Very sad for the dog but really blaming the TTC for it's death?

I find its more the less liberal among us that make excuses for their own actions....like, it must be someone else that is to blame for my son getting drunk and driving etc.
 
I find its more the less liberal among us that make excuses for their own actions....like, it must be someone else that is to blame for my son getting drunk and driving etc.

I take it then that you are either one of the less liberal among us, or don't see the total and complete irony of your statement.
 
Please explain? Ps. I don't have kids and I probably should have used quotes.
". . . it must be someone else that is to blame . . .", and you blame someone else i.e. "the less liberal among us".
 
Well your memory blows. I specifically remember doing Air France 2006ish, and a crate carrying a yellow lab fell of the cart and broke open. Dog bolted and we tried to contain him. This was at gate B34ish and he ran straight for the midfield. They spent an hour trying to corner him and get him contained with no luck. Wildlife was called in. I spoke to the ASO on scene as he used to be our ground handling companies trainer. He was not a happy camper about the whole situation

I never said ASOs were armed or carrying. Nor would a pistol be any help in that case.

ASOs are definitely not armed. PRP and Wildlife are the armed people at Pearson (along with other law enforcement agencies who are there in smaller numbers).

Neither of those agencies are told to shoot on sight. Actually, when traveling animals get loose there a rather large effort is made to retrieve the animal safely. After all, there is a passenger (AKA customer) who would prefer to receive their pet intact.

Now, wildlife like Coyote, Fox, Groundhog, Gulls etc don't enjoy the same comfort but it is still not "shoot on sight".

Edit: about the "few did and were put down", I've been working on the airfield for 17 years and can't remember a traveling animal getting put down. Lost maybe, died on route or during transfer sure... a loose Golden even jumped off the Briannia Road/T taxiway bridge running away from responders a couple years ago on my shift and as bad of shape it was in even that animal wasn't put down.
 
Well your memory blows. I specifically remember doing Air France 2006ish, and a crate carrying a yellow lab fell of the cart and broke open. Dog bolted and we tried to contain him. This was at gate B34ish and he ran straight for the midfield. They spent an hour trying to corner him and get him contained with no luck. Wildlife was called in. I spoke to the ASO on scene as he used to be our ground handling companies trainer. He was not a happy camper about the whole situation

I never said ASOs were armed or carrying. Nor would a pistol be any help in that case.

Well you did say"ASOs were told to shoot on sight". So unless you were referring to elastic bands what did you mean by that? Nasty looks? The ol' evil eye?

And can you clarify what the outcome of the hour long exhaustive attempt to contain the animal was? What happened after wildlife was called in?
 
They could point their fingers and yell BangBang Bang.

pew-pew-pew-merica.jpg
 
Well your memory blows. I specifically remember doing Air France 2006ish, and a crate carrying a yellow lab fell of the cart and broke open. Dog bolted and we tried to contain him. This was at gate B34ish and he ran straight for the midfield. They spent an hour trying to corner him and get him contained with no luck. Wildlife was called in. I spoke to the ASO on scene as he used to be our ground handling companies trainer. He was not a happy camper about the whole situation

I never said ASOs were armed or carrying. Nor would a pistol be any help in that case.
lmfao. more BS
 
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