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    Willie Mullins hoping Un De Sceaux learned from fall at Thurles - December 19, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Updated: Friday, 19 Dec 2014 14:50 | Comments Un De Sceaux wins The Star Best for Racing Coverage Novice Hurdle at Punchestown last year

    Willie Mullins is keeping his fingers crossed Un De Sceaux can learn to be less extravagant in the jumping department as he bids to get off the mark over fences at the second attempt at Fairyhouse on Saturday.

    The free-going six-year-old won each of his seven starts over hurdles, more often than not blowing his rivals away with awesome displays from the front.

    He looked set to continue that trend on his chasing debut at Thurles last month, but failed to organise himself on landing after jumping the third fence from the finish and parted company with Ruby Walsh.

    Un De Sceaux, second only to esteemed stable companion Vautour in ante-post lists for the Arkle Trophy at the Cheltenham Festival, will be a long odds-on favourite to put that recent mishap behind him this weekend.

    "Everyone likes to see horses stand off fences and clear them by miles and that was what he was doing (at Thurles) until he made a mistake," said Mullins.

    "Hopefully it might have taught him something. Horses need to be able to go in short and pop one every now and then, like Vautour did at Navan."

    Walsh has schooled Un De Sceaux since his Thurles tumble and reports him to have suffered no ill effects.

    "He schooled over eight fences last week and was super. He was unlucky to fall. It was just a novicey fall and he jumped super up until that. His jumping wouldn't be a concern to me at the moment," Walsh told Racing UK.

    "He seems in really good form."

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    Willie Mullins hoping Un De Sceaux learned from fall at Thurles

    Chain Link Fences Companies In Louisville Ky | Call 555-555-5555 – Video - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


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    Jingle ball 2014 in Seattle fences ft.Macklemore – Video - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Jingle ball 2014 in Seattle fences ft.Macklemore

    By: Tricia Rivera

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    Jingle ball 2014 in Seattle fences ft.Macklemore - Video

    White Vinyl Fence For Sale | White Vinyl Fences For Sale | White Vinyl Fence Material – Video - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


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    White Vinyl Fence For Sale | White Vinyl Fences For Sale | White Vinyl Fence Material - Video

    Taller fences to deter coyotes goes to Sullivan's Planning Commission - December 18, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Stanford Kirshtein/Provided Sullivan's Island resident Stanford Kirshtein photographs coyotes at night using a remote camera placed on a fence at his home near Station 26.

    SULLIVAN'S ISLAND - Taller fences to discourage coyotes may still be allowed here but first the idea must get Planning Commission approval.

    Town Council on Tuesday night voted to send to the Commission a proposal to allow residents to have seven-foot-tall fences.

    Currently, residential fences can be up to five-feet tall.

    Residents have said they would like the option of enclosing backyards with taller fences to better protect pets and even children, although there have been no reports of the animals threatening people.

    In the meantime, the town has encouraged people to report coyote sightings to police.

    "A lot of people are seeing them very often. We want to hear about it," Councilman Pat O'Neil said.

    Several people spoke on the coyote issue Tuesday night at the council meeting.

    "These are invasive animals. They do not belong here and they are decimating everything on this island," Wayne Stelljes told the Council.

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    Taller fences to deter coyotes goes to Sullivan's Planning Commission

    Vatican offers olive branch to US nuns - December 17, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    VATICAN CITY (AP) A sweeping Vatican investigation into Roman Catholic nuns in the U.S. that began amid fears they had become too feminist and secular ended up praising the sisters for their selfless work caring for the poor a major shift in tone that reflected the social justice mindset of Pope Francis.

    The overwhelmingly positive report Tuesday also promised to value their "feminine genius" more, while gently suggesting ways to serve the church faithfully and survive amid a steep drop in their numbers. It was cheered by the American sisters themselves, dozens of whom swarmed the Vatican news conference announcing the results in a rare occasion of women outnumbering men at the Vatican.

    "There is an encouraging and realistic tone in this report," Sister Sharon Holland told reporters. "Challenges are understood, but it is not a document of blame, or of simplistic solutions. One can read the text and feel appreciated and trusted to carry on."

    The report was most remarkable for what it didn't say, given the criticism of American religious life that prompted the Vatican under Pope Benedict XVI to launch the investigation in 2009.

    There was no critique of the nuns, no demands that they shift their focus from social justice to emphasize Catholic teaching on abortion, no condemnation that a feminist, secular mentality had taken hold in their ranks.

    Rather, while offering a sobering assessment of the difficult state of American congregations, the report praised the sisters' dedication and reaffirmed their calling in a reflection of the pastoral tone characteristic of history's first Jesuit pope.

    It was a radically different message than that of another Vatican office that investigated an umbrella group of the sisters' leaders.

    That investigation, conducted by the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, resulted in a Vatican takeover of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious in 2012. The doctrine office determined that the LCWR, which represents the leaders of 80 percent of U.S. nuns, took positions that undermined church teaching and promoted "radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith."

    The Vatican's congregation for religious orders has long sought to distinguish its broad investigation into the quality of life of American sisters from the more narrow doctrinal assessment carried out by the orthodoxy office.

    But both investigations began within months of one another and resulted in tremendous feelings of betrayal and insult from the sisters.

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    Vatican offers olive branch to US nuns

    Vatican signals new tone on US nuns - December 17, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    An unprecedented Vatican investigation of U.S. women's religious orders that alarmed Roman Catholic sisters when the inquiry began years ago ended Tuesday with a report signaling a softer approach under Pope Francis.

