yes, dear you do have a problem.
I found you on Facebook and you would appear to be about what I thought.
you don't even know anything about me and yet you make rude and snide remarks....
that I am "isolated", therefore stupid, I presume?
that the "river puts off some vibe...yadayada"
I don't agree with BTDT saying they don't need help and they are tough and resilient but BTDT is polite and I will let him make his point that I don't agree with because he is courteous.
you, however, are inflamatory. Herein lies your problem. Why do you feel you need to be this way which gets the whole original discussion off track?
FYI: (sigh) I may live east river (by 10 miles) but I have many good friends and family west river.
I have a son who, as I said before, is an attorney in Rapid City...here is his bio...(coming from isolation XBAR will be interested to see)
http://www.costelloporter.com/attorneys.php?id=112 he serves a good number of the affected ranchers
I have another son who works for a world-based company based out of Baltimore MD, BUT lives in Black Hawk, SD, a community of Rapid City. Coming from the isolated conditions XBAR indicates we are under, I am sure he will be surprised to hear that this young man makes a great 6 figure income and he can live anywhere in the world he chooses, BUT he chooses Black Hawk, SD,
working from an office IN HIS HOME...
XBAR, do you know what "pro bono" work is? I am sure you do because you are so worldly and I am so isolated.....
As proud and pleased as I am with my two sons and their careers, I am much more proud of their philosophy of life; their attitudes of giving back to
their communities....the attorney does his share of free work for those that can't pay; in fact he has one client that brings him a box of candy every
so often as her only payment and he enjoys that. The other son is the first one to donate his time and talents to needing situations; both of these young men feel not that they are ABOVE anyone, but that we have an OBLIGATION in life to give back to those in need or to those less fortunate. They are polite, courteous and encouraging, perhaps XBAR, you could add those 3 words to your persona.
So back to my original topic,
150,000 dead cattle in South Dakota.....
it will be impossible for a great many of the affected ranchers to survive without government assistance. especially for the young folks whose cattle were carrying loans on them....unlike small business owners in Katrina, who could have and should have purchased insurance for their businesses, insurance on livestock is very prohibitive cost wise IF you can get it. Many of the dead cows were carrying borrowed money; how can a loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars be "survived" by only being "tough and persevering"?
Another thing that is puzzling is why some on this board feel that these ranchers don't want help?
this article just came out in the New York Times...
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/16/us/as-south-dakota-ranchers-face-storms-toll-us-helping-hands-are-tied.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20131016&_r=3&
Ranchers pay lots and lots in personal property taxes, and XBAR, even as isolated as I am, I KNOW this
because I am one of those property owners that pays out thousands in personal property taxes. We ranchers also pay taxes on all of our purchases, which is supplies, we do purchase lots and lots of fuel, seed, fertilizer, spray, fencing supplies for miles of fences....why, when something of this magnitude occurs can't ranchers have assistance from that same government who collects all of those tax dollars from us?