Alright guys, this one is... maybe not quite so serious.  But Maybe don't read it at work. 

We've all been dealing with the snow lately, and of course, that's different for everyone involved.

via GIPHY

For me, it was a struggle to get out of my alley, and dealing with side roads is an issue.  But we all deal in our own way, of course we do.  We're Missourians.  This isn't our first Snow Rodeo. Some people leave it be, some people shovel it, some people decide to get creative with it.

Well, one neighborhood house here in Sedalia decided to do the latter with it.  They made a.... well.  Let's try to be polite about this just in case.  It is a snow sculpture of a man's private business.  His hammer. His trouser snake. Little Willy. Dong. Winky Sausage. HIs hose, his lizard, his joystick.

You get it. It wasn't photo realistic or anything too gross, but the idea was conveyed.

I made sure to download the video, in case TikTok is gone in a few days.  Check this out and see what you think about what happened.

@amandabalke #snow #snowman #madman #hoa #badneighbors #art #snowsculpture #hard #funnyvideo #rocketman #cold @keithbalke @Dr.Games 21 #fyp ♬ Bad Boys (Theme from Cops) - Inner Circle

So the poster is a neighbor, not the sculptor, obviously.

So the question is, do you think he did a good or bad thing by removing it?

via GIPHY

I can kinda see both sides.  I mean, I don't think I'd want some four foot wang staring me in the face every day as I drove by.  And while I could explain it to a kid, you know they'd never drop it.  And it would probably start a precedent, where now THEY want build snow ding dongs every year.  It's not as appealing to a kid to make a snowman when they know they could make a giant snow Weiner that they KNOW will annoy someone, probably their parents.  I can get how a parent would want to just avoid that conversation altogether. And I guess some people just... don't like tallywhackers?

Mix 92.3 logo
Get our free mobile app

But on the other hand..... that's not my property.  It's not my house. I didn't build that sculpture.  It seems wrong to vandalize it and take it down.  It seems even more wrong to step onto someone's private property to do so.  I mean, just because this dude doesn't like this sculpture, that gives him the right to destroy it?  I know it's not all that serious because it's SNOW, but... it's about the principle, isn't it?  I don't want anyone coming into my yard to cut down a hedge just because they think they're entitled to.  

And he couldn't have, you know, left them a note in the mailbox or something?  Couldn't have talked to the people who live there, conveyed how he was feeling?  No, he just...acted.

via GIPHY

Well, like I say, I see both sides.  What do you think?  Do you think the sculpture should have stayed til the homeowner got rid of it, or was the vandal really a vigilante?

Decidedly yours,
Behka

KEEP READING: Get answers to 51 of the most frequently asked weather questions...

LOOK: The most extreme temperatures in the history of every state

Stacker consulted 2021 data from the NOAA's State Climate Extremes Committee (SCEC) to illustrate the hottest and coldest temperatures ever recorded in each state. Each slide also reveals the all-time highest 24-hour precipitation record and all-time highest 24-hour snowfall.

Keep reading to find out individual state records in alphabetical order.

Gallery Credit: Anuradha Varanasi

More From Mix 92.3