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Re: family values



Bass why don't you post all this crap to Comp.Home.Automation too?

I am sure its only a slight mistake,don't worry I will forward it for you


"Robert L Bass" <sales@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> a écrit dans le message de
news: 1161010212.259416.280420@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Republican Family Values
> Bear with me for a second--I'm going to take you back two months, to
> one of those horrible Bush campaign idiot-fests--this one in Iowa:
>
>    Bush: Overall, 94 million Americans will have a lower tax bill next
> year, including 70 million women and 38 million families with children.
> The money they keep will make it easier to save for their retirement,
> or their children's education, invest in a home or a small business, or
> pay off credit card debts. One of those families is the Hintz family,
> from Clive, Iowa. Thank you all for coming. (Applause.)
>
>    It's a special day for Mike and Sharla, not because they're with
> the President or with Chairman Grassley, but because it's their 13th
> wedding anniversary. (Applause.) Theirs is a typical story. See, last
> year they received a child tax credit check for $1,600 for their four
> children. And under all the tax relief we've passed, they saved about
> $2,800 last year. With this extra money they bought a wood-burning
> stove to reduce their home heating costs. They made a decision for
> their family.
>
>    They also made home repairs and improvements. They took the family
> on a vacation to Minnesota. Next year when you get your check, you may
> want to come to Texas. (Laughter.) Without the tax bill I'm signing
> today, the Hintzes would have paid $1,200 more in federal taxes next
> year. Think about that. Here's a family of four, working hard to raise
> their kids, the money would have been going out of their pocket. I
> believe they can spend that $1,200 better than the federal government
> can. (Applause.)
>
> AP interviewed Mike Hintz after Bush's speech:
>
>    Mike Hintz, a First Assembly of God youth pastor, said the tax cuts
> also gave him additional money to use for health care.
>
>    He said he supports Bush's values.
>
>    "The American people are starting to see what kind of leader
> President Bush is. People know where he stands," he said.
>
>    "Where we are in this world, with not just the war on terror, but
> with the war with our culture that's going on, I think we need a man
> that is going to be in the White House like President Bush, that's
> going to stand by what he believes.
>
>    "Everybody that I've talked to are saying that things are going to
> start going his way," Hintz said.
>
> Now, Bush and Hintz failed to mention a few things. First off, a Texas
> vacation, as horrible as that sounds, is probably all they can
> afford--the falling dollar means that Europe and Asia are out of the
> question, even if the people there could possibly stand Bush voters
> like the Hintzes. More importantly, the Hintzes probably wouldn't have
> paid $1,200 more in taxes next year, because Mike just lost his job.
> Furthermore, their 13th anniversary was probably their last. Whatever
> money they may have saved from tax cuts is likely to go to lawyers now.
> You see, Mike, father of four, has been charged with sexual
> exploitation of a minor for shagging a 17-year-old girl in his church
> youth group:
>
>    A Des Moines youth pastor is charged with sexual exploitation by a
> counselor.
>
>    KCCI learned that the married father of four recently turned
> himself in to Johnston police.
>
>    Rev. Mike Hintz was fired from the First Assembly of God Church,
> located at 2725 Merle Hay Road, on Oct. 30. Hintz was the youth pastor
> there for three years.
>
>    Police said he started an affair with a 17-year-old woman in the
> church youth group this spring.
>
>    Church officials fired Hintz immediately after hearing the
> allegations.
>
>    "They did acknowledge with their congregation that Mr. Hintz had
> made apparently some admissions to his inappropriate activity, and they
> took a proactive approach and immediately terminated him from his
> position," Johnston police Sgt. Lynn Aswegan said.
>




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