T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
293.1 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Mon Jul 16 1990 07:43 | 8 |
| I didn't see it, but it sure does sound effective.
There is a 1-800 number you can call to voice your protest, but I
forget what it is, and can't seem to find it.
Of course, the alternative is to brew your own...
'Saw
|
293.2 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Gimme a warm woman and a cold beer | Mon Jul 16 1990 10:44 | 6 |
|
It's time we took a whole shipload of beer kegs and dumped 'em in
Boston Harbor...after we empty 'em, of course.
Dickster
|
293.3 | I'd vote FOR it! | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Mon Jul 16 1990 11:03 | 1 |
|
|
293.4 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:15 | 18 |
| A) - I move we officially change the name of this NOTE to:
OURGNG::SPORTSBAR
We need a second to the motion, and a show of hands (okay.. a
vote).
B) - I'm tired of everytime the gov't (local.. state.. whatever) wants
more money, they slap another tax on booze or cigarettes. They even
CALL it a sin tax (the jerks! Booze and cigarettes are GOOD for you!).
The damned gov't should stop trying to legislate morality.
C) - I make another motion that if the stoopid gov't wants more money,
they should tax the churches. (`nother second and a show of hands
please).
Mike JN
|
293.5 | | FSHQA1::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 292-2170 | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:34 | 16 |
| Sin taxes are another example of how the government is shooting itself
in the foot.
We slap taxes on tobacco products all the time yet the government
spends lots of time and effort to prevent people from smoking. If they
legislate smoking out of existence, then who's going to pay all of
these taxes? Not only that, but if no one smokes, then the government
is going to end up paying out more money in social security benefits
because people will live longer.
Sin taxes are regressive because they hit the poorer members of society
disproportionately.
Oops I just realized, this isn't SOAPBOX.
John
|
293.6 | Move South for Cheaper Cancer Sticks | SHALOT::MEDVID | Head Like a Hole | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:44 | 27 |
| Move to North Carolina if you want cheapo cigs. The state tax on
cigarettes here is 2 cents. Yep, 2 cents. Our great state legislature
and their tobacco lobbyists do a bangup job at keeping it that way too.
Meanwhile, we have one of the highest gasoline taxes in the country.
'Course you have some pretty archaic drinking laws in NC too:
- In order for a club or establishment to serve anything stronger
than beer or wine, it must be a private member club.
- During daylight savings time, final call comes at 2:00 AM.
When the time changes for winter months, final call is at 1:00AM;
the logic there is that since it gets dark one hour earlier,
people start drinking one hour earlier. Go figure.
South Carolina is even worse. There's no alcohol whatsoever on
Sundays. Not even special exceptions. For instance:
- You can't buy a beer at a Charlotte Knights baseball game on
a Sunday because the stadium is in Ft. Mill, SC.
- New Years Eve this year was on a Saturday night. At midnight,
most nightclubs were not allowed to serve champagne.
RE:-.1
You've got a second on both your motions there, Mike. Since I'm
the original author, OKBYME.
|
293.7 | more drinking legalities | OTEK::HAAS | same as talking to you | Tue Jul 17 1990 12:51 | 13 |
| > South Carolina is even worse. There's no alcohol whatsoever on
> Sundays. Not even special exceptions.
This is like NC, in that if you're a private club you can serve on
Sundays. Examples are a lot of the hotel clubs, which is about your only
source on Sundays in the Palmetto State.
NC has also passed a no-happy-hour bill. Private clubs are exempt from
this. The way others get around it is to have a happy-day, which is legal
For instance, 7 oz. Rolling Rocks may go for $.50 all day Monday, which
of course may not be any deal at all ;-)
TTom
|
293.8 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:05 | 12 |
| re: private clubs
I was stationed in NC for awhile. It was my impression that the Private
Clubs were just a winked-at means of making sure only the `right' type
of people got in (meaning no Blacks). I got a membership card for one
place for $1, and mentioned to a friend of mine (Black) what a neat
place it was. When he was in town, he wandered by and got some
rigamarole about having to be sponsored by a member in good standing,
vote by the membership, initiation fees, yearly dues, blah, blah, blah.
whattacuntree, hey?
Mike JN
|
293.9 | | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:05 | 10 |
| I'll vote a yes on that rename of the conference, whenever it is that
we next have to roll this thing over to a new version. (Speaking of
which, what's the word on what happens when OURGNG goes away? Any
resolution yet, or did I just miss it?) Maybe the rename will cut down
on instances of newcomers expecting to get serious discussion of
sporting topics at all times, and cause less offense-taking and
references to 'Saw's eeexxxcellent description of just how this file
works......
A&W
|
293.10 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Gimme a warm woman and a cold beer | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:06 | 23 |
|
While "vacationing" at Fort Jackson, SC, I seem to recall that there
were no sales of any 'hard liquor', except at what we call a package
store here up nawth. Restaurants served beer and wine only. You
wanted a Jack Daniels, you bought a bottle.
On the other hand, you have Massachusetts, in which there are
absolutely no over-the-counter sales of any alcohol on Sundays,
but you can go to a bar and drink your head off. It sure is a pain
in the posterior to have company drop by and you can't run out for
even a lousy six-pack (of course, you always make sure you've bought
enough for yourself on Saturday.)
Now SPORTS related. No hunting on Sundays. You can golf, fish,
play baseball, row, run, play right-handed polo, left handed
socker[sic], tennis, beach volleyball, wrestle, box, you-name-it,
but if you happen to enjoy hunting, you can't. Granted, there would
be more hunting pressure, but other states seem to manage just fine
by adjusting the length of the season. How 'bout closing hunting
on Tuesdays and Thursdays instead?
Dickster
|
293.11 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:07 | 23 |
| The problem in this country is that all the old farts have the power,
and their in Congress and what not.
I mean, what we need is a few folks in Congress who used to do a lot
of acid in the sixties, named their kids Leaf, and Autumn, and Dew,
and understand that the problem is with inefficiency in government,
not in who's smoking cigarettes or drinking hard liquor.
Gawd, some of these Congressmen are so old they can't find their ass
with both hands.
And Mike, I agree, Tax the churches. No reason not too, as long as
they are all taxed equally and fairly. Got some mighty big
tax bases out there. And if they decided to tax personal property
they should take a good look at the coffers of most any large
Catholic church. I can't speak for all of them, but I remember
what was in the sacristy vault when I was a_altar boy.
