25 Things About to Become Extinct

DG Hear

My Friend Kipper
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I just received this and am inclined to agree with it, but in no particular order. What do you think? Anything to add?
DG

25 Things About to Become Extinct


25. U.S. Post Office
They are pricing themselves out of existence. With e-mail, and online services they are a relic of the past. (refer to #9) Packages are also sent faster and cheaper with UPS.

24. Yellow Pages
This year will be pivotal for the global Yellow Pages industry. Much like newspapers, print Yellow Pages will continue to bleed dollars to their various digital counterparts, from Internet Yellow Pages (IYPs), to local search engines and combination search/listing services like Reach Local and Yodel Factors like 20 an acceleration of the print 'fade rate' and the looming recession will contribute to the onslaught. One research firm predicts the falloff in usage of newspapers and print Yellow Pages could even reach 10% this year -- much higher than the 2%-3% fade rate seen in past years.

23.Classified Ads
The Internet has made so many things obsolete that newspaper classified ads might sound like just another trivial item on a long list. But this is one of those harbingers of the future that could signal the end of civilization as we know it. The argument is that if newspaper classifieds are replaced by free online listings at sites like Craigslist.org and Google Base, then newspapers are not far behind them.

22. Movie Rental Stores
While Netflix is looking up at the moment, Blockbuster keeps closing store locations by the hundreds. It still has about 6,000 left across the world, but those keep dwindling and the stock is down considerably in 2008, especially since the company gave up a quest of Circuit City. Movie Gallery, which owned the Hollywood Video brand, closed up shop earlier this year. Countless small video chains and mom-and-pop stores have given up the ghost already.

21. Dial-up Internet Access
Dial-up connections have fallen from 40% in 2001 to 10% in 2008. The combination of an infrastructure to accommodate affordable high speed Internet connections and the disappearing home phone have all but pounded the final nail in the coffin of dial-up Internet access.

20. Phone Land Lines
According to a survey from the National Center for Health Statistics, at the end of 2007, nearly one in six homes was cell-only and, of those homes that had land lines, one in eight only received calls on their cells.

19. Chesapeake Bay Blue Crabs
Maryland's icon, the blue crab, has been fading away in Chesapeake Bay. Last year Maryland saw the lowest harvest (22 million pounds) since 1945. Just four decades ago the bay produced 96 million pounds. The population is down 70% since 1990, when they first did a formal count. There are only about 120 million crabs in the bay and they think they need 200 million for a sustainable population. Over-fishing, pollution, invasive species and global warming get the blame.

18. VCRs
For the better part of three decades, the VCR was a best-seller and staple in every American household until being completely decimated by the DVD, and now the Digital Video Recorder (DVR). In fact, the only remnants of the VHS age at your local Wal-Mart or Radio Shack are blank VHS tapes these days. Pre-recorded VHS tapes are largely gone and VHS decks are practically nowhere to be found. They served us so well.

17. Ash Trees
In the late 1990's, a pretty, iridescent green species of beetle, now known as the emerald ash borer, hitched a ride to North America with ash wood products imported from eastern Asia. In less than a decade, its larvae have killed millions of trees in the
Midwest, and continue to spread. They've killed more than 30 million ash trees in southeastern Michigan alone, with tens of millions more lost in Ohio and Indiana.. More than 7.5 billion ash trees=2 0are currently at risk.

16. Ham Radio
Amateur radio operators enjoy personal (and often worldwide) wireless communications with each other and are able to support their communities with emergency and disaster communications if necessary, while increasing their personal knowledge of electronics and radio theory. However, proliferation of the Internet and its popularity among youth has caused the decline of amateur radio. In the past five years alone, the number of people holding active ham radio licenses has dropped by 50,000, even though Morse Code is no longer a requirement.

15. The Swimming Hole
Thanks to our litigious society, swimming holes are becoming a thing of the past. '20/20' reports that swimming hole owners, like Robert Every in High Falls, NY, are shutting them down out of worry that if someone gets hurt they'll sue.. And that's exactly what happened in Seattle. The city of Bellingham was sued by Katie Hofstetter who was paralyzed in a fall at a popular swimming hole in Whatcom Falls Park. As injuries occur and lawsuits follow, expect more swimming holes to post 'Keep out!' signs.

14. Answering Machines
The increasing disappearance of answering machines is directly tied to No 20 our list -- the decline of landlines. According to USA Today, the number of homes that only use cell phones jumped 159% between 2004 and 2007. It has been particularly ba d in New York; since 2000, landline usage has dropped 55%. It's logical that as cell phones rise, many of them replacing traditional landlines, that there will be fewer answering machines.

