This strikes me as remarkably audacious. Cuccinelli has sent letters to the state's public higher education establishments, most of which have bylaws banning discrimination based on sexual orientation, instructing them to strike those ... more This strikes me as remarkably audacious. Cuccinelli has sent letters to the state's public higher education establishments, most of which have bylaws banning discrimination based on sexual orientation, instructing them to strike those clauses. The argument is that only the state's General Assembly can establish protected-class rules with reference to state employment, and that colleges and universities are thus acting without outside the bounds of their authority when they enacted those rules. Several legal sources for this article commented that the letter's directive is probably more or less unenforceable, but who knows. One Republican member of GMU's board of visitors commented: "What he's saying is reprehensible... I don't know what he's doing, opening up this can of worms." URL: www.washingtonpost.com
I kind of have to wonder if this didn’t get stuck into the text by someone trying to make the South Dakotans look bad. (And by the way, “thermology” means the medical use of thermal imaging. Looks like someone forgot to check their Wikipedia before drafting this.)
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363R0643
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HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 1009
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| A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION, Calling for balanced teaching of global warming in the
public schools of South Dakota |
| WHEREAS, carbon dioxide is not a pollutant but rather a highly beneficial ingredient for
all plant life on earth. Many scientists refer to carbon dioxide as “the gas of life” |
| NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, by the House of Representatives of the Eighty-fifth Legislature of the State of South Dakota, the Senate concurring therein, that the South
Dakota Legislature urges that instruction in the public schools relating to global warming
include the following:
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| (1) That global warming is a scientific theory rather than a proven fact |
| (2) That there are a variety of climatological, meteorological, astrological, thermological,
cosmological, and ecological dynamics that can effect world weather phenomena and
that the significance and interrelativity of these factors is largely speculativeRead more at legis.state.sd.us |
Rules of use ot the trademark Moleskine on the web (Guidelines) |
Any use of the trademark MOLESKINE ® or of similar signs without our consent amounts to an unlawful action.
However, there are lawful uses of the trademark MOLESKINE ® by third parties of which our company is happy, provided that some conditions are respected.
In particular, it is necessary to: - always use the trademark MOLESKINE with the symbol ®;
- never use the trademark MOLESKINE ® in relation to products which do not originate from our company;
- never use the trademark MOLESKINE ® as descriptive term and, therefore, substantially, as synonym of generic denominations such as, for example, “note pad”, “block-notes”, “agenda”, etc.;
- always use a disclaimer bearing the wording “MOLESKINE ® is a trademark registered by Moleskine S.r.l.” at the bottom of the web page.
- accept the conditions of use and have Moleskine’s authorization. Read more at www.moleskine.com |
The bishops claim to be “suffering” as a result of their opposition to same-sex marriage. Maybe it’s me, but I find this, well, nauseating. 59 Bishops Contributed Financially to Maine Bishop’s Effort to Oppose Maine Same-Sex “Marriage” Law |
Bishop Says God Gave Him Courage, Perseverance and Serenity in the Battle to Defend Marriage |
BALTIMORE, Maryland, November 19, 2009 (LifeSiteNews.com) - At least fifty-nine US Catholic bishops gave financial support - either personally or through their dioceses and diocesan offices - to the battle to defeat the legalization of same-sex “marriage” and for that the Catholic bishop of Maine is grateful. Portland Bishop Richard J. Malone thanked them for their solidarity with pro-family advocates in Maine by not only defending natural marriage and the family, but suffering for it as well. |
Malone said that he was grateful for his fellow Catholic bishops “prayer, encouragement, and financial support” and sharing the suffering that now comes with the territory of doing battle with same-sex “marriage” advocates. Read more at www.lifesitenews.com |
Sightings
November 12, 2009
Religion-Based Arguments in Juvenile Life Without Parole Cases
— Joan Gottschall |
| The legal position advanced by the brief is also remarkable, for amici argue that their shared religious values require the Supreme Court to reverse the Florida judgments and to hold that it is a violation of the Eighth Amendment to sentence juveniles convicted of non-homicide offenses to life without the possibility of parole. |
| First, it reviews traditional religious recognition of the distinction between children and adults, both in religious teachings regarding crime and punishment and in other aspects of religious law. |