Oops, I guess I got up on John's SOAPBOX. But hey, isn't this
OURGNG::SPORTSBAR?
8^)
'Saw
|
293.12 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:19 | 10 |
| � I mean, what we need is a few folks in Congress who used to do a lot
� of acid in the sixties, named their kids Leaf, and Autumn, and Dew,
Eggs-Ackly!
(I wanted to name the kid Bilbo Baggins Johnston, but my wife slapped
me up side the head so hard I sat on my water-pipe and busted it. Named
him Mike instead. Excellent decision. Have to hand it to the little
woman [ or she might slap me bow-legged ]).
Mike `TIP me over and (so on and so forth)' JN
|
293.13 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:27 | 27 |
| Wanna run for Congress Mike? Couldn't be any worse than working here!
Re hunting on Sundays:
I have a feeling that was a left over law from the early
days, when ya all had to "go to meetin'" on Sundays.
If Pa was out huntin', he wouldn't be settin' a good example
for the younguns....lessin' a course he 'as needin' food...
So many of our laws our put in effect at one time, get quickly outdated,
and then are left on the books.
If the law concerns alcohol, forget getting it repealed. Connecticut
package stores close at 8pm because in the late 50s,
Joseph "Mad Dog" Taborski was robbing the stores, and executing anyone
who happened to be in there when he hit.
Since the robberies were all late at night, they passed emergency
legislation to get the stores closed at 8pm. Taborski was the
last man to be executed in the States Electric chair, in the old
State Prison in Wethersfield, in 1960.
But, have the dweebs allowed package stores to stay open late? NOOOOOOOOOO!
I'll tell ya!
'Saw
|
293.14 | | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:39 | 14 |
| I think it's dumb that grocery stores/supermarkets and convenience
stores do not sell beer and wine here in MA. And what the hell is a
package store? Man, when I firsted moved up here from NY, I nearly
died of hunger because I couldn't get a sub and refused to eat
something called a grinder, and nearly died of thirst because I wasn't
gonna drink tonic, something that my haid could use some of for growth,
and I couldn't get drunk because I didn't need any packages from a
package store........ Damn strange state this MA! :-)
I'd gladly pitch in to this budget deficit if supermarkets sold beer
and wine, and on Sunday's too. In the meantime, if I need a beer on
Sunday, I ain't waiting till Monday, I go north........
H�wk
|
293.15 | | WMOIS::JBARROWS | I get so excitable | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:41 | 3 |
| H�wk,
Didya miss the white pizza and spiedies too when you moved up here?
|
293.16 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Gimme a warm woman and a cold beer | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:49 | 9 |
|
Hawkster,
Lotsa sto-wahs and mahkets sell beeyah in this state. They *all*
don't because they haffta be licensed by the City/Town, and there
are only so many licenses to go around.
Dickster
|
293.17 | | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:49 | 7 |
| Actually, I never had white pizza back home, but the pizza itself- no
comparison, especially NYCity pizza. This greasy Greek-style pan pizza
stuff is not pizza!
What the hell is "spiedies"?
H�wk
|
293.18 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Gimme a warm woman and a cold beer | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:51 | 7 |
|
> What the hell is "spiedies"?
It's a pizza with extra cheese and double arachnids.
Dickster
|
293.19 | Keep it clean guys! | WMOIS::JBARROWS | I get so excitable | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:54 | 10 |
| H�wk,
"Spiedies" is marinated meat (chicken, pork or beef). The only place
I've ever been able to get this is in New York (Endicott/Owego area)
The meat is all cut up in cubes - perfect for shish-ka-bobs on the
B-B-Q!!!!!
Most people out there either like 'em or hate 'em.
Wheel
|
293.20 | | WMOIS::JBARROWS | I get so excitable | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:57 | 6 |
| Forgot to mention its pronounced:
'speedies'
Good try Dickster!
|
293.21 | ex | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | SMASH THE PUMPKIN!!!!!! (tm) | Tue Jul 17 1990 13:58 | 2 |
| Ain't Speedies a cereal guaranteed to keep you "mov'in" all day.
Especially good for dem late night cramming sessions in college.
|
293.22 | | WMOIS::JBARROWS | I get so excitable | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:02 | 8 |
| I dunno.....I don't care much for cereal. I *hate* it when it
gets soggy and limp. Reminds me of some guy I once knew, but
thats another story.............
BTW, we used to tell people that it was a special kind of deer
meat that you cold only get in NY!!!!! They would fall for it
all the time....
|
293.23 | I never saw a drink I liked | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:06 | 13 |
| Re: taxing the church
Why tax the Catholics twice? 90% of them will already be covered by
the sin taxes!
Now that I have your attention... ;-)
I vote NO on renaming the conference! If it is renamed, I'll delete it
from my Notebook.
Bring back the Prohibition!
Mike
|
293.24 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:10 | 49 |
| Hawkster --
Now is the time, my son, for you to hear the Gospel of Homebrewing.
In the beginning, God made the Water. And it was good. On the
second day, God made the malt. In the evening of the second day,
God sat back and decided he still wasn't ready, so he made the
Yeast.
For years, beer was brewed thusly. God saw, and it was good.
In those days the women brewed the beer, and the term alewives
came into being. The men baked the bread.
One day, God saw that the beer was not lasting as long as it
could have, so an Angel of God appeared to the people and brought
them glad tidings about the new creation called Hops.
And those four creations were good, and what God decreed should
be in beer.
But in those days there were devils that roamed the earth. Devils
that used additives and sweeteners in their beer. Additives and
sweeteners that robbed the beer of it's natural flavors. Some devils
even used chemical preservatives...
Over the years, even the commercial brewers succombed to the possession
of the devils.
But also over the years a small, steadfast band, carried on the tradition
handed down from on high...a small band of people called Homebrewers.
People who, in their own kitchens brewed fine, fresh beer. People who
controlled the taste the way a musician controls an instrument.
That is the gospel of homebrew....
Oh yeah, forgot to mention that all this fine, fresh beer is pretty
cheap when you come right down to it.....
Plus, the government hasn't taxed it yet, and the limit per year
that you can homebrew works out to be a six pack per day (roughly)....
So Hawk, heed now the call. The only time I run out of beer on Sunday
is if I forget to put it in the fridge on Saturday night....8^)
'Saw, Der Braumeister
|
293.25 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | SMASH THE PUMPKIN!!!!!! (tm) | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:11 | 5 |
| >>I vote NO on renaming the conference! If it is renamed, I'll delete it
>>from my Notebook.
