Oooops! Accidentally pos repped this post when I meant to neg it. Someone help!
LOL, that's how he got back to green.
Oooops! Accidentally pos repped this post when I meant to neg it. Someone help!
before they had these laws there werent as many people in the world as there is today. im sure even back then there were laws too.
Sadly, yes. Build without the permits and the city can force you to knock it down or pay heavy fines. My father-in-law was a building inspector for the City of Indianapolis. He eventually quit because he hated that he was expected to hammer "Joe Taxpayer" for violations but would get in trouble for doing the same to builders.
before they had these laws there werent as many people in the world as there is today. im sure even back then there were laws too.
I have already explained to my wife that when I become old(er), frail, and can no longer care for myself..........the 3 S's rule applies. If she felt some compassion she could go for a box of some kind, cardboard or pine but nothing more.
Should I be concerned if she starts showing more intrest in my guns?????
And before anyone says anything about joking in a thread like this.....you will notice none of that was in purple.
Oooops! Accidentally pos repped this post when I meant to neg it. Someone help!
Ranger, I've heard that line of reasoning before from anti gunners.
Whoever requests the permit should pay for it (paperwork, filing, etc...). Not because the fee would discourage folks, but because we should each pay our own way. No reason for YOU to pay for MY permits.I think the permit should be free.
Whoever requests the permit should pay for it (paperwork, filing, etc...). Not because the fee would discourage folks, but because we should each pay our own way. No reason for YOU to pay for MY permits.
I do agree that a "permit" of sorts is needed. If not for the health/sanitation reasons, than to at least allow FUTURE owners of the property to know there is a corpse buried in the yard.
All that said, it is too bad someone couldn't/wouldn't have stepped up to help this family out. It isn't like we were talking big money.
Paupers funeral, likely. Tax-funded burial or cremation. You and I pay to have them properly buried.what does this place do to medicaid/medicare recipients and their families who kick the bucket without a penny to their names? do they take the money out of their children's monthly check?
That's certainly what the world is coming to. Eventually, everything will be "free", because we pay our entire income in taxes. The socialist utopia.see, I thought thats what we paid taxes for
I hate the fact that govt charges tax paying citizen any more money just for a document ect. its like paying for a passport, license, or vehicle registration, its ridiculous!
Paupers funeral, likely. Tax-funded burial or cremation. You and I pay to have them properly buried.
I'd much rather you pay for only the services you use.
totally different things, people can use whatever argument they want against guns but its constitutionally protected by the 2nd amendment. we are talking about disease and death resulting from the improper burial of corpses. they will affect the water and ground, also if improperly sealed the bodies will release toxic chemicals into the air from underground. theres no way it would be sanitary for everyone to bury people in their back yards. I think a permit in this case is appropriate to make sure no one else is harmed. I think the permit should be free.
I've given out too much lately, but I'll take care of it when I recharge.
I do agree that a "permit" of sorts is needed. If not for the health/sanitation reasons, than to at least allow FUTURE owners of the property to know there is a corpse buried in the yard.
All that said, it is too bad someone couldn't/wouldn't have stepped up to help this family out. It isn't like we were talking big money.
I don't see it as totally different things. The only difference between my right to bury my loved ones on my property and my right to carry guns, is that one is named in the bill of rights, and the other is not named but included under the 9th amendment.
For the disease and death, how specifically is a dead human different than a dead dear/coyote/opossum/raccoon/squirrel/whatever? It's been recommended on this forum to leave shot coyotes in a pile as bait for other coyotes. I see dead critters all the time in the road or on the side of it. Should I be wearing a mask every time I go for a walk or a drive? My city cemetery is pretty dang small, I guarantee that all the folks around here who died during the time it was open were not buried there. Knowing the history of my house, it would not surprise me if there was a body somewhere on my property. I know for a fact that there are several critters buried on it, and none of them six feet deep. Should I move?
The coffin I want, since it's required that I be put in a box for cremation, is able to be ordered online and shipped directly to my house. But by law I can't do that. Only a funeral director can do that. How does that make it any safer? It only raises the cost.
Dross, I recharged.
Why should the future owners need to know if there is a body in their yard? Other than to not disturb their rest. It wouldn't surprise me if there was one in mine, if I happen to dig one up I'll replant it or turn it over to the authorities. Most likely replant it. If they were buried there, let them rest there. I have no problems with that.
And no, we are talking about big money. Google the average cost of a funeral. By my moms request we went cheap. Rented a coffin, no embalming, no cemetery plot. It wasn't cheap.
Plenty of human-specific pathogens. I doubt that other site recommended letting coyotes rot in your back yard, though.For the disease and death, how specifically is a dead human different than a dead dear/coyote/opossum/raccoon/squirrel/whatever?
So they don't try to drill a drinking water well right through the mess? I dunno, maybe lots of other reasons? If the PO's grandma died of a nasty infectious disease, I certainly would want to know if she was under 6" of topsoil right were my garden would be, or properly entombed and marked.Why should the future owners need to know if there is a body in their yard?
Plenty of human-specific pathogens. I doubt that other site recommended letting coyotes rot in your back yard, though.
So they don't try to drill a drinking water well right through the mess? I dunno, maybe lots of other reasons? If the PO's grandma died of a nasty infectious disease, I certainly would want to know if she was under 6" of topsoil right were my garden would be, or properly entombed and marked.
Even before we codified our customs in law, our ancestors had the good sense to plant the dead WAY from where they lived.
Granted, after a good 100 years or so, nothing but bones would remain and the vast majority of pathogens would be gone.
Besides, anyone see the movie Poltergeist?