Ok, so this isn't my favorite source for news articles. And it might have some sort of unknown bias on the story, but the facts still seem nutty even after taking it with all those grains of salt.
"A northern Kentucky man is in jail today serving a 180-day sentence because his 18-year-old daughter failed a math test and didn't get her General Equivalency Diploma, or GED, as a previous court order required."
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"The promptings of the Holy Ghost will always be sufficient for our needs if we keep to the covenant path. Our path is uphill most days, but the help we receive for the climb is literally divine." --Elaine S. Dalton
"The promptings of the Holy Ghost will always be sufficient for our needs if we keep to the covenant path. Our path is uphill most days, but the help we receive for the climb is literally divine." --Elaine S. Dalton
This is another one of those events that I, at this point, still do not know which parts of what I am reading are correct information, which parts are misinformation, and which parts are disinformation. Although the media rarely tells an outright lie, I find that reporters and editors, as well as people involved in controversial events often purposefully omit key pieces of information that would significantly change peoples opinion about what is being presented. Church callings have in past placed me in positions in which I had to sort out fact from fiction in cases of endangerment to distressed church members, and from those experiences alone I hesitate to pass judgement at this time on either side in this conflict.