Posted on 05/25/2017 1:44:55 PM PDT by Morgana
Members of an Amish community in Kentucky may take their cases to court after being cited for violating an ordinance requiring horses to wear bags to catch their droppings.
The Bowling Green Daily News reports 13 members of the Swartzentruber Amish sect in Auburn appeared in court Wednesday and were told their trials will begin August 2 if they can't settle the cases before then.
The defendants belong to a conservative sect that rejects motor vehicles and most modern technology and travel by horse-drawn buggies. They believe the bags violate their community's religious standards.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
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There you are on the side of stupidity again.
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I’m fairly sure the Amish around Etheridge TN use poop bags on their buggy horses
They’re Arabian horses, so they get a pass.
You pwnd him
Hey man nice shot
“There you are on the side of stupidity again.”
I’m in the side of people not having their horses crap in the street.
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You’re a proponent of every stupid idea on Earth.
“Youre a proponent of every stupid idea on Earth.”
I’m a proponent of horse crap not being in the street.
Mr. Ed Akhbar!
Yes, that’s it. Right before downtown Princeton.
Oh, noes!
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People have lived just fine with horse poop and camel poop in the streets for 6000 years; what is so damned special now?
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Time for a big batch of Jury Nullification!
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They drink raw milk, too!!!!!!!
It’s not necessarily hypocrisy.
The Amish rejection of (most) technology isn’t for its own sake. It has to do largely with what might help or harm the community, as well as wanting to maintain a visible separation from the “English.”
For example, for the most part Amish don’t have phones, because (for example), they are conducive to gossip, offer a direct line to the world that they want to keep separate from, and they reduce personal visiting. Hence they could be viewed as a net harm to the community. On the other hand, Amish leaders recognize the usefulness of a phone in an emergency - needing to call a vet or an ambulance, say. Hence the “phone shanty,” an outbuilding housing a communal phone that they can use if they need it, but it’s in public, so it is more difficult to abuse.
Sociologist Donald Kraybill, who lives in Amish country, wrote a very interesting article for Wired several years back about the implications of mobile phones for the Amish community, since you no longer need to be tied to a building to use a phone but can just stick it discreetly in your pocket?
Similarly, there are probably many good reasons why an Amish family might not want their own computer: it’s a time-waster, it requires that same connection to the world since it requires both electricity and a phone line; there’s the potential for abusing it, such as watching porn. On the other hand, hiring someone to put up a Web page advertising your quilts is useful for your business, while avoiding all those other problems. (And it’s probably fair to point out that the aforementioned Web site in the previous post actually belongs to the local chamber of commerce, and may well simply mean that the quilt-maker is a member.)
The Amish’s ethic concerning technology draws a distinction between ownership and use. Once that is recognized, what appears to be “hypocrisy” actually makes sense by their logic.
“People have lived just fine with horse poop and camel poop in the streets for 6000 years; what is so damned special now?”
And just under 200 years ago major cites in the United States had insufficient sewage systems and all sorts of poop flowed in the streets. Cholera epidemics were common and killed thousands of people.
Or horses dwelling in a sanctuary city.
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You post much nonsense.
Cities are usually what is wrong.
Disease is always due to sin, not inadequate sewers.
Horse poop has never caused human disease, NEVER!
Same for cow poop, goat poop, and sheep poop.
Your hatred of Godly people is what is tripping you up on this.
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