2012 WTF #17 – 6th Grader Handcuffed for Bad Attitude
2012 WTF #17 – An 11-year old sixth-grader at Shaw Heights Middle School, in Adams County, CO, was handcuffed and taken to a holding facility for disobeying the orders of an assistant principal during lunch and being “argumentative and extremely rude.”
An Adams County Sheriff’s Office incident report says the assistant principal found Yajira walking in the hallway during lunch because the girl claimed she was cold and needed to get a sweater from her locker. The report says the assistant principal was in mid-sentence when Yajira, “turned and walked away saying, ‘I don’t have time for this.'” When intervention efforts with a counselor failed, Yajira was handcuffed and put in the school resource officer’s patrol car and taken to a juvenile holding facility called “The Link.”
The Adams County Sheriff’s Office told 9Wants to Know that handcuffing kids during transport is standard procedure, but refused to discuss this incident because a juvenile was involved and NO CHARGES WERE FILED!
So remember kids if you back-talk a teacher in Adams County CO (which you shouldn’t do, so please don’t no matter where you live) you don’t have to worry about detention or suspension, just the embarrassment that comes with being handcuffed in front of your friends, put in a patrol car and taken to juvenile detention so your parents can come get you – but don’t worry they probably won’t file charges because it doesn’t appear that you actually broke any laws that would allow them to arrest you.
(h/t 9News.com) Read Colorado’s 9News.com for the entire story.
Read the story and watch the video at the link below:
http://www.9news.com/news/article/254065/339/Girl-handcuffed-in-school-for-being-extremely-rude
Catholic Bishop Tells Parable of the Kosher Deli
Roman Catholic Bishop William E. Lori of Bridgeport, Conn., testified before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Feb. 16, 2012. In his testimony he used an analogy to explain the Catholic Church’s argument against the contraception mandate. He submitted a statement in his written testimony called “The Parable of the Kosher Deli”.
According to CNSNews:
The bishop’s “parable” was not reported in the establishment press. Fox News did quote one line from it, as did ABC–not the ABC here in the United States, but the Australian Broadcasting Company.
Bishop Lori’s parable, according to a Lexis-Nexis search of English-language news sources, was not reported in The New York Times, The Washington Post, or in any other major English-language newspaper.
I’ve included a copy of the Bishop’s testimony in full from CNSNews:
“THE PARABLE OF THE KOSHER DELI”Written Testimony of The Most Reverend William E. LoriRoman Catholic Bishop of Bridgeport, Conn.
For my testimony today, I would like to tell a story. Let’s call it, “The Parable of the Kosher Deli.”
Once upon a time, a new law is proposed, so that any business that serves food must serve pork. There is a narrow exception for kosher catering halls attached to synagogues, since they serve mostly members of that synagogue, but kosher delicatessens are still subject to the mandate.
The Orthodox Jewish community—whose members run kosher delis and many other restaurants and grocers besides—expresses its outrage at the new government mandate. And they are joined by others who have no problem eating pork—not just the many Jews who eat pork, but people of all faiths—because these others recognize the threat to the principle of religious liberty. They recognize as well the practical impact of the damage to that principle. They know that, if the mandate stands, they might be the next ones forced—under threat of severe government sanction—to violate their most deeply held beliefs, especially their unpopular beliefs.
Meanwhile, those who support the mandate respond, “But pork is good for you. It is, after all, the other white meat.” Other supporters add, “So many Jews eat pork, and those who don’t should just get with the times.”
Still others say, “Those Orthodox are just trying to impose their beliefs on everyone else.”
But in our hypothetical, those arguments fail in the public debate, because people widely recognize the following.
First, although people may reasonably debate whether pork is good for you, that’s not the question posed by the nationwide pork mandate. Instead, the mandate generates the question whether people who believe—even if they believe in error—that pork is not good for you, should be forced by government to serve pork within their very own institutions. In a nation committed to religious liberty and diversity, the answer, of course, is no.
Second, the fact that some (or even most) Jews eat pork is simply irrelevant. The fact remains that some Jews do not—and they do not out of their most deeply held religious convictions.
Does the fact that large majorities in society—even large majorities within the protesting religious community—reject a particular religious belief make it permissible for the government to weigh in on one side of that dispute? Does it allow government to punish that minority belief with its coercive power? In a nation committed to religious liberty and diversity, the answer, of course, is no.