13. Cameras That Use Film
It doesn't require a statistician to prove the rapid disappearance of the film camera in America. Just look to companies like Nikon, the professional' s choice for quality camera equipment. In 2006, it announced that it would stop making film cameras, pointing to the shrinking market -- only 3% of i ts sales in 2005, compared to 75% of sales from digital cameras and equipment.

12. Incandescent Bulbs
Before a few years ago, the standard 60-watt (or, yikes, 100-watt) bulb was the mainstay of every U.S. home. With the green movement and all-things-sustaina ble-energy crowd, the Compact Fluorescent Lightbulb (CFL) is largely replacing the older, Edison-era incandescent bulb. The EPA reports that 2007 sales for Energy Star CFLs nearly doubled from 2006, and these sales accounted for approximately 20 percent of the U.S. light bulb market. And according to USA Today, a new energy bill plans to phase out incandescent bulbs in the next four to 12 years.

11. Stand-Alone Bowling Alleys
Bowling Balls. US claims there are still 60 million Americans who bowl at least once a year, but many are not bowling in stand-alone bowling alleys. Today most new bo wling alleys are part of facilities for all types or recreation including laser tag, go-karts, bumper cars, video game arcades, climbing walls and glow miniature golf.
Bowling lanes also have been added to many non-traditional venues such as adult communities, hotels and resorts, and gambling casinos.

10. The Milkman
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 1950, over half of the milk delivered was to the home in quart bottles, by 1963, it was about a third and by 2001, it represented only 0.4% percent. Nowadays most milk is sold through supermarkets in gallon jugs. The steady decline in home-delivered milk is blamed, of course, on the rise of the supermarket, better home refrigeration and longer-lasting milk. Although some milkmen still make the rounds in pockets of the U.S., they are certainly a dying breed..

9. Hand-Written Letters
In 2006, the Radicati Group estimated that, worldwide, 183 billion e-mails were sent each day.. Two million each second. By November of 2007, an estimated 3.3 billion Earthlings owned cell phones, and 80% of the world's population had access to ce ll phone coverage. In 2004, half-a-trillion text messages were sent, and the number has no doubt increased exponentially since then. So where amongst this gorge of gabble is there room for the elegant, polite hand-written letter?

8. Wild Horses
It is estimated that 100 years ago, as many as two million horses were roaming free within the United States. In 2001, National Geographic News estimated that the wild horse population has decreased to about 50,000 head. Currently, the National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory board states that there are 32,000 free roaming horses in ten Western states, with half of them residing in Nevada. The Bureau of Land Management is seeking to reduce the total number of free range horses to 27,000, possibly by selective euthanasia.

7. Personal Checks
According to an American Bankers Assoc. report, a net 23% of consumers plan to decrease their use of checks over the next two years, while a net 14% plan to increase their use of PIN debit. Bill payment remains the last stronghold of paper-based payments -- for the time being. Checks continue to be the most commonly used bill payment method, with 71% of consumers paying at least one recurring bill per month by writing a check. However, a bill-by-bill basis, checks account for only 49% of consumers' recurring bill payments (down from 72% in 2001 and 60% in 2003)..

6. Drive-in Theaters
During the peak in 1958, there were more than 4,000 drive-in theaters in this country, but in 2007 only 405 drive-ins were still operating. Exactly zero new drive-ins have been built since 2005. Only one reopened in 2005 and five reop ened in 2006, so there isn't much of a movement toward reviving the closed ones.

5.. Mumps & Measles
Despite what's been in the news lately, the measles and mumps actually, truly are disappearing from the United States.. In 1964, 212,000 cases of mumps wer e reported in the U.S. By 1983, this figure had dropped to 3,000, thanks to a vigorous
vaccination program. Prior to the introduction of the measles vaccine, approximately half a million cases of measles were reported in the U.S. annually, resulting in 450 deaths. In 2005, only 66 cases were recorded.

4. Honey Bees
Perhaps nothing on our list of disappearing America is so dire; plummeting so enormously; and so necessary to the survival of our food supply as the honey bee. Very scary. 'Colony Collapse Disorder,' or CCD, has spread throughout the U.S. and Europe over the past few years, wiping out 50% to 90% of the colonies of many
beekeepers -- and along with it, their livelihood.

