In the spirit of the late Douglas Adams, I have an important message (see the last line of the blog). But first, I'd like to explain to whom it applies and to whom it does not apply.
The message at the end of this blog does apply to anyone who is aware of the recent decision of the Ninth District Circuit Court that because some Arizona Scholarship Tuition Organizations (STO's) are designed to serve schools of a particular faith group (Catholic, Jewish, Adventist, Lutheran, Christian) that it is unconstitutional for them to get any scholarship monies through the (legal) tax credit because Arizona families NOT from their faith group might not have enough choices of STO's for their scholarship applications (even though there are 55 STO's altogether, and fewer than half are faith-based or faith-related);
The message at the end of this blog does apply to the 2.3% of all Arizona filers (58,000 citizen taxpayers) who took the individual scholarship tax credit in 2008;
The message at the end of this blog does apply to the 28,324 students in 373 private schools (of all kinds of persuasions) who received a scholarship award fron an STO for the 2008 tax year;
The message at the end of this blog does apply to the underpaid teachers and administrators in most private schools who are determined to teach "a better way" with the freedom of conscience to guide them rather than legislation and political correctness;
The message at the end of this blog is made possible by the fact that the decision of the Ninth District Circuit Court will be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, if necesssary;
The message at the end of this blog is made possible by the fact that freedom-loving souls will find a way to avoid offering their children on the altar of Molech even if the Supreme Court decides to agree with the Ninth District Circuit Court (freedom-loving parents just aren't THAT stupid);
The message at the end of this blog does not apply to the ACLU and its lackeys, who are bent on wasting as much public and private money in court costs as possible by jousting with this windmill, in order to eliminate the dreadful possibility that some child in Arizona might be taught be SOMETHING that the ACLU does not agree with (hmmm, where's the "liberty" in ACLU?).
And here is the message at the end of the blog:
Do Not Push the Panic Button!
The message at the end of this blog does apply to anyone who is aware of the recent decision of the Ninth District Circuit Court that because some Arizona Scholarship Tuition Organizations (STO's) are designed to serve schools of a particular faith group (Catholic, Jewish, Adventist, Lutheran, Christian) that it is unconstitutional for them to get any scholarship monies through the (legal) tax credit because Arizona families NOT from their faith group might not have enough choices of STO's for their scholarship applications (even though there are 55 STO's altogether, and fewer than half are faith-based or faith-related);
The message at the end of this blog does apply to the 2.3% of all Arizona filers (58,000 citizen taxpayers) who took the individual scholarship tax credit in 2008;
The message at the end of this blog does apply to the 28,324 students in 373 private schools (of all kinds of persuasions) who received a scholarship award fron an STO for the 2008 tax year;
The message at the end of this blog does apply to the underpaid teachers and administrators in most private schools who are determined to teach "a better way" with the freedom of conscience to guide them rather than legislation and political correctness;
The message at the end of this blog is made possible by the fact that the decision of the Ninth District Circuit Court will be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, if necesssary;
The message at the end of this blog is made possible by the fact that freedom-loving souls will find a way to avoid offering their children on the altar of Molech even if the Supreme Court decides to agree with the Ninth District Circuit Court (freedom-loving parents just aren't THAT stupid);
The message at the end of this blog does not apply to the ACLU and its lackeys, who are bent on wasting as much public and private money in court costs as possible by jousting with this windmill, in order to eliminate the dreadful possibility that some child in Arizona might be taught be SOMETHING that the ACLU does not agree with (hmmm, where's the "liberty" in ACLU?).
And here is the message at the end of the blog:
Do Not Push the Panic Button!
2 comments:
i will not push the panic button.
So many panic buttons - so little time. God is in control - nothing phases me like it used to! :)
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