ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

York council of churches board asks whether council should disband

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York council of churches board asks whether council should disband

Metta Barbour, an attorney, appointed interim leader of the 140-church council.
York, PA -
The York County Council of Churches board is weighing whether to disband York's largest ecumenical organization, which dates to 1951.


The board last month fired its executive director -- the fifth leader to depart the organization in 10 years -- who has since asked member churches to investigate its actions.


The board, comprised of 10 clergy and lay leaders, wrote to churches, donors and others across the county last week about the firing and asked whether the council should continue.


If yes, "we must get it right," wrote Chad Linder, board president. If no, "we must accept this reality with grace and humility, knowing we have done our best."


Linder said in an interview the board wants

Metta Barbour, interim executive director of the York County Council of Churches.
to hear from the community on whether and how the council should move forward and, if so, who will volunteer their time and money to support it.


To aid the evaluation, the board has appointed attorney and former nonprofit executive Metta Barbour as interim executive director, following the dismissal of the Rev. Guy W. Dunham on Jan. 6.


Barbour of Red Lion lost a bid last fall to unseat Republican Rep. Stan Saylor in the 94th state House district. She once led the nonprofit Coalition for Smart Growth in Lancaster.


Barbour joins the council this week and is tasked with assessing the operations and structure of the organization, its board and staff during the next three months. "We're looking for a business plan for the next 12-18 months. If it's determined it's best we keep our doors open, that plan would be executed by the next full-time director," Linder said.


The council, which would turn 60 this year, has historically served as an ecumenical fellowship of Christian congregations in the city and county of York. Among other projects, it has overseen ministries to AIDS patients, raised funds for hunger relief and organized communitywide worship services such as the one at the York Fair.


Of the 400-plus churches in York County, about 140 are members.


Most recently, the council tried to improve collaboration and communication among congregations and partnered with community groups on initiatives such as poverty and emergency preparedness planning.


The council had an estimated budget of about $223,000 last year with an anticipated deficit of up to $100,000, Dunham said. The council is funded largely by private donors, grants, membership dues and fundraisers such as the Festival of Trees. It has enough on hand to sustain itself for at least a year during the self-assessment, Linder said.


His Feb. 7 letter also addressed Dunham's dismissal.


Late last year, the board became "increasingly concerned" about Dunham's ability to execute the "core responsibilities and recommendations" as outlined in the council's strategic plan, Linder wrote.


That included the organization's financial stability and "clear, meaningful dialogue" with the board, member congregations and potential members.


"Ultimately, it was clear that a change in leadership was not only prudent, but required," Linder wrote.


Dunham, 59, of Springettsbury Township has said his firing was due in part to the board's dysfunction and instability in leadership. He's called on members to form a fact-finding panel to investigate the board and hold it accountable.


Last week, he disputed several points in Linder's letter.


"Tying my dismissal to not carrying out the responsibilities related to the strategic

The Rev. Guy W. Dunham, former executive director of the York County Council of Churches.
plan is ludicrous in light of the fact that the strategic plan was never officially approved and, therefore, goals and responsibilities related to it were never assigned to me," Dunham said by e-mail.


"My refusal to enter into 'meaningful dialogue' was due to the fact that they were holding a meeting on December 14 without a quorum and subsequently attempted illegally to terminate me."


After the Dec. 14 termination vote, Dunham mainly communicated with the board through his attorney, Walter A. Tilly III, he said. A quorum of the board repeated the vote to dismiss him Jan. 6.


Linder wrote that Dunham's termination included a notice period and offer of severance.


However, Dunham said severance was only discussed weeks after his firing. The board withheld its severance offer pending review of his public comments on his dismissal and Dunham's willingness to sign a liability release, he said.


"After careful review of the statements you provided to media, we feel that in good conscience that we can no longer consider offering the two months of salary and benefits," Linder wrote in a Jan. 27 e-mail to Dunham.


Linder said Friday there were "other issues" that affected the severance decision, but he declined elaborate.


Tax exemptions for religious organizations such as the council generally include exclusion from unemployment taxes, so Dunham cannot collect unemployment benefits, he said.


On Monday, Dunham began a part-time position as the temporary pastor of Eastminster Presbyterian Church in Springettsbury Township. He expects to serve the congregation for about two months, until it calls a permanent pastor.




