Author Topic: Real Life for AARColytes  (Read 1066 times)

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Offline ajax13

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Real Life for AARColytes
« on: February 08, 2009, 10:42:40 PM »
I realize that if AARColytes can believe that a phys ed teacher who worked in a cult intuitively discovered a method to fix teen drug addiction, then you can believe anything.
Whichever one of you mongoloids claimed that AARC can't be defrauding the Government might want to look at this.  It took place in Toronto, but the methods used to get government coin are identical to those used by All About Receiving Cash:
http://www.thestar.com/article/240471
"However, McCarter said, "many other organizations received grants simply because ... a member of the organization had had a discussion with, or had made a verbal request to, the minister or his staff at some point during that year or even in previous years."
The above demonstrates how AARC managed to rip off the tax-payers.  As stated earlier, when AARC was still called Kids, they tried to get a license so that they could receive government money.  As it turned out that AARC was simply a cult with no real provision of health care, and with no way to ensure the safety of clients, they were refused any license and any money.
As a result, it befell independent AARColyte parents to push dancing monkeys like MLA Denis Herard and Diane Mirosh to try to pry money out of the government.  As AARC was and continues to be a religious organization and not a healthcare facility, it was no dice for the government money.  Until Paddy Meade came along.  Paddy's got personal ties to AARColytes, and could be counted on to reverse years of Government policy by sliding AARC tax-payer's cash in a manner that left completely obscure the manner in which the funds would be used.  Ron Stevens, whose riding is home to a number of AARColyte parent heavy-hitters, knows which side upon which his bread is buttered.  When the AARColytes pull the strings, Stevens dances, doing his best mendicant routine in the legislature to make it rain for AARC.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
"AARC will go on serving youth and families as long as it will be needed, if it keeps open to God for inspiration" Dr. F. Dean Vause Executive Director


MR. NELSON: Mr. Speaker, AADAC has been involved with
assistance in developing the program of the Alberta Adolescent
Recovery Centre since its inception originally as Kids of the
Canadian West."
Alberta Hansard, March 24, 1992