Showing posts with label england. Show all posts
Showing posts with label england. Show all posts

Friday, 27 August 2010

British Woman Mary Bale Dumps Cat in Garbage Can and Thought it was Funny (Video)


CT Patriot via Huffington Post reports that the British woman who sparked an Internet frenzy for throwing a cat into the trash now says her actions were “completely out of character” and meant as a “joke.”

Mary Bale, 45, was caught on CCTV petting four-year-old tabby cat Lola before picking her up, tossing her into a trash can and closing the lid.

When Lola’s owners posted the clip online, it sparked a terse reaction from animal lovers and advocates which allegedly culminated in a series of death threats against Bale, an unmarried banker and resident of Coventry, England.

“I want to take this opportunity to apologize profusely for the upset and distress that my actions have caused,” she told the Daily Mail.

“I certainly did not intend to cause any distress to Lola or her owners.”

Still, Bale felt the outcry had been blown out of proportion.

“I don’t know what the fuss is about. It’s just a cat,” the Mail reported her as saying. “I did it as a joke because I thought it would be funny. I never thought it would be trapped. I expected it to wriggle out.”

She later retracted those comments, as seen in the video below.
Watch reporters try to confront Bale about her actions:





Cross ref The Huffington Post

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Friday, 2 July 2010

Across the Pond in England Homosexual Couples Could Be Allowed to “Marry” in Traditional Religious Ceremonies


With all due respect to my Queer brothers and sisters, stop making a mockery of religious faith.
The battles that are being waged in Great Britain will soon be coming to our shores.
Pastors of the Church of the Nazarene would rather be put in jail than to be forced to perform religious ceremonies for homosexual couples.

From The UK Telegraph:

Lynne Featherstone, the equalities minister, said the Coalition was considering allowing same-sex couples to include key religious elements in civil partnership ceremonies.

In a parliamentary answer, she disclosed that homosexual couples could be permitted to use “religious readings, music and symbols”.
This would make civil partnerships practically indistinguishable from traditional weddings as Parliament recently removed the bar on same-sex unions in churches and other places of worship through an amendment to Labour’s Equality Act.

The proposals will delight equality campaigners who believe civil partnership is a “second-class” status, but they prompted fierce opposition from mainstream Christian leaders who believe marriage can only take place between a man and a woman.

Church of England sources warned that the Government could not make such dramatic changes merely by issuing regulations or guidance, as the current Civil Partnership Act prohibits the use of religious services during the registrations.

A spokesman made it clear that senior  figures in the established faith would resist any moves effectively to legalise homosexual marriage.
The Rt Rev Michael Langrish, the Bishop of Exeter, added in a personal statement: “As some of us warned at the time, the amendment to the Equality Bill has opened an area of unhelpful doubt and confusion. The Church of England will not be allowing use of any of its buildings for civil partnership registrations.”

Lord Tebbit, a former Tory party chairman who spoke out against same-sex unions in churches in the Lords, said: “I wouldn’t want anything done to add to the pretence that a civil partnership is a marriage. That’s the key thing, and anything which changes the law would have to come back to the Lords.”

In 2005, same-sex couples in Britain were allowed for the first time to take part in ceremonies that made them “civil partners”.

This gave them similar legal rights to married spouses, but the law required the events to take place in register offices or approved venues such as hotels and stately homes.

The ceremony has had to be secular, with no hymns or Bible readings, in order to preserve the definition of religious marriage as the union of a man and a woman.

When the Equality Bill was being debated earlier this year, an amendment was added by Lord Alli that permitted civil partnership ceremonies to take place in places of worship if the relevant religious group permitted it.

Quakers, Unitarians and the Liberal Judaism movement will ask to be allowed to host the ceremonies but the Church of England will resist it, despite the wishes of some liberal clerics, as will the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales.

Registrars provided by local councils would still have to conduct civil partnership ceremonies.
Full story