This moronic scumbag Samuel J. Wurzelbacher "Joe the Plumber" had his AZ driver license suspended
http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/story/128323
Wurzelbacher, who lived in Mesa in 2000 and had an Arizona driver's license, had his driver's license suspended by the Arizona Department of Transportation Motor Vehicle Division on May 4, 2000, following a nonpayment of a court-imposed fine for civil traffic violations, according to court records.
...owes nearly $1,200 in back taxes, according to public records, still owes more than $700 to the Mesa court system.
Records show he was cited for failure to stop at a red light and for failure to provide proof of insurance on Feb. 9, 2000, in a black Dodge truck at the intersection of Dobson and Baseline roads in Mesa.
After failing to pay his original fine of $627.50 issued in March 2000, his license was suspended and the fine was handed over to a collection agency along with a 16 percent surcharge. The now-resident of Holland, Ohio, still owes $727.90 to the Mesa Municipal Court, according to court records.
Hopefully the collection agency will break both of his legs so he'll never be able to walk nor work ever again. This typical Republican scumbag deserves it.
Big Hair, Big Show
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
Speaking of dying traditions, there
'
s a manners segment on every season of the show where you teach the girls to eat and drink like ladies
—
usually to mixed success. Have our manners gotten worse over the years?
Oh, a-a-absolutely. I have definitely seen it get worse. There was a time where people had home-economics and debutante training and so on and so forth, and today [manners have] absolutely diminished in young people's lives.
My mother loves that you train them to use the right forks.
Good, I'm so glad. Etiquette is a hobby of mine, which I acquired from my own mother, and I enjoy teaching the girls and watching them learn. And they need it—they're put in situations where they have dinner with dignitaries and ambassadors, and they need to gain the confidence to do so.
Are you just swamped with people at tryouts who are looking to be big stars, now that auditions are televised?
The quality of dancers has improved over the years. Before there were a lot of people who would try out just to say they tried out. The TV show has just exposed how competitive, physically and mentally, it really is, certainly from a dance and choreography standpoint. Having said that, we still always have people show up and it's like, 'Have you seen this uniform?! Are you serious?' But my hat goes off. They're doing it for the experience.
How does it feel to see that uniform on a Barbie?
Oh, the Barbie was personally and professionally one of the moments that I was most proud of. It had been a career-long mission of mine.
And what
'
s next
—
your own country?
We're working with MTV on some fitness videos. I'm real excited because we're doing them based on our style of fitness—the boot-camp fitness, with yoga fitness and kind of a youth-cheer follow-along video for kids. We still get a lot of television requests, and I don't see that slowing down anytime soon. And I think this Internet stuff—the blogging, the message boards—is the equivalent of all the fan mail we used to get. It's just electronic now. That whole world is a new platform and a new stage for us. We just relaunched dallascowboyscheerleaders.com and, since all the girls are roughly 18 to 30, they're more the experts on that than I am.
Are you used to dismissing girls on camera by now?
I'm used to cameras around us, to being the subject, but it's the part of our year that's being focused on—the elimination and evaluation process—that's uncomfortable every year. It's hard to disappoint people, it's hard to be honest with them, and it's a hard part of my job that I take very seriously. Having a camera in the room during those kinds of moments is not easy and is not a cakewalk.









Discuss