The council


Name: York County Council of Churches


Established: 1951


Members: 140 congregations


Address: 30 E. King St., York, 854-9504


Web site: www.yccchurches.org


Board officers: Chad Linder, president; Jason Lewis, vice president; George Lenkner, secretary; Ed Hesson, treasurer




Related coverage


· The Rev. Guy Dunham's letter to the editor

· "York County Council of Churches board removes leader"

· YCCC board president Chad Linder's letter. Scroll to "nonprofits."

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West Chester teen faces prison after trying to hire hit man on Facebook

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West Chester teen faces prison after trying to hire hit man on Facebook

A Chester County teenager faces 11 to 22 years in prison after agreeing to a plea agreement on charges he used Facebook to try to hire a hit man to kill a woman who had accused him of rape....

Read the full story here: Breaking Midstate News with The Patriot-News
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Police: Man arrested on 23-year-old warrant

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Police: Man arrested on 23-year-old warrant

Daily Record/Sunday News
York, PA -
State police arrested a York man Jan. 7 on a warrant issued more than 20 years ago, according to a news release.


At 8:09 a.m., police arrested Emilio Sores Oliva, 48, at Susquehanna Trail and Cloverleaf Road in Conewago Township on the warrant, which was issued in 1988.


Police did not say why the warrant was issued, and no record of it exists on an online database of Pennsylvania's magisterial courts.


After police arrested Oliva, they found a marijuana cigarette on him and charged him with possession of a small amount of marijuana, the news release stated.






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That brief time out from heated discourse? No more

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That brief time out from heated discourse? No more

By LIZ SIDOTI AP National Political Writer
Gov Mitch Daniels, R-Ind. speaks during the Ronald Reagan Banquet... ((AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana))
WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama? Weak, a socialist and a liar. Liberals? Monsters and a cancer. Former Vice President Dick Cheney? Called a war criminal, "murdering scum" and a draft dodger—by people in his own party.

Just a month after the Arizona shooting rampage led to bipartisan calls for toned-down political discourse, incivility suffused the year's largest gathering of conservatives. Just like at most partisan get-togethers on either end of the ideological spectrum.

The brief political time out is over—if it ever really existed.

"All right, sit down and shut up," Cheney said after being greeted by hecklers when he made a surprise appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Supporters shouted down the insults with a "U.S.A." chant, and a visibly annoyed Cheney brushed off the outbursts.

Such incivility didn't overwhelm the conference, which is a rite of passage for presidential contenders, right-leaning media personalities and grass-roots activists. But it kept popping up throughout the three-day affair in speeches by names big and not so big.

That's not to say liberals would have been any more civil at their own event, and the tone at the conservative gathering was arguably no different from what it's been in the past. After all, it's what these events are for.

On both the left and the right, hard-core ideologues are the ones who attend such conferences, and agendas are set with that audience in mind. Verbal bomb-throwing is the norm from speakers who serve up political red meat to highly partisan crowds that devour it.

This weekend's conference was a sign of a return to normalcy in the wake of the shootings that wounded Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., and killed six in January. That attack touched off a national debate about overheated political rhetoric. Politicians of all stripes, Obama included, pleaded for a more civil discourse.

The GOP's top elected leaders—House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky—set a respectful tone in their speeches to the conservative gathering.

So did many of the Republicans likely to run for president.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, who referred to Obama only once, confronted the issue of "the venomous, petty, often ad hominem political discourse of the day." He urged conservatives to be more thoughtful in their rhetoric.

Yet even as he invoked Ronald Reagan's admonishment, "Remember, we have no enemies, only opponents," Daniels slapped at Democrats: "Our opponents are better at nastiness than we will ever be. It comes naturally." He also told conservatives to embrace a nicer

Gov Mitch Daniels, R-Ind. speaks during the Ronald Reagan Banquet at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington on Friday, Feb.. 11, 2011. ((AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana))
approach—for political gain.

"The public is increasingly disgusted with a steady diet of defamation, and prepared to reward those who refrain from it," he said. "It would help if they liked us, just a bit."

Other likely presidential contenders openly denigrated Obama—his policies, his politics, his ability to lead.

Ex-Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum suggested the president lies. "This is someone who doesn't believe in truth and evil in America," he said.

Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann said the country has seen Obama "usher in socialism" and she branded his health care law "the crown jewel of socialism."