Good!! One less SunStroke fan to deal wif. 8^)
|
293.26 | | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:15 | 3 |
| > <<< Note 293.25 by CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ "SMASH THE PUMPKIN!!!!!! (tm)" >>>
get a REAL team you LA puke!
|
293.27 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | SMASH THE PUMPKIN!!!!!! (tm) | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:18 | 1 |
| yeh like phoenix is a real team.
|
293.28 | | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:19 | 3 |
| > yeh like phoenix is a real team.
more real than LA!
|
293.29 | Give me a Rock... | CNTROL::CHILDS | King of the Swingers:the Jungle VIP | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:17 | 10 |
|
A little bit off the track but the note does say commercial in it so what
I want to know is how many people think of Hawk, when they see that
Rolling Rock commercial where the knockout gal is making eyes at the guy
at the end of the bar and he seems to be returning them only to walk past
her and pick up a Rock? ;^)
love that commericial, used to love that beer too...
mike
|
293.30 | rough | 33945::HAAS | same as talking to you | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:21 | 3 |
| Green Death :== Rolling Rock
TTom
|
293.31 | ;^) | CNTROL::CHILDS | King of the Swingers:the Jungle VIP | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:26 | 11 |
|
>>Green Death :== Rolling Rock
TTom
Maybe TTom but you're talking to a guy who's favorite beer during his
drinking days was Schiltz....
;^0
mike
|
293.32 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:57 | 8 |
| re the last couple, I thought the "Green Death" was Haffenreffer.
Anyone besides me get a mailing a few months back from some Anti Beer
Tax committee? Some former major league player was "honorary
chairman" but I can't recall who...
py
|
293.33 | | IAMOK::AHEARN | Rams vs. Bengals in SB XXV | Wed Jul 18 1990 15:03 | 8 |
| PY,
I'll second your assertion that "Green Death" IS Haffenreffer (on the
East Coast, anyway). Haffenreffer ALWAYS tastes like it's 'skunked'.
Rolling Rock is MUCH milder.
Nelly
|
293.34 | | CAM::WAY | and I didn't draw the card I needed | Wed Jul 18 1990 15:05 | 9 |
| Gentlemen, gentlemen...heed the homebrew call. If you can boil water,
you can homebrew.
If you homebrew, you can taste the fruit of your labor without taxation
or regulation....
Shout Halla-brew-ya!
Amen!
|
293.35 | | WMOIS::JBARROWS | WANT: Man in velcro pants w/Big feet | Wed Jul 18 1990 15:16 | 8 |
| re: .34
>Shout Halla-brew-ya!
HALLA-BREW-YA!
|
293.36 | | RIPPLE::DEVLIN_JO | Eraserhead LIVES!!! | Wed Jul 18 1990 15:44 | 8 |
| Changing the name of the conference is a really dumb idea. Just
leave it what it is. Geez.
Rolling Rock is a *great* beer. Haffenreffer was the green death.
Home brew is okay, Saw, but not everyone needs to do it...
JD
|
293.37 | Send money to this address.... | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 07:46 | 15 |
| � Home brew is okay, Saw, but not everyone needs to do it...
JD, hear the GOSPEL, hear the WORD! Salvation is boiling wort
on your stove! 8^)
(Actually, JD, your feeling is spoken like a true Pacific Nor'westerner.
Wif all dem great beers and ales out there, it'd be kinda redundant
to homebrew. But, it is good beer, much cheaper than commercial
beer, not taxed, and fun to do...)
Say AMEN!
Rev Chainsaw
|
293.38 | Starting to homebrew??? | RONALD::VENDER | | Thu Jul 19 1990 07:59 | 10 |
| Saw,
I was just wondering what kind of start up costs are entailed in
starting to home brew(what equipment do you have to buy + ingredients).
Also, just out of curiousity, do you have to be over 21 to buy the
ingredients from the specialty supply shops for beer and wine making?
It sounds like it could be pretty fun to do.
Tom
|
293.39 | Bringing in the malt, bringing in the malt... | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 08:10 | 17 |
| You can get started with quality equipment and ingredients for your
first batch for under $100.
To the best of my knowledge you don't have to be over 21 to buy the
ingredients because what you buy doesn't become alcohol until you've
fermented it.
There are two states (I'm pretty sure) where it is still illegal to
home brew beer. I know that Connecticut is NOT one of them, I'm not
sure what they are.
There is a homebrew conference on DSSDEV::HOMEBREW, and if I get
a chance I'll try and send you some mail on what it entails...
(Say Amen, another sheep for the fold!)
Rev Chainsaw
|
293.40 | | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Thu Jul 19 1990 08:57 | 9 |
| I think of Hawk when I see a cold one, Rolling Rock, Old Milwaukee,
Schmidt's, etc. It don't matter......
I think of Hawk when I see a hot one, blonde, brunette, red-haid, etc.
It don't matter......
:-)
H�wk
|
293.41 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 10:03 | 1 |
| Hot or Cold, Hawk es mas macho!
|
293.42 | | HOTSHT::SCHNEIDER | Address the ball | Thu Jul 19 1990 13:51 | 11 |
| >C) - I make another motion that if the stoopid gov't wants more money,
>they should tax the churches. (`nother second and a show of hands
>please).
Hear, hear!! It doesn't cost anything to have faith. And so many
charletons abuse tax exemptions under this guise, it turns my stomach.
The tax exemption has brought about more religion than anything since
the Greek gods were worshipped.
Dan
|
293.43 | Hail Zeus! | SASE::SZABO | The Blues kicked me in the head | Thu Jul 19 1990 13:59 | 1 |
|
|
293.44 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:08 | 12 |
| Actually, I don't think taxing the churches is such a bad
idea. They rake in enough money.
I can see that in the early days non-taxation of the Church might
have helped maintain separation of Church and State, but today, the
churches are hauling in a lot of money, and don't really appear to
be accountable to anyone.....
JMHO,
'Saw
|
293.45 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Run Toto Run! HONK!*splat*...Rats! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:15 | 9 |
|
>and don't really appear to
> be accountable to anyone.....
Like the guy says in the Hebrew National Salami ads, "We're accountable
to a higher authority." ;-)
Dickster
|
293.46 | | SASE::SZABO | Breeder of Olympic Champions! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:19 | 12 |
| I'm 50-50 on this. I'm afraid that the local parishes will get hurt by
this. (I'm talking about Catholic, don't know about other
Christian-based religions or Jewish). Parishes are closing their doors
because they can't raise enough funds while the goddamn Pope sits on
the largest real estate empire in the world. I enjoy my parish, which
is just barely making ends meet. I'd hate to see it shut down. On the
other hand, these phony bozos setting up ministries to avoid taxes
should be nailed (to the cross).
