Archbishops Daniel Pilarczyk and Dennis Schnurr of
Cincinnatti Ohio, (w/ hands in pockets) explain important new changes in the
Third Edition of the Roman Missal in 2010 on You Tube (below)
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All life is
sacred except when it begins via artificial insemination and with unmarried Hispanic
gay females.
No,
Archbishop Schnurr is not trying to get into a female teacher’s pants (the
catholic god forbid). But fresh from a stint of duty in Snickerdoodle land,
Duluth Minnesota, also made famous by alleged coffin sex with consenting adult
age seminarians (i.e. Bishop Brom “the vampire” in San Diego Calif. and or
mentor of Sally Cordileone) – Archbishop Schnurr’s catholic school system wants
to discriminate against female teachers who want to create life in a modern
scientific method and maintain the right (far right) – yelling “Religious
Liberty” and or “Frankenstein Monster”.
(BTW, Ms.
Dias is also “Homosexual” - ya know, that sexual thingy and "Shhh!" that they don't know how to talk about it.)
Trying to pull the Religious minister’s loophole clause that the Catholic Supreme Court of the United States says is okay to fire any church employee for any cause or petty prejudice, a pregnant teacher who got fired and probably lost her health insurance just as she needed it, being pregnant and all that, was rewarded by a jury of her peers (human beings and not church clerics) $170,000 for discrimination.
CINCINNATI (AP) — A jury found an Ohio archdiocese discriminated against a teacher fired after becoming pregnant via artificial insemination, leaving legal experts expecting an appeal they say could have a much wider legal impact.
Christa Dias (what a lovely name), who was fired from two schools in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati in October 2010, was awarded more than $170,000 Monday after winning her federal anti-discrimination lawsuit against the archdiocese.
Dias' attorney, Robert Klingler, argued she was fired simply because she was pregnant and unmarried, a dismissal he said violated state and federal law.
Steven Goodwin, the attorney for the archdiocese and the schools, contended Dias was fired for violating her contract, which he said required her to comply with the philosophies and teachings of the Catholic church. The church considers artificial insemination immoral and a violation of church doctrine.
Read more:
http://www.seattlepi.com/news/us/article/Archdiocese-expected-to-appeal-OH-teacher-case-4573753.php#ixzz2VEN57mXo
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