The City of Edmonton has released yet another "report" trying to con you into believing how great and rah-rah the new arena is supposed to be. And then we have councilor Sohi running his mouth off in support for this.
I must admit, I am getting a little sick and tired of all of the lies, deceptions, mis-truths and all of the other ElToroPooPoo happening. Very few people in city council seem to have the morals and ethics to deal with this properly.
For sure, Mayor Mandel has been lying his teeth off. No taxpayer dollars will ever be used to build an arena. Nothing will be done until all of the funds are in place. The project will never go over $450 million dollars.
What a crock. And this report? OH MY GOD.. Why don't we use this as a better angle, after all it is basically the same thing...
Let's bring in 5000 new people into Edmonton. We will build a brand new community to hold them. 5000 new houses will be built costing $120,000 each for a total of $600 million dollars. Look at all of the jobs we will make, all of the new people paying taxes and spending money. So because of this, the federal and provincial governments should put huge sums of dollars into this because we are going to send them huge sums of dollars in taxes.
Seriously? When the hell are you going to wake up? First of all, this report is speculation at best. I am not aware of any other sports development around that has attracted the money stated. To think we will be the ones to do it is absurd.
Let's not forget, all of the dollars for this arena project are effectively tax dollars from your pocket. The money Katz is putting in, is YOUR money he is borrowing from YOUR tax dollars, and paying it back over a really long time.
Let's not forget, we own the building, now have to pay all of the maintenance for it, and get not a single penny in profits. Every cent goes to Katz. Remember in the council meeting when this was "approved", someone from the KG said "don't be mad at us when we make a LOT of money from this", and someone on council said "oh hey, that's great, we want you to make a lot of money." ... Taxpayers pay it all. Katz gets it all.
Criminal? Certainly borderline... unethical? Hell ya. None of the people in council that voted for this project have the moral ethics to stay in office. And where is the Alberta Government while all this unethical crap is going on? Hiding.... politicians like to cover politicians asses. Which certainly raises the question of ethics for the Alberta Government.
Getting back to some basic common sense values for life, politics and justice. Encouraging honesty, integrity and accountability within all levels of Government, along with the transparency of the processes used to reach the decisions made.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
The Chevy Farm
Otherwise known as Westgate Chev... if you live in Edmonton, you probably have seen the tv commercials they put out, featuring Gord Gent, the "owner" of the business. All typical of this type of industry, doing the proverbial "Hey, come see us, we have a large selection of quality new and used vehicles", and the normal implications of how great they are and how well they treat their customers.
Sadly, like many in the industry, they speak the words but do their best to get out of honoring them. This post is about my brother, a person with a deep interest in cars, quality, and a desire to believe.
A few years back he went on a shopping spree, looking for something comfortable he could "retire" with, and came across a used Cadillac at 'the farm'. Knowing cars like he does, he researched his books and found this particular model had been known for some nasty electrical problems. Those issues were brought up with the sales person, and an extended warranty was suggested with the promise that it would cover everything. (Are you seeing where this is going? Well, you would be right.)
Shortly after buying the car, problems came up with not only the electrical system but also with some "shudder and vibration" issues which pointed towards the fancy transmission system. As well, usually in the winter months, the car battery would just die.
Covered first by the normal used vehicle warranty, and then the extended warranty, the car made many trips into Westgate. Often for days at a time. They replaced this and that, tightened this and that. But the problems were never fixed.
They said the problem was the computer, which is housed inside the car radio. So they pulled that out, put in a new one, and then charged him about a thousand dollars. Even though he was told the electrical and electronic systems were covered, apparently the car radio by magic, is not included with that. Of course, he mentioned that the sales person told him it would be, which is the reason he bought the extended warranty in the first place. But the sales person left the dealership shortly after he bought the car, so he conveniently could not be questioned about the promises made.
To make matters worse, the radio system had CD's inside of it, which they never removed when they replaced the unit. And it took over 6 months of complaints before the CD's were tracked down and returned. Damaged of course...
And yes, you would guess right when I say the radio was not the problem at all.
Other problems happened, and Westgate said "Oh we can't fix that, you have to take it to the Cadillac dealership"... which he did, and had to pay for repairs for things that were supposed to have been covered under the warranty.
Any time my brother tried to discuss the issues with the Service Manager, all he got was the run around. Does that surprise you? Now.. when I found Westgate finally climbed up into the social media world, I tweeted them, asked if they would want to correct a wrong and of course they replied "sure". I sent them my brothers contact information... weeks went by and no call. So I tweeted them again and they responded with the proverbial "ok, will look into it". And a few days after that someone did call.
