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Random Stupidity (Read 541358 times)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1245 - Nov 1st, 2007 at 12:27pm
 
Quote:
"New Iowa Pumpkin Tax Puts Damper on Growers' Halloween Spirit

Wednesday, October 31, 2007


DES MOINES, Iowa — The Iowa Department of Revenue is taxing jack-o'-lanterns this Halloween.

The new department policy was implemented after officials decided that pumpkins are used primarily for Halloween decorations, not food, and should be taxed, said Renee Mulvey, the department's spokeswoman.

"We made the change because we wanted the sales tax law to match what we thought the predominant use was," Mulvey said. "We thought the predominant use was for decorations or jack-o'-lanterns."

Previously, pumpkins had been considered an edible squash and exempted from the tax. The department ruled this year that pumpkins are taxable — with some exceptions — if they are advertised for use as jack-'o-lanterns or decorations.

Iowans planning to eat pumpkins can still get a tax exemption if they fill out a form.

The new policy, published in the department's September newsletter, has some pumpkin farmers feeling tricked this Halloween.

"I don't mind paying taxes, but let's get real here, people," said Bob Kautz, owner of the Buffalo Pumpkin Patch in Buffalo, about eight miles west of Davenport.

Kautz, who has owned his farm for seven years, was particularly dismayed with the notion of requiring customers to fill out a form verifying that they planned to eat the pumpkins they were buying.

"It's another crazy, crazy, stupid thing," he said.

Kautz said he will estimate how many pumpkins were bought for non-food purposes, and then will send the tax on that amount to the revenue department.

"It gets unfeasible for people to have small businesses," he said.

Danny Carroll, who owns Carroll's Pumpkin Farm in Grinnell with his wife, said he will have to pay the sales tax out of profits.

"Essentially, they just reduced our income by 6 percent," he said. "It's too bad, but it's not surprising."

Other Iowa pumpkin sellers also expressed confusion about the new policy. Some, like Carroll, said they were unaware of it. A few said they have been charging the tax this Halloween season and few customers have complained. None said they are asking customers to fill out the tax-exemption certificate.

Mulvey said department officials don't know how much extra revenue to expect from the pumpkin tax."


How many new government employees have been hired to process pumpkin exemption paperwork?

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-b0b
(...thinks there is no quenching government's thirst for the fruits of our labor.)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1246 - Nov 5th, 2007 at 2:52pm
 
Does anybody else see the problem with this movie poster?

...


Here's the Chinese version of the poster with the same picture of Will Smith...

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One of these pictures is not like the other.  In one picture, Will Smith has an AR-15 (and a darn sexy one at that) slung over his shoulder.  In the next, you can see the sling but no gun.  What kind of retarded sniveling liberal pantywaist idiot Photoshops a gun out of a survival movie poster?

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1247 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 11:54am
 
Look at this blasphemous teaching.  I can't believe how many people who want to challenge the Bible think they can add stuff to an English version and think it'll make sense.  Again, because The Bible is a translation we sometimes loose the sense and meaning of words that were written in Hebrew, Greek, and Aramaic (example: there are three different types of love in the Bible - perfect love, friendship love, and physical lover - I could take the context of "Love your neighbor/enemy as yourself" to mean have sex with them...however I can go back to the actual language and see that's not the right kind of love.

Quote:
An Evangelical Rethink on Divorce?

By DAVID VAN BIEMA Tue Nov 6, 12:30 AM ET

On questions relating to the Bible's treatment of family and morals, one might expect assurance, if not rigidity, from Evangelical Christianity. So, it may surprise many to learn how "live" the topic of divorce remains in Evangelical circles. Last month, the cover story of the monthly Christianity Today was titled "When to Separate What God has Joined: A Closer Reading on the Bible on Divorce." The heated controversy provoked by the story showed how Biblically flexible some Evangelicals can be - especially when God's word seems at odds not just with modern American behavior, but also with simple human kindness.

As the article's author, the British Evangelical scholar David Instone-Brewer, points out, for most of 2,000 years Christians have viewed divorce through two scriptural citations. In Matthew, the pharisees ask Christ, "Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any cause?" Jesus refers to the Old Testament and then replies, "Whoever divorces a wife, except for sexual indecency, commits adultery." The apostle Paul adds in the book First Corinthians that a Christian is "not bound" to a non-Christian spouse who abandons him. Simple, right?

Instone-Brewer radically reinterprets the first passage using, of all things, quotation marks. The Greek of the New Testament didn't always contain them, and scholars agree that sometimes they must be added in to make sense of it. Instone-Brewer, an expert in Jewish thought during Jesus's era, writes that Christ's interlocutors were not asking him whether there was any cause at all for divorce, but whether he supported something called "any-cause" divorce, a term a little bit like "no-fault" that allowed husbands to divorce wives for any reason at all. Instone-Brewer claims Jesus's "no" was a response to this idea, and that his "except for sexual indecency" condition was not a statement of the sole exemption from God's blanket prohibition, but merely Christ's reiteration of one of several divorce permissions in the Old Testament - one he felt the "any-time" advocates had exaggerated. Finally, Instone-Brewer tallies four grounds for divorce he finds affirmed in both Old and New Testaments: adultery, emotional and sexual neglect, abandonment (by anyone) and abuse.