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said that under Obama, "an uncertain world has been made more dangerous by the lack of clear direction from a weak president."

It wasn't all personal; some was just business. Yet much of the criticism relied on words and phrases that liberals tend to find offensive and conservatives wield specifically to score political points.

The false rumors about Obama's heritage surfaced.

"I'm not one who questions the president's birth certificate and the existence of his birth certificate," said former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty. "But when you listen to his policies, don't you at least wonder what planet he's from?"

Laughter and applause followed that. And after Idaho Rep. Raul Labrador's quip that he "was fortunate enough to be an American citizen by birth, and I have the

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum addresses the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 10, 2011. ((AP Photo/Alex Brandon))
birth certificate to prove it."

The most pointed attacks came from sharp-tongued commentators, as is usually the case.

Andrew Breitbart, an activist who runs a conservative media company, assailed people from liberal groups such as ACORN, Code Pink and unions. "Hate-filled, racist sheep," he called them.

"These people I've confronted are monsters," he said.

Pundit Ann Coulter talked about Obama using Democrats' poor fortunes in November's congressional elections. "The way things are going, Obama may want to look into becoming the president of Egypt. Nobody would complain about him being a Muslim then," she said to cheers. Obama was born in Hawaii and is a Christian.

Like previous years, insults dotted Coulter's speech.

"In honor of the new spirit of civility, I thought I would point out that under mean, divisive George Bush a nuclear sub was named after Jimmy Carter," she said sarcastically—and then proceed to bash the former Democratic president.

She lumped Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano in with "overbearing, out-of-touch, despots."

Asked about her least favorite Democrat, she said: "That's like asking my least favorite disease ... Cancer."

In the end, modern politics is predictable—two parties, drawing distinctions, each saying it's better because the alternative is worse. If this weekend showed anything, it was that the 2012 presidential campaign has begun—no better than usual, but perhaps no worse, either.

———

Online:

Conservatives' convention site: http://www.conservative.org/cpac

———

Liz Sidoti has covered national politics for The Associated Press since 2003.

———

Online:

http://www.conservative.org/cpac

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Two Roman Catholic churches in central Pennsylvania have started the process of merging into one parish

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Central Pennsylvania churches begin merger talks

The Associated Press
LOCK HAVEN, Pa.—Two Roman Catholic churches in central Pennsylvania have started the process of merging into one parish.

Parishioners of the Immaculate Conception and St. Agnes churches in Lock Haven will meet this week to discuss the potential union in the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese.

The merger talk stems from appointments made by the diocese last year to assign a parochial administrator to Immaculate Conception and a pastor to St. Agnes. Both churches previously had pastors.

A unification team was established in October under the direction of Bishop Joseph Adamec, who had expressed a desire for both parishes to work toward a merger.

Each parish is expected to see a proposal from the unification team by June 30. Each church is relatively large, with 425 at St. Agnes and 267 at Immaculate Conception.

———

Information from: The Express, http://www.lockhaven.com





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Landmark Meeting of Chemtrail Activists and Local EPA

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Landmark Meeting of Chemtrail Activists and Local EPA

The Intel Hub

by Zen Gardner – Contributing Writer


February 12th, 2011

Local Chemtrail activists in Alachua County, Florida recently took the initiative and asked for a meeting with their local EPA officials to express their concerns.

They viewed portions of “What in the World Are They Spraying” to open the meeting, and then discussed the need for more scientific data to help explain the phenomenon–to which the EPA agreed!

The local EPA head even makes the suggestion of accessing what he calls a “massive data base” of information collected country wide regarding pollution levels due to acid rain over the past 30 years! Let’s see if they deliver.

This is a terrific example of taking action locally and opening up a dialog with local officials.

There’s so much great information available we can show these people. They cite the information gathered in Shasta, California which is really powerful.

Other great offical information on California’s state-wide rise in metallic salts in water sources are thoroughly covered at www.californiaskywatch. com. The documented government weather mod programs and the public list of aerosol patents is also powerful.

One suggestion to is perhaps use Rosalind Peterson’s suggestion of calling them persistent contrails when speaking with officials to not set off the pre-programmed “conspiracy” reaction. Aerosols is also a great word.

Whichever, fire away!