The response? "Oh well, you waited too long, we can't do anything about that now". And what about a refund on replacing parts that didn't need replacing in the first place? "Oh we can't do that either".
What Westgate Chev can do however, is give you the run around... refuse to deal with the things you paid for, charge you more money to fix things that have NEVER been fixed, and politely tell you to fuck off afterwards.
Oh yeah.. the fella that called said he would be more than happy to sell him a different car.
Well Westgate. You know what? The same issues exist. The electrical still has problems, the vibration is still there, and the battery still goes from a full charge to totally dead while the car is parked and not running and not doing anything. Apparently the computer thinks that in the winter time, it needs to just turn something on at random intervals which quickly drains a full charged (and in good shape) battery.
Westgate was given several chances to correct these issues before this blog post was created, and they knew it was coming...
Their response? To un-follow me on twitter. Yup, that sure solves a lot...
I suspect they may find a few cars parked in their area this summer, displaying signs about the rip off, and educating potential customers about their (total lack of) really great service. Oh wait... my bad. Lip service is still service, yes?
Sadly, like many in the industry, they speak the words but do their best to get out of honoring them. This post is about my brother, a person with a deep interest in cars, quality, and a desire to believe.
A few years back he went on a shopping spree, looking for something comfortable he could "retire" with, and came across a used Cadillac at 'the farm'. Knowing cars like he does, he researched his books and found this particular model had been known for some nasty electrical problems. Those issues were brought up with the sales person, and an extended warranty was suggested with the promise that it would cover everything. (Are you seeing where this is going? Well, you would be right.)
Shortly after buying the car, problems came up with not only the electrical system but also with some "shudder and vibration" issues which pointed towards the fancy transmission system. As well, usually in the winter months, the car battery would just die.
Covered first by the normal used vehicle warranty, and then the extended warranty, the car made many trips into Westgate. Often for days at a time. They replaced this and that, tightened this and that. But the problems were never fixed.
They said the problem was the computer, which is housed inside the car radio. So they pulled that out, put in a new one, and then charged him about a thousand dollars. Even though he was told the electrical and electronic systems were covered, apparently the car radio by magic, is not included with that. Of course, he mentioned that the sales person told him it would be, which is the reason he bought the extended warranty in the first place. But the sales person left the dealership shortly after he bought the car, so he conveniently could not be questioned about the promises made.
To make matters worse, the radio system had CD's inside of it, which they never removed when they replaced the unit. And it took over 6 months of complaints before the CD's were tracked down and returned. Damaged of course...
And yes, you would guess right when I say the radio was not the problem at all.
Other problems happened, and Westgate said "Oh we can't fix that, you have to take it to the Cadillac dealership"... which he did, and had to pay for repairs for things that were supposed to have been covered under the warranty.
Any time my brother tried to discuss the issues with the Service Manager, all he got was the run around. Does that surprise you? Now.. when I found Westgate finally climbed up into the social media world, I tweeted them, asked if they would want to correct a wrong and of course they replied "sure". I sent them my brothers contact information... weeks went by and no call. So I tweeted them again and they responded with the proverbial "ok, will look into it". And a few days after that someone did call.
The response? "Oh well, you waited too long, we can't do anything about that now". And what about a refund on replacing parts that didn't need replacing in the first place? "Oh we can't do that either".
What Westgate Chev can do however, is give you the run around... refuse to deal with the things you paid for, charge you more money to fix things that have NEVER been fixed, and politely tell you to fuck off afterwards.
Oh yeah.. the fella that called said he would be more than happy to sell him a different car.
Well Westgate. You know what? The same issues exist. The electrical still has problems, the vibration is still there, and the battery still goes from a full charge to totally dead while the car is parked and not running and not doing anything. Apparently the computer thinks that in the winter time, it needs to just turn something on at random intervals which quickly drains a full charged (and in good shape) battery.
Westgate was given several chances to correct these issues before this blog post was created, and they knew it was coming...
Their response? To un-follow me on twitter. Yup, that sure solves a lot...
I suspect they may find a few cars parked in their area this summer, displaying signs about the rip off, and educating potential customers about their (total lack of) really great service. Oh wait... my bad. Lip service is still service, yes?
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Arena ElToroPooPoo
There is no question that the Mayor of Edmonton is a master of the art of manipulation. And he has taken his latest round to the Edmonton media, who have come out with various titles like "Public tired of Edmonton arena discussions" and "Six weeks left to strike arena deal".