As usual, this form of taxation will hurt the wrong people, I think.
H�wk
|
293.47 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | Sleep Keeps Me Awake | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:20 | 3 |
| Hawk, clearly, you're soapboxing again.
Mark.
|
293.48 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:20 | 8 |
| But remember, Dickster, these are the same folks who dropped
into a picnic at Jesus's house only brought 3 fish and five loaves
for 5,000 of them.
With that kinda greed, you think they're gonna be puttin' their
gold coins on the next Heaven Express? 8^)
'Saw
|
293.49 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:24 | 24 |
| Hawk --
I hear you in a way. But I also remember my parish when I was
a kid. The priest, at Midnight Mass, after the sermon, quickly
went through the budget. He demanded (yes, correct word) a
housekeeper, because, after all "I shouldn't have to empty my
own ash trays".
Small wonder people are fed up with the Catholic Church with
attitudes like that.
The Catholic Church, as a whole, I've heard, is the second
richest institution in the world. If they sold off half of
the precious artifacts that they sit on (not to mention the
real estate, like you said), they could feed the world's poor
twice over....
I have to pay my taxes. I don't have a housekeeper to empty
my ash trays (don't smoke, but you know what I mean...)
Argghhh...
'Saw
|
293.50 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Run Toto Run! HONK!*splat*...Rats! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:25 | 6 |
|
3 fish and 5 loaves is plenty, but you need to mix in a helluva
lot of mayo.
Dickster
|
293.51 | | SASE::SZABO | Breeder of Olympic Champions! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:37 | 14 |
| Mark, clearly, you caught me again! Someone, please whack my pee pee.
Please!
Yeah, I hear you too, 'Saw, and agree. On the same token, our gov't
could stop all the military, economic, etc. aid to everyone else, and
reduce the deficit to $0........
The day that the things that make sense will happen is the day you and
me quit drinking beer, the BoSox win the WS, the Donks win a SB, Kelly
Bundy spends a night at your house, and the dINz runs down Causeway St.
with a black and gold jock on his nose and Wheels' lips glued to his
epiladied butt! :-)
H�wk
|
293.52 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | Run Toto Run! HONK!*splat*...Rats! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:41 | 22 |
|
I see no reason why the Church shouldn't be taxed. They could even
make it a token amount. But multiply those tokens by all the churches
around and it certainly is a heavenly amount.
What gets me is this "Bishop's Fund Drive" that goes on every year
in the spring. The dioscese is rolling in dough, and they're hitting
poor little churches like Hawkster's for money. Robbing from the
poor and giving to the rich, if you will. Each little parish also
has a goal or quota set by the dioscese, complete with thermometer
board on the church lawn, and the goal is always a little bit higher
than the year before.
But, I'm sure there a lot of people who feel a sense of purpose,
or a sense of accomplishment in sacrificing for the church each
year. In fact, if some churches didn't band together for the annual
fund drive, they'd collapse. Enough soap for me.....I have scars
from growing up Catholic.
Dickster
Knights of Columbus, 4th Degree
|
293.53 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:45 | 16 |
| At least those shyster TV preachers are up front about wantin' money.
The Church is basically the same way, only with years of "tradition"
and "legitimacy" behind them.
Whatever happened to that old vow of poverty stuff anyway?
Simon Peter never had a housekeeper 8^)
OH, hell, it's too hot. I'm getting cranky.
Hawk (or should I say Stud), that picture of Dinz with Wheel's lips
glued to his epiladied butt had me rolling so hard I almost peed
my pants!!!!!
'Saw
|
293.54 | | WMOIS::JBARROWS | Take wicked slapshots! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:50 | 5 |
| Now tell the truth, you probably DID pee your pants....
And don't count on it happening!
Wheel
|
293.55 | | SASE::SZABO | Breeder of Olympic Champions! | Thu Jul 19 1990 14:55 | 3 |
| What, dInz using a_epilady? :-)
H�wk
|
293.56 | | FSHQA1::JHENDRY | John Hendry, DTN 292-2170 | Thu Jul 19 1990 15:54 | 10 |
| The Catholic Church does have a lot of its money tied up in art work
and real estate and normally has a cash-flow problem. That's why
there's so much emphasis on fund-raising.
The more critical problem for the Church is the shortage of priests.
There are too many parishes being served by too few people, and I think
lots of parishes are going to have to be closed in the next few years,
unless the rules on celibacy are relaxed.
John
|
293.57 | How'd we get onto this subject, anyway? | FSHQA1::AWASKOM | | Thu Jul 19 1990 16:02 | 12 |
| I think there's a compromise position on the tax-the-churches thing.
If the property is used solely for worship purposes, don't tax it.
That covers the separation of Church and State, which is very important
to me. Any additional property (houses, schools, hospitals, business
offices, TV studios, amusement parks,etc) should be taxed at the rate
appropriate to the use.
But that's probably too sensible. :-)
A&W
|
293.58 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Thu Jul 19 1990 16:40 | 3 |
| Speaking of beer commercials, the major breweries are threatening to
pull all beer ads on sporting events if the U.S. Surgeon General
requires warnings like those already on the label to be part of the ad.
|
293.59 | | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Thu Jul 19 1990 16:42 | 6 |
| The financial state of churches (any denomination) run the full
spectrum. The large ones (congregations > 1,000) are REAL stable. The
rest barely survive the summers every year (when everyone is on
vacation).
Mike
|
293.60 | | 15436::LEFEBVRE | Sleep Keeps Me Awake | Thu Jul 19 1990 17:26 | 10 |
| Regarding the beer ads. I'm sure pro sports will find other sponsors
to fill the void left by the brewers.
Cars
Athletic footwear
Shaving
Hunting equipment :^)
etc.
Mark.
|
293.61 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Bimbo Bowlers from Buffalo | Fri Jul 20 1990 06:02 | 9 |
|
While I do think taxing the churches isn't a bad idea, it's going to be
you and me again footing the bill cause the churches will just ask us for
more cash to cover the cost. You'll pay more to play bingo, you'll pay
for kids to go sunday school or they'll threaten to lock you out. Any
way you look at you and I are going to pay while the rich find loophole
after loophole....
mike
|
293.62 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 07:00 | 27 |
| Mike --
You've hit the nail on the head! I'd be willing to bet the Catholic
Church (and probably others too) have a certain percentage of corruption
just like any other large organization...