| Third, it argues that ignoring the special status of youth and condemning juveniles to die in prison contravenes the fundamental religious values of mercy, forgiveness, and compassion.Read more at divinity.uchicago.edu |
This is a well-known story by now. An Arizona family had photos developed at a Wal-mart. Some of the photos showed their three girls (all under five) in the bathtub. A Wal-mart employee called the police, who brought in Child Protective Services. The kids were removed from the home, charges were filed, the parents’ names went on the sex offender registry, and the wife was suspended from her job. A year and $75,000 in legal fees later, the state has dropped the charges and the kids are back home. Last fall A.J. and Lisa Demaree took a memory stick with family photos to the printing center at the Wal-Mart store in Peoria, Ariz. Some of the photos showed their three young girls, all under 5 years old, partially nude in the bathtub. The Demarees say these were innocent pictures that all families take. But a Wal-Mart employee felt otherwise and contacted the police who agreed that this was a child pornography situation. |
Child Protective Services searched the Demaree home and took custody of the children for a month while the state investigated. The watched family videotapes and found a few in which the children were playing unclothed. Lisa was suspended from her school job for a year, and both of their names were placed on the sex offender registry. The couple spent $75,000 on legal bills. |
A damning piece by The New Yorker on the story of Todd Willingham. Willingham was executed in 2005 for triple homicide after being convicted of killing his three children by setting their room on fire. Texas officials ignored reports by fire scientists, whose investigations showed that there had been no solid evidence that the fire was arson. The arson investigators who testified in Willingham’s case relied on traditional methods whose scientific validity had long ago been disproven, and the parole board apparently did not even bother to read the exonerating information provided to them by Willingham’s lawyer. Trial by Fire
Did Texas execute an innocent man?
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| In mid-August, the noted fire scientist Craig Beyler, who was hired by the commission, completed his investigation. In a scathing report, he concluded that investigators in the Willingham case had no scientific basis for claiming that the fire was arson, ignored evidence that contradicted their theory, had no comprehension of flashover and fire dynamics, relied on discredited folklore, and failed to eliminate potential accidental or alternative causes of the fire. He said that Vasquez’s approach seemed to deny “rational reasoning” and was more “characteristic of mystics or psychics.” What’s more, Beyler determined that the investigation violated, as he put it to me, “not only the standards of today but even of the time period.” |
| Texas could become the first state to acknowledge officially that, since the advent of the modern judicial system, it had carried out the “execution of a legally and factually innocent person.”Read more at www.newyorker.com |
It appears that the legal issues surrounding Rifqa Bary’s situation are getting more and more complicated. The judge has so far been dealing only with procedural questions. For the time being, most of the relevant documents are sealed, the attorneys are under a gag order, and the seventeen-year-old Bary, who is insisting on staying in Florida (her parents want her to return home to Ohio), remains in foster care under the guardianship of the state of Florida. In my opinion, the child’s lawyers have been making some very unscrupulous and inflammatory public statements, such as the claim that the parents’ Columbus mosque is a “haven for Islamic terrorists” (law enforcement officials say there is no evidence for this). From the perspective of the parents, this is a matter of family law; for their opponents, it’s about Christianity versus Islam. Fathima Rifqa Bary: Judge keeps girl in Florida, seals investigative findings |
After sealing findings of a state investigation into Fathima Rifqa Bary, Circuit Judge Daniel Dawson on Thursday decided to keep the 17-year-old girl in Florida while putting the case into mediation |
For an hour and a half Thursday, lawyers argued about how to handle the legal battle that has sprung up around Fathima Rifqa Bary, the tiny 17-year-old who ran away from her Muslim home in Ohio to the shelter of Christian evangelists in Orlando. |
Never once, though, did they raise the core issue: Should she be returned to her parents? |
They had ammunition to back up their argument: a report by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement that says her family poses no threat to her. |
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“Want to save marriage? Ban divorce,” by Candace Chellew-Hodge (@revtheodyke)
A good, short opinion piece by Candace Chellew-Hodge (@revtheodyke) on John Marcotte’s effort to get a new, Proposition 8-like measure placed on the ballot in California to “protect traditional marriage” by making divorce illegal. After all, she points out, Jesus never mentions homosexuality, but he sure does have a problem with divorce.