3. News Magazines and TV News
While the TV evening newscasts haven't gone anywhere over the last several decades, their audiences have. In 1984, in a story about the diminishing returns of the evening news, the New York Times reported that all three network evening-news programs combined had only 40.9 million viewers.. Fast forward to 2008, and what they have today is half that.

2.. Analog TV
According to the Consumer Electronics Association, 85% of homes in the U.S. get their television programming through cable or satellite providers. For the remaining 15% -- or 13 million individuals -- who are using rabbit ears or a large outdoor antenna to get their local stations, change is in the air. If you are one of these people you'll need to get a new TV or a converter box in order to get the new stations which will only be broadcast in digital..

1. The Family Farm
Since the 1930's, the number of family farms has been declining rapidly. According to the USDA, 5.3 million farms dotted the nation in 1950, but this number had declined to 2.1 million by the 2003 farm census (data from the 2007 census is just now being published). Ninety-one percent of the U.S. FARMS are small Family Farms.
 
The album. You'll buy your music song by song on iTunes.
 
Interesting list, DG, illuminating...

I would suggest that old die hard 'Hams', like myself, will keep amateur radio and CB, Citizens Band, alive forever as a means to commicate, (with battery power), when all else fails.

The family farm, economically, is waning, of course, a natural thing I think, but many Cities are becoming unliveable and the suburbs as well. I can't document this, but somewhere I read of a great migration to small town America and the countryside as people desire to become more self sufficient.

The incandescent bulb...maybe...although the CFR's, have toxic materials in them, and public dump sites will not openly accept the hazardous material. This is something pushed by the environmentalists and the EPA in government without consideration of the consequences....dunno...

Nice post...

ami
 
Good list but you missed a couple.

The D.I.Y.'er. The Backyard Mechanic and the Home Improvement People have gone the way of the Mom and Pop Restaraunt. Unless you have the computers and specalized tools needed to fix todays cars you are on you're own. Unless you have the power to get the permits needed to do the work on your home you'll soon be unable to do it.

Personal Responsibility. Drink too much? Blame the Beer Makers. Smoke too much? Blame the Tobacco Companies. Take Drugs? Blame anyone you care to. Rape someone? Blame the victim. Rob a gas station? Blame society. Sue, sue, sue. That's the public mantra now. It's not your fault it's someone elses.

American. No longer do we have just plain Americans. Now we have Polish-Americans, Irish-Americans, Italian-Americans, Afro-Americans, German-Americans, Gay-Americans, Asexual-Americans and of course the Illegal-Americans. What ever happened to the just plain American? (Am I the last of the breed?)

Cat
 
Pubic Crabs can probably be added to this list. With recent trends in trimming and removal, the little guys just don't have as many ways to get around.

The KKK - it boasted 6 million members in the 1920s, but now only has about 6,000 members, according to wikipedia. It wouldn't shock me if most of those members were born before the baby boom.

Vinyl Records - Although kept alive by collectors and DJs for a while, these days no DJ wants to lug around a bag of heavy albums when a Laptop or portable hard drive will do. New vinyl releases are generally novelty items, and the younger generation likes the way CDs sound better.

TV Laugh tracks/Live studio audience - outside of children's shows, you're unlikely to hear a laugh-track in most modern single-camera sitcoms. Modern audiences are perfectly happy deciding for themselves what is funny or not. And tv shows are too heavily edited and include special effects and various sets to the point where a live studio audience, once a staple of television, is long gone outside of some game shows and talk shows.

-------------------------------

Regarding the list:

The USPS will survive. It's still extremely valuable as a cheap advertising method for a lot of businesses who want to target the local market and may not be able to afford online advertising. They keep threatening to cut Saturday service, but I wonder if the trigger will every actually be pulled on that. They're competitive with FedEx and UPS on packages.

Yellow Pages and Classified Ads exist, just online. The interesting thing is craigslist's business model has sucked a lot of the profit from the market. Craig is kind of a hippy and has little interest in growing his business and making a lot of money, and passes the savings on to the consumer.

Moving on... will anyone *really* miss technology that is 20 years old and itself replaced something? VCRs... Answering machines...

The Swimming Hole was dead when I was a kid in the early 1980s, at least in any area that could afford a municipal pool (or backyard swimming pools!). As gross as chlorine and other kids' pee is, leeches and other parasites are far nastier.

The end of Film Cameras is an interesting one, as for a long time digital just couldn't compete for high end photography, even if it was cheaper and more convenient for your family christmas photos. The big turning point is retouching; once digital images got to be good enough to look the same as film to the human eye, digital retouching is a breeze compared to old school retouching.