Regarding the beer and warning labels. YOu know, I think it's all well
and good that we have a Surgeon General and all, but when you come
right down to it, who really gives two SLOFs(tm) about a warning label.
If you want a beer, do you really care what that stupid label says?
Does anyone? Meantime, all this extra expense of changing the label print
is being passed on to the consumer. Yep, good ol' Surgeon General.
Didja ever notice how they handle the really 'easy' stuff. Label alcohol
and cigarettes, because the majority of the conservatives will agree with
ya. Meantime, there's a ton of teenagers out there getting pregnant
because they don't have easy access too, or know about using a condom
etc. Now, if the Surgeon General got a program going to distribute
condoms in schools.... (there'd be hell to pay).
Finally, I didn't pee my pants. I *almost* peed my pants. No DEPENDS
on me!
'Saw
|
293.63 | Ain't no flies on 'Saw's DEPENDS! | SASE::SZABO | Breeder of Olympic Champions! | Fri Jul 20 1990 07:54 | 1 |
|
|
293.64 | A Catholic who's losing respect | BUILD::MORGAN | | Fri Jul 20 1990 08:05 | 20 |
| >You've hit the nail on the head! I'd be willing to bet the Catholic
>Church (and probably others too) have a certain percentage of corruption
>just like any other large organization...
Frank, that's putting it mildly. If you really want an awakening
regarding the Roman Catholic church, read a book called "In God's Name".
It's goes into great detail in regard to the church's monetary value,
but the main topic of the book is the suspected murder of Pope John
Paul I. After reading this book, in my mind, I too think he was
murdered.
Here's one bit of interest I picked up from the book, regarding Vatican
finances. We know that the only form of birth control the church
allows is the rythm method, right? Well, for years the Vatican held a
majority interest in a French chemical company, that was the world's
leading supplier of the pill. But hey, money talks. I could go on
about this all day, but this is my last day before vacation, so I don't
really want to get the blood pressure up too much!
Steve
|
293.65 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | A splinter in the bannister of life | Fri Jul 20 1990 08:08 | 3 |
|
Why did they off the pope?
|
293.66 | Off on a tangent... | BUILD::MORGAN | | Fri Jul 20 1990 08:37 | 17 |
| He was a revolutionary. He believed in other forms of birth control.
He was under the belief that the Vatican Bank was corrupt (rightly so
in my opinion), and plans were in place to remove several highly ranked
bishops because of this. He believed that a VERY corrupt sect of
freemasonry had infiltrated the church. At the time, Catholics belonging
to the Masons were excommunicated.
According to witnesses (nuns,bishops), all evidence was taken from his
room, where he was found dead, and destroyed. An autopsy was called for
by many, but the 2nd in command (forget his name but he was also a
suspect) would hear nothing of it.
And there's a WHOLE lot more. The authors name was something like
David Yallop. It's well worth reading, but don't let your parish
priest see you reading it. It's on the church's list of unreadables.
Steve
|
293.67 | | SASE::SZABO | Breeder of Olympic Champions! | Fri Jul 20 1990 08:55 | 8 |
| Ha! Unreadable, eh? I'd bet many a parish priest got dressed in their
civies and went off to the city library to take a peek!
Thanks for the info Steve. Sounds like an interesteing book. I forgot
about the Vatican treasury corruption, and the stuff about the Pope's
death.......
H�wk
|
293.68 | Thou Shalt Not Read! | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 09:03 | 24 |
| Yup, unreadable.
(Gawd, it's Friday, and Steve, ya got me on a roll).
Here we are in the 20th Century. The Berlin wall has come tumbling
down almost as fast as those famed Walls of Jericho. Radical reforms
are starting to happen in the Soviet Union. People in Eastern Europe
are tasting freedoms unimaginable 5 years ago.
But, the good ol' Catholic Church is still proclaiming what it's
people should or shouldn't read. Amazin' isn't it.
It'd be interesting if someone did a study of brainwashing and
propaganda techniques used by the Church....
I guess ultimately Power corrupts. There are men in the Church that
have power, and once you have power you never want to give it up...
As Andrew Dice Clay would say (sort of)
Un-_______-believable!
'Saw
|
293.69 | Just Curious | SHALOT::MEDVID | Head Like a Hole | Fri Jul 20 1990 09:26 | 10 |
| OK, since we're way off (no pun intended, Frank) on a tangent, I'd like
to know which church is the richest these days. I saw a report five
years or so ago that listed the Latter Day Saints at the top and the
Catholics a good million or two behind. I'd bet it's still true.
FYI: The Mormons own one of the largest cattle ranches in the U.S.
It's called Deseret and takes up most of Florida between Melbourne and
Orlando and points to the north and south of both cities.
--dan'l
|
293.70 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | A splinter in the bannister of life | Fri Jul 20 1990 09:31 | 21 |
|
>It'd be interesting if someone did a study of brainwashing and
>propaganda techniques used by the Church....
Bingo.
Seems we discussed growing up Catholic in another note a long time
ago, in a galaxy far, far away, but this hits the nail right on
the head, pure and simple. Some people have made the break, and
others simply can't, because to do so, or even question authority,
will land you in hot water (or worse, fire and brimstone.)
Back on topic: Does the pope drink beer, and how does he feel about
the beer tax? Do you think he buys his own, or does he send the
Swiss Guards out for beer runs? And if he's out of Schlitz and
he's out of beer, and there are no sales on Sunday, can he just,
like, draw himself a bathtub full of water and change it into home
brew?
Dickster
|
293.71 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 09:43 | 35 |
| � like, draw himself a bathtub full of water and change it into home
� brew?
Gee, Dickster, I guess you've made the break! 8^)
See, you gotta look at where the Pope is from. Like, for a long
time, the Pope was from Italy. Now Italy is not known as a hellacious
beer drinking country, so you know the Pope was doing the Jesus thing
and drinking wine. (I mean, hey, if Jesus was really into beer, he'd
have made that water into beer, really good beer, back at that wedding).
But this Pope is from Poland, so there's a good chance ol' JP has
sucked back some suds in his time. I couldn't tell ya about the
homebrewing, though.
