LadyKate wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
I don't see that this is particularly rude. Just inaccurate. Do you really not understand that it's not about lack of compassion or him reaping what he sowed, but rather about having compassion for all the people who would be harmed if the fire department is allowed to go underfunded?
I guess not, pooter-butt. (Did I do that right?
)
For me, I have compassion for the guy who just lost his home, not for the people who *possibly* could sometime in the future lose their homes....because one guy didn't pay $75?
It would seem to me that if they were having a funding problem, that they would do something to try to resolve the problem that does NOT involve letting people's houses burn to the ground who didn't pay.
LK, it is not just a matter of people losing their homes because of $75 one way or the other, nor of a funding problem
now.
It is a problem of, once people see that this guy has gotten away with paying only once a fire starts, not once, but TWICE, that they will say "well, why am I bothering to pay?" Then one of two things happens: The city stops providing fire services to the county at all, because the citizens of the city are pissed that they are paying taxes, which they have no choice about, and county residents are getting away with not paying, or the city keeps providing it, but the dollars flowing in keep dropping resulting in poorer and poorer equipment and training.
It isn't a matter of people possibly losing their homes, or whatever (a fire doesn't necessarily have to be about losing a home), it's a matter of when. There will certainly be more fires; I'm sure this is not the first guy to be irresponsible with a trash fire knowing what poor rural areas are like. It's also a matter of the firefighters getting enough equipment and training.
Yes, they could do other things to ensure funding, like pass a county tax to pay the city instead of leaving it to individuals, or founding a county fire department. But the fact is those things haven't been done and they may or may not get done. The county government responds to the county voters and evidently the county voters have been fine with this arrangement up until now. That isn't surprising given that the fire department made exceptions in the past. Why screw up a sweet deal?
I get the distinct impression you are not really reading what I'm saying carefully since I have posted this several times now, and you keep asking the same question of why let the guy's house burn over $75? Are you really reading what I'm pointing out carefully? Or is it a matter of it making you feel like a bad person to explore the idea that there's more at stake than the issue of the guy's home? It's ok if you feel that way but it seems I am simply repeating myself here and not being heard.