Friday, February 20, 2015

Star Of The Sea



As the story time of the Hunger Games is the term direction of the grade to elementary broadway,
a staggering effect^shun with the status lane to crossword grid as the bubble of the suffocation,
in chemical Castration to the brochure that was handed one by one to the San Francisco Schools,
as morality is most obviously introduction to the Principle of confession in the age of Impression on dark,
levels with dear have brought this entanglement as an Emergency Cut You System to bier.

On that it is the Mass Sieve that has turned to the shredder as the Facts for core ick Ka chure,
the stock of Film in Oscars has denial on my front to the Truth of Live in San Francisco Historic,
movies are the reaction to the dead story in Tell on that it is my pleasure to deliver a shore,
as History is being done as the ladder is made swept to walk paths of nothing borrow Addressed.

Actual morality pamphlet given to 8 year olds in San Francisco, Ca. 

Tack on the asses of Actors on Parade for the day of the Weak and a Rock its Read bong,
salute to the method of cancelation to strong Arms are the shoulders that weapons have Kong,
in San Francisco California the Golden Gate Barrier hath a solution to problem the world ignored,
on that product of Televised to the Monitors prompt may the structure of 800 be 1000 go Pride,
rain bow to pot lines copper gone screen Eye blinking huts to the embarassment Kings,
chess on the blackboard the concrete to the Bart rails that spark to the Gere or the Tarps.

Whilst CBS ran the Corker for Entertainment Tonight the plan it is sharked,
the Catholic provision has robbed Confession to Say that aprons the Wrath of death by death trait,
to climb the HELL^OWE for the Turing box Sake this is the ABSOLUTE to Volition by Spake,
Won for the Factor to for the Fraud as Hollywood Dances children are trout.



Fished by the scope of handed a threat to park the back on the Hollywood Vet,
to total of barrel of firing Ignite shall the Movie House be a dumping of Trite,
to cast on the mouth Pick Turns to Bare the Naked be Left for a destination of Light.

The sky is a bank with the Sun to make Natural be frame of the Moon as the death is born doom,
oxygen certain to be exploded by lungs shouting silence to power the opening soon,
body to armor the Streak of a Tight to buttocks the Shit that Hollywood Type,
no scarce are the Bill O'Reilly`s to shite as so is the Farmer with Ball to the dyke,
thumb for the plug an organ to brand irons are soakin' to verify Knight.

To not be of Counter in marching with shiver the goose pebbles will know it's all but a fiddle,
actors take Cuts to accept the doll ore excusing the position to bend on the rob,
never performance always the dog barking what others have died to make love.



Therefore moreover and most masters of So ask Bill O'Reilly for grocery informs to be the Down Lo,
the bigger the show the more that it blows ask the smell of the camps at Auschwitz to silk,
cream for the dairy trains on a heard yet World War II learned nobody turned,
a Way with the saddle and on with the Wealth as Curtains are hurdled by Tits and big Pelts.

SF priest for giving inappropriate pamphlets to schoolchildren 


Some parents of students at Star of the Sea Catholic school were outraged by language in a pamphlet of questions given to penitents before confession. - MIKE KOOZMIN/THE S.F. EXAMINER
  • MIKE KOOZMIN/THE S.F. EXAMINER
  • Some parents of students at Star of the Sea Catholic school were outraged by language in a pamphlet of questions given to penitents before confession.
In the latest controversy to strike the Catholic Church in San Francisco, elementary school students at the Star of the Sea School were given pamphlets referring to sexual topics that some parents say were inappropriate and far too advanced for their children.
At the Inner Richmond school whose parish recently made news when its pastor banned girls from acting as altar servers at Mass, copies of “The Examination of Conscience and Catholic Doctrine” were passed out to students in second through sixth grades about two weeks ago, just before confession, parents and students said.
They asked questions such as, “Did I perform impure acts by myself (masturbation) or with another (adultery, fornication and sodomy)?” and, “Did I practice artificial birth control or was I or my spouse prematurely sterilized (tubal ligation or vasectomy)?” as well as, “Have I had or advised anyone to have an abortion?”
“It was very careless on their behalf, and you would expect anyone who works around children to be much more careful,” said parent Siobhan McFeeney, who has four children at the school. “You should never show this to a 9-year-old.”
A spokesman for the Archdiocese of San Francisco did not return messages for comment, and the Rev. Joseph Illo, pastor at Star of the Sea Church, could not be reached.
McFeeney said some teachers realized what the pamphlets contained and grabbed them before her child in the second grade could read one. But her fourth-grade daughter, Sinead Trevino, said she had read them. They were being handed out by Father Patrick Driscoll, the parish’s parochial vicar, she said.
“I read the first few lines and I thought, 'What does that mean?’” she said. “They looked like they were things you weren’t supposed to do — the Commandments. But I don’t think they were.”
The older students were just as confused, and were talking about them at recess and getting “really grossed out,” said sixth-grader Riley Brooks, 11.
“There was something about masturbation,” he said. “Pretty sure abortion was on there, but I can’t remember. And sodomy. I don’t know what that means.”
His mother, Christy Brooks, said she found it ironic.
“There’s something on there saying, 'Did I deliberately look at impure television or Internet,’ and I feel like they have actually given my children impure content,” she said. “It’s not appropriate for children and anybody who thinks otherwise doesn’t belong around children.”
Brooks said she understands that these are the teachings of the Catholic Church and that her children would eventually learn about these topics. But she said these pamphlets were just the latest in questionable actions made by the clergy running the parish and the school.
Illo’s exclusion of girls from serving at the altar came after he forbade non-Catholic students from receiving blessings while the Catholic students took Communion, Brooks said. He reinstated the option after parents complained about his decision.
Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone has also recently come under protests for introducing a new “morality document" for Catholic high school faculty and staff that would require them to “affirm and believe” that sex outside of marriage and homosexual relations are “gravely evil.”

