I was curious about that one, too. I did find this collection. Scroll down a bit and you do see some butterflies.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/496240452661088344/
In that neck of the woods, my guess would be that they used the crate to transport dogs to hunt. I live in a rural area and have seen people hunt with many different breeds of dog.
Unfortunately, I suspect quite a few. If they helped us/govt./military at any point, terrorist or not, they could very well have ended up here and, possibly working for a govt. agency. No, I'm not a paranoid militia member, I just grew up with a parent who was a civilian under govt. contract...
You were responding to:
"It's all about organs. That's what they want. They even had somebody at our first court date there.. ready to take over my son and take his organs. The first...the second court date, but we fought it and we won and that's mainly what i believe it's all about," said...
I love this theory. She could also have been the child of a civilian under govt. contract. I was one, during the same time frame as her estimated age, and lived like an "army brat." I don't believe the military had any record of me, even though I entered military base.
http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/b/bowman_aundria.html
I did a search and couldn't find any posted connection between these two. There are minor differences but nothing that would obviously rule her out (that I could find, anyway).
So many times, I have seen children who seemed to love school because it was a break from their home life. As sad as that is, it can set them up for academic success and in situations like that, every little bit helps.
I know that, at our school, if the parent makes contact and lets us know there's an issue, we will do whatever to help. They can also apply for free and reduced lunch any time they need to.
Yep, that was my daughter's reaction, too. She thought it was funny in a train wreck sort of way--the VMA performance, too.
I do have to admit that Blurred Lines is so catchy that I like it (hangs head in shame and stands in corner).
I'm one of these people who can't print but have decent handwriting. It makes me wonder how many of my students who have terrible printing would benefit from learning cursive. The trick is finding even 5 minutes per day to teach handwriting.
I don't know whether to :floorlaugh: or :pullhair: . I teach and have seen how badly Spell-Check can butcher a paper. Good God, they have entire websites dedicated to how horrible Auto-Correct can be.
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