Help Me Understand This...
In one community recently, the local authorities were all puffed up over a family having a purple jungle set in their back yard and some of the locals didn't agree with the aesthetic. (Apparently the little girls for whom the swing set was erected liked purple. Go figure.). The authorities were promising fines, etc. if the family didn't take it down.
Fast forward to today in Orlando, Florida. It seems a local there has his own reality TV show. He also has lethal reptiles in his home. Well darn the luck, one got out the other day. Sadly, he forgot to mention it to anyone like, oh say, the cops for several days. Turns out the escapee is an EIGHT FOOT KING COBRA, which can grow to 14 feet. Further, said snake owner opined the the beast probably went into a local wooded area and most likely we'll never be found. Not to worry though...he probably won't bite anyone.
Is this a great country or what??!?!
Fast forward to today in Orlando, Florida. It seems a local there has his own reality TV show. He also has lethal reptiles in his home. Well darn the luck, one got out the other day. Sadly, he forgot to mention it to anyone like, oh say, the cops for several days. Turns out the escapee is an EIGHT FOOT KING COBRA, which can grow to 14 feet. Further, said snake owner opined the the beast probably went into a local wooded area and most likely we'll never be found. Not to worry though...he probably won't bite anyone.
Is this a great country or what??!?!
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But I think (and perhaps Mamaemma does not) that the moment that one of them wiggles a scale over the property edge, the owner is At That Moment guilty of having released a harmful animal into the environment. You do not have to wait for the snake to bite someone - right then, you go after the owner with the demand that he pay for a competent search for the reptile until it is captured or until he runs out of money. The owner is still legally responsible if the cobra bites someone - but that is a criminal charge.
I think that you can do anything that is legal on your own property, but that 'it' cannot transverse the border of your land.
Jan
Innocent until proven or found guilty. what about someone who sends their child to school with the flu?
Moreover, the basic legal case is called TERRY VERSUS OHIO. Terry was a convicted felon, stopped and frisked outside a jewelry store. The police found a gun. He sued. He lost.
Jan
This rapidly evolves into the preventative use of force which doesn't seem very attractive. I guess you could claim you are using retaliatory force against the probabilistic future act that forcefully impacts your rights.
But that slope isn't just slippery, it's greased.
As I see it, the following are options.
a) An overactive government decides that such pets can no longer be pets. That is an overreach.
b) A government or homeowners' association fines them for infringing upon the safety of the neighborhood. There has been some harm done here, simply by people no longer feeling comfortable to let their kids loose in their backyards.
c) Move along. Nothing to see here.
d) Have someone whose family member or pet was killed sue for damages, after a tragic loss. Money can make up for some things, but not life.
This really is a fascinating debate the Gulch will have.
for you. . it overrides your judgment,,, in the color of swingsets
or the nature of pets,,, so that you should adopt MY ideas just 'cuz ........
well, just 'cuz I am ME and you are not. . so there!!!
and it I have the power, watch out -- ME counts over YOU. -- j
.
Like jbrenner, I don't like excess rules from government. However, if one is negligent and there are consequences, one is responsible.
I ask this because I lived in the northeast US. We had (and might still have) a big problem with Gypsy Moth Caterpillars.
The caterpillar is not native to the area. It was accidentally released (I think in the late 1800s) by a scientist who was trying to find a better silk by researching Asian silk worms and caterpillars. To the researcher's credit, he immediately notified the local and federal authorities. The government ended up doing nothing. One hundred years later, during its peak cycle, millions of acres of forest are destroyed by these little bastards.
So, what to do? It should be the individual's responsibility to clean up their mess. But with living things, a situation can quickly get beyond an individual's ability to responsibility control. And do we want a government which legislates away potential threats (the excuse for much of its current overreach and abuse)?
Your comments are welcome.
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