LadyKate wrote:
Ya'll are a bunch of big meanies. The guy's house was burning down, its not like he was asking for a free luxury item.
Whatever happened to communities and neighbors and people helping others?
Sheesh.
Well lets see:
1) For one thing, we discovered that communities and neighbors helping each other aren't very good at fighting fires
2) Because of that we decided to come up with the concept of trained firefighters, and we invented proper equipment to do it with
3) That stuff is very expensive
4) Therefore, we need to find some way to pay for it. In many places, we tax people
5) This county is not one of those places. It is rural Tenessee and evidently cannot afford a county fire department.
6) It therefore allows county resients to subscribe to city fire protection for which the city charges the pittance of $75 a year
Are you following yet why we're not big meanies?
If not, here is the rest:
7) If ole boy gets his fire put out for free when he doesn't pay taxes and doesn't pay the fee, everyone else in the county will expect the same and stop paying
8) Then, the residents of the city are stuck paying for the fire department for no reason other than what side of a map line they live on
9) Then, one of two things happen:
9A) The city stops having fire coverage for the county which now has NO fire protection AT ALL or
9B) The city can't afford or decides it doesn't want a fire department and gets rid of it (not likely but possible) or
9C) The city goes to the $500/fire model except that this eventually leads to either the fire department being underfunded or not serving the county like in 9A because you can't force people to pay
In otherwords, what happened to neighbors and communities helping out was that people like this guy expected community help when they didn't help the community themselves. That just isn't sustainable. Unfortunately, this picture of "communities" that all help each other out is largely an illusion. There's usually a certain portion of the people that do most of the helping, another portion that helps some, and another, large portion that is always getting help and never getting it.
Not only that, but in this case the guy wasn't part of the community. He lived outside the community, which generously allowed him to use their services for a very small fee. He chose not to take a
very generous offer and suffered the consequences. The community has to protect itself from people who take advantage of its generosity.