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Keyword: zotwithin

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  • ZOT! The Democrats are quick to judge

    10/07/2004 6:23:43 PM PDT · by big sexxy joe · 63 replies · 880+ views
    The Democrats are quick to say that Cheney is a liar because he said he never met Senator Edwards before. They insist that it was a lie rather than a mistake. Apparently no one from their ranks has ever lied... It's such B.S. It slipped his mind. He's getting older and has already had multiple heart attacks. Being Vice President is a tough job. A lot tougher than Edwards could handle, I'll tell that. I don't think it's so unreasonable for him to forget some trival meeting. But the liberals have to jump all over it and call him a...
  • Theresa Heinz Kerry drunk while speaking at the DNC Convention?

    07/27/2004 8:31:49 PM PDT · by FreepinFemale · 16 replies · 666+ views
    A Sound Mind | Tuesday, July 27, 2004 | FreepinFemale
    I'll be honest with you, I've never heard the ketchup lady speak before but the woman definitely sounded drunk or sedated one way or another to me. She slurred her words repeatedly and her timing was off throughout her speech. Other than that, can anyone tell me where her unusual accent comes from? She doesn't sound like a Bostonian or even a Boston Brahman as far as I can tell. I doubt the public can relate to her. She's definitely no match for our Lady Laura. She appears to belong more in the Betty Ford Clinic than the White House.
  • Linda Ronstadt BOOed off stage and KICKED OUT of her hotel!

    07/19/2004 9:37:52 PM PDT · by Delta 21 · 138 replies · 11,866+ views
    FOX News
    Linda Ronstadt was booed of stage and denied back into her room by the casino owner after she told her audiance to go see Moore's Farenheight 9-11 and that he was a great american patriot. Just on FOX.
  • Presidency of George W. Bush -- the first 35 months

    07/18/2004 6:16:18 AM PDT · by yoe · 124 replies · 4,978+ views
    Naspino.com ^ | 2001 - 2003 | Staff
    This is a re-post - lest we forget and what must be told about our President Bush - read it carefully and see why the Democrats are fighting back so hard to regain power - from unions to the environmentalists to the United Nations – President Bush has acted for America and Americans. Please pass this on.Presidency of George W. Bush -- the first 35 months · Banned Partial Birth Abortion · Reversed Clinton's move to strike Reagan's anti-abortion Mexico Policy · Killed the Kyoto Global Warming Treaty · Killed U.S. involvement in the International Criminal Court · Killed Clinton's...
  • 'Separate but equal' now part of gay marriage debate [BARF ALERT]

    05/09/2004 2:15:05 PM PDT · by MegaSilver · 14 replies · 195+ views
    The Salt Lake Tribune ^ | 09 May 2004 | Victor B. Flatt
    After a shocking and unexpected court decision, much of the nation finds itself stunned at the fast pace of social change that appears to be on the horizon. There is talk of civil disobedience, of the protection of historical values and the need for a constitutional amendment to stop "activist courts" from redefining American society. This scenario could be drawn from the current headlines about the issue of gay marriage, but actually refers to the aftermath of the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education 50 years ago where, in striking down public school segregation by race, the...
  • Worker opposed to gays wins suit

    04/07/2004 8:12:09 PM PDT · by missyme · 73 replies · 445+ views
    Washington Times ^ | April 7th, 2004 | Amy Fagan
    <p>An AT&T Broadband employee who was fired after refusing to abide by company rules that he said violated his religious beliefs about homosexuality has won a federal court case. Judge Marcia S. Krieger of the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado awarded Albert Buonanno of Denver $146,269 for lost salary, loss of 401(k) matching contributions and compensation for emotional distress in a Friday ruling released this week. The judge found that although there was no direct religious discrimination against Mr. Buonanno, AT&T Broadband failed to show it could not have accommodated Mr. Buonanno's beliefs "without undue hardship" to the company he had been with for nearly two years. Mr. Buonanno objected to language in a new employee handbook issued in January 2001 that said "each person at AT&T Broadband is charged with the responsibility to fully recognize, respect and value the differences among all of us," including sexual orientation. He was fired after refusing to sign a "certificate of understanding" acknowledging that he agreed to the policy. The Civil Rights Act requires employers to reasonably accommodate the religious beliefs of employees unless the employer can show it will create an undue hardship on the company to do so. Mr. Buonanno felt his Christian beliefs prevented him from valuing or agreeing with homosexuality, which he views as a sin, but he pledged not to discriminate against or harass anyone, said John W. Whitehead, president of the Rutherford Institute, the group that represented Mr. Buonanno. "This issue is about more than an objection to homosexuality," Mr. Whitehead said. "It concerns the freedom of conscience — the right of individuals to object to something they believe is wrong, especially when it contradicts their religious beliefs, whether it is war, abortion, homosexuality or a number of other issues." A spokesman for Comcast, which owns AT&T Broadband, said, the company "is disappointed in the court's ruling," which they said appears to ignore attempts by companies "to foster diversity and nondiscrimination in the workplace." The spokesman, who asked not to be named, said the company is reviewing the case and might appeal the ruling. Mr. Buonanno did not ask the court to reinstate him as a quota specialist, instead seeking monetary compensation. He now works for Mental Health Corporation of Denver as a counselor. The ruling could embolden other Christians or religious people to challenge similar policies, said Mr. Whitehead, who expects court challenges to the "sensitivity training" companies sometimes require, which he said often aims at training workers to accept and value diversity, including homosexuality. "I think Buonanno is just the tip of the iceberg," Mr. Whitehead said. Mr. Buonanno wasn't asking anything that would unduly burden the company — such as granting him every Wednesday off for religious purposes, Mr. Whitehead said. "All he was saying that he couldn't agree that he would value the homosexual lifestyle ... which as a fundamentalist Christian he sees as a sinful lifestyle," said Mr. Whitehead. But AT&T made "no attempt to even reasonably accommodate him," and they couldn't show undue hardship would occur if they did. In the ruling, the judge listed several things the company could have done to avoid the situation, such as communicating better, getting more details about Mr. Buonanno's concerns, clarifying what the company intended by the language in question, accepting his pledge not to discriminate, or even rewriting the language to make it less ambiguous.</p>