Well Steve, you are right. The public is tired of hearing about the handout of 700 million dollars of taxpayer money given to a billionaire who in all practical terms is not putting a cent of his money (other than perhaps some land deals that some people are calling shady) into this project... and where it's been projected that the same billionaire could potentially pocket a good 400 to 600 million dollars in profits over the term of the deal.
And I have to ask, why is it that we only have 6 weeks left to nail this, otherwise it will never be done? Would it have anything to do with the fact that the majority of Edmonton taxpayers do not like this deal, and you are afraid that a new council to be elected in 2013 will not approve of the theft of taxpayer money?
I mean after all, the Oilers are certainly not going anywhere, they can still play at the current Rexall place until a proper deal can be reached... so why the rush?
I think you will find most people are passionate about keeping the Oilers here. But we are not passionate about having public dollars going to a private company into the pocket of one of the (supposed) richest men in Canada.
In my humble opinion, if you try and force this through, you and the others on City Council will be committing political suicide. Remember when you said that no tax money would be going towards this? And what about your council partner Kim, who stated that a pleb would be needed? It would seem that both of you are liars.
Citizens will hope for a pleb to be called, and in the past you have proven with the City Center Airport that you will do everything in your power to make sure that the people will not be heard. This will naturally place a damper on having a citizen driven pleb successful... and I can envision you rubbing your biased hands together with glee because that is exactly what you want.
But that will not stop a newly elected Council from putting a halt to this. Which of course will result in lawsuits flying all over the place. And I think that might just be a really good idea, because then the truth will come out, and taxpayers will see all of the dirty deeds done. And I'm betting there is a lot of "dirt" to dig up.
Of course, you do have the opportunity for Council to actually call for that pleb, and to make it a part of the election coming up, which will minimize the costs to taxpayers. You are totally aware that a pleb called for by Council will not be legally binding, where as one called for by the citizens would be.
But then.... that would mean you would need to do the right thing. Something we know you probably won't do because you have already proven your word means nothing. Add in how people are comparing Katz to Pocklington, with the former now smelling worse than the latter...
Ah.. you don't care. And the people see that. We are not as blind as you want us to be.
Well Steve, you are right. The public is tired of hearing about the handout of 700 million dollars of taxpayer money given to a billionaire who in all practical terms is not putting a cent of his money (other than perhaps some land deals that some people are calling shady) into this project... and where it's been projected that the same billionaire could potentially pocket a good 400 to 600 million dollars in profits over the term of the deal.
And I have to ask, why is it that we only have 6 weeks left to nail this, otherwise it will never be done? Would it have anything to do with the fact that the majority of Edmonton taxpayers do not like this deal, and you are afraid that a new council to be elected in 2013 will not approve of the theft of taxpayer money?
I mean after all, the Oilers are certainly not going anywhere, they can still play at the current Rexall place until a proper deal can be reached... so why the rush?
I think you will find most people are passionate about keeping the Oilers here. But we are not passionate about having public dollars going to a private company into the pocket of one of the (supposed) richest men in Canada.
In my humble opinion, if you try and force this through, you and the others on City Council will be committing political suicide. Remember when you said that no tax money would be going towards this? And what about your council partner Kim, who stated that a pleb would be needed? It would seem that both of you are liars.
Citizens will hope for a pleb to be called, and in the past you have proven with the City Center Airport that you will do everything in your power to make sure that the people will not be heard. This will naturally place a damper on having a citizen driven pleb successful... and I can envision you rubbing your biased hands together with glee because that is exactly what you want.
But that will not stop a newly elected Council from putting a halt to this. Which of course will result in lawsuits flying all over the place. And I think that might just be a really good idea, because then the truth will come out, and taxpayers will see all of the dirty deeds done. And I'm betting there is a lot of "dirt" to dig up.
Of course, you do have the opportunity for Council to actually call for that pleb, and to make it a part of the election coming up, which will minimize the costs to taxpayers. You are totally aware that a pleb called for by Council will not be legally binding, where as one called for by the citizens would be.
But then.... that would mean you would need to do the right thing. Something we know you probably won't do because you have already proven your word means nothing. Add in how people are comparing Katz to Pocklington, with the former now smelling worse than the latter...
Ah.. you don't care. And the people see that. We are not as blind as you want us to be.
Doing it for the Kids
A short time back, I had the privilege of attending a luncheon hosted by the Edmonton Public School Foundation which I discovered from the @EPSFoundation twitter feed.
