Imagine this.
Your beautiful three-year-old daughter is playing quietly in the living room. You step away briefly. In the 90 seconds that you’re out of the room, three vicious pitbulls make their way into the house. They knock her down and drag her to the backyard. They begin mauling her. By the time you reach her, they have broken several of her delicate bones. They have ripped apart her gorgeous little face. One of her eyes is completely gone.
Thankfully, she survives the horrific attack but her injuries are extreme. She needs several surgeries. She can only be fed special formula through a tube. There will eventually be plastic surgery for her severe facial scarring, and probably a prosthetic eye.
But, your insurance isn’t great. You’re struggling to afford the formula. Her life may have been saved, but the gap has left you in a scary amount of debt. No financial help is available for the ‘cosmetic’ surgeries she needs. Your heart breaks as you think about her going through life with a severly disfigured face.
How far would you be willing to go to get your little girl the help she needs? What would you be willing to do to pay for the formula that feeds her? What would you be willing to do to pay for the medical care you can’t afford?
One family doesn’t have to imagine the above scenario – they’re living it.
You’ve probably read about Victoria Wilcher at some point over the last week. The three-year-old girl from Mississippi was attacked by her grandfather’s pitbulls in April. Her horrific injuries match the ones described in the scenario above. Her story was unknown to the public until last week, when her grandmother told the media that they had been kicked out of a KFC restaurant because Victoria’s face was ‘upsetting to other customers’.
Top Comments
There seems to be a real lack of compassion in these comments, desperate people do desperate things. In the end KFC came out looking fantastic, the child is getting help and a horrible situation was somewhat improved. I'm not saying I think the Grandma should get a medal or anything but what she did was out of a love, with the tools she had at hand. I feel for everyone involved, the KFC workers included.
I'll think you'll find the majority of comments have shown compassion. For the staff and employees who've been bullied or threatened due to the grandmother's direct actions. Also towards those who donated in good faith only to have been victims of fraud. And to the little girl who will forever be known as the "hoax" girl.
Many of us also feel immense compassion towards others who are seriously ill, and who now may not get the public support because their cause is treated with suspicion.
Being extremely poor is no excuse! If they can afford fighting dogs, they can't be that hard done by.
Just a moment. These people owned the pitbulls in question. As I understand it, dogs like this aren't cheap, either to purchase or feed. I would think that once the grandparents had served their jail sentences for allowing vicious animals to attack a child (their own granddaughter or any other hapless person happening past the premises... or pet... or adult), then the question of whether KFC should be seeking punitive damages for defamatory and malicious lies. That they carried on and paid for the poor child's surgery as promised is testament to a far-sighted marketing and PR dept, and good on them. But really, the adult owners of the dogs are criminal and should be prosecuted on several different fronts.