I do not know how to categorize this.
“Our government dollars at work”?
“Solving a problem that doesn’t exist”?
Or
“What the heck are they thinking?”
As in,
“Are there not a more productive uses of their time?”
Before diving in – and explaining what I am talking about – I
like to personalize my stories.
Here now is that subjective perspective.
When visiting our tiny cabin in Michiana, we take Highway 12
to travel from Indiana to Michigan. (Which
is not far. Michigan is directly across
the street from our cabin.) We take “Route
12” three miles deeper into Michigan
to go to Oink’s – the best ice cream
in the land. (There’s a picture of Joe Biden
stopping there. If he runs and wins, I
can say I eat the same ice cream as the President of the United States.)
More than I’d like to traveling “Route 12”, like the time
after dining at Casey’s – the best
sauteed lake perch in the land – we pass the carcass of a dead deer, dragged onto
the side of the road. I imagine that is the case, because if the
deer had been hit where it was lying, the driver would have needed to veer onto
the “shoulder” to hit it. So, unless it was
premeditated deer murder, the vehicle hit it “mid-highway”, the driver stopped
and got out, lugging it painstakingly off of the road.
Back at the cabin, I invariably call “Animal Control” to
report the dead deer by the side of the road.
And eventually they do
something, sounding, not infrequently, bothered by the request.
“Sir, we are ‘Animal Control.’ What do you expect us to do?”
(Harrowing Implication: The animal you are calling about has been
sufficiently “controlled.”)
So that’s my personalized perspective – a run-over animal, roiling
the Casey’s sautéed lake perch,
rumbling in my stomach.
Maybe I’m just a “City Guy.”
Squeamish to a fault.
Suddenly wondering where the word “squeamish” comes from?
“ – after Jonathan Squeam,
who threw up at the littlest provocation.”
Similar behavior was henceforth called,
“Squeam-ish.”
Anyway…
I see a story in the paper.
The California legislature…
Wait.
I’ll let them tell
it.
Los Angeles Times –
California Section – “Page 1”:
Headline:
“Bill Would OK Roadkill
As Food”
(That’s how Sacramento {our state capital’s} spending its
time? Don’t they know there’s a wall to
build?)
Deconstructing the story…
The Reported Announcement:
“Roadkill could be on
dinner tables across California by 2021 if a Senate state bill wins approval
from the lawmakers.”
The Legislative Proposal:
“SB (Senate Bill) 395 seeks to amend current state law to
allow drivers who fatally strike a deer, antelope, elk or wild pig to take the
animal home and cook it.”
Limited Extension:
“The bill… also would let
people not in vehicles who simply stumble upon a carcass keep it for
food.” (But not people who drive by the massacred animal? This thing needs further debate!)
Justification for
the Bill:
“The bill estimates
that more than 20,000 deer are hit by cars on California roadways
annually. ‘This translates into hundreds
of pounds of healthy meat that could be utilized to feed those in need’, the
bill states.”
Limited Exceptions:
“The bill does not
make all wild animals fair game on the state’s roadways.”
Wandering Turkeys:
“Phew!”
Punitive Warning:
“The legislation
emphasizes that the animal has to have been killed accidentally.”
Nipping an imagined “Reality Show” idea in the bud.
And finally,
The Surprise Curveball Only Real Life Can Credibly
Deliver:
“People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals wrote on its website that roadkill is a more
humane food source and a ‘superior option’ to meat in the supermarket.”
(I did not see that coming.
Did you?)
So there you have it.
Added to the regular complaint dining on hunted food: “I just ate buckshot” is, if SB 395 passes,
the brand new dining-on-hunted-food complaint:
“I just ate ‘bumper’.”
Some days, this job is too easy.
You just sit back and the thing writes itself.
(Cautionary Note:
Most days, it doesn’t.)
3 comments:
Today’s special: Critter de jour.
A Michigander I know has a rule:
If you see a dead deer on the way IN to town, leave it.
If You see a dead deer coming back from town...yum.
Freshness.
ps...13 rounds of robot check. sheesh
A deer ran into my car a few months ago. It came running out of the woods, crossed the empty lane and hit the side of my car so hard that it bounced off and, with the momentum added by my car, ended up on the side of the road across the empty lane. So, a deer by the side of the road doesn't mean someone pulled it off the road. As a matter of fact, I would never go near a deer in that situation. They can be stunned and then jump up and run off (or run into you) - as other folks have told me.
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