When my daughter was in elementary school, I was able to do many of the 'parent things' like being a teachers helper in classes, being involved in school field trips, etc.I was passionate about participating in these things since I could not remember my parents having that type of involvement. Of course, things were different 50 years ago... but one of the things I do remember was the excitement of kindergarten.
As I grew older, started a family, watched my daughter grow up (she's 25 now) I had always presumed that kindergarten was one of those inalienable rights to prepare children for school... however somewhere along the road I fell asleep as a parent and a human being and did not notice that "right to a better beginning" had been lost.
There is no question in my mind that the children are our future. They are born innocent, free of hate and biases, zero understanding of race or color issues. And those early years of life are THE time when the basic building blocks for their futures happen. We as a society, should be doing everything possible to give the children the best chances we can. Sadly, this is not happening.
The Edmonton Public School system has seen the need, and set up a Foundation to promote the sanity of early education. They cover all of the costs of the Foundations work, performed tirelessly by two major players, Sandra Woitas and Alva Shewchuk. Please... take a few moments and visit the Foundations website, the information is extensive, but some of it has not been updated because of internal objectives within the EPSB... they are trying to get all of their websites into a "standard", and the IT department hasn't been able to update the events information. Sandra has kindly passed on some new info as follows:
Upcoming info sessions at Lauderdale School, 10610 - 129 Ave.
Call the Foundation to book your free lunch for Friday January 18th, Tuesday January 29th, Thursday February 14th (be a foundation sweetheart is easy on this day) or Wednesday February 27th.
As well, there is a Ready to Shine 3 Fashion Show at Kingsway Mall on Thursday April 25th. Sandra has also advised me that their main fund raiser will be held on Thursday May 30th, at Harry Ainlay School, located at 4350 - 111 street. And a "yet to be announced" Ready to Frame event, featuring high school student art for sale.
If the love of kids doesn't get your butt in gear, then perhaps you should consider the following. I was shocked when I found out this fact during our luncheon... When you look at the "rich kids versus the poor kids"... a study by Betty Hart and Todd Risley has determined that by the age of THREE YEARS OLD, there is a 32 million word gap exposure. Yes... 32 MILLION words.
Do yourselves a favor... check out the work of the Foundation, where 100% of the funds raised go towards providing a better education for the kids. And thank the EPSB for having the decency to cover 100% of the costs of the Foundation.
When my daughter was in elementary school, I was able to do many of the 'parent things' like being a teachers helper in classes, being involved in school field trips, etc.I was passionate about participating in these things since I could not remember my parents having that type of involvement. Of course, things were different 50 years ago... but one of the things I do remember was the excitement of kindergarten.
As I grew older, started a family, watched my daughter grow up (she's 25 now) I had always presumed that kindergarten was one of those inalienable rights to prepare children for school... however somewhere along the road I fell asleep as a parent and a human being and did not notice that "right to a better beginning" had been lost.
There is no question in my mind that the children are our future. They are born innocent, free of hate and biases, zero understanding of race or color issues. And those early years of life are THE time when the basic building blocks for their futures happen. We as a society, should be doing everything possible to give the children the best chances we can. Sadly, this is not happening.
The Edmonton Public School system has seen the need, and set up a Foundation to promote the sanity of early education. They cover all of the costs of the Foundations work, performed tirelessly by two major players, Sandra Woitas and Alva Shewchuk. Please... take a few moments and visit the Foundations website, the information is extensive, but some of it has not been updated because of internal objectives within the EPSB... they are trying to get all of their websites into a "standard", and the IT department hasn't been able to update the events information. Sandra has kindly passed on some new info as follows:
Upcoming info sessions at Lauderdale School, 10610 - 129 Ave.
Call the Foundation to book your free lunch for Friday January 18th, Tuesday January 29th, Thursday February 14th (be a foundation sweetheart is easy on this day) or Wednesday February 27th.
As well, there is a Ready to Shine 3 Fashion Show at Kingsway Mall on Thursday April 25th. Sandra has also advised me that their main fund raiser will be held on Thursday May 30th, at Harry Ainlay School, located at 4350 - 111 street. And a "yet to be announced" Ready to Frame event, featuring high school student art for sale.
If the love of kids doesn't get your butt in gear, then perhaps you should consider the following. I was shocked when I found out this fact during our luncheon... When you look at the "rich kids versus the poor kids"... a study by Betty Hart and Todd Risley has determined that by the age of THREE YEARS OLD, there is a 32 million word gap exposure. Yes... 32 MILLION words.
