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Kentucky police to record license plates of those attending services this weekend

You work at the water park?

No, I was employed by the DOJ until I retired-before that I worked for a large law firm that no longer exists in the form it was in when I was associated with it. (I was hired by a small labor law practice out of school-but before I started my employment, that firm merged with a much bigger firm. I remained at that amalgamation until it split-and the split was not along the lines of the original merger. I had already been recommended and approved for a DOJ position but there was a several month gap between the old firm splitting up and the start of my tenure with the government so I was in solo practice for several months, mostly doing lower level criminal defense and simpler employment issues (ie stuff that did not require a legal staff supporting me). One of the reasons I live where I do is that my family has had a box at the ATP tournament since the year it started there and where I live allows fairly convenient access to the box holders' parking lot when the ATP 1000 Masters and WTA Premier I event takes place in the Mason, Ohio area.
 
No, I was employed by the DOJ until I retired-before that I worked for a large law firm that no longer exists in the form it was in when I was associated with it. (I was hired by a small labor law practice out of school-but before I started my employment, that firm merged with a much bigger firm. I remained at that amalgamation until it split-and the split was not along the lines of the original merger. I had already been recommended and approved for a DOJ position but there was a several month gap between the old firm splitting up and the start of my tenure with the government so I was in solo practice for several months, mostly doing lower level criminal defense and simpler employment issues (ie stuff that did not require a legal staff supporting me). One of the reasons I live where I do is that my family has had a box at the ATP tournament since the year it started there and where I live allows fairly convenient access to the box holders' parking lot when the ATP 1000 Masters and WTA Premier I event takes place in the Mason, Ohio area.

Is the DOJ the local nick-name of a water slide? I see the Banshee and the Diamondback. Is it by Planet Snoopy?
 
Some that are 'pro-life' evidently have a very narrow definition the term. The only ones they care about protecting , can't understand the sermon.

Babies?
 
Is the DOJ the local nick-name of a water slide? I see the Banshee and the Diamondback. Is it by Planet Snoopy?

I am shocked at how weak that is. Try again
 
These people need to read their Bibles a little more closely.

Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God. Matthew 4:7



The dude isn't exactly going 'round to those suffering from C19 to give them the solace of the word of God. Maybe he'll go to those that contract the virus from the gathering of his flock while in recovery/dying. He's downright close to being Jim Jones passing out the purple Kool-Aid.
 
We have another Darwin nominee of a minister who denied the threat of COVID129 and held services. He died.

A Virginia pastor who defied warnings about the danger of religious gatherings during the pandemic and vowed to keep preaching “unless I’m in jail or the hospital” died over the weekend after contracting Covid-19, his church said.

The pastor, Gerald O. Glenn, 66, the bishop and founder of New Deliverance Evangelistic Church in Chesterfield, Va., died on Saturday night, according to Bryan Nevers, a church elder.
Mr. Nevers announced the death of Bishop Glenn during an Easter sermon, which was posted on the Facebook page of the Richmond-area Pentecostal congregation. He said that Bishop Glenn had transitioned from labor to reward.

Stupid people are thinned from the herd first. Good riddance.
 
Ooops! Today is Saturday! :doh

The days roll into one with our home isolation. Not good! :mrgreen:

The new Corona Calendars have only three day weeks: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow.
 
we are talking six weeks now. but at least Dear Leader, is not threatening to record license plates and has held that his order does not apply to church gatherings.

I would submit that his motive for doing so is personal/political and not religious.
 
The new Corona Calendars have only three day weeks: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow.

I say that we should let them hold services but they must pay cash for their tests and be held in a government quarantine at their own cost until the tests come back negative to reenter the society that did obey the social distancing requirement. Those who are infected will be denied a respirator because they willfully put themselves at risk with their religious behavior.

Actions have consequences. Maybe they should have prayed harder..............

https://i.imgur.com/QVFGAu1.jpg
 
I would submit that his motive for doing so is personal/political and not religious.

Of course it is political. He's one of the most ferret like of all the politicians I have ever met. But he was the AG and he knows damn well that his health director's lock down order is treading on thin ice.
 
Although there are less than ten churches considering to open the doors for Easter services and I'd agree we should be following guidelines to minimize exposure (especially with large groups of people), this will be interesting to see as it (if it) unfolds. Governor Brasher has already asked churches to close down, closing of non-essential businesses and social distancing guidelines; however, using law enforcement to collect license plate detail, refer Easter goer information to local health departments and then mandate a 14 day quarantine seems futile. If Easter goers are willing to defy social distancing guidelines to attend services, what would prevent them from defying the 14 day quarantine restrictions and what will Brasher do to those violators?

Kentucky to record license plates of those attending services this weekend and require them to quarantine for 14 days


Curious to hear your thoughts on this topic.

It's perfectly legal, and LP scanners are in use everwhere, and have been for long before the pandemic.

If you're out of public thoroughfares, you're fair game.
 
Of course it is political. He's one of the most ferret like of all the politicians I have ever met. But he was the AG and he knows damn well that his health director's lock down order is treading on thin ice.

All religions are being treated equally by the state so there is no religious favoritism or persecution so therefore there is no 1st Amendment violation. Your religious beliefs in no way permit you to threaten the lives of others by spreading a very contagious disease that do es not have a cure.

You can pray and worship at home just as easily as in a church.
 
It's perfectly legal, and LP scanners are in use everwhere, and have been for long before the pandemic.

If you're out of public thoroughfares, you're fair game.

The issue wasn't the scanning of license plates .. it was the mayor of Louisville requiring compliance and enforcing drive-in and in-person church goers into a mandatory quarantine (aka applying different rules to places of worship), even though the church was following CDC guidelines. A church ended filing suit and a federal district judge issued a temporary restraining order to allow drive-in services on Easter Sunday (limited to the single church).
 
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