I think bowling alleys will always have a certain niche appeal, although many have bars with karaoke and some video games. It's a group activity that gets more fun the more you drink... what's not to love?

The Milkman? As noted, by 2001 he was already long gone.

Personal Checks are still the easiest way to pay the rent or to repay a friend for anything over $40. Yeah, a lot of it has gone online, but I couldn't give up my checkbook tomorrow. Businesses have pushed checks out of the store line, and for good reason; they're slow, and more likely to bounce than debit or credit cards.

I'm amazed there were still 405 drive-ins around in 2007.

3. should have been "Network News". Obviously 24 hour cable news and the internet have replaced it.
 
Poor wild horses. :( Damn government. :mad:

I agree. Although, upon recollection, wild horses are considered an exotic species in North America, and not native, thereby elimintaing themselves by default. I doubt the rest of the world's population is in the same danger, and thus not on the brink of extinction.
 
The USPS is generally cheaper than UPS or FEDEX, at least in the small package department. After years of shipping electronic equipment to be repaired or warranteed via UPS or FEDEX, I discovered USPS was about 30% cheaper for the same service.

Missing from the list: Approximately 100 animal species per year go extinct. Looking at this statistic from the canary-in-the-coal-mine perspective, it does not bode well for the planet earth.

Civility - the latest discussion on civility blames TV violence and attitudes for the lack of civility in today's schools. At this rate, we may never see our society as civil as it has been in previous decades.

Critical thinking - with schools teaching to the test, and political discussions reduced to slogans with no relation to facts, it appears as though critical thinking has fallen by the wayside, replaced by posturing and propaganda.
 
The end of Film Cameras is an interesting one, as for a long time digital just couldn't compete for high end photography, even if it was cheaper and more convenient for your family christmas photos.

I've been watching PBS recently and have wondered how the heirs to Ken Burns and similar documentary makers will be able to reconstruct our age?

Film Cameras, Handwritten Letters, books, newspapers--even microfilm archives of newspapers, are being digitized and encoded on disks and memory cards. Movies that were never in theaters and only released on VHS -- or even older movies only released on BetaMAX tapes -- and all the video home movies taken since the 70's killed 8mm and 16mm movies are all but gone and the hardware required to display them is fast failing to mechanical failure and disuse.

As much as I hated watching home movies on film as a child, I still have a couple of reels in a box of old stuff and I can still see the images even though I don't have a projector. I can't do that with the VHS equivalent of my Granddaughter's school recitals or even some of the older digital videos.


So to those listing blamed on the internet killing old technologies, we can probably add archeology and historical documentaries because WE are going to pass without an information trail to mark our lives.
 
Add teachers and perfessers to the list. Theyre expensive and ineffective and doomed. There's no reason the very best educators cant produce their material for online presentation.

Mom & Pop stores are doomed.

Public transportation is doomed. Who wants to risk interacting with ghetto bunnies with free passes to ride?
 
The USPS is generally cheaper than UPS or FEDEX, at least in the small package department. After years of shipping electronic equipment to be repaired or warranteed via UPS or FEDEX, I discovered USPS was about 30% cheaper for the same service.
Selling on Ebay, I found that most Ebay sellers only ship USPS because it's cheaper and more reliable than UPS and FedX most of the time. It's also less complicated for those of us who live in rural areas where there are no UPS stores and have to wait for a driver to show up eventually to pick up packages.

As for everything else on the list, I think some of those things are purely regional. Around here in the Midwest, things are very different than say on the coasts. There are just some Mom and Pop places I could never see closing. A local grocery store I shop at has been thriving right next door to Walmart for decades. There are still century family farms that are kicking ass and taking names. Little boys still want to grow up to be farmers. I wouldn't count them out just yet. Though, the bees look quite confused, that does worry me. :(
 
SCARLETT

Of course there will always be farriers to shoe horses, the Smithsonian will employ a few souls with ancient & arcane skills, but it looks to me like the mega-corporations wanna kill mom & pop and force you to settle for what the big box has on the shelf.
In 10 years if you want seafood you'll go to RED LOBSTER, if you want steak you'll go to OUTBACK, burgers? McDONALDS. There wont be options becuz only the BIG will be able to fund the socialism of America.
 
Poor wild horses. :( Damn government. :mad:

Why does the government get blamed for this? They have to cull the herds because of budget cuts to the Bureau of Land Management. You want smaller government, you get less protection of natural resources like mustangs.