Do yourselves a favor... check out the work of the Foundation, where 100% of the funds raised go towards providing a better education for the kids. And thank the EPSB for having the decency to cover 100% of the costs of the Foundation.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Miss Communications
Twitter has been, shall we say... quite active in Edmonton over the past few days. Two of the recent major events causing the locals to uproar was the tragic massacre of little children and adults in Newtown, and the tweeting of a check stop location.
I'm not sure you can even come close to relating these two items on a scale of 1 to anything. I for one can not even BEGIN to fathom the pain of all of the people affected. My heart goes out to those who have been.
With that said, this post is about the challenges people face in expressing anything within the world of 140 characters. They say communication comprises about 7 percent of the spoken words, with the balance coming from facial expressions, body language gestures and the tone and voice inflections. Bottom line being, when you get into something as complex as these two issue have been, you have about a seven percent chance of your text words being received in the manner you meant them to be. ... All within 140 characters.
Common sense would dictate then, that if you see something that irks you, you would take a moment to ask the other person what they meant. And I get it, really... I do. When you deal with emotional issues of any kind, the mouth speaks (or in this case the fingers type) much faster than the brain thinks. And in dealing with complex issues, you generally are involved in a "thread" of chatter. People must also remember that the number of followers differs between "you and me and them" (this can dictate the speed of ones feed) and the people I follow are going to be different than the people you follow, which increases the challenge of being involved in that thread. Anyway...
When the Newtown news hit twitter, it went viral. Horror... shock... and speechless to start with. Information came pouring in, the urge to "speak" was huge. The question was "what to say" to make some form of valid contribution. Not wanting to jump to any conclusions or onto any bandwagons, I simply stated "Killing kids.. sigh.#Newtown". Time went on, more information came in, and I added in a few simple statements representing the shock and horror to a few friends, and sent out "Dear #USA. Ya know... it's time for some serious gun legislation. #uspoli" and a few comments on my disgust for the reporters who were in such a hurry to scoop interview time with the kids involved. On a side note, any who did this should be fired.
After watching more and more information, I then stated "God Bless America... how's that working for you?#Newton". (yes, I know, I misspelled the hash tag.. sigh) The statement was meant to be challenge to the concept of what the USA is (in theory) supposed to represent to the world. How great we are, how much we value freedoms, etc etc... Perhaps what could be more known as the "American Arrogance Factor". Let me first state, I love the USA and the people. I have MANY dear friends that live there and I have visited the country many times... as recent as this summer. My USA buddies have been the first people to acknowledge this, many openly admitting they have issues that need fixing. (I kind of think we as a world, all have things needing fixing, I just wanted to point out the 'statement' was not a slap in the face to the USA, but as a wake up call for their values.)
A short time later I was accused of religion bashing and told to "grow up" by an individual with whom I've had many extremely positive discussions with, and despite political differences, one that I had a lot of respect for. ... I admit, that comment pissed me off because it had, in my mind, nothing to do with religion in any way shape or form. We had a few more tweets, with my blood boiling, and I knew I was not in any emotional state where I could handle any more of the horror, and I left twitter for the rest of the day.
The following day, the Newtown incident stream was down to a more manageable level, but along came tweets about a check stop that had been broadcast. Before I delve into this issue, a tweet came along from @Social_Moi with a reference to my "god bless" comment that I found to be fitting. Note, her comment was not in reply to what I said, but fit with the concept I was trying to address. I will include that now for your viewing pleasure... It appears to have originated from Handgun Control Inc, in Washington D.C.
Back to the check stop issue. Now I do admit, I have issues with the logic of the police service asking those locations not be told, yet in the next breath they contact media outlets on where they are doing radar locations. Seems even tweeting those is "approved". Do let me state that I detest people who drink and drive. My issue is not with their stupidity, but with the concept of tweeting to evade. Those who speed probably cause more accidents and (ugly word.. please over look it) damage... but we clearly see a lot of deaths that happen from drunk drivers. I tend to be of the mindset that I wish it were just the drunks that got killed instead however this seldom happens. And yes, I know it's not politically correct to wish death on anyone. So anyway...
The cops don't want people saying where the check stops are. I get it. I still don't think that the majority of the drunks have got the smarts to check twitter in the hopes of finding the locations.But maybe some do. Who knows. The twitter discussions on this reference the fact that a drunk can not become "un-drunk" but a speeder can slow down. And yes, the speeders... at least those who are aware of the locations, do indeed slow down so they don't get a ticket. And I'm guessing the moment they pass that radar trap they speed right back up again. So I kinda fail to see how this really helps matters.
