Sunday 1st of March 2020

So, in other words, just like everything else…

Source: paullandry.micro.blog

Some Catholics Are Eating Plant-Based Burgers to Avoid Eating “Meat” on Fridays

Friendly Athiest:

For Catholics who celebrated Lent yesterday, they’re also supposed to abstain from eating meat on Fridays until Easter. (Hey, don’t ask me to explain religious logic.)

But that rule raises an interesting question: What if a practicing Catholic eats a plant-based burger?

I love the tag for this article: “Give them credit. They found a loophole around Catholic dogma.”

According to some Catholic leaders in Chicago, at least, eating an Impossible Burger still breaks the spirit of the religious law. […]

Still, it’s not like most Catholics give a damn about what the Church says.

True dat.

Saturday 29th of February 2020

Outstanding: “The question of whether Confederate symbols represent heritage or hatred has been vexing for the U.S. military.” –> Marine commandant banishes Confederate symbols from all Corps installations

Source: paullandry.micro.blog


Ed Brayton at Dispatches from the Culture Wars nails it:

Heritage or hate is a false dichotomy. The heritage IS hate. My fear is that this will be another instance where Trump intervenes to reverse an order from military leaders. That would be entirely unsurprising.

Thursday 27th of February 2020

“Pence has a track record of ignoring public health evidence” –> Mike Pence, who enabled an HIV outbreak in Indiana, will lead US coronavirus response

Source: paullandry.micro.blog

Thursday 27th of February 2020

“It’s impossible to overstate just how much governments hate not being able to read your mail, listen to your phone calls, and peruse your text messages.” –> Encryption Foes in Washington Won’t Give Up

Source: paullandry.micro.blog

Thursday 27th of February 2020

“Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump said that he was already in the process of crafting insults about the virus that would obliterate it once and for all.” –> TRUMP PLANS TO DESTROY CORONAVIRUS WITH AN INCREDIBLY MEAN TWEET

Source: paullandry.micro.blog

GoFundMe: Two Godless Moms Starting A Nonprofit

Bridget Gaudette and Courtney Heard are secular humanist atheist activists with a track record for success. We have extensive experience working for and helping to launch nonprofits.

We desire a fully transparent organization with successful campaigns to help atheists all over the world.

We have been ready and excited to work for months now and all we want to do is help atheists around the world.

To be honest, I didn’t read any more than what I’ve quoted above before contributing–I follow Courtney Heard on Twitter, and well, this all sounds like a worthwhile project to me.

Please consider contributing, if you can.

Wednesday 26th of February 2020

“The confusion over vaccine development points to a much bigger problem” –> Trump’s reckless coronavirus statements put the entire US at risk

Source: paullandry.micro.blog

Ruth Bader Ginsburg says Trump Should Recuse Himself from All Decisions Involving the Future of the Country

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Asserting that his personal interests put him in direct conflict with the interests of the United States of America, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has demanded that Donald Trump recuse himself from all decisions involving the future of the U.S.

U.S. Supreme Court turns away religious bias claim

Yahoo! Finance:

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday handed a victory to Walgreens, turning away an appeal by a fired former Florida employee of the pharmacy chain who asked not to work on Saturdays for religious reasons as a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

The justices declined to review a lower court ruling in Darrell Patterson’s religious discrimination lawsuit that concluded that his demand to never work on Saturday, observed as the Sabbath by Seventh-day Adventists, placed an undue hardship on Walgreens.
[…]
The case tested the allowances companies must make for employees for religious reasons to comply with a federal anti-discrimination law called Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The law prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex and national origin.

Under Title VII, employers must “reasonably accommodate” workers’ religious practices unless that would cause the company “undue hardship.”

Asked by the justices for its views on the case, President Donald Trump’s administration in December suggested that the court review only part of the dispute – whether lower courts used an improper standard to judge “undue hardship” – one that is too favorable to companies.

Well Hallelujah! The courts appear to have used reason and common sense to reach their logical conclusion, and that’s nice for a change.