thephan wrote:pacino's posting is one of the more important things revealed in weeks.
Calvinball wrote:Pacino was right.
Doll Is Mine wrote:This Ellen DeGeneres look alike on ESPN is annoying. Who the hell is he?
Phan In Phlorida wrote:Rev_Beezer wrote:Only in Schuylkill County...
http://republicanherald.com/news/gilberton-police-chief-posts-profanity-laced-video-on-youtube-1.1524509
The chief of Police in teeny tiny Gilberton, PA posted this video:
(yootoobz)In August 2011, Kessler was allegedly shot in his hand with his own gun while he was off duty at a Girardville tavern.Kessler is also a member of the North Schuylkill school board.
This dickhead also shot a dog.
And formed a "Constitution Security Force" (civilian militia) chapter, to defend America from tyranny.
GILBERTON - The Gilberton Borough Council meeting scheduled for 7 p.m. today has been canceled due to irate telephone calls to borough hall prompted by the controversial YouTube videos recently posted by borough police Chief Mark Kessler.
The council meeting has been rescheduled for 7 p.m. July 31 at the borough hall in Mahanoy Plane.
Gilberton Mayor Mary Lou Hannon said Wednesday that the telephone calls were answered by secretary Tina Antalosky, who was shaken by the loud, angry words used by callers.
"It was the tone of voice that they had and what they were saying," Hannon said. "She kind of felt threatened, even though nobody threatened her. They were talking about Mark. She got very uneasy about it.
"It's been nonstop. There have been calls galore," Hannon said.
The two YouTube videos were filmed by Kessler in a remote location in the area. The first video of 1 minute, 34 seconds, voiced his opposition to comments made by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry that the Obama administration would sign a United Nations treaty on arms regulation - passed by the U.N. General Assembly on April 2 - despite bipartisan opposition in Congress to the treaty.
The second video that runs 2 minutes, 45 seconds, is a follow-up by Kessler responding to negative comments by some viewers who objected to his vulgar language and the firing of automatic weapons in the first video. The profanity and the gunfire increased in the second video.
The weapons in the video are legal weapons and belong to the police department after he purchased them with his own money and donated them in a transaction approved by the borough council, Hannon said.
"I'm trying to wake people up to say, 'Hey, there's a lot more going on than meets the eye.' A lot more," Kessler, 41 and a father of four, said in an interview from Texas where he was vacationing. "It goes way beyond the Second Amendment, the First Amendment. It's a shame. Our founding fathers didn't intend for our government to be the way it is."
Kessler, who called himself "a wholeheartedly good man who loves his country," acknowledged that some people were upset by the videos but he said he does not regret posting them and insisted that many more people were supportive of them.
Hannon said state police have been notified of the phone calls.
"I wanted them to be aware of what was going on," Hannon said. "I made a report that we had the calls. I had also asked if they (state police) would cover our meeting. We're taking security precautions right now."
thephan wrote:pacino's posting is one of the more important things revealed in weeks.
Calvinball wrote:Pacino was right.
NORRISTOWN — Around 10:45 a.m. Wednesday, the first same-sex couple in Pennsylvania’s history officially married in the presence of their children.
Alicia Terrizzi and Loreen Bloodgood, of Limerick, married after their license was filed and approved at 8 a.m. in the Montgomery County Courthouse.
“Unless you’re in the military, normally there’s a three-day holding period but I guess with how sensitive this matter is they were willing to give them their license,” said Craig Andrussier, a non-denominational minister who officiated the couple’s ceremony.
Montgomery County Register of Wills D. Bruce Hanes said he issued Terrizzi and Bloodgood their license early because they said they were leaving the area soon.
“I think we feel equal, for once. I think we feel the same as everybody else and it’s a great feeling. It’s almost indescribable,” Bloodgood told a reporter.
Andrussier said he normally sends the license through the mail but went to the courthouse himself to make sure everything went through.
On Tuesday, an unidentified same-sex couple applied for a marriage license but decided against it over the possibility of a lawsuit challenging state law.
A 17-year-old Pennsylvania law recognizes marriages between men and women and does not provide for same-sex marriages or civil unions.
“What we have is a law that was passed defining marriage,” said Hanes, a Democrat. “In my opinion, that law is in opposition to the Pennsylvania Constitution.”
The American Civil Liberties Union is challenging the state law in court.
Although the ACLU said is not representing Terrizzi and Bloodgood, a staff attorney for the group, Molly Tack-Hooper, said, “We think every gay and lesbian couple in Pennsylvania should have the right to marry.”
thephan wrote:pacino's posting is one of the more important things revealed in weeks.
Calvinball wrote:Pacino was right.
pacino wrote:the Carlos Danger name generator
pacino wrote:same-sex couples issued marriage licenses in Montco:NORRISTOWN — Around 10:45 a.m. Wednesday, the first same-sex couple in Pennsylvania’s history officially married in the presence of their children.
Alicia Terrizzi and Loreen Bloodgood, of Limerick, married after their license was filed and approved at 8 a.m. in the Montgomery County Courthouse.
“Unless you’re in the military, normally there’s a three-day holding period but I guess with how sensitive this matter is they were willing to give them their license,” said Craig Andrussier, a non-denominational minister who officiated the couple’s ceremony.
Montgomery County Register of Wills D. Bruce Hanes said he issued Terrizzi and Bloodgood their license early because they said they were leaving the area soon.
“I think we feel equal, for once. I think we feel the same as everybody else and it’s a great feeling. It’s almost indescribable,” Bloodgood told a reporter.
Andrussier said he normally sends the license through the mail but went to the courthouse himself to make sure everything went through.
On Tuesday, an unidentified same-sex couple applied for a marriage license but decided against it over the possibility of a lawsuit challenging state law.
A 17-year-old Pennsylvania law recognizes marriages between men and women and does not provide for same-sex marriages or civil unions.
“What we have is a law that was passed defining marriage,” said Hanes, a Democrat. “In my opinion, that law is in opposition to the Pennsylvania Constitution.”
The American Civil Liberties Union is challenging the state law in court.
Although the ACLU said is not representing Terrizzi and Bloodgood, a staff attorney for the group, Molly Tack-Hooper, said, “We think every gay and lesbian couple in Pennsylvania should have the right to marry.”
it's how it started in California, let's do it. look at those lawbreakers!
RT @katetaylornyt: Weiner begins opening statement at Latina forum in Spanish, introducing himself as "Antonio Weiner."
thephan wrote:pacino's posting is one of the more important things revealed in weeks.
Calvinball wrote:Pacino was right.
jerseyhoya wrote:We named our team Carlos Danger at pub trivia last night. A lot of people didn't get it.