Third, the charge that the Orthodox Jews are imposing their beliefs on others has it exactly backwards. Again, the question generated by a government mandate is whether the government will impose its belief that eating pork is good on objecting Orthodox Jews.
Meanwhile, there is no imposition at all on the freedom of those who want to eat pork. That is, they are subject to no government interference at all in their choice to eat pork, and pork is ubiquitous and cheap, available at the overwhelming majority of restaurants and grocers.
Indeed, some pork producers and retailers, and even the government itself, are so eager to promote the eating of pork, that they sometimes give pork away for free.
In this context, the question is this: can a customer come to a kosher deli, demand to be served a ham sandwich, and if refused, bring down severe government sanction on the deli. In a nation committed to religious liberty and diversity, the answer, of course, is no.
So in our hypothetical story, because the hypothetical nation is indeed committed to religious liberty and diversity, these arguments carry the day.
In response, those proposing the new law claim to hear and understand the concerns of kosher deli owners, and offer them a new “accommodation.” You are free to call yourself a kosher deli; you are free not to place ham sandwiches on your menu; you are free not to be the person to prepare the sandwich and hand it over the counter to the customer. But we will force your meat supplier to set up a kiosk on your premises, and to offer, prepare, and serve ham sandwiches to all of your customers, free of charge to them. And when you get your monthly bill from your meat supplier, it will include the cost of any of the “free” ham sandwiches that your customers may accept. And you will, of course, be required to pay that bill.
Some who supported the deli owners initially began to celebrate the fact that ham sandwiches didn’t need to be on the menu, and didn’t need to be prepared or served by the deli itself. But on closer examination, they noticed three troubling things. First, all kosher delis will still be forced to pay for the ham sandwiches.
Second, many of the kosher delis’ meat suppliers, themselves, are forbidden in conscience from offering, preparing, or serving pork to anyone. Third, there are many kosher delis that are their own meat supplier, so the mandate to offer, prepare, and serve the ham sandwich still falls on them.
This story has a happy ending. The government recognized that it is absurd for someone to come into a kosher deli and demand a ham sandwich; that it is beyond absurd for that private demand to be backed with the coercive power of the state; that it is downright surreal to apply this coercive power when the customer can get the same sandwich cheaply, or even free, just a few doors down.
The question before the United States government—right now—is whether the story of our own Church institutions that serve the public, and that are threatened by the HHS mandate, will end happily too. Will our nation continue to be one committed to religious liberty and diversity? We urge, in the strongest possible terms, that the answer must be yes. We urge you, in the strongest possible terms, to answer the same way.
Thank you for your attention.
To see the video of the Bishop’s testimony, please go to CNSNews.
2012 WTF #16 – “Killing babies no different from abortion”
2012 WTF #16: Hey all my friends who are parents – do you agree with the Oxford University latest article that states “Killing babies no different from abortion” – Parents should be allowed to have their newborn babies killed because they are “morally irrelevant” and ending their lives is no different to abortion, a group of medical ethicists linked to Oxford University has argued.
The article, published in the Journal of Medical Ethics, says newborn babies are not “actual persons” and do not have a “moral right to life”. The academics also argue that parents should be able to have their baby killed if it turns out to be disabled when it is born.
They go on to say:
“We take ‘person’ to mean an individual who is capable of attributing to her own existence some (at least) basic value such that being deprived of this existence represents a loss to her.”
As such they argued it was “not possible to damage a newborn by preventing her from developing the potentiality to become a person in the morally relevant sense”.
The authors therefore concluded that “what we call ‘after-birth abortion’ (killing a newborn) should be permissible in all the cases where abortion is, including cases where the newborn is not disabled”.
I’m sorry, but I have to believe that these people have either 1) never been parents, 2) have been irreparably harmed by having a child born with a severe birth defect, or 3) simply do not have the capability of understanding the value of human life or the healing power in the smile of newborn.
Oxford University Report
http://jme.bmj.com/content/early/2012/02/22/medethics-2011-100411.full.pdf+html
2012 WTF #15 – Military Healthcare to Sky Rocket!
2012 WTF #15 – President Obama decides to screw over military enlisted personnel over civilian workers – did you hear that the Obama administration’s proposed defense budget calls for military families and retirees to pay sharply more for their healthcare, while leaving unionized civilian defense workers’ benefits untouched.
