Little towns get bad names because of this kind of nonsense

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
**** yeah!!!!

Now maybe they can start to deal with that 'rock and or roll' music all these damned kids are listening to now a days!!

:D

What a joke.
And what about the Beatle hairdos?
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
47,127
8,145
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.canadianforums.ca
According to Statistics Canada, 86% of Taber residents were identified with a Christian denomination in 2011; the other 14% had no religious affiliation. The NHS data recorded no Hindus, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Buddhists or people who followed aboriginal spirituality.

Population 8,000 + 3 potatoes factories and plenty of farms.. as I remember it has a WalMart, 3 fuel stops, and a Timmies. Blink you miss it ..

Nice community.

If you need anything, you run to Lethbridge.
 

Spade

Ace Poster
Nov 18, 2008
12,822
49
48
11
Aether Island
No swearing, spitting,yelling,or disruptive assembly of three or more people. Thank Gawd Almighty, that will put an end to golf, baseball, and hockey.

Laws should never be crafted where their arbitrary and subjective enforcement curtails freedom, restricts human rights, and targets groups among us who differ in age, culture, dress, religion, or belief.

That said, aren't adolescents a pain in the unmentionables?
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
193
63
Nakusp, BC
No swearing, spitting,yelling,or disruptive assembly of three or more people. Thank Gawd Almighty, that will put an end to golf, baseball, and hockey.

Laws should never be crafted where their arbitrary and subjective enforcement curtails freedom, restricts human rights, and targets groups among us who differ in age, culture, dress, religion, or belief.

That said, aren't adolescents a pain in the unmentionables?
Funny that we forget that we were once a pain in our parents unmentionables. We get old and crotchety and can't handle the exuberance of puberty and hormonal imbalance. I think it so annoying because it reminds us that we are getting old and crotchety.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
Embarrassing’ new bylaw in Taber, Alberta outlaws swearing, restricts public assembly








With a sweeping new bylaw, the southern Alberta town of Taber has outlawed swearing in public, instituted a nightly curfew on kids and teenagers, and granted local law enforcement the power to break up any assemblies of three or more people.


The new “Community Standards Bylaw” is clearly unconstitutional, said Lisa Lambert, a PhD candidate and instructor in political science at the University of Calgary, who lives in Coaldale, about 35 kilometres west of Taber.


“Little towns get bad names because of this kind of nonsense,” Lambert said. “This is so embarrassing.”


Taber chief administrative officer Greg Birch said the bylaw was drafted in part by the Taber Police Service “to provide for better and more consistent oversight, bylaw enforcement and policing of various matters,” according to town council minutes.


Adults are also prohibited from assembling in a public place in a group of three or more where a peace officer “has reasonable grounds to believe the assembly will disturb the peace of the neighborhood,” according to the section of the bylaw that deals with “Assembly of Persons.”


Taber is a town of 8,000 people located about 250 kilometres southeast of Calgary.




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‘Embarrassing’ new bylaw in Taber, Alberta outlaws swearing, restricts public assembly | Metro

Why is it necessary to swear in public, especially if others can hear you?

Better watch out. Our new moderator hates that.

You might start out by respecting her wishes! :)
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
99
48
Alberta
Why is it necessary to swear in public, especially if others can hear you?

Why is it neccessary to call other people "a$$holes all the time? The repeated use of vulgarity shows the lack of an adequate vocabulary and an overall lack of intelligence.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
The real target of Taber’s new law: Mennonites






It’s one o’clock on a damp Sunday afternoon in Taber, Alta., three weeks after the town council enacted a bylaw that imposes a curfew, fines for swearing and yelling in public, and gives police powers to break up groups of three or more people. Like every other Sunday here, pickup trucks begin pulling into the Wal-Mart parking lot. Ten guys in jeans and ball caps, aged 15 to 21, hop out and crack open their extra-large coffees from the Tim Hortons on the other side of the lot; some light cigarettes.


Many of them have come from the morning service at the Reinland Mennonite church. Young Mennonites from all over—some have travelled for more than three hours—have gathered here every week for as long as they can remember. Alternating between English and Low German, they talk about cars and watch videos on their phones. After six days spent working on farms and in factories, it’s time to relax.


A few minutes later, a Taber police car pulls up. The officer gets out and walks toward the group. “Are you boys swearing?” he asks, looking them up and down. “We got a call from a woman who says you were swearing at her.” “No, sir,” they mumble. “Any of you been drinking? Any liquor in the vehicles?” he asks, peering into the back windows of their trucks. “Are we going to get a ticket?” one asks. “No,” replies the officer, “as long as you’re not drinking or swearing at people.” He looks at the last vehicle and drives away.
They expected this. The officer will drive by a couple of more times throughout the day, they say. “I’m used to it,” says 18-year-old Isaak Froese, who attends the local Mennonite school. “But it definitely doesn’t feel good.”


Last week, the town of Taber­—known as Canada’s corn capital­—and its 8,100 residents were thrust into international headlines because of their new “community standards” bylaw. Social media erupted with anger and confusion, with thousands of posts gleefully comparing Taber to Footloose (the movie about a rural town that bans dancing to crack down on unruly teens). But what outsiders failed to mention, and what everyone here talks about in hushed tones, is the town’s open secret: what they see as the Mennonite problem.




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Taber’s real target: Mennonites?