from an economic point of view no matter what.
So, while the government and the media try to make us into whimpering, thumb sucking in the corner adolescents........some of us ignore the rules and act like men.
If we followed the "rules" we'd have a real snow emergency.
I've got an idea for Kirk Greenfield. Instead of giving the population the impression that Athens county is a lot worse off than all the neighboring counties, maybe he should ask why that all winter storms are worse in Athens county, because their "snow emergency" levels are always higher than our neighbors in bordering counties....you'd think studying this phenomenon would be a meteorologist's dream.
Got to go now, have to refill the generator, put wood in the stove. I haven't seen the government here offering to do that for me, yet.
We've turned into a nation of wimps.