Why not blame the ranchers and developers who have taken over the horses' natural habitat? Why is it always government?

"BLM has overseen the protection and management of America's wild and free-roaming horses and burros on public land since December 15, 1971 with approval of The Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act, (P.L. 92-195) which declares, in part...

"Congress finds and declares that wild free-roaming horses and burros are living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West; (and) that they contribute to the diversity of life forms within the Nation and enrich the lives of the American people ..."

The horses and burros are protected. The budget for enabling this protection isn't.

"It [the culling] is part of a scheme that has resulted in 33,000 mustangs being caught, with only about 26,000 left to roam. Some of the horses will be put up for adoption. Others will be released, but only after the mares have been given contraceptives.

What happens to the rest, especially the older ones, is not clear, although one thing is for sure: with budgets being cut because of the recession, feeding and housing captured mustangs is not a priority."


--Times online 9/12/09
 
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I've been watching PBS recently and have wondered how the heirs to Ken Burns and similar documentary makers will be able to reconstruct our age?

...

So to those listing blamed on the internet killing old technologies, we can probably add archeology and historical documentaries because WE are going to pass without an information trail to mark our lives.

They will look it up on the internet?

In the era of blogging and youtube, it's relatively easy to construct an idea of a total stranger's life. And that's before the possibility of access to individual e-mail accounts or hard drives. And that's also before the fact we have a broader, more diverse news media than ever documenting and collecting all sorts of information.

Also, people still create physical copies of images. Digital files are actually safer from things like fire and heat damage than film stock. The original prints of many classic films have been lost, but those shot on digital are trivial to back up perfectly.

The digital age is a dream for archiving life. The big challenge for future generations will be sifting through it all.
 
Of course there will always be farriers to shoe horses, the Smithsonian will employ a few souls with ancient & arcane skills, but it looks to me like the mega-corporations wanna kill mom & pop and force you to settle for what the big box has on the shelf.
In 10 years if you want seafood you'll go to RED LOBSTER, if you want steak you'll go to OUTBACK, burgers? McDONALDS. There wont be options becuz only the BIG will be able to fund the socialism of America.

*clap.... clap.... clap...*

JBJ, I have to give you credit. This is the worst piece of logic I think I've ever seen anyone post on this board.

You are blaming socialism for mega-corporations, the very jewel of capitalism and bane of hippies? Sam Walton, capitalist and socialist hater, has done far more to destroy mom and pop than any government action.

Really, what has happened is mom and pop have had to shift from consumer goods to the service industry. The local sporting goods store or appliance store are all but gone. However, my mechanic, barber, favorite coffee shop, and favorite restaurants are all independently owned. Yeah, there are chains in those industries, but they can't provide anything better than mediocre service. And you can't order a haircut or fresh cup of coffee over the internet!
 
They will look it up on the internet?
...
The digital age is a dream for archiving life. The big challenge for future generations will be sifting through it all.

How many internet page haves you bookmarked and then found that they had gone tits up when you got around to cleaningup your bookmarks tab?

How many computers have you owned in your life and how many saved e0mails vanished forever when computer they were saved on died?

The companies that hosted my first four primary e-mail addresses are gone, unarchived and unretreivable.

I used to do a good bit of programming. All of those digital files stillexist, but the computers required to read them are gone -- mot just mine, but all but a few inoperable museum pieces. I have information in my "junk" pile on old hard drives and 5.25 and 3.5 inch floppies that no modern computer can read becaue the HDDC chips and Floppy Controller chips to read them aren't made any more.

Digital archiving -- such as google.books and the gutenburg project -- is great for modern researchers but how about those who have gone as far beyond the internet as the internet has gone beyond 8 inch floppy drives tape drives and hard drives the size of walk-in freezers?

Digital archives produce absolutely accurate copies every time they're accessed, but what happens when their servers crash or power goes out? How do you read them in a post-apocalyptic world without power?
 
Why does the government get blamed for this? They have to cull the herds because of budget cuts to the Bureau of Land Management. You want smaller government, you get less protection of natural resources like mustangs.

Why not blame the ranchers and developers who have taken over the horses' natural habitat? Why is it always government?

"BLM has overseen the protection and management of America's wild and free-roaming horses and burros on public land since December 15, 1971 with approval of The Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act, (P.L. 92-195) which declares, in part...

"Congress finds and declares that wild free-roaming horses and burros are living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West; (and) that they contribute to the diversity of life forms within the Nation and enrich the lives of the American people ..."

