LOL Keith looks exactly like you would imagine.
His wife has him pegged.Artorias said:
LOL Keith looks exactly like you would imagine.
100% okay in my book. If a guy went to the pound 1x a week to get a dog for dog burritos I wouldn't bat an eye. I also wouldn't accept an invitation for a bbq, but if he wants to eat Fido, then bon Appetit .DarkBrandon01 said:aggiepanic95 said:DarkBrandon01 said:
I don't think dogs should be treated like farm animals
Farmers treat their animals very well. That's why they work all day everyday to keep them fed and healthy. Dogs, unfortunately, sometimes need compassion and that results in being put down.
I wouldn't expect you to know any of this bc it takes someone that has been around farming, ranching, or ag to understand this and based on your posting history, you are a dem loving city dweller who has terrible opinions about anything associated with hard working, God loving Americans.
If dogs are on the same level as farm animals, is it okay to cook and eat their meat like we do with cows, chickens, and pigs?
Ag CPA said:
I understand her reasoning but still stupid to put that in a book as a politician, probably "killed" her VP chances.
Neighbors should get sued.bobbranco said:
Here you go Nancies. It's a tear jerker. A feel good story.
LOL My high school class was 37. We actually used horses to work cattle. I have cut pigs and grafted trees. I have shot my own dog(he had a stroke and couldnt wait for a vet because he was suffering) I am much more rural than you but still wouldnt kill a puppy for screwing up a pheasant hunt or shoot a goat because he smelled bad.drcrinum said:You've never lived in a rural area with acerage, have you? Dogs are for protection. They take care of the snakes, coons, possums, armadillos, and skunks, keep the deer and rabbits out of your garden (to some degree at least), and sound the alarm whenever strangers or cars come on your property.2040huck said:Nobody wants one running freelydrcrinum said:
I once had a dog that went after the neighbors' chickens. I had to take him to the dog pound, which basically meant he eventually was going to be exterminated...nobody in a rural area wants a chicken killing dog.
DarkBrandon01 said:aggiepanic95 said:DarkBrandon01 said:
I don't think dogs should be treated like farm animals
Farmers treat their animals very well. That's why they work all day everyday to keep them fed and healthy. Dogs, unfortunately, sometimes need compassion and that results in being put down.
I wouldn't expect you to know any of this bc it takes someone that has been around farming, ranching, or ag to understand this and based on your posting history, you are a dem loving city dweller who has terrible opinions about anything associated with hard working, God loving Americans.
If dogs are on the same level as farm animals, is it okay to cook and eat their meat like we do with cows, chickens, and pigs?
Be honest - you wouldn't want her as anything, no matter what, and this little story isn't the straw that broke the camel's back on an agonizing decision you've been wrestling with internally.Dan Scott said:
What was the context leading up to the story?
There are some things that we have to do but we don't broadcast. If the context was about making tough decisions then she should have picked a better story. If the context was to portray herself as a relatable outdoorsy woman that knows how to handle guns then that's even worse.
Either way, shows poor judgement to me and I wouldn't want her as VP.
Remember when errbody was all riled up and wanting to run Obama out of town when he put in his book that dog was one of the finest meals he'd ever had?nai06 said:jt2hunt said:
This is a nothing story. City folk will never understand.
What percentage of the voting population are city folk vs country folk?
It doesn't matter how you feel about her killing a dog, but you'd be crazy to not understand the political implications of putting this in a book.
...and yet, day in and day out, people still dump dogs and cats on country roads all day long.Sid Farkas said:
It's a domesticated dog, not a coyote or a chicken or a goldfish.
In this day and age simply euthanizing a domesticated dog isn't necessary if there's an opportunity for someone to come and take it away. This isn't the 1880's.
schmellba99 said:...and yet, day in and day out, people still dump dogs and cats on country roads all day long.Sid Farkas said:
It's a domesticated dog, not a coyote or a chicken or a goldfish.
In this day and age simply euthanizing a domesticated dog isn't necessary if there's an opportunity for someone to come and take it away. This isn't the 1880's.
The hand wringing over this is beyond stupid, and shows how out of touch a significant portion of the population is with anything outside of HEB.
You think all dogs are saved when sent to the pound or the SPCA?Sid Farkas said:schmellba99 said:...and yet, day in and day out, people still dump dogs and cats on country roads all day long.Sid Farkas said:
It's a domesticated dog, not a coyote or a chicken or a goldfish.
In this day and age simply euthanizing a domesticated dog isn't necessary if there's an opportunity for someone to come and take it away. This isn't the 1880's.
The hand wringing over this is beyond stupid, and shows how out of touch a significant portion of the population is with anything outside of HEB.
No hand wringing bruh. Not even mad about it.
I simply have an opinion that a domesticated dog, in this day and age, gets different consideration than it would in years past, when resources and options were limited…and societies sensibilities were different
Bondag said:
UH....They make nice companions? Mine live mostly on the couch or in the bed anyhowdrcrinum said:
If you lived on acerage in the country, what's the point in having a dog if you have to fence him up in your back yard?
LOL You got one of those big chains?TexasRebel said:
Dogs belong outside.
Did she eat it? ok thenschmellba99 said:Remember when errbody was all riled up and wanting to run Obama out of town when he put in his book that dog was one of the finest meals he'd ever had?nai06 said:jt2hunt said:
This is a nothing story. City folk will never understand.
What percentage of the voting population are city folk vs country folk?
It doesn't matter how you feel about her killing a dog, but you'd be crazy to not understand the political implications of putting this in a book.
Oh, that's right, it's (d)ifferent.
Maybe to kill chickens?TexasRebel said:
Why would a dog want to run away?
Well I have a lab. Not sure if it can be defined as house dog or country dog. It prefers to stay in the house when it can. I also have a poodle mix. It likes it outdoors and would likely chase chickens if given the chancedrcrinum said:
So you have a city dog or house dog. Never had one of those. Compared to an outside country dog it's apples vs oranges.
Wat?El Chupacabra said:100% okay in my book. If a guy went to the pound 1x a week to get a dog for dog burritos I wouldn't bat an eye. I also wouldn't accept an invitation for a bbq, but if he wants to eat Fido, then bon Appetit .DarkBrandon01 said:aggiepanic95 said:DarkBrandon01 said:
I don't think dogs should be treated like farm animals
Farmers treat their animals very well. That's why they work all day everyday to keep them fed and healthy. Dogs, unfortunately, sometimes need compassion and that results in being put down.
I wouldn't expect you to know any of this bc it takes someone that has been around farming, ranching, or ag to understand this and based on your posting history, you are a dem loving city dweller who has terrible opinions about anything associated with hard working, God loving Americans.
If dogs are on the same level as farm animals, is it okay to cook and eat their meat like we do with cows, chickens, and pigs?
Too bad she lives in South Dakota, then.oysterbayAG said:
Kristi Noem is a good governor for North Dakota but too soft to be a potential POTUS !