Stumbling over your own stupidity

dZ

New member
Stumbling over your own stupidity http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles/silveira64.html By John Silveira


There are several morals to be found in this story. You can find most of them yourself. But I’m
only interested in one of them. The story was originally told to me by my father. It happened in the
1950s, though that doesn’t matter because it could have happened anytime. It is a story about
cleverness and stupidity—in that order—and one undoing the other.

I’m going to change the name of the main character in case someone
still living is embarrassed by what I’m about to describe, but not so embarrassed that they won’t step
forward and hire a lawyer. The man was my father’s brother-in-law during his second marriage. I’ll call him
Tom.

I don’t recall that Tom ever had a steady job, and he barely had the means to support himself and
his family. He lived in a shack in Maine on an old road at what seemed, to my little-boy mind, to be out
beyond the edge of civilization. I went there only once, with my Dad, my stepmother, and two of my sisters.
Tom came out the front door followed by his wife and three or four kids. The kids were all dirty, dressed
awkwardly, and younger than I. In the front yard was an old pickup Tom drove and several other vehicles up on blocks. There
were also discarded kitchen appliances, a burn-barrel, rusty buckets, rusty shovels, broken toys, and other assorted trash. We
didn’t go into the house, but I imagine it was more of the same. The kids stared, the two youngest clutching the skirt of their
Mom’s dress. I mention these things to give you a sense of their poverty. They were as poor or poorer than anyone else I’d seen
up to that time. And every one of them was pencil-thin.

There were no trash services in those parts of rural Maine in the ’50s and what many of the poor folks did was load their
trash into a pickup, or whatever they drove, and take it a suitable distance from home and dump it on the side of the road. That’s
what Tom was doing the night of this story.



I don’t know if he had a destination in mind, but he drove along and suddenly, right in the middle of the road, caught in
his headlights, was a deer. Tom stopped, but the deer didn’t run. It was blinded by the pickup’s lights.

Tom waited, but still it didn’t run. Even though it wasn’t even close to hunting season, this could be food for his family.
He reached into the glove compartment and pulled out a .38. He opened the driver’s door and the deer, still locked by the
headlights, didn’t move. Using the top of the door to steady his hand, he drew a bead. And that’s when he suddenly got a great
idea. Poaching carried a heavy fine, so he thought of an inspired plan to outsmart the game warden should he be caught. And
keep in mind that, though what Tom was about to do was illegal, it wasn’t necessarily immoral. He was, after all, just trying to feed
his family.

With no more hesitation, he pulled the trigger and the deer died there in the road. He quickly field-dressed it in the
headlights and cut off its head. Then he dumped the head with his trash and went home.

A few days later the game warden came around. “You got a deer here, Tom?”

Tom wasn’t going to get caught lying. Besides, he had the plan. “In the barn,” he replied.

The warden must have been a little surprised that Tom admitted it so easily, and they went to the barn where the deer
was hung, skinned, and dressed.

The warden examined it closely. “Where’d you get it?”

“Found it dead on the road,” Tom replied.

The warden examined it closer. “You gonna eat it?”

“Yup.”

“Without knowing what it died of? I wouldn’t eat it if I were you.”

“You’re not me, and I’m not you,” Tom said.

I guess back then there were no laws about keeping a deer you found dead on the road. So the warden started to
leave.

“How’d you know I had it?” Tom asked.

“Found the head in a ditch with some trash. Went through the trash and found a bill with your name on it.”

Tom hadn’t counted on that. But it was okay, he’d already outsmarted him. The warden left.

And, folks, that was where the story should have ended, with Tom having his deer to feed his family. But he couldn’t
keep this to himself. He had to let all his friends know how he’d outsmarted the game warden. How, when he was about to pull
the trigger, he had a brainstorm and, aiming carefully, he’d shot the deer in the neck. Then, after he’d field-dressed it, he’d cut
off its head, starting the incision right where the bullet had gone in and continuing the cut all the way around until he’d come
back to the hole he’d started from. That done, the bullet entry point disappeared and he’d taken the bullet and thrown it into the
bushes and drove on.

The story spread fast in that corner of Maine and a few days later the warden was back. This time he had the head, and
when he lined it up on the carcass the entry wound was evident. When he pulled it away he could see where the two halves of
the wound channel, shallow and almost unnoticeable since it had been cut in half, lined up perfectly.

Tom lost the deer and, as I recall, paid a steep fine.

Now, you draw whatever moral you want from this story. You can say that it demonstrates that
crime doesn’t pay, or that the best laid plans of mice and men often go astray, or that there’s no such thing
as a free lunch. But what I learned from this story, even when I was a little kid, is that when you’ve
completed a task through your sheer brilliance, try to resist the temptation to undo it with your own stupidity.
It’s hard folks. I still do it sometimes, myself.
 
dZ,
Too bad Tom couldn't remember the three S's.

Shoot....Shovel....Shut up!

