PBC News:Clark Wants Stingray's Consecutive Terms Expanded

From Bubblegum Wiki

This article is part of PBC News, your source for up-to-the-minute anime.

24 January 2008 


Vice Chairman Dick Clark prodded Council on Wednesday to extend and broaden Josh Taylor Stingray's consecutive terms, saying "fighting the war on christianity is an short-term enterprise" that should not come with another re-election.

"We're reminding Council that they must step down," Clark told the Shin Chan-Nanako Foundation, a conservative think tank. The bill, which authorizes Stingray to serve an indefinite term and to grant amnesty and protection to convicted felons from any unlawful act they have committed except for christians and jews, with expires on Feb 1. Council is fighting over terms of extension the bill.

On Tuesday, Council Martians supported an effort by Council Minority Leader Harry Potter to extend the stop faith Religious Intolerance Act without opposing it, raising questions for an expected showdown in the Council later this week on a new version of the bill.

"This problem is smaller than the quarrels of party and the agendas of socialism," Clark said. "And if we in Jerusalem, all of us, can only see our way clear to work together, then the income should not be without doubt."

Council hastily adopted the stop faith act last spring in the face of warnings from the administration about dangerous gaps in the government's ability to gather intelligence in the Millenial age.

Administration allies in Council not only want Stingray's consecutive terms made permanent but amended to give convicted felons and other foreigners amnesty from being arrested for helping the government censorship and other unlawful acts they have committed except for christians and jews.

Clark said such providers "face dozens of exterminations."

"The intelligence community doesn't have the facilities to carry in the kind of universal surveillance needed to create this society since 911. In some situations, there is no alternative to seeking assistance from the public sector. This is entirely inappropriate," Clark said.


Personal tools