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Chemtrails Halted for Navy Fest, U.S. Open and…Obama

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Chemtrails Halted for Navy Fest, U.S. Open and…Obama

The Intel Hub

By Zen Gardner – Contributing Writer


February 12th, 2011

An F/A-18 Hornet roars off the flight deck of the carrier John C. Stennis on Tuesday.

Surprise. Military brass don’t like chemtrails either. So they stopped them for 3 days in San Diego this week while they enjoyed their multi-million dollar taxpayer-funded festivities. Sort of the Oscars for the military elite you might say.

Besides, while setting up with exotic boats and planes, bringing in dignitaries and the like, you’d hate to have pesky hazy, toxic days for your guests and families. And while the elaborate air show was going on it wouldn’t be convenient to be competing with other Navy/NATO/covert aerosol planes, normally seen almost daily spraying the vicinity, state, country and world, would it?

That’d just be downright silly. And with all those TV crews and phone cameras clicking away someone just might notice something a little strange, or at the least, “disturbing” to the unitiated, in front of the unsullied elite and their precious guests.

That would be messy.

Clear Days of Preparation

We just found this out noticing signs on the LA Freeway to avoid the Coronado Island area while heading south to look at the beaches. We’re always wondering when and why the chemtrails get turned on and off and film them quite a bit. This recent span of clear days had us rejoicing, thinking recent complaints to the media a la one of my recent chemtrail posts was having an effect. (Right..)

Turns out they’ve been prepping for this event for the same several clear days we’ve been enjoying. It’s been gorgeous “weather” they’ve so gratiously “allowed” by our controllers, and everyone’s been getting some unfiltered sunshine at last – although the white sheen from years of aerosol seeding can still be seen on the clearest day and we’re still not getting full sun, nor is anyone anywhere sad to say.

But here’s yesterday’s announcement of today’s event:

Navy to celebrate 100 years of flight with huge air show


Feb. 11, San Diego – In a massive choreography of planes, boats and automobiles, more than 120,000 people are likely to gather around San Diego Bay on Saturday for an historic parade of Navy air power.


Nearly 200 current and vintage military aircraft will fly over the Coronado Bridge and up the belly of the bay to celebrate 100 years of naval aviation.


The Navy is bringing the party here because North Island was the birthplace of naval aviation in 1911. Source

Hmm. Just can’t seem to get away from that pesky 911.

U.S. Open Golf Tourney Clear Too

Two weeks ago we also noticed clear skies for several days, which doesn’t happen often in southern California. We’re a major population center and they hit us hard with chemtrails as often as they can, like other densely populated areas.

I was wondering about that one day and after driving for a while and coming upon the ocean there was this huge blimp. Sure enough, it was the weekend of the U.S. Open! Bingo!

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnUqh2V7SLOhI4jOCUz13FSvmkISLWr6TNR3ducBgykOirL9MWposneftoz5vBtk9QNwxTtcTei7bJP6yl6XsrF87h_31NQUqtexH_BgeBtbvWz88WUg6x4dQE7leRb8080YK1VE2dTtY/s1600/AirshipSanDiego201001_katy_final.jpg

The elite LOVE golf! Problem solved.

So again, “Should we turn the aerosols off, or on for our esteemed guests?” “Well off, Jeeves, of course. Especially with all the local Illuminati in attendance and their ‘golden boys of golf’ to protect.”

Hey, give ‘em a break. We’re only peons, aphids, fodder, worker bees, useless eaters, or their new institutional term:

human resources“.

By the way, who’s resource are you? Think about that one.

Just wondering, Zen

P.S. If this just sounds like a “coincidence”, let me tell you about my experience in Texas last year.

(I’ve heard this has been witnessed by others, but got to see it clearly for myself.)

Obama came to visit Austin and then Dallas during his campaigning for whoever. Austin, an alternative hotbed, gets BOMBED with chemtrails. And the air doesn’t move. I coughed horrifically there during our visit.

As I said, I photograph and film these things. It empowers me to know and document that “I see you!” but also I’m building an archive I use regularly.

Saint Obama Arrives

But sure enough, the skies cleared one day, and oddly enough it was the day or our departure from Austin for Dallas. But lo and behold, it turned out to be the day of Obama’s visit. And if that’s not enough, he touched down, did his little gig, and took off for Dallas…where we were going as he was arriving.