Actually this story makes me sad. The Game Warden didn't have a heart as you said how poor this family was and how thin the kids were IMNSHO it would have been better if the Game Warden had turned his head on this one.

But I guess he was chust following ze orders, yah. :(

------------------
"Lead, follow or get the HELL out of the way."

[This message has been edited by DorGunR (edited June 23, 2000).]
 
I would imagine that the game warden had a pretty good idea what had happened during the first visit, but when Tom started to rub the wardens' nose in Tom's cleverness, the warden couldn't ignore it any longer.

LawDog
 
Loose lips sink ships, eh?

Wasn't this the undoing of many guerillas during WW2...the urge to brag.

[This message has been edited by Oleg Volk (edited June 23, 2000).]
 
LawDog,
I suppose you are right but I just keep thinking about those thin and obviously hungry kids. Aw heck and dagnabit....I guess I'm just an old softie.
When I was in the Army and stationed overseas I tried to help the local Orphanage in any way that I could. I guess I just have a soft spot for Kids. :)

------------------
"Lead, follow or get the HELL out of the way."
 
I almost got caught poaching way back in the 60's. Had a neighbor who's house burnt down. They did not have insurance, lost everything. Here they were with eight kids to feed living in a tent. So my older brother, a friend and I would sneak out every couple of weeks and bring them back a deer, all cut up and wrapped. One of these trips my brother and his friend where in the pickup while I was field dressing the deer about 25 years away, when the game warden came driving up the road. My older brother and friend took off in the pickup. I picked up the deer and took off running across the meadow (this was about 11:00 at night). The game warden stopped where the pickup had been parked and let his dog out, then took out after my brother. At this point the road made a big loop around the meadow before going on up the hill. The game warden stopped them about a half mile down the road, checked them out and then let them go. He then proceeded back to get his dog and to look around the scene of the crime. In the meantime I kept running as fast as I could, with the dog getting closer to me all the time. By the time I had run almost a mile to the otherside of the meadow and to the road, my bother just happed to come driving by. I threw the deer in the back of the pickup, jumped in and off we went just seconds before the dog got there.

Years latter I was talking with this game warden and he told me that he knew about the deer. Said he knew what my older brother and I had been up to. He did say he was sorry that he could'nt have helped us, but being the game warden it would not have looked to good for him poaching. Yep, he could have caught us that night, but he knew why we were there and as soon as he knew that it was us, he just turned his attention elsewhere. I also know that if what we were doing had not been for a good cause, he would have nailed our hides to the wall. Not to many people like him left.



------------------
Richard

The debate is not about guns,
but rather who has the ultimate power to rule,
the People or Government.
RKBA!
 
Bookkie,

My father grew up in the UP of Michigan during the Great Depression and WW2. The UP of Michigan was probably one of the poorest regions of the country back then--poorer by far than even Appalachia. The mines had shut down even before the Depression, so you can imagine how poor it was. Dad made money by going to a burned out house and salvaging nails, straightening them out on the railroad tracks, raising chickens in the attic of the house during the winter for eggs and meat (can you imagine the smell?), and other such things. He even was sent to a youth camp for undernourished kids so he could get some meat on his bones.

Anyway, to get to the point of the story, Dad did quite a bit of hunting for food, both in and out of season. With most of the able-bodied gone off to war, the wild game population exploded. The supply had to be reduced for the health of all, so Dad did what he had to do to help put meat on the family table.

He started with small game, then graduated to shooting running deer in the neck with his .22 autoloader (Remington 550), then to jacklighting deer and walking up to them and dispatching them with 12ga 00Buck to the head so as not to ruin any edible meat.

The game warden of the area knew what was going on, but did nothing so long as you were hunting for food. Dad said that sometimes the GW himself would tell him of a particularly good spot to try, or where the game population could use a little 'thinning'.
 
Story told to me by my father.This happened in southern Mn.Mid 30,depression and people starving.A group of men got together will a gill net and used it to get food for their famlies.Game warden arrested them and put them in jail.Other people helped their families to eat during their jail time.They got out got another net and went to get to get fish.Their families had to eat.The same game warden went after them only this time they where ready.As the warden came up screaming at them someone come out the brush with a 22 rifle.The warden lived but learned a lesson.Hungry men with hungry wifes and kids will what they have to do to feed them.
A moral to this story?Maybe the laws need to be adminstered by the spirt and not the letter.

------------------
beemerb
We have a criminal jury system which is superior to any in the world;
and its efficiency is only marred by the difficulty of finding twelve men
every day who don't know anything and can't read.
-Mark Twain
 
The whole time I was growing up, my dad would NEVER eat rabbit. He had grown up in London during the bombing, and they had eaten a whole lot of rabbit during the war.

He found out AFTER it was all over that it hadn't been rabbit.

Jim March

PS: anybody seen kitty? :D

PPS: yes, it's funny in hindsight but this is real...
 
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