My logic is, if you are going to deal with one then you should deal with both. Both cause problems. Bad problems. So why is one okay, and the other not. In closing, as for the "religious" slam... I don't think I have portrayed an image of 'prejudice' against anyone. I've always said that I don't care what color you are, what religion (if any) that you prefer, what your sexual preferences are, or anything along those lines. You are either a good person or a bad person, in simple terms. I will respect your right to your opinion. I may not agree with it. And unless it's an opinion that really stinks (according to base society standards) then I will not continue to communicate. If you block me or I block you over something, then it is what it is.
Just don't judge me based on a few pieces of miss-communication.
I'm not sure you can even come close to relating these two items on a scale of 1 to anything. I for one can not even BEGIN to fathom the pain of all of the people affected. My heart goes out to those who have been.
With that said, this post is about the challenges people face in expressing anything within the world of 140 characters. They say communication comprises about 7 percent of the spoken words, with the balance coming from facial expressions, body language gestures and the tone and voice inflections. Bottom line being, when you get into something as complex as these two issue have been, you have about a seven percent chance of your text words being received in the manner you meant them to be. ... All within 140 characters.
Common sense would dictate then, that if you see something that irks you, you would take a moment to ask the other person what they meant. And I get it, really... I do. When you deal with emotional issues of any kind, the mouth speaks (or in this case the fingers type) much faster than the brain thinks. And in dealing with complex issues, you generally are involved in a "thread" of chatter. People must also remember that the number of followers differs between "you and me and them" (this can dictate the speed of ones feed) and the people I follow are going to be different than the people you follow, which increases the challenge of being involved in that thread. Anyway...
When the Newtown news hit twitter, it went viral. Horror... shock... and speechless to start with. Information came pouring in, the urge to "speak" was huge. The question was "what to say" to make some form of valid contribution. Not wanting to jump to any conclusions or onto any bandwagons, I simply stated "Killing kids.. sigh.
After watching more and more information, I then stated "God Bless America... how's that working for you?
A short time later I was accused of religion bashing and told to "grow up" by an individual with whom I've had many extremely positive discussions with, and despite political differences, one that I had a lot of respect for. ... I admit, that comment pissed me off because it had, in my mind, nothing to do with religion in any way shape or form. We had a few more tweets, with my blood boiling, and I knew I was not in any emotional state where I could handle any more of the horror, and I left twitter for the rest of the day.
The following day, the Newtown incident stream was down to a more manageable level, but along came tweets about a check stop that had been broadcast. Before I delve into this issue, a tweet came along from @Social_Moi with a reference to my "god bless" comment that I found to be fitting. Note, her comment was not in reply to what I said, but fit with the concept I was trying to address. I will include that now for your viewing pleasure... It appears to have originated from Handgun Control Inc, in Washington D.C.
Back to the check stop issue. Now I do admit, I have issues with the logic of the police service asking those locations not be told, yet in the next breath they contact media outlets on where they are doing radar locations. Seems even tweeting those is "approved". Do let me state that I detest people who drink and drive. My issue is not with their stupidity, but with the concept of tweeting to evade. Those who speed probably cause more accidents and (ugly word.. please over look it) damage... but we clearly see a lot of deaths that happen from drunk drivers. I tend to be of the mindset that I wish it were just the drunks that got killed instead however this seldom happens. And yes, I know it's not politically correct to wish death on anyone. So anyway...
The cops don't want people saying where the check stops are. I get it. I still don't think that the majority of the drunks have got the smarts to check twitter in the hopes of finding the locations.But maybe some do. Who knows. The twitter discussions on this reference the fact that a drunk can not become "un-drunk" but a speeder can slow down. And yes, the speeders... at least those who are aware of the locations, do indeed slow down so they don't get a ticket. And I'm guessing the moment they pass that radar trap they speed right back up again. So I kinda fail to see how this really helps matters.
My logic is, if you are going to deal with one then you should deal with both. Both cause problems. Bad problems. So why is one okay, and the other not. In closing, as for the "religious" slam... I don't think I have portrayed an image of 'prejudice' against anyone. I've always said that I don't care what color you are, what religion (if any) that you prefer, what your sexual preferences are, or anything along those lines. You are either a good person or a bad person, in simple terms. I will respect your right to your opinion. I may not agree with it. And unless it's an opinion that really stinks (according to base society standards) then I will not continue to communicate. If you block me or I block you over something, then it is what it is.
Just don't judge me based on a few pieces of miss-communication.
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