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Wednesday, January 15, 2025

City of Louisville Proves that No Good Deed Goes Unpunished

Every once in a while, you’ll wade through the news clutter to find a story that restores your faith in humanity. One of those was happening right down the street from my house in Louisville, Kentucky. Unfortunately, that story does not have a happy ending.
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-Chuck

13 comments:

  1. Land of the free, eh? It is UNPOSSIBLE to fucking hate government enough.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agreed.
      Just like fema kicking helene victims out of temporary housing and hotels.
      -lg

      Delete
  2. Nothing a bureaucrat can’t make worse

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  3. Anyone e who has ever dealt with "local government" could have seen this coming. Nobody is as petty as the politicians running a city.

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  4. Despite the great charitable intentions of the store owner Liberal politicians are never "kind" when it comes to applying the "rules" to crush capitalist entrepreneurs.

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  5. Make Tar and Feathers Great Again

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    Replies
    1. Winner, winner, chicken dinner!

      Delete
    2. The problem would still exist.
      Morbark is the solution.

      TMF Bert

      Delete
  6. Where I live in California, if you try to sell eggs from your own coop, you'll feel the FULL WEIGHT of the county on your back. If you're a MEXCIAN, you can set up a taco stand right down the street from the dung heap of the local dairy, and it's "Have fun, kids!"

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  7. The Bureaucracy must be maintained at all costs.
    The Bureaucracy is the reason, not the tool.
    There is no sacrifice too great for the Bureaucracy.
    The Bureaucracy is the reason.
    One must have the proper permits for the Bureaucracy to feed upon.

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  8. Ve haf ze rules und ze regulashuns. Und if you do not follow ze rules und ze regulashuns ve vill put you in ze kooler.

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  9. I built a shed in my backyard. Concrete pad, asphalt shingles, insulated, electrical, painted, looked great, etc. Had about $3000 invested. It was there for 10 years. It was about 15 feet from the sidewalk, but it was next to my block wall fence. Then, out of the blue, one day I was notified by the La Quinta code inspector that the shed was too close to the property line, which was legally not on the sidewalk but was on the fence. Even though I was held responsible for maintenance, weeding and upkeep of the 15 feet of bare land, between the fence and the sidewalk, but the city said the property line was the fence. After much yelling on my part and under threat of forcible destruction of the shed and forced payment for removal of debris, I had to tear it down. 10 years without complaint and then ordered to destroy it.

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  10. Louisville is the liberal center of Kentucky. I can not stand the place. The rest of Kentucky is more sane.

    ReplyDelete

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