Whole town rummage sale doesn't stand up to logic
Today and tomorrow are days were I will stay out of town. I will admit I was in town this morning as I forgot that it was City-Wide Rummage Sale day. I found this out after I went to get my cup of coffee and read the paper.
What I found was the back-end of every paper was torn up. This is unusual because normally only the puzzles are finished and maybe a coupon is ripped out. That never bothers me unless the backside of the coupon contains a paragraph for an article I'm reading. Nothing worse then reading about some murder somewhere only to turn to page 10b and find that the killer names is (torn out here)
Anyway I'm staying away and for good reason. If you can imagine a city full of cars with their car brakes on and the driver looking up every side street then you understand my concern. In fact I watched a postal truck attempt to navigate his route and he finally just parked his truck and hand delivered the mail to two houses.
Nothing caught my attention today in the paper except for the hunter who accidentally shot his hunting buddy. He was so distraught that he went and got the law and showed them the body. Then he walked off a little ways and shot himself. What stuck my fancy with this is the obvious question.
“Why did the law still allow him to be close to a gun/rifle. He had just shot someone (accidentally) yet he still had access? “
What I found was the back-end of every paper was torn up. This is unusual because normally only the puzzles are finished and maybe a coupon is ripped out. That never bothers me unless the backside of the coupon contains a paragraph for an article I'm reading. Nothing worse then reading about some murder somewhere only to turn to page 10b and find that the killer names is (torn out here)
Anyway I'm staying away and for good reason. If you can imagine a city full of cars with their car brakes on and the driver looking up every side street then you understand my concern. In fact I watched a postal truck attempt to navigate his route and he finally just parked his truck and hand delivered the mail to two houses.
Nothing caught my attention today in the paper except for the hunter who accidentally shot his hunting buddy. He was so distraught that he went and got the law and showed them the body. Then he walked off a little ways and shot himself. What stuck my fancy with this is the obvious question.
“Why did the law still allow him to be close to a gun/rifle. He had just shot someone (accidentally) yet he still had access? “
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