The horses and burros are protected. The budget for enabling this protection isn't.

"It [the culling] is part of a scheme that has resulted in 33,000 mustangs being caught, with only about 26,000 left to roam. Some of the horses will be put up for adoption. Others will be released, but only after the mares have been given contraceptives.

What happens to the rest, especially the older ones, is not clear, although one thing is for sure: with budgets being cut because of the recession, feeding and housing captured mustangs is not a priority."


--Times online 9/12/09

Honestly? Because it always seems to boils down to them. I'll admit I may be wrong, but IMO it is the government's responsibility to care for all beneath it, and not only humans.
 
The USPS is generally cheaper than UPS or FEDEX, at least in the small package department. After years of shipping electronic equipment to be repaired or warranteed via UPS or FEDEX, I discovered USPS was about 30% cheaper for the same service.

Missing from the list: Approximately 100 animal species per year go extinct. Looking at this statistic from the canary-in-the-coal-mine perspective, it does not bode well for the planet earth.

Civility - the latest discussion on civility blames TV violence and attitudes for the lack of civility in today's schools. At this rate, we may never see our society as civil as it has been in previous decades.

Critical thinking - with schools teaching to the test, and political discussions reduced to slogans with no relation to facts, it appears as though critical thinking has fallen by the wayside, replaced by posturing and propaganda.


Hear hear.

I don't think any of the technology will ever disappear, you will always have people who collect and retain technology, just for the history sake. There'll be a club out there somewhere!!

The USPS is brilliant. I've used them many times on my long sojourns in Az, and I was amazed at how cheaply I could send out a lot of packages to family and friends all over the world. Ma in law frequently sends us one of the 'box''. You buy the box, fill it with whatever, and no matter what's in there, or what it weighs (within reason), it is posted off for a set price for that size box. Brilliant. Wish we had it over here. I order stuff off the internet to sent overseas, but I still love to wrap and post packages. Even waiting in line at the post office doesn't bother me. It's great feeling sending off parcels and gifts to friends and family. Nothing beats it.

Technology at the moment, is its own worst enemy. It's evolving so fast, it's making itself redundant day after day after day. And personally, I find much of it far too complicated. Take mobiles. I wanted a phone. That's all, just a phone that I could use to call people. The one they gave me, does everything bar make tea, it has a touch screen which drives me insane, and I find it far too complicated to use. End of my contract I'll be changing it back to a simple phone.

I love technology when it's a definite improvement on what already exists, but when it's just technology for technology sake, then I'm totally against it. If it ain't broke, don't fix it, is still my mantra. Luddite I may be, but I think a lot of people feel the same way.
 
Just a point.

Not everyone has a computer. Not everyone wants a computer.

Many old people, including my folks, don't have a computer, and at 89 and 90 wouldn't know what to do with one, they can barely understand how to use a DVD player.

The assumption now rife, that everyone has a computer, and if you want to 'contact us', then just go to our website. Want to apply for a job? Do it on line, we don't send out paper application forms any more? Have a question about your tax, your pension, your insurance.....send us an e-mail.

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

I want to be able to talk to a person.

Arrogant and exclusive. It pisses me off big time.
 
I just learned that spelling is extinct in my local school system. They stopped teaching spelling becuz computers have spell-check.
 
Honestly? Because it always seems to boils down to them. I'll admit I may be wrong, but IMO it is the government's responsibility to care for all beneath it, and not only humans.

"Because it always seems to boils down to them."

LOL. Yes, you're right. The government is the root of ALL evil. Everyone else on here blames them for everything, so it MUST be true.

Well, darling, a government agency can't function without money. And when you slash the BLM's budget so that they don't have the funds to do what we elected them to do, this is what you get. Horses that must be culled so they all don't starve to death.

Now why don't we gut the EPA and see what that does for the environment, and take the knife to the FDA, and see what happens to the safety of our drugs and food? Then we can blame the resulting disasters on the government too, because it always seems to boil down to them.

Or here's an idea: why don't we privatize the herds? Sell them to Big Business? I'm sure they'll have a much more efficient solution for 33,000 wild horse that no one wants to pay for. Watch the cost of dogfood plummet.
 
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It's a poor workman who blames his tools. And that's all government is, a tool. So if there are problems with it the blame falls on us, the people that chose the government.

And the main reason civility is going out the door is because a large segment of the population no longer believes in civility. And, oddly enough, most often they are the ones who complain most frequently and loudly about the lack of civility in society. ;)
 
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