    The report praised sisters for their selfless work caring for the poor and promised to value their "feminine genius" more, while gently suggesting ways to serve the church faithfully and survive amid a steep drop in their numbers. There was no direct critique of the nuns, nor any demand for them to change only requests that they ensure their ministries remain "in harmony with Catholic teaching."

    "There is an encouraging and realistic tone in this report," said Sister Sharon Holland, head of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the umbrella organization for most U.S. religious orders. "Challenges are understood, but it is not a document of blame, or of simplistic solutions. One can read the text and feel appreciated and trusted to carry on."

    The laudatory language contrasted sharply with the atmosphere in which the review started under Pope Benedict XVI. Cardinal Franc Rode, who in 2008 initiated the nationwide study when he led the Vatican office that oversees religious orders, said there was concern about "a certain secular mentality that has spread in these religious families and, perhaps, also a certain 'feminist' spirit."

    Rode left the post while the review was still under way, and his successors had said they wanted a friendlier relationship with the sisters.

    Still, many nuns remained concerned about the outcome of the investigation under Francis' still-young pontificate. Some nuns had taken legal steps during the inquiry to shield the financial assets of their religious orders in case of a Vatican takeover.

    The report expressed hope that sisters would take "this present moment as an opportunity to transform uncertainty and hesitancy into collaborative trust" with the church hierarchy. Many sisters have complained that their work often went unrecognized by priests and requested improved dialogue with bishops to clarify their role in the church and give them greater voice in decisions, according to the report.

    Before the news conference releasing the report in Rome, leaders for the sisters and the nun who oversaw the review, Mother Mary Clare Millea, attended the pope's daily Mass in the Vatican hotel where he lives and spoke with him briefly, where he offered his blessing.

    Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, based in Maryland, said in a statement the document signaled "a hope for future dialogue and communion among and between women religious and church leaders."

    "The report is clearly focused on cooperation. It's clearly focused on dialogue, which I think is not necessarily what people expected back in 2008 when this issue came up," said Jana Bennett, a specialist in Catholic theology and ethics at the University of Dayton, Ohio.

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    Vatican signals new tone on US nuns

    Government and Fences - December 15, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary James Madison, 1788.

    Civil asset forfeiture, or forfeiture of contraband as it is referred to in Chapter 59 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, is the process by which the state may confiscate assets of an individual that are alleged to be proceeds or instruments of crime. Current law allows such property to be seized even if the property owner is never charged, much less convicted of a crime. If charges are brought, the seized property may still be disposed of prior to conviction, or in the case of acquittal, does not have to be returned to the owner.

    It is a powerful tool in the hands of law enforcement developed and often used to attack drug dealers, cartels, and human trafficking rings. It also has increasingly become a significant source of government funds.

    Like many government ideas gone awry, the thought behind civil asset forfeitures may have had a kernel of sense in it, when it was first conceived. It is right that the government requires a convicted criminal to make restitution, and such restitution should include ill-gotten gains. It may well be prudent too for civil authorities to freeze certain property clearly connected with criminal activity until sentencing has occurred.

    However, the seizure of property, the fruit of someones life and liberty, in the name of justice, must be performed with care, humility, and due process, not like highway robbery.

    Because of the propensity of government officials to overstep their bounds in doing their jobs, our Constitution requires: The right of the people to be

    secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    It also stipulates that No person . . . shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

    Even a cursory reading of those provisions would lead an individual to believe that seizure and forfeiture of assets should, at a minimum, require a warrant and due process.

    But that isnt what always happens. One law enforcement agent told me he never uses the criminal forfeiture process, because the civil asset forfeiture process is much easier. You dont have to convict the owner of a crime.

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    Government and Fences

    How to make fences in Minecraft 1.8! – Video - December 14, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


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    'Being Human': Sam Witwer on 'Swinging for the Fences' and Bittersweet Series Finale - December 14, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Being Human is closing its doors.

    After four seasons and more than 50 episodes, Syfy's adaptation of the British drama finishes its run with a series finale that promises to finish the story of the four supernatural roommates. In "There Goes the Neighborhood Part III," Sally (Meaghan Rath) makes a sacrifice to keep her vision of Aidan (Sam Witwer) killing Josh (Sam Huntington) from coming to fruition, while Josh and Nora (Kristen Hager) consider their future as parents.

    PHOTOS: 2014's New Broadcast and Cable TV Shows

    As Witwer hints to The Hollywood Reporter, "not everyone makes it out of this" in Monday's swan song. In a candid chat, the actor previews the series' final episode, reveals his favorite episodes and tells what he'll miss most.

    When did you know this was the final season of Being Human?

    We knew about a year ago. We were in a position where some weird things were happening with the finance and what it all amounted to was our budget going down and basically the decision was, sure, we could make a season five but it might not be any good. We all talked and decided that the best thing to do was to end it with season four and so we went to Syfy to make that request. First they said "sure" to an ending and they weren't committing to it, but thankfully they honored the ending we created because the whole season was designed to be a swan song for all these characters.

    It's somewhat of a rarity for television shows to end on that note.

    It's extraordinarily rare, and to be honest, I'm super surprised that it all worked out because you never get that opportunity to end things on your own terms, to have something you feel happy with as a story from beginning to end. I really respect Syfy for honoring that.

    STORY: Syfy Cancels 'Being Human'

    Did you notice, from a storytelling perspective, that the stakes were getting higher in the final 13 episodes?

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    'Being Human': Sam Witwer on 'Swinging for the Fences' and Bittersweet Series Finale

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