Christianity Today has written previously on divorce, often bemoaning how easy it is in today's America. However, the Instone-Brewer essay appeared to be its editors' attempt to offer Evangelicals an escape from a classic dilemma. The "plain sense" of Jesus's words without quotes seems clear enough, but also inhumane: how could a loving God forbid divorce, even by omission, in cases of wife-beating, or of abandonment by a Christian spouse?

Each branch of Christianity deals with divorce in its own way: Catholicism bans it entirely, but many divorced and remarried couples nonetheless find that their conscience permits them to take Communion. Liberal Protestantism accepted divorce some decades ago without much engagement of the scriptural issue. Evangelicals define themselves as being tightly bound by scripture. But besides the humanitarian problem, there are some uncomfortable facts on the ground: The divorce rate among Evangelicals, which first became news after polls released by the Barna Research Group in 2001, has been as high or higher than the national average.

The Evangelical movement has actually made tremendous accommodations given the strictures it lives under. Ministries for the newly divorced are common at megachurches; and on the historically less-rigid Pentecostal side of the spectrum, celebrity preachers Juanita Bynum and Paula White both recently announced their intention to divorce. Most experts interviewed for this story attested that whereas 30 years ago, a pastor might well order a battered woman home to return her husband, that is rare today.

More conservative Evangelicals remain uneasy about divorce. If a split itself is inescapable, notes Christianity Today editor Andy Crouch, "remarriage is where the rubber meets the road," and many remarried couples find themselves denied church membership. Says Russel Moore, dean of the 16.3 million-member Southern Baptist Convention's influential Southern Seminary, "We teach our future pastors that marriage is a lifelong, one-flesh union." Any woman in an abusive marriage should "leave that situation," he acknowledges, and a "majority" probably accept remarriage. Asked if he does, Moore demurred: "Let me think about that for a little bit. I could answer in a way that would be very easily misunderstood."

Evangelical conflict on the topic was obvious in reader response to the Instone Brewer essay. Initially the mail was heavily negative. The most stinging broadside sas a column by John Piper, a respected theological conservative, that called the essay not just weak but "tragic." The magazine's editor in chief, David Neff, felt the need to explain online that "Instone-Brewer's article did not... give people carte blanche on divorce." The mail eventually leveled off at 60% negative to 40% positive.

Still, the controversy suggests that even the country's most rule-bound Christians will search for a fresh understanding of scripture when it seems unjust to them. The implications? Flexibility on divorce may mean that evangelicals could also rethink their position on such things as gay marriage, as a generation of Christians far more accepting of homosexuality begins to move into power. (The ever-active Barna folks have found that 57% of "born-again" Christians age 16-29 criticize their own church for being "anti-homosexual.") It could also give heart to a certain twice-divorced former New York mayor who is running for President and seeking the conservative vote. But that may be pushing things a bit.


I shouldn't be surprised, Satan has been trying to negate the Bible since it's first pen stroke.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1248 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 1:31pm
 
Wow, that's got to be the most blatant example of liturgical reinterpretation I've ever seen - and that's saying something.

Jesus said divorce is bad, mmkay?

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(...thinks folks need to deal with it.)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1249 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 1:52pm
 
Yea that was pretty bad.

To start a debate: A woman is abused. Divorce? or not? The guy turned sour over time. Can she remarry?

Or the guy/girl you're with is just NOT your type and you rushed into it.

Thoughts?

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1250 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 2:12pm
 
MediaMaster wrote on Nov 6th, 2007 at 1:52pm:
To start a debate: A woman is abused. Divorce? or not? The guy turned sour over time. Can she remarry?


Here's the correct way to handle the problem.  The woman's father needs to shoot her husband, thereby making her a widow.  Then, she's free to remarry.

Sorry, was that Pharisaical of me?


Quote:
Or the guy/girl you're with is just NOT your type and you rushed into it.


Too bad, so sad.  You made a lifelong commitment, and you're obligated to see it through to the bloody end.

God isn't going to give you a pass on your marital vows simply because you've decided your spouse "isn't your type."

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1251 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 2:31pm
 
Where does forgiveness come into play? The fact that people will look down on those that have remarried boggles my mind. We have all sinned. What about those that messed up, weren't paying attention to what God wanted, and just married someone that wasn't right for them? Then they get out of their backsliding state and realize their spouse is totally wrong for them, and not Godly at all. They should be paired with someone that brings down their faith the rest of their lives? Of course not.

