So many possible replies......so little time.
Gee, I really feel sorry for him ........... NOT.
He’s morally crippled too.
So the proud “gay American” isn’t man enough to pay child support. What a bastard. Get your butt to McDonalds get a job and help support your kids you SOB!
Wish I could feel sorry for Gov McScurvy.....NOT!
Openly gay...... not until the day he quit.
She makes $82,000 a year. Plus, any money that could have gone to the child, she made him spend in legal bills.
He’s no better than one of the turds he burgles.
Former New Jersey Gov. James McGreevey testified Wednesday that he has limited income, few assets and significant debts. He said he is all but unemployable because of the gay sex scandal that toppled his administration and ongoing publicity in his messy divorce.
That’s crazy, this time of year there are lots of landscaping companies that are hiring.
So I presume the Episcopal Diocese in New Jersey is paying for his seminary tuition and books?
This SOB should be in jail for corruption.
That would be the only acceptable excuse for not paying alimony.
But, he’s a Dem in a Dem paradise. Plus he’s gay—double bonus points for that./s/
The real chickens came home to roost?
What is it about being a gay, cheating husband causes one to become an Episcopal seminary student?
Keep this person away from the kids, people.
Typical gay white man.
“He said he relies on boyfriend Mark O’Donnell to pay legal bills and lifestyle expenses.”
Lifestyle expenses - the mind boggles at what this could possibly mean. Now I need an aspirin....
Who cheated again? To be blunt - he was married, then he went out, and s****ed d-—. He made that decision. That was his choice to make. Now he has to live with that.
Nonsense!
A Prayer for Larry Craig
By [former NJ governor] James E. McGreevey
Monday, September 3, 2007; A15
Washington Post
My gut wrenched when I read of Sen. Larry Craig's bathroom arrest. I remembered my own late-night encounter with the law at a Garden State Parkway rest stop following a political dinner in north Jersey.
I pulled into the rest stop, parked my car, flashed my headlights, which was "the signal," and waited. Glancing in my rearview mirror, I saw a state trooper approaching. I desperately tried to convince the trooper of my innocence, showing him my former prosecutor's badge, a gift from the office when I left. The trooper radioed his office and returned. "I never want to see you here again," he said. I survived for another day.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/02/AR2007090200889_pf.html
Good grief. And they let him in? It's one thing to repent your ways and reform, but there's no perceptible sign that he has reformed. He's still living with his boyfriend.
I guess he's lining himself up to be the next Bishop of New Hampshire--or New Jersey.
So many topics in one article, but this one worries me the most. I can't imagine what this seminary is teaching ... and glossing over ... that allows McGreevey to continue believing that he has been called by God to serve as a spiritual guide to others. I don't have the arrogance to claim perfection in my life, but neither do I have the arrogance to claim that my flaws are actually virtuous.
A man is not automatically disqualified for ministry by lust, pride, anger, greed, homosexual inclinations, or even adultery. He is, however, disqualified by taking the position that "I want what I want, and if the Bible disagrees then God was wrong." The Bible, in the original languages, is completely clear on homosexuality, and someone who doesn't believe the Bible is the word of God has no business in any form of ministry work.