The proposed increases in health care payments by service members, which must be approved by Congress, are part of the Pentagon’s $487 billion cut in spending. The plan calls for increases between 30 percent to 78 percent in Tricare annual premiums for the first year,
after that, the plan will impose five-year increases ranging from 94 percent to 345 percent—more than 3 times current levels.
Administration officials told Congress that one goal of the increased fees is to force military retirees to reduce their involvement in Tricare and eventually opt out of the program in favor of alternatives established by the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare.
The changes are worrying some in the Pentagon who fear it will severely impact efforts to recruit and maintain a high-quality all-volunteer military force. Such benefits have been a key tool for recruiting qualified people and keeping them in uniform.
Do Today’s Gas Prices Make You Feel Like the Economy is Improving?
Does anyone else remember when everyone, including me, was complaining about the price of gas under President Bush? Well, why are the only complaints we hear now coming from people like me? There’s nothing from the media except excuses trying to take responsibility away from President Obama. Even Obama was complaining back in 2008 when he was senator, blaming Bush and the big oil companies. He’s now blaming speculators for the high prices the same way he blamed them in the 2008 presidential campaign.
According to the Washington Times he claimed that:
As president he would strengthen government oversight of energy traders he blames in large part for the skyrocketing price of oil.
The Democratic presidential candidate’s campaign singled out the so-called “Enron loophole” for allowing speculators to run up the cost of fuel by operating outside federal regulation.
Has he done anything about the speculators that he blamed then and is blaming now?
They tell us we can handle higher gas prices because the economy is better. Do you feel like the economy is better? Does it seem better at the grocery store? Do you feel improvement when you buy clothes for your kids? Did any of your friends lose their jobs? What about when you go to get gas? Do you feel the improving economy then? Did you know that a station in Orlando, Fla., was charging $5.79 per gallon for regular unleaded?
I’ve always felt that gas prices reflect what’s happening in our economy and in our country. I remember the gas lines in the late 1970’s. You could only fill up on certain days, depending on if your license plate ended in an odd or even number. I turned 18 at that time and even I could see the state of the economy because of the state of the gas lines. People were cranky and felt the pain right in their wallets. When gas prices got high under George W. Bush there was crankiness too.
President Carter was in an election year and as I remember Ronald Reagan won every state except Georgia. Republicans aren’t licking their chops, as the president suggested when he mentioned during a speech in Florida Thursday that he read a headline in one newspaper that “Republicans are Licking Their Chops” over rising gas prices. “Only in politics,” he added, “do people root for bad news.”
He goes on to mention that the American people are smart enough not to fall for Republicans bumper sticker slogan (You know: “Drill, baby, drill!”)
I don’t know any people who are ‘licking their chops’ about high gas prices. Oh, I’m sure politicians will take advantage of it and although they may not wish for bad things to happen to the American people, why shouldn’t they use the utter incompetence of the current administration to help them during this election. If the Republicans feel the reason for the problems in the country are because of President Obama’s poor leadership, why shouldn’t they use it to their advantage. Senator Obama sure had no problem doing the same when he was running for president. They all need to remember that the president was right about one thing. The American people are smart.
Now as far as gas prices and the economy, an AP story printed in The Naples News says that:
Those higher prices could hurt consumer spending and unravel some of the recent improvements in the economy. And they could also be a daily reminder to voters to question Obama’s contention that he’s making the nation — and them — more secure.
While motorists are already starting to complain, many economists see the $4-a-gallon mark as a breaking point above which the economy starts to suffer real pain. Analysts estimate that every one-cent increase is roughly a $1.4 billon drain on the economy.
I’m pretty sure it will be a drain on my economy.
According to the Orlando Sentinel, the rise in gas prices will result in consumers spending more on gas and less on other things. “You re-evaluate your life when you’re at the pump,” Anna Dieuveil, 26, of Orlando, told the Orlando Sentinel. She said she expects to spend less money on going out to eat as she spends more money on gasoline.
According to the Huffington Post:
As any driver knows, rising gas prices can put a dent in a household budget. For small business owners, it can hurt – or even wipe out – profits.
The recent rise in the price of gas is pressuring business owners to find ways to protect their earnings. Some of their strategies are simple, such as using GPS devices to track fuel usage. Others are drastic – like moving manufacturing operations to the U.S. from Asia.
Small business owners have navigated this road before – most recently in 2008 when the price of gas rose to a national average of $4.11 a gallon. But gas is expected to surpass that record and reach $4.25 by late April. And even if the price follows its usual pattern of gradually falling back from a high reached in the spring, it will still be expensive for the rest of the year.
