Sunday, September 07, 2008

Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head

Who owns the rain?
Good grief.

Well, I guess if we ever incur a loss from said rain via flooding, traffic accidents, power loss, etc., we ought to go after its "owners" for damages.

That door swings both ways, doesn't it?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

But but the 'only ones' can't have liability for their actions or they wouldn't be able to do their job holding us liable for our actions! -The word of the Unity Gov., now genuflect to the power and wisdom of the state..

Anonymous said...

I guess you are dammed if you do and dammed if you don't.

Kent McManigal said...

Never let the agents of the state know what you are doing, whether it is your guns, your water, or your own body. It is none of their business.

Sean said...

Next, it'll be the air we breathe. In Missouri, they charge a tax built into the water/sewage bill, hidden by the bureaucrats of course, that denotes the run-off from your property from the rain. It's figured by how much roof you have and the driveway, sidewalks,etc. Same as here in Tejas. It was duly noted in the papers, but buried, and not many people are aware. Anyway, it works into the storm drains, different from the sewer, but part of the system. Then, when the storm drains are in need of repair, they tax us some more, sell tax-free munincipal bonds to their fat cat buddies to finance them, and kick back and admire the thousands of sheep grazing on THEIR land. And tax the sheep some more, to finance the govt.schools, so the kids can be dumbed down further, and made more compliant, and if the illegal aliens need money for their districts, Tejas just gives them some from the more prosperous sheep, a legacy from George Bush, called the Robin Hood law, from when the backstabbing bastard was governor here.