Archbishop on crash course with S.F., state

 Updated 10:22 pm, Wednesday, February 18, 2015
San Francisco’s archbishop is trying to make its Catholic schools more Catholic, but city and state officials are poised to push back, saying any effort to discriminate against employees will be met with legal action.
In recent weeks, the Archdiocese of San Francisco caused dismay among teachers, students, parents and the public for introducing morality clauses into four Catholic high school handbooks as well as teacher labor contracts.
“Catholic schools exist to affirm and proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ as held and taught by his Catholic Church,” Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone said in his explanation for the addition of language against homosexuality, same-sex marriage, abortion, contraceptives and artificial insemination. Teachers who publicly violate that language could face discipline or dismissal.
That’s a problem, said Supervisor Mark Farrell, who said he will introduce a resolution Tuesday calling on Cordileone to resolve the issue of the morality clauses in a way that preserves the rights and dignity of teachers while respecting the church.
“The last few weeks have been incredibly frustrating and disheartening for many Catholics here in San Francisco, myself included,” he said. “The resolution should both express the concern and disappointment that we have as Catholics here.”
He also said city officials were looking at legal options to prevent discriminatory employment practices, if necessary.
State legislators also weighed in on the conflict.
The morality clauses “conflict with settled areas of law and foment a discriminatory environment,” eight legislators said in a letter to Cordileone sent Tuesday. “Although your position wields discretion over working conditions at schools affiliated with the Catholic Church, the standards within the morality clauses would be illegal for any other employer.” The group of eight lawmakers includes state Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, and Assemblymen David Chiuand Phil Ting, both San Francisco Democrats.
The clauses apply to four high schools — Serra, Marin Catholic, Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory and Riordan. But the archbishop’s effort to rein in secularism at Catholic schools has also been felt at other schools, including Star of the Sea, a K-8 school in the Richmond District. The archdiocese did not respond to requests for comment.
The Rev. Joseph Illo recently banned the use of altar girls at school and parish Masses at Star of the Sea, a decision opposed by some parents and staff.
Illo also upset families when he decided that non-Catholic students could no longer receive blessings during Communion, a decision he reversed after complaints from the school community.
And this week, parents revealed that Star of the Sea students as young as those in second grade received a pamphlet about confession late last year that referred to sexual topics such as sodomy, masturbation and abortion.
That was a mistake, Illo said Wednesday.
“Among the 70 items for reflection, some were not age appropriate for schoolchildren,” Illo said in a statement. “We apologize for this oversight and removed the pamphlet as soon as this was brought to our attention by the school faculty in December.”
Still, parents at Catholic schools across the city were feeling the reverberations of the archbishop’s approach to a Catholic education.
Kevin Fisher-Paulson and his husband send their two sons to St. John Catholic School, an elementary school in Glen Park.
They were rejected by four Catholic schools before being accepted at St. John, and they have no intention of leaving the school despite the archbishop’s very vocal opposition to the makeup of their family.
“Ultimately, I believe in the message of that guy 2,000 years ago who had this great idea: If you’re nice to your neighbors and your neighbors are nice to you, the world is going to be a great place,” said Fisher-Paulson, adding that he is more stubborn than Cordileone, “Just ask my husband.”
The San Francisco sheriff’s captain said the archidiocese needs to reconsider its message.
“The best way to go out of business is to start refusing customers,” he said. “Suddenly, you’re going to be left with a church of three straight people.”

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