User:Hoping To Help

Hello,

I hope to be helpful here on Wikipedia without wasting too much of my or other people's time.

-- Hoping To Help

==I NEED YOUR HELP sorry not sure how to use this site yet just joined== FeelSooAlone (talk) 02:22, 2 September 2011 (UTC)

Tools
Reference Generator: http://toolserver.org/~magnus/makeref.php

Wikipedia Template Filler - good for ISBN:
 * http://toolserver.org/~diberri/cgi-bin/templatefiller/index.cgi?ddb=&type=url&id=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F1998%2F08%2F23%2Fworld%2Futah-struggles-with-a-revival-of-polygamy.html&vertical=1&add_accessdate=1&add_ref_tag=1
 * http://tools.wikimedia.pl/~holek/isbn.php

Universal Reverence Formater []

Google Scholar Search http://toolserver.org/~verisimilus/Scholar/

Search and count citations in WP: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:LinkSearch&limit=500&offset=500&target=

YFZ Ranch
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:YFZ_Ranch&action=edit&section=new

In 2008, starting on April 4, Texas State officials took all of the ranches 436 children into temporary legal custody after someone claiming to be a 16-year-old girl made a series of phone calls to Texas Child Protective Services (CPS) in late March, claiming she had been beaten and forced to become a "spiritual" wife to an adult man residing at the compound. Authorities later discovered that the calls where a hoax. And instead of being a blond, blue-eyed, teen-aged mother, living at the FLDS ranch in Texas as the caller claimed. The caller was actually a thirty-three year old, African-American, living in Colorado, who had never been part of the FLDS,and who has convictions from 2007 for false reporting and obstructing government operations  Acting on her calls, authorities raided the ranch in Eldorado, about 40 miles south of San Angelo. The YFZ Ranch is owned by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS), a Mormon offshoot that practices polygamy. Two men were arrested for obstructing the raid. The children ranged in age from infants to teenagers, including teenage mothers and pregnant teens. The original call that alleged that abuse was occurring turned out to be a hoax.

On appeal, all the children were ordered released and the court ruled that the lower court had "abused its discretion" in not returning the children to their families. Texas appealed to the state Supreme Court which sided with the appeals court and ruled that the children never should have been removed from their families.

Civil Liberty
User:Hoping_To_Help/Civil_Liberty_vs._Civil_Rights

Down Low
User:Hoping_To_Help/Down_Low-Article

User:Hoping_To_Help/Down_Low-Notes

User:Hoping_To_Help/HIV_MSM-Citations