I'm so torn over this, like he clearly loves his pet but he did have 3 years to fix the conditions and stop doing certain things and if I loved my pet and some authority gave me instructions to keep them then I'd just follow them.
Then there's the long term care, where does a big old gator go? There's hundreds if not thousands killed every year because they're too acclimatised to humans, is there space for this guy? And even if there is space, wouldn't it be better going to one of those being killed?
He claims he tried to make the changes, but they ignored his emails and calls requesting clarification. Because I don’t see a DEC response indicating otherwise, I’m going to assume it’s true for now. He’s housed it successfully for 30 years, and they could just take it if he happened to die without leaving sufficient care for the alligator. As it stands, the alligator is presently taking the “space” of another alligator, so I’m not sure how this is a net benefit. If there was an alligator out there waiting for a spot to avoid being killed, it’s probably quite dead now.
It also seems like the officers injured the alligator during the transition. Given that he had spent a six figure sum modifying his home to better house it, and had it cared for by a veterinarian, I’m inclined to believe him when he says it did not have spinal complications prior. This is in part due to my relatively low faith officers as a whole— theoretically officers for humans should be the most disciplined, and I am having some difficulty thinking much higher for these conservation officers. So if you’re correct about limited space, and he’s correct about the injuries, I’m counting two alligators worse off than before.
I’m just not seeing any big wins here. I don’t know enough about alligators to say whether it was a true danger to the people he let it interact with (though three decades says no), or whether it could one day suffer enough mental degradation to become a danger. I’d of course defer to expertise but until then I think it would’ve been better to serve him notice that he can never again let it interact with anyone without some sort of barrier between. If he continued to do so, and there was real concern that it might someday become violent, then seize it. It’s definitely more American to jump straight to officers taking it away though, as it happens with anything but guns.
I feel it's unlikely that they ignored his emails and calls for 3 years. I'm thinking he may have called or emailed once or twice and is using that as an excuse.
I worked in a zoo, not directly with crocodilians, but I know that I wouldn't let a kid swim with one. That seems like one of those things that are fine until it's not. Also if it can get out then that's a really bad thing.
I do think it's probably better for them to give him another chance to fix the conditions and I really hope he does what he's told.
Even if it was suicide, Boeing should be held responsible. They literally inflicted the emotional damage that ended his life, even if you could somehow prove that they didn't pull the actual trigger.
Putin is a tumor, if he is not exised he will continue to slowly kill his nation. It's a shame that Russians seem so conditioned to strong man dictator types. Instead of coming to their own defense and joining the international community, they are slowly bleeding to death in Ukraine.
This article is lame. No one is proposing a ban on tiktok. The law just approved by Congress only requires a change of ownership (i.e. to something other than a Chinese-government-owned entity).
TikTok would still be just like it always is, minus the pro-China algorithm/propaganda. An algorithm well known to persistently favor the views of the Chinese government (which can be very much against what most Americans believe in such as freedom of speech):
In other words, the influence of the Chinese government on teenagers and old people incessantly calling congressmen telling them to vote against that very bill. The very thing that the bill is supposed to prevent.
Look, the investors need their hard-eared returns so corners must be cut everywhere else. It is wholly acceptable if 1000 planes fall out of the sky if it means one more golden toilet seat be installed on a yacht that is never boarded. It is worth 5000 customer deaths if it means the baron’s bath of balsamic vinaigrette be filled for a day, that he might submerge therein after murderizing a few courtesans.
I know this might sound naive, buy why don't more whistleblowers get "all their ducks in a row" before coming out by recording absolutely everything and mailing it out in triplicate to random (or carefully chosen) third parties with some sort pf deadman switch? And announcing they've done so only after it's all in place? If one knows one's life might be at risk, make sure the bastards are exposed, no matter what happens.
News
Newest