Now, just cogitate on this for a while. Supposing the Pope was
from Munich. Could you imagine. I mean, you'd have the Swiss Guards
change to lederhosen, and you'd probably have the band from the
Hofbra� Haus called in for speical occasions.
If the Pope ever came from America, that'd be too much. I mean, here
you'd have a guy who likes Schlitz... I mean the guy would say "Wine?
Ferget about it!"
I mean, the Catholic Church needs a shot in the arm. How bout
Pope Roscoe I. That would really blow there minds, no?
But anyway, I digress. Personally, I think the Pope is opposed to the
beer tax, since the Church (obviously) is against any kind of taxation...
later,
'Saw
|
293.72 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | A splinter in the bannister of life | Fri Jul 20 1990 09:59 | 6 |
|
If the Pope came from America, he'd probably be some Dan Quayle-type
yuppie and we'd end up with Pope Biff, or Pope Chip I or something.
Dickster
|
293.73 | I wouldn't exactly call myself a *devout* Catholic! | SASE::SZABO | Breeder of Olympic Champions! | Fri Jul 20 1990 10:06 | 16 |
| Well, I made the break for a good 10 years or so, but then slowly
slipped back into the fold when I started breeding Olympic champions.
:-) Seriously, the main reason is that I strongly feel that kids need
a religious upbringing. When they get older, they can continue, or
not. And, if I didn't go to church on Sundays, I wouldn't be a good
example to them. Yeah, sorta hypocritical, I guess. But, when you're
a parent, sometimes you have to do things that you don't want to for
the good of your kids. Actually, I do enjoy Sunday Mass. I get a good
feeling about it. What really cracks me up though is this mental image
I get every Sunday when the congregation starts chanting the same stuff
we chant every week. I picture the old Roman movies where crowds of
people are chanting praises to their leader........
I usually have a few beers after church. Hell, it's Sunday anyway!
H�wk
|
293.74 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 10:41 | 15 |
| Perhaps it's because my religious upbringing started out in
the Methodist church (my dad's religion), I've always felt
much more comfortable there than in a Catholic church, despite
the years of Catholic upbringing.
In Catholic church I always had this feeling of being judged
(and found wanting), while in a Protestant church (either
Congregationalist or Methodist, didn't much matter) I seemed to
feel a peace and acceptance.
I don't want to offend anyone, but for the most part, I think
priests and bishops are pretty bogus, at least most of the ones I've
seen.
'Saw
|
293.75 | | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Fri Jul 20 1990 11:54 | 19 |
| >If you want a beer, do you really care what that stupid label says?
If you want to smoke, do you really care what the label says? I do,
and I don't.
>ya. Meantime, there's a ton of teenagers out there getting pregnant
>because they don't have easy access too, or know about using a condom
>etc. Now, if the Surgeon General got a program going to distribute
>condoms in schools.... (there'd be hell to pay).
Children don't need a license for premarital sex because their parents
aren't taking care of business at home. You could eliminate a lot of
"children having children" if the parents brought up their kids
properly and gave them the proper love and attention at home. A LOT of
girls get caught up in that mess because of loneliness and they're
searching for love that they aren't getting elsewhere. Kids make the
mistake of confusing physical sex with real love.
Mike_who's_worked_at_crisis_centers
|
293.76 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:04 | 15 |
| I don't really have any antipathy to churches. Everybody comes to terms
with the fact of their existence in one way or another. I do get bugged
by some church people. Too many of them seem determined to see that
everyone is converted to THEIR way of thinking. I find a lot of
arrogance, and a lack of tolerance of other belief systems. I find a
lot of hate simmering in self professed `Christians', and wonder what
the hell Bible they are reading. I see Shi'ite mullahs waving AK47's
and screaming their guts out about how rotten America is. I see people
all over the world being sliced and diced because of their religious
beliefs, or slicing and dicing others over theirs. It sucks. I've
eventually come to the conclusion that organized religion is often a
vehicle for harm rather than good. I don't like fanatics of any kind.
They're generally first cousins to terrorists.
Mike JN
|
293.77 | I know it's friday, but it's been going on all week | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:09 | 3 |
| Did somone change the OURGNG::SPORTS definition? I keep trying to
login into a sports conference and find myself in either SOAPBOX,
music/book reviews, or snippets of private fantasies.
|
293.78 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:16 | 20 |
| That's SPORTS, Mac.. But hey, seriously, there has been a lot
of craziness going on this week all over the place. Don't know
what it is.
Mike (Heiser)... I hear ya dude. But I'd put for the premise that
smokers don't care what that label says. And I agree about the
teens and the reasons you mention, however, I was just trying to
make the point that the Surgeon General seems mostly (with some minor
exceptions) to do what's safe. (ie. we'll label butts and beers
because big factions are against them, but we won't pass out condoms
to prevent pregnancies and AIDS because it's too controversial).
Mike JN, you have some good points. One only needs to look back
at how the Church tried and tried to deny scientific discovery
(such as Galileo's work) to see just what a vehicle it can be.
'Saw
|
293.79 | Tax the parishes | RONALD::VENDER | | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:27 | 25 |
| I'm Catholic, and I was educated in Catholic elementary and high
schools. While I still attend mass on a regular basis, I have grown
more skeptical of the reliability of the Church. The Catholic Church
is supposedly against birth control, premarital sex, and abortion.
The only way I know this is through my religion classes way back when.
Ther Church is very hypocritical. It expects its members to follow these
controversial rules, yet I've heard nada from the priests mouths on
Sunday sermon time. They'd rather rattle off about their irrelevant
correlations between Mrs. Jones cat, Viginia & Santa Claus, and fit in
something about the big JC's main message in the readings.
The bottom line is that these priests & bishops don't have the
balls to preach what the church teaches because they're afraid that if
they piss off the congregation they won't be pulling in those big
Sunday collections. The Church's silence on these issues offer nill
guidance to its young parishioners and contributes to my growing belief
that in the US at least, much of it is spineless. Why should they then
follow rules that the Church is too afraid to teach & explain.
Oh yeah, my friends and I from high school, liken the Catholic
Church's and institutions' ability to cover up its dirty side to that of
the mob: but I think the Church does it better.
Tom
|
293.80 | we don't need a big brother | CNTROL::CHILDS | Bimbo Bowlers from Buffalo | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:32 | 9 |
|
Hey Mac, do you work for Bush or something? You're great at trying to tell
us what to do....We've benn getting off on tangents for years now and you're
still trying to straighten us out. I'd have thought you'd have given up by
now...