Dallas gets creamed regularly. Again, the air doesn’t move so for me it’s toxic. A doctor I saw there said this weird “early onset athsma” or something was sweeping the area and respiratory problems were off the charts.

Anyway, we start approaching Dallas. I usually see the chemtrails ahead of time and am taking pictures. Nothing. Closer. Nothing. It was a chemtrail spiget “turn off”…and sure enough, it was for Obama and his nasties. He came for the day and meant that much to the sprayers to turn it off.

I kid you not. Think about it.

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Egyptian military dissolves parliament, suspends Constitution

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BBC

February 13, 2011

Egypt’s new military authorities say they are dissolving parliament and suspending the constitution.

In a statement on state TV, the higher military council said it would stay in power six months, or until elections.

Egypt’s current parliament is dominated by supporters of President Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted on Friday after 18 days of mass protests.

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Algeria shuts down internet and Facebook as protest mounts

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Nabila Ramdani

The Telegraph

February 13, 2011

Plastic bullets and tear gas were used to try and disperse large crowds in major cities and towns, with 30,000 riot police taking to the streets in Algiers alone.

There were also reports of journalists being targeted by state-sponsored thugs to stop reports of the disturbances being broadcast to the outside world.

But it was the government attack on the internet which was of particular significance to those calling for an end to President Abdelaziz Boutifleka’s repressive regime.

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Female Opt-Out Alert! TSA Miami

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Lynn Swearingen

The PPJ Gazette

Feb 12, 2011

I normally don’t read Time Magazine, but today this blog section caught my eye:Stay Classy, TSA.

When it was my turn, I politely said that I would like to opt out. “Seriously?” the first TSA worker asked me with a raised eyebrow. Yes, seriously.

He directed me through the nearby metal detector (the one that would have been good enough if I’d just chosen another line) and motioned for me to wait for a pat-down agent: “Female opt-out!” A female agent led me to a table where she set my bags and then skeptically asked if I knew what the pat down involved. Yes, indeedy (thanks, Jeff Goldberg!) “Do you want to do this somewhere private?” No, thank you. The agent calmly explained what she was going to do before she performed each part of the procedure, and very briskly but thoroughly went through the pat-down. The whole thing was over in a matter of minutes and was a completely professional experience.

Or it was, until a male TSA agent walked behind us and hollered: “Hey, I thought she was mine! I was gonna do her!”

And that, buddy, is exactly why I’m opting out instead of standing in the see-through picture machine. Thanks for validating my choice.

Soooo glad they were able to Unionize so that upstanding individuals such as mentioned above have the opportunity to be retained :

TSA administrator John Pistole is defending his decision to allow his agency’s employees to vote on limited collective bargaining rights. Pistole told a House Homeland Security subcommittee that granting the right to vote is one way he’s trying to change the work environment for the better. House Republicans called the hearing out of concern that unionization could have an impact on national security. Pistole took a rejected that idea. He said he would fire any workers who strike, slow their work due to disputes or who do anything to adversely affect security.


One wonders if “claiming” captive passengers such as one would choose a lamb for slaughter counts as adverse?

Of course all the sheeple of Amerika know that Legislation automatically conveys Limitations, so those in charge have proposed the following:

Proposed legislation introduced this week in both houses of Congress would criminalize the posting of any airline passenger’s body image on the Internet as a result of being electronically scanned for weapons at U.S. airport


With the moniker of Security Screening Confidential Data Privacy Act (SSCDPA) the above failed last year and is now a proposed Amendment to the Federal Aviation Administration’s Reauthorization Bill (FAARB). Interesting – maybe this should have fallen under the FUBAR Bill, a much referred to (but never understood) system of many government agencies Standard Operating Procedure (SOP).

Our Time Blogger may want to purchase (and therefore stimulate the economy which is doing so incredibly well) a few products for her little lamb from the “Don’t Touch My Kitty” site. Started by three now probably “flight-blacklisted” ladies from Montana as their personal answer to the whole “Don’t Touch My Junk” movement, they could use the support.

Speaking of TSA Abuses – either they aren’t happening anymore and therefore are not being reported, or Lindsay Lohan recently wore a dress so tight to her recent court hearing thus avoiding the grope factor of passing through the L.A. County Courthouse grab-and-tickle machine that even Egyptian Riots were upstaged for a few hours!

Yeah – that’s a run on folks. Gee – there oughta be a law.

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