A Dog’s Warning to America

Originally posted at American Thinker. Blog

For those Americans chomping at the bit to have Big Brother administer healthcare, it might be wise to consider this: “If Target isn’t safe, nobody is.”

Target was the famous pooch that saved the lives of 50 U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan. The dog “helped scare a suicide bomber who showed up at a base wearing 25 lbs of explosives, barking at and biting the terrorist. Target was hailed a hero… treated by medics as though she was a soldier.”

Target survived IED explosions and the Taliban.  However, surviving a local government employee was an insurmountable challenge even a canine war heroine couldn’t win.  Target was mistakenly euthanized.

Although the guilty employee is on administrative leave after unintentionally putting Target to sleep, unfortunately the dog that managed to make it to America from war-torn Afghanistan won’t be returning home from doggy heaven any time soon.

Ruth Stalter, director of the Animal Care and Control Center explained: “When it comes to euthanizing an animal, there are some clear-cut procedures to follow. Based on my preliminary investigation, our employee did not follow those procedures.”

Dare I say  – too late!

Before going into the story of Target’s untimely end, it’s important to note Pinal County’s Animal Care and Control is a Division of the Health and Human Services Department, a county agency that “protects the health and welfare of Pinal County citizens.”  In other words, the animal shelter is government-run on the county level.

Based on ordinances, the division enforces regulations and provisions, “humanely” cares for animals, and provides “proactive and ongoing public education and information to the residents.” Above all, the organization prides itself on always adhering to “professional standards in all aspects of public relations and animal management.”

Tell that one to the dog’s owner Sgt Terry Young and his devastated four year-old son.

Sgt Young said: “‘I just can’t believe that something like this would happen to such a good dog.” Target escaped from Young’s yard, and although the sergeant tried desperately to find her a concerned neighbor had already called the shelter.   Poor Target fell into the hands of the enemy, disguised as a friendly government worker, with a Phenobarbital-filled needle and a bottom line.

After tracking down the missing dog, Sgt. Young tried to reclaim his pet only to find the shelter was closed until Monday.  You know the old adage – “Don’t get sick on the weekend…there’s nobody on staff,” especially if the hospital workers are on the government payroll.

Nevertheless, on Monday Sgt. Young attempted to retrieve Target, “only to find out she was dead.” County officials say the “employee mistakenly took the dog out of its pen … and euthanized it.”

A teary Sgt Young told a local TV station: “My four year-old son just can’t understand what is going on with Target and keeps asking me to get the poison out of her and bring her home. They don’t want her to go be with God yet.”

Target the Heroine Dog’s Post-mortem message to America: Once Obamacare kicks in, be wary of smiling bureaucrats touting professional standards in all aspects of health care management, because the government fix may include an inept health care worker sending any one of us on a premature one-way trip, even though it isn’t our time “to go be with God yet.”

5 Comments

    • jeannieology

      I know that Joe … you are correct…but the article was more about the incompetency of the gov’t worker than about Sgt Young not microchipping his dog. Both of my standard poodles are chipped.

      Blessings Joe!

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  2. Frank

    To take this tragedy (I cried when I first read about it, to be honest) and turn it into a screed against government-run health care strikes me as pathetic.

    The fact is that, depending on estimates, somewhere between 40,000 and 200,000 people die each year in the US due to medical mistakes. There is no evidence of which I’m aware that such mistakes are more prevalent in government-run healthcare facilities (VA, DoD Medical) than in their privately-run counterparts. Have you seen any such evidence?

    If you want to argue that government-run healthcare is going to lead to more human deaths by mistake, find peer-reviewed data to support your position rather than latching on to the tragic, preventable death of an animal at an animal control shelter, part of the mission of which (whether we like it or not) is to euthanize animals.

    • jeannieology

      I’m pathetic then. If you feel comfortable having government employees take care of your health care, you have the freedom to do so. The rest of America who would rather not and would like to be afforded the same freedom.

      Government in general handles things poorly. The last thing we need is the government into our health care. Rest assured after they run out of money, after adding 30,000,000 to the rolls and looking for ways to cost cut rationing will soon follow.

      Check out England’s health care program, people are dying of thirst in hospitals — but then again its free and as long as its “free and fair” that’s all that matters. I’m sure you’re all for equal opportunity dehydration.

      That aside, government workers in general have no incentive for excellence, civil service employees are a perfect example. That dog died because the worker wasn’t paying attention and was likely talking on the cell phone or watching the clock for a break when he or she shot up poor Target, realizing too late it wasn’t a B-12 shot. If you think the same thing won’t happen to us…well you can take the chance if you like.

      The dog died because a government worker was at the helm — no loss to the worker. Private enterprise, although not perfect, certainly won’t treat patients like people on line at the DMV, which is what socialized health care in this nation is bound to turn into in short order.

      Pathetic is as pathetic believes, so on second thought I’m not the pathetic one.

      Just saying.

      Oh yeah because you asked:

      http://www.jewishworldreview.com/michelle/malkin111299.asp

      http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=1066

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/04/AR2007030401394.html

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