I'm going to try to complete my "things I'm wondering about" blog that was interrupted Monday afternoon. I'm still wondering about Jimmy, Black Caviar's brother, in Australia. The vets' still say he's in "stable condition" and that he appears to be making progress. His pain medications are being slowly decreased, and he ate well over the weekend. Considering the amount of care he has been given, I hope that the colt will make it to the breeding shed, even if he doesn't make it to the track.
Here it is Wednesday, and I'm still wondering about the newspaper headlines Monday morning that described Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning as "hobbled." Peyton had extra bracing, padding, and tons of tape around his high right ankle strain. It looked thick and ungainly. But, during the entire game, Cris Collingsworth was watching Manning's movements, and he only made one comment about the quarterback seeming to be hampered by the sprain and the extra support. And, really, "hobbled?" I have hobbled horses many times in my life, and Peyton Manning was not moving as if he had a pair of hobbles around his ankles. Hobbles can vary widely in materials they are made of, in width around the "ankle," and in the length of the strap/chain/rope that determines the size of step a horse can take. Peyton Manning was not hobbled in any way, shape, or form.
I'm still wondering about the five children in the care of the couple in Monroe, Union County, North Carolina. Their Foster Care license expired in 2010 - three years ago. They lived in Union County, but the children were supposedly under the supervision of a neighboring county's Social Services. It turns out that the children were home schooled, and this is why no teachers, counselors, or administrators were aware of their plight. No social worker had visited the family in more than three years. What still astounds me is that the female of the couple was the Director of Social Services in Union County, where they resided. It still blows my mind.
I'm wondering about the laws of our country - the man who attacked the woman next door on Monday afternoon was released from jail Tuesday afternoon. The only reason I know this is because two men, who didn't live in the building, came walking down the hall this morning, looking for names on door plates. (I think there are six apartments out of 80 that actually have a name posted.) I asked if I could help them find someone, and they said they were Boulder PD detectives, and wanted to see Britta and Ted, the folks next door. I told them that Britta had walked her bicycle out the front door less than 3 minutes earlier, and that ted was in jail. That's when they told me that Ted had been released Tuesday night, and wanted to know if I had seen him.... They left their card on her door, with a request that she call them.
The other reason I'm wondering about the laws is because of George Zimmerman. He was found "not guilty" of second degree murder in the killing of an unarmed youth in Florida. Since he was exonerated by the jury, he has been stopped for speeding in Texas and given a warning; he received a $256 ticket for speeding in Florida a month later; in September, police in Florida arrested both Zimmerman and his wife for a domestic dispute, but released both without any charges, because both stories seemed plausible, but both were also contradictory, and they had no evidence; George Z was arrested again in Florida this past Monday for a felony charge of aggravated assault and misdemeanor domestic violence battery and criminal mischief. He was released today on a $9,000 bond - after claiming he was indigent, had no fixed address, and was currently in debt to the amount of $2.5 million. .... More tomorrow.
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Wondering
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