Look, I get the argument about green energy and alternative fuels and I don’t want to get into the same details I got into with my son tonight about the same thing. I just want to afford gas for my car. I can’t afford to buy a hybrid or an electric car, no matter how much the government offers me in subsidies. I see what’s happening in the Middle East and I want us to be oil independent. I want to drill here and when we’re not afraid of where our oil is coming from and we can afford the cost of gas, groceries and the things that matter, then we can concentrate on finding a better way.
I don’t care about my carbon footprint. I don’t really care what humans (might) be doing to the planet. What I care about is just being able to take care of my family. I want my kids to have the things they need. I want to be able to afford to send them to college. I want to look forward to a future where I can afford to drive to wherever my grand kids are and spoil them like crazy.
Remember, high gas prices make us cranky. They’ve always made us cranky when they get higher and higher, especially when we’re paying more for food and clothing. I’m pretty sure I’m going to vote for someone who gets it and isn’t so dead set on his own plan that isn’t really helpful for us now anyway. We can’t wait more than a decade for relief.
Bible Burning vs Koran Burning
Hmmm – Do you remember how many people were attacked in retaliation when Iran burned 6,500 Bibles last august? Oh yea, none! Nobody killed, nobody attacked… nothing!
How about the “Thank You’s” from the Muslim community when the U.S. military voluntarily destroyed hundreds of bibles that had been printed in the two most common Afghan languages and sent to the Bagram Air Base unsolicited with notes to distribute them to the locals? None that I can find, but it does look like the army got accused of doing it to cover up their own attempts to convert locals.
And it looks like when people burn the Torah, the Jewish community simply condemns the act, without the need for violent reaction.
But the US military burning a couple of Koran books that were “removed from a detainee center’s library because they had ‘extremist inscriptions’ on them and there was ‘an appearance that these documents were being used to facilitate extremist communications” leads to the death of 2 soldiers and 4 civilian, plus injuries to more than 50 people during 5 days of rioting. Is it just me, or does this seems like some severe over-reacting by people who do not seem capable of handling these types of things like adults?
***DATA SOURCES***
Iran Burning Bibles
http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/iran-bible-burning-christians/2011/08/26/id/408824
US Burning Bibles in Afghan Language
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/05/20/us.military.bibles.burned/
Torah Burning
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/142083
Deaths in Retaliation for Burning the Koran
http://www.cnn.com/2012/02/25/world/asia/afghanistan-burned-qurans/index.html?hpt=hp_t3
Tim Geithner says The Rich Need to Pay Higher Taxes for the Privilege of Being an American
Wow! Is this guy nuts, or what? Listen for yourself. I know this guy is smart, but quit the scare tactics already. We can make cuts to things other than old people and whatever other crazy thing he said. I’m sick, sick, sick of the Obama administration claiming that Conservatives and Republicans just want to cut things for seniors and national security. I can think of plenty of things to cut before I even touch anything else and I would sure reform entitlements. Come on, get a clue. How can people believe this dreck?
Listen for yourself:
» Imagine a Moratorium on Gun Control in 2012 – Big Government
» Imagine a Moratorium on Gun Control in 2012 – Big Government
Interesting. I wasn’t sure what to expect when I read this article, but it’s interesting and logical. I’d at least like to give it a try. I would rather be able to protect myself and my family than have the police arrive only to try to solve the crime after the fact.
via Big Government:
What would happen if the United States enjoyed a moratorium on restrictions on equipment for rifles, a moratorium on the enforcement of types of guns, acoustic suppressors, length of a rifle, magazine capacity or where and when one can concealed carry? What would change?
The greatest fear of gun control is personal independence of the citizen, where the silliness of large bureaucracies is self-evident. Since America’s first gun control measures, public servants have been able to plumb the depths of the electorate’s tolerance for political nonsense and find a rather broad tolerance for the earliest appearance of impropriety and corruption. Once servants learned that the electorate will delegate to them the illusion of protecting our personal safety, they believed and acted upon the practice of getting the people to delegate them anything. Officials haven’t stopped since.
What would happen if Americans could stop violent acts on their authority instead of being restrained from acting in emergency? What would happen if more Americans – by the millions – became increasingly aware of their legal authority to act in refusing to be a victim?
Seriously, what would happen? What would happen if more citizens refused to be a victim of crime and system both?
Read the rest of this article at Big Government.








