Lunch with Jesus, 10 Sacred Emoji, Bathroom Law, Talmud

  • Wisconsin conservative James Wigderson protests against those protesting against a Christian themed lunch hosted by parents in a public park. The park is leased to the Middleton High School and the lunches occur during school hours. I suppose that’s the focus of the protests. The protests strike me as having a foundation of sand, but then I’m a Christian, so what do I know?
     
  • NOJO at Stinque reduces the 10 Commandments to 10 easy to understand emoji.
     
  • At Crooks and Liars, Frances Langum, the Artist formerly known as Blue Gal, has a solution to problems with North Carolina’s new transgender bathroom law.
     
  • Lots of commentary about whether convoluted delegate rules are fair to candidates. After all, they should have known the rules, right? The Big Empty seems to think the issue ought to be what is fair to voters.
     
  • Nancy Hanks at The Hankster believes non-Democrats should choose who will represent Democrats and non-Republicans should choose who will represent Republicans on November’s ballot. She conducted a small informal poll on whether whether three Sanders voters and one Trump voter agree with her. They do.
     
  • tengrain at Mock Paper Scissors brings us John Kasich, Governor of Ohio, candidate for President of the United States, and Talmudic scholar
     

One thought on “Lunch with Jesus, 10 Sacred Emoji, Bathroom Law, Talmud”

  1. I can accept superdelegates (to some extent) and restricting voting for particular parties to party members. What bothers me is that we don’t have a standard system for all 50 states. It is not right that some states award all of their delegates to the one with the most votes while others award them proportionally and still others have some fusion of the two or bizarre alternative. Without consistency, it seems to me that we haven’t yet decided what election results are supposed to reflect.

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