It’s the only logical solution.
I won’t have to worry during the heart pounding 47 seconds when my little girl disappears behind a clothes rack while I search for the perfect white tank and is suddenly no where to be found.
I won’t have to worry when I leave all three kids in the car while I run back into the house for 32 seconds to grab my debit card from the counter top.
I won’t have to worry when my one year old waddles away from the park while I concern myself with taking pictures of his sisters.
I won’t have to worry about my five year old getting snatched from her preschool while she’s out of the protective confines of my loving arms three hours a day, three whopping days a week.
I won’t have to worry anymore ever about my children getting abducted because my children will all be microchipped and they will wear t-shirts that say “I’m microchipped and you will spend the rest of your Godforsaken life in prison so back the frick up”.
I’ll never have to watch my kids AGAIN!!
Privacy Shmivacy, a microchip is the only way.
I decided this thirty seconds ago when I read an article that told me I could get my kids microchipped for a measly $1450 a piece.
In Mexico.
Nothing ever goes wrong in Mexico. For half the cost I can bring my cat and they will remove the microchip currently embedded in her neck and place it in my child’s forearm.
Sa-Weet!!
Who’s comin’ with me!?!
~Mama Kat
Article written and reprinted with permission by Mama Kat from Mama’s Losin It.
This week will be full of feature writers. I am working on the development of MomDots new template, while somehow wrapping up May around here. Basically, very busy. I have decided to allow a bunch of feature writers in order to bring you quality articles all week long and introduce you to bloggers that you may fall in love with.
Please come back and enjoy and comment on these bloggers who donated their writing for your reading pleasure (if you comment, maybe I can get them to come back!). If you would like to submit an article to me for this week, email to Trisha@MomDot.com. Please no reviews or giveaways. Article can be any topic but we are more likely to pick articles that are informative, interesting, funny, or controversial and are not printed anywhere else. We prefer unique work.
~trisha


















Dogs Dying from Microchip
by Uglydog on 25 March 2010 – 19:03
Uglydog
Posts: 1596
Joined: Tue Aug 15, 2006 02:38 pm
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=131533
Dogs suffer cancer after ID chipping
‘I saw it growing every day, and I could see it taking his life’
March 24, 2010
By Chelsea Schilling
© 2010 WorldNetDaily
I think whoever came up with this microchipping dog idea is absolutely SICK mentally person! I would love to myself to implant 100,000 microchips into this asshole!
I was just forced by airline STUPID regualtions to microchip my 5 pound toy poodle. I planned to leave overseas for two month and when purchased my tickets sales person NEVER mentioned to me about microchipping my poodle. They only said that I need all vacinations including rabbies which I had and pay a fee to have her travel with us.
About a week before my flight someone mentioned to me that most airlines now FORCE people to microchip their dogs and when I called and asked they confirmed that.
I cried for several days and still absolutely heart broken that I felt I was forced to do that and I absolutely HATE those people and wish all those awful jerks would microchip themself in every part of their body.
DO NOT MICROCHIP YOUR DOG!!!
LET’S ALL PROTEST AGAINST THAT!!!
MICROCHIPPING cause CANCER!!! For those of you who say it is worth the risk to microchip your dog versus the risk of losing them…..you haven’t been through what I just have. My dog developed a one pound tumor in between her shoulder blades, and it was identified as a sarcoma. It took almost 3 hours for them to remove it, and the tumor was attached to her vertebral processes. When I arrived at the vet, I asked if the microchip could have been part of the problem. The vet scanned my dog, and there was no microchip. He called the pathologists office to see if they would scan the tumor……and that is exactly where the microchip was. So, beware of microchips in your animals!!!!
Teresa Carney on September 27th, 2009 11:21 am
My shetland sheepdog just had surgery for a tumor Friday 25th. During the removal of the tumor which has grown to the size of a golf ball out popped his microchip under the mass. My family is heartbroken to even think this could be cancerous. We should have the biopsy back this next week to find out. His microchip had traveled down to his lower shoulder. Not a spot your would think it would be. So there are pros and cons but hopefully this one turns out o.k. I will keep you updated. They Carney Family
This isn’t something to laugh about. As a mom whose husband one day flew into a murderous rage, a mom desperate to protect her children of the kidnapping her husband has promised, this may be my only hope.
I think this is a great idea. It would be better if there were GPS but as of now just the simple fact that if a child is lost and found they can be easily reunited would be a huge plus. Also, if a child, or anyone for that matter, is injured and unable to communicate the medical records are recorded and easily accessible which would prevent delays in medical treatments such as determining blood types for transfusions or any prescriptions the child might be on that could have adverse effects on the treatment such as blood thinners, allergies, or behavioral medications. I’m a police officer and I remember the first time I had to respond to a two year old child who was wandering around alone. It took eight hours to finally locate the parents and that was a very fortunate incident. The child was so young he didn’t know where he lived or even his parents first names. It was by chance that someone recognized him and knew the parents. I also have an autistic nephew who frequently tries to run. He has to have an aid help him on and off the bus and watch him however when he is at after school care the supervisors attention is focused on a large group of children with mental disabilities and he has made it as far as the street outside the school before. It’s easy for someone who doesn’t like the idea to say it’s an invasion of privacy but if you have ever experienced a situation that would benefit from the microchip you might realize how useful it can be and how it could save a child. It would be nice if no child ever had to rely on something like this but that is not reality and if a child can be saved as a result of a small insert then to me it’s well worth it.