We need to be forgiving and loving Christians. Its not a situation of absolutes anymore or we would all be absolutely going to hell anyway. Jesus died for us and by His blood we are forgiven for all of our sins, including adultery in the form of divorce. In my opinion, get right with God, repent, and get on with your life, with God and the Word as your guide.
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1252 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 2:56pm
 
Yeah, you're right, we shouldn't look down on those that have divorced.  That's not our place.  Even if it was our place, we should forgive them and move on.

However, that doesn't change the fact that divorce in most situations is a sin.  That's a completely different topic.  The Bible specifically says we shouldn't commit a sin simply because we know we'll be forgiven for it.

If you're in a "bad" marriage that is "dragging down your faith," I think God would want you to do everything in your power to make things right.  If you ditch your spouse simply because they don't know Christ as their savior, you're abandoning them in their greatest time of need.  I personally can't imagine a greater or more influential witness than a godly spouse!

Getting out of a marriage simply because your spouse isn't "godly" enough is a cop-out.  Anybody that backs out of their marriage vows outside of a very narrow set of biblically-defined parameters is bailing on one of their greatest promises.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1253 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 2:58pm
 
Moving this topic to the debate thread...

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1254 - Nov 6th, 2007 at 5:04pm
 
The newest drug craze to hit the streets of the ghetto:  Inhaling poo fumes!

PDF:  http://www.glennbeck.com/news/Jenkem2.pdf

Alrighty then.  I'm fairly certain that huffing poo gas is a sign of the apocalypse.  Now there will be turf wars over which gang controls the local dung pile.

How long until its a felony to take a crap?

Who came up with this?  Some guy must have been sitting around thinking that he needed a high.  "Maybe if I save some poo and bottle it up until it starts to ferment, and then inhale the fumes..."

How long before human feces becomes a Schedule I drug?  You had beans for lunch?  Manufacturing!  Up against the wall, scumbag!

Walking your dog in the neighborhood and picking up after them?  Distributing and transporting!  Spread 'em!

Does this mean that beans will now be removed from displays and only be sold from behind the counter?  Will you have to be 21 to buy them?  Will you be limited to a single 6oz can per day?

-b0b
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1255 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 5:06am
 
This is the second story I've seen like this:

Quote:
Mother says Student Disciplined for Hugging

Posted: Nov 6, 2007 07:32 PM

Updated: Nov 6, 2007 07:32 PM
Prattville Junior High School
Prattville Junior High School
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The debate of public displays of affection in school is hitting home in Alabama. The mother of a student in Autauga County says her daughter was disciplined for simply hugging a friend.

"When I went through school, I hugged my friends," said Lea Muir. Her daughter was given detention Monday at Prattville Junior High School. She called it an overreaction.

"It's a little bit extreme, I think."

But according the Autauga County School System's code of conduct, "inappropriate public displays of affection, including but not limited to embracing and kissing" are not allowed.

And Autauga County isn't the only one. Just last week, a school in Illinois disciplined a student for the very same thing. And a South Dakota student got in trouble for holding hands with a friend.

"It was made to be something ugly and it wasn't," Muir said.

She says the hug wasn't meant to be sexual. She says her daughter was consoling a male friend who recently lost a parent.

"What's it going to come to next?," she asked. "You can't high five or touch anybody? You can't brush by someone in the hallway?"

Muir says her daughter served out her punishment and she doesn't plan to take any legal action. But she encourages the school system to reevaluate its policy.

WSFA 12 News checked with other local school systems and found a more leeway in their codes of conduct. In Montgomery and Elmore counties, for example, touching must be of a sexual nature to be considered inappropriate.

Autauga County school officials didn't agree to an on-camera interview, but told WSFA 12 News, they were simply following the rules.

In 1999, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled schools could be held liable by ignoring claims of sexual harassment. Some say the ruling puts schools between a rock and a hard place. By not identifying all suspect behavior, they risk liability.  But when they do, they often hear complaints from parents.


I can understand school having rules about PDA...shoot, TR had enough people making out by their lockers that it still gives me the willies (I've never seen anyone unhinge their jaw and encompass a person's head quite like Kira Noland and Todd Mayer).  However this is ridiculous.  Students are getting in trouble for hugging their teachers first now it's their friends (not their bf or gf...just their friends).

Does this mean that we can no longer play any sports where contact is involved?  Football, cheerleading, tag, high fiving, passing some napkins and accidentally touching hands?  If someone drops their papers should no one help them because that's a PDA?

Ludacris...and not the rapper either.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1256 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 7:32am
 
Cheerleading isn't a sport.

That is all.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1257 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 8:10am
 
Well either is tag, high fiving, passing some napkins and accidentally touching hands that's why it's in a different sentence.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1258 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 9:07am
 
I'm pretty sure that's a geek commandment, along with football.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1259 - Nov 7th, 2007 at 10:53am
 
Also with football you'd have to have the coaches and the players expelled for slapping each others butts....ya know...maybe this isn't a bad policy.

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