Kristi and the goat

So shooting the dog was bad enough, but apparently her desire ti kill wasn't satisfied after the dog, so she went and got a goat. A goat that was apparently doing nothing except existing in her line of sight when she wanted something else to kill.

“Walking back up to the yard, I spotted our billy goat,” Noem wrote.

The nameless goat’s only sin in that moment was being in Noem’s field of view.

In the book, Noem tried to justify her snap decision to kill the goat by writing that it “loved to chase” her children and would “knock them down and butt them,” leaving them “terrified.” The animal also had a “wretched smell.”

But apparently none of that had been a big enough problem to do anything about it. Not until Noem got angry enough to kill a dog and decided she needed to kill again.

Noem says she “dragged” the goat to the gravel pit, “tied him to a post,” and shot at him. But the goat jumped when she shot.

“My shot was off and I needed one more shell to finish the job,” she wrote.

She studiously avoided saying she wounded the goat with the first shot, but that’s the implication.

“Not wanting him to suffer,” she added — apparently experiencing her first twinge of feeling, after saying that killing the dog was not “pleasant” — “I hustled back across the pasture to the pickup, grabbed another shell, hurried back to the gravel pit, and put him down.”


The goat story not only reflects a disturbing lack of self-control, but also raises a question of law.
What's next? An aide or page in the governors office?
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"the dog was a working dog" noem

maybe she is telling us her attitude towards the working class.
She's been governor for awhile. Her attitude toward the working class is already known. This tempest in a teapot is solely to discredit Kristi Noem.

This is a war between Republican good and democrat evil.
 
Her daughter seemed to think so

Kids actually have it right... up until the point when this world corrupts them.

It's sad, really.

That reminds me of a beautiful documentary called 'Peaceable Kingdom - The Journey Home'..... It's stories of farmers, ranchers (and a few other people) who had a change of heart and a complete paradigm shift when it comes to animals.

If anyone wants something interesting to watch, I highly recommend this documentary. There's one part in particular that always makes me cry. It actually has to do with a young goat (coincidently, considering what this thread is about.) :)

 

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