:^)
mike
|
293.81 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:32 | 21 |
| > correlations between Mrs. Jones cat, Viginia & Santa Claus, and fit in
> something about the big JC's main message in the readings.
Tom, I haven't been in a while. Do they actually get JC's main message
in there?
(I'm not being funny, I'm serious here) I always found that there seemed
to be a lot more emphasis on the Bible, and Bible reading in the
Protestant Churches than in the Catholic Church.
I think people are finding today that there's a lot of hoopla in
the Catholic Church and not much substance. As John Hendry mentioned,
the number of Priests and Nuns are quickly diminishing. If the
trend doesn't change, I predict there won't be any Catholic Church
farther on down the road....
Good analogy to the mob, btw....
'Saw
|
293.82 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Bo don't know rugby! | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:56 | 2 |
| No, Mike, I don't work for Bush. I thought I was one of the conference
moderators.
|
293.83 | | TOPDWN::METZGER | Head Northwest young man.... | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:59 | 20 |
|
IMHO...
It all depends on your local priest and your local parish. If you have a priest
that believes in what he is doing and is willing to tlak to the parisheners then
church is a worthwhile experience. If you get one of the priests that is just
spouting rhetoric then church become hipocrasy.
In my parents parish they used to have a hyocrite who was basically interested
in how much money the parish pulled in...attendance declined and the parish
was falling apart..after many moons they got a new priest that cares about what
he is doing. He never talks about $$$ and he is willing to discuss anything
with anyone (had a great conversation with im about everything under the sun
at a party once) He is a young guy that believes in what he is doing and it
shows.
The parish loves him and church is worth going to when I'm home visiting.
Metz
|
293.84 | | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Fri Jul 20 1990 12:59 | 23 |
| >(I'm not being funny, I'm serious here) I always found that there seemed
>to be a lot more emphasis on the Bible, and Bible reading in the
>Protestant Churches than in the Catholic Church.
'Saw, you hit the nail on the head! This Protestant went to a Catholic
high school. Is it coincidence that the Catholic Church's stances are
derived from the Bible, yet they never reference it?
There's a lot of doctrine in the Catholic Bible (including 6 extra
books that the KJV DOESN'T have, otherwise it is the same book) that
Catholics will never know about because their clergy never addresses
those topics.
There aren't many fundamental doctrines (read a few important ones) that
separate Catholics and Protestants, but they'd never know it.
Not that I'm raggin' on the Catholic Church, but I've also heard they
compromised themselves for financial reasons back in the early
centuries by incorporating Druid practices, rather than lose their
support in the Roman Empire. That explains why Druids and Catholics have
similar ceremonial garments and altars. All because of $$$!
Mike
|
293.85 | Some good messages | RONALD::VENDER | | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:25 | 12 |
| My gripe in my last note was that the Church doesn't teach its own
rules. The parishes that I've attended do address the scriptures and
mostly try to relate it to today's world(often unsuccessfully). I
agree with some of the past replies that a priest who really is ardent
and believes in what he is doing can make a difference in what
you are able to get out of Mass.
I've never attended a Protestant Church so I have no basis for a
comparison.
Tom
|
293.86 | Sorry Mac | MPO::MCFALL | Takes more than hocus-pocus, babe | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:31 | 38 |
|
Only in SPORTS could we have beer tax law, and it turns into a rag
on the Catholic Church note.
I'll say this much. It depends on where you go to Church, etc.
as to who speaks about what. As a rule, the sermon is supposed to address
the Gospel and the Readings(The Bible). Since specific laws about
abortion, etc. were developed AFTER the Bible, they are generally not spoken
about at sermons.
However, there are Catholic publications, available free of charge,
and even mailed to parishoners homes in organized parishes, which
address these issues very specifically. I'm not saying they give both
sides, of course the give the church viewpoint. Also, adult religious
education addresses this, in parishes where it is offered. This is where
the age of the church, particularly in the US, becomes a problem. Older
priests who are generally in charge have to energy to keep up with some
of the new stuff, and keep things status quo. They may be wrong, but they
are giving in to human nature. They are human, after all. As far as changes
in the Church go, consider this. Yes, society in the US has changed drastically
in the US in the last 30 years or so. Has it undergone such a dramatic change
in the rest of the world? Hard for us to say. Should there be a US Roman
Catholic Church, and another for the rest of the world? We are used to getting
what we want, hell even demanding what we want, and getting it, or going out
and getting it ourselves. The Church doesn't work that way. It's scope is the
world, not the US. The last 30 years in the US are really just a drop in the
bucket of time as far as the Church is concerned.
And yes, it's easy to be critical of the Church, as it's easy to be
critical of most large organizations. And it's also easy to single out
bad members of an organization, they tend to leave a bad impression. We
seem to be judging the Church the way someone who reads SPORTS for the first
time might judge us. (Yikes! :^))
That's enough for now..
Jim M
|
293.87 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:33 | 24 |
| Good point Mike.
From what I remember of some of my informal religious studies,
the closer Protestant Church to the Catholic Church is the
Episcopalians. The major difference I believe between the
two is that the Episcopalians don't believe in the infallibility of
the Pope, and (if I remember correctly) don't believe in the
Assumption of the Virgin Mary.
Other churches have varying differences.
Easter, the day commemorating Christ's resurrection is really observed on an
old Pagan holiday. It's always the first Sunday after the first full
moon following the Vernal Equinox. That's why it's a different day every
year. The Church chose this day to help new converts to remember (or
because of Druidic practices....)
It's great the there are some young priests who are willing to be
human like that. The Church has to help meet people's needs, not
give them more neurosis....
'Saw
|
293.88 | | UPWARD::HEISER | trimmed & burnin' | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:46 | 19 |
| >Re: .86
>the Gospel and the Readings(The Bible). Since specific laws about
>abortion, etc. were developed AFTER the Bible, they are generally not spoken
>about at sermons.
Murder became unlawful after the Bible?
Re: .87
'Saw, FWIW, I don't believe ANY Protestant denomination accepts Mary or
the Pope as deity.
Re: Pagan holidays
I believe you can also add Christmas and Halloween (All Saints Day or All
Hallows Eve) to that list. Christmas was some sort of Winter Solstice
holiday.
Mike
|
293.89 | Well, sorta... | COGITO::HILL | | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:52 | 22 |
| This is an interesting debate here. Who woulda thunk it...
Just to clarify a couple of points, the Episcopal, or Anglican Church,
is very similar to Roman Catholicism, except for a few things: Priests
can marry and have a family (there are also some women priests).
