Posted on 03/08/2015 9:23:11 AM PDT by Kaslin
There was yet another stunning display of lawlessness over the last couple of days in Washington D.C. It was bold, wanton, and right in the face of the authorities.
And it was awesome.
Children were sledding down Capitol Hill. This was despite a specific ban on sledding or skiing around the capitol. Both activities are expressly forbidden. To be fair, cross-country skiing IS allowed, but only for the purpose of transportation. Presumably, that's no fun at all and therefore totally OK.
Not everyone was happy about this, according to The Hill. Capitol Police Board Chairman and Senate Sgt. At Arms and Doorkeeper (aside: in this bloated-beyond-recognition world of government, the longer one's title the shorter one's effective reach and vision, apparently) Frank Larkin pointed out that the ban on sledding was actually done on behalf of the children.
He said that over 20,000 children a year are injured while sledding and that as the legal liability to municipalities looms large due to this, sledding on public property is banned all over the country.
In other words, everybody else is not doing it and so neither are we.
The chief doorkeeper and gravity-games compliance officer who overlooks the backyard of the nanny-state's palace played his part perfectly. Responding to D.C. Congressional representative Eleanor Holmes Norton's request to temporarily lift the ban, he simply replied that he was unable to even do that.
She even issued a press release, saying in part, "Because the (Capital Hill Police) Board did not enforce the sledding ban for many years, it is clearly within its power not to enforce it again during a four-day period."
Obviously, the only surprising fact about this aspect of the story is that Norton was on the common-sense side of an issue.
There was even a petition to get the ban lifted on www.change.org that had over 800 signatures. Frozen-grass roots activism, apparently.
On Thursday a semi-organized "sled-in" was held. Dozens of parents and children held a lesson in civil disobedience and whisked down the hill in the face of the capitol police. There were even protest signs. One said "Let My People Sled."
One parent, Tim Krepp, was told by an officer to stop with an officious "no sledding or skiing on Capitol grounds because of safety and property damage on Capitol grounds.
Krepp then connected the extraordinarily obvious dots, telling Fox News this:
On the DHS side, were seeing Congress embarrass itself in passing legislation. The fact they theyre lecturing us about safety … when dropping the ball resonates with me.
Indeed. Lecturing us while dropping the ball - that could not possibly have been stated any better. What's needed now is a sled-in against everything else they're doing at the top of Capitol Hill.
“Capitol Police Board Chairman and Senate Sgt. At Arms and Doorkeeper”
Think that’s on his business card?
Oddly enough, that's the same reasoning Preezy Obola uses to repeatedly violate The Constitution.
Kids fall down stairs:
Should the Feds ban 2 or 3 story homes? Should they ban homes with basements?
Banning sledding is just plain mean. Put up signs that state liability for injuries while sledding are the fault of the sledder.
I’m not against the kids having fun .. but there might have been another reason to stop the sledding.
If the snow is not that deep, sledding on it can damage the grass underneath .. causing it to die.
So .. maybe the rule was to prevent having to replace all that lawn .. by USING TAXPAYER DOLLARS.
Geeeeee .. I guess nobody thought of that.
And yet when Tim's kid gets hurt sledding on Capitol grounds, he will beat feet to the nearest lawyer to sue the government, since they have the deepest pockets.
Allow a little civil disobedience and the next thing you know you’re on that slippery slope.
Now, if only Boehner and McConnell would take a lesson and push back on big government.
Ha...there was an old cold war joke about suicides in the Evil Empire....
Difficult to commit suicide by jumping out from a basement.
"LET MY PEOPLE SLED!"
No lawns in the Constitution. Plant kudzu.
Just wait till they treat those sledders like they did that lady who rammed the Capitol Hill area in her car.
Have you been paying attention to the snowfall in the DC area this past winter? They have a couple feet to work with.
Grass is replaceable. Childhood isn’t.
Ha.Ha.Yep.
Having known someone died sledding (hit a tree and suffered fatal head injuries) and someone who broke heir neck sledding, I can understand the fear of damages and so on.
But kids need to do things that are risky sometimes. And heck, sledding is just plain fun!!
How about getting the kids’ parents to sign a release that they won’t sue if the kid gets hurt.
That’s clearly an assault saucer in the photo.
My goodness .. could you lean over any further to keep from getting my point ..?????????????????
We’re in debt 18 TRILLION DOLLARS .. is it necessary to use MORE OF OUR tax dollars to replace grass - WHEN WE SHOULDN’T HAVE TO ..??????????????????
How can so many people so obviously miss the point of everything I say .. it’s beginning to show a pattern of attack .. and I don’t like it.
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