Episcopalians don't have confession. Anyone, as long as they have been
baptized in a Christain denomination, can receive communion at a service
(This may vary, but it was the case in the parish where I grew up).
They don't recognize the Pope as the next step away from God (The
ArchBishop of Canterbury is the equivalent).
The split came in the Middle Ages when the King of England (James I,
I think) wanted to get divorced. the Pope said "no, I'll excommunicate
you if you do this." Jimmy told the Pope to take a hike and formed his
"own" church, the Church of England. I dunno when and where the other
differences came from.
Personally, I'm a little fed up with organized religion in general,
and think that it means much more to live within the 10 commandments,
work hard, treat people right, etc. than it does to belong to a parish.
Tom
|
293.90 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:55 | 18 |
| re Protestants and the Pope...
From what I understand, the Episcopalians are the closest to the
Catholic Church.
re Papl Infallibility...
This does not refer to him never making a mistake. The way I understand
this, it means that when the Pope speaks on doctrine and dogma, his
word is considered to be the direct word of God, or something like
that.
BTW, what's Mattingly's batting average this days? Is it higher than
his body weight? Has he needed devine intervention...
'Saw
|
293.91 | Off with their heads ... | SHALOT::HUNT | Send lawyers, guns, and money ... | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:57 | 14 |
| � The split came in the Middle Ages when the King of England (James I,
� I think) wanted to get divorced. the Pope said "no, I'll excommunicate
� you if you do this." Jimmy told the Pope to take a hike and formed his
� "own" church, the Church of England. I dunno when and where the other
� differences came from.
The English king who wanted a divorce that caused the split from the
Roman Catholic Church that led to the founding of the Church Of England
was the infamous Henry VIII. He of the "Six Wives" fame.
Henry certainly employed some *interesting* methods when he felt like
changing partners.
Bob Hunt
|
293.92 | | MCIS1::DHAMEL | A splinter in the bannister of life | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:16 | 16 |
|
Lately, I've gotten more involved with the Unitarians, my wife's
affiliation. Basically, it seems to be an organized religion for
people who don't like organized religion. Some of the Parishioners
lean toward traditional Jewish teachings, while others favor Christian
teachings. That particular parish is having a hard time finding
and keeping ministers because they can't settle on one who will
please all the people all the time. Tough task, eh?
But this does seem to be a church which is more in line with my
own personal feelings; that God is what you want Him to be, and
your relationship with him is personal. We all share a common bond,
which is life itself, and perhaps that is the concept of "God."
Dickster
|
293.93 | Infallibility | RONALD::VENDER | | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:23 | 11 |
| I just want to respond to this big deal that is always made out of the
Pope supposedly being 2nd in line to God. Saw was right in saying that
the concept of Papal infallibility is only used in situations where the
Pope is decreeing a special statement on Church dogma. I believe that
this has only been invoked twice in the history of the Church(taught a
long time ago and can't remember what they were). It is often refered
to by people to make it sound like whatever the Pope says is correct &
the word of God(incorrectly)
Tom
.
|
293.94 | Hard to believe it took so long to see the obvious ... | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:28 | 8 |
| Knowing what I do about the Catholic Church (and reading the griping
going on in here) I can only conclude:
"Thank you Martin Luther. Thank you!"
- ACC_Chris_who_thinks_Dean_(and_everybody_else)_are_on_equal_footing_
with_the_Pope
|
293.95 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:32 | 9 |
| � - ACC_Chris_who_thinks_Dean_(and_everybody_else)_are_on_equal_footing_
� with_the_Pope
Gawd, Chris, cain't you do anything without getting Dean involved 8^)
This has been a very interesting discussion....
'Saw
|
293.96 | Dean this!!! | RONALD::VENDER | | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:33 | 3 |
| Dean couldn't hold a nun's jock, don't kid yourself.
Tom
|
293.97 | furthering the tangent | BUILD::MORGAN | | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:48 | 29 |
| Re: the mob and the Roman Catholic church
Once again, read "In God's Name" by David Yallop if you get a chance.
I don't recall the publisher, but the paperback version came out in
about '84.
This man did an incredible amount of research. Has anyone ever
wondered where the mob launders their money? One way is to set up
dummy corporations and banks, by very clever bankers like Michelle
Sindonna, who was controlled by a guy whose last name was Gelli. Mr.
Gelli was a high ranking Mason (who's since been denounced) who
controlled many many people in high places (some of them American).
When the news was about to become public, Mr. Gelli was found hanging
from beneath a bridge in London I believe. Mr. Sindonna had more
"acquaintances" than Gelli I suspect.
These men were frequent visitors of Pope Paul, who preceeded Pope John
Paul I. When John Paul I was going to remove all the ranking bishops
in the Vatican Bank the plan of action went into effect. I'm convinced
this very humble man was murdered. The present Pope John Paul II has
kept many of these corrupt bishops in place, where they still are to
this day. It is reasons such as these that have completely turned me
off.
Anyway, I'm off on vacation for the next week, so I won't be around to
defend or offer more anecdotes concerning this topic, so...C-Ya!
Steve
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293.98 | Just bringin' the SPORTS angle in, 1Way. | RHETT::KNORR | Carolina Blue | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:57 | 1 |
|
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293.99 | | CAM::WAY | For I intend to go in harm's way | Fri Jul 20 1990 15:05 | 8 |
| ACC, let me guess then...BobKnight would be the AntiChrist? 8^)
Just pullin' your leg dude....
Have a good weekend.
'Saw
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293.100 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Fri Jul 20 1990 15:15 | 11 |
| RE: the book `In God's Name'
The author sounds like one of those dudes with an axe to grind, or
working to their own agenda. I generally read things of that nature
with a healthy dose of skepticism, if not outright disbelief. Ever read
Eric Van Daniken (sp?). He's a real hoot.
(Should we talk about Ancient Astronauts, Flying Saucers, and Chariots
of the gods, next? It seems like a logical segue; I mean, after all,
this is SPORTS, right?)
Mike JN
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293.101 | | PARVAX::WARDLE | Dukakis,Romer,Florio,Taxes | Mon Jul 23 1990 07:57 | 1 |
| DEVILS!
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293.102 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Mon Jul 23 1990 09:28 | 6 |
| JOISY!!!! uh... I mean JERSEY! (Sorry, got carried away)
^^^^^
[ Ever read Carrie? ]
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA (tm)
Mike JN
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