And then, then you try and play scrabble with other people like Polgara, who try and kill you because that's not what the scrabble rules say. And so I'm a scrabble blasphemer. But it's not my fault. It's how I was raised. I was raised that you get one free shot at switching out a letter. I WAS JUST RAISED THAT WAY.
And so I've thought about nailing that rule to Polgara's door, like a scrabble lutheran.
like a scrabble lutheran.
Does that mean we don't have to use only Latin words for Scrabble now?
I suspect that's why zen is still illegal. WHICH IS BULLSHIT.
Never did understand how two men(or two women) getting married threatens my marriage. Of course, the folks who are most vocal about "traditional marriage" think I'm going to Hell anyway, so fuck them.
While I sincerely doubt it would have any effect on your marriage, I can kind of see how Michelle Bachmann might consider the prospect of men being able to marry each other a threat to her own.
ALso claiming the founding fathers were Christian.
Isn't the salient point, though, that they emphatically did not impose their religious beliefs on others through the law?
Isn't the salient point, though, that they emphatically did not impose their religious beliefs on others through the law?
It's almost like that was one of the Main Ideas for the founding of a country full of religious exiles.
And so I've thought about nailing that rule to Polgara's door, like a scrabble lutheran.
I don't think my security deposit would cover that.
Good thoughts for the discharge, msbelle.
I get to fast overnight so I can get every blood test in the world tomorrow morning. And after that I get to pick up my car from the garage in the afternoon (Lee, you will have to find another reason to laugh at me (not that that will be hard), I'm getting a whole new-to-me driver side door that opens from the inside! Possibly the same color as the rest of the car, we'll see). Big day!
Isn't the salient point, though, that they emphatically did not impose their religious beliefs on others through the law?
This. I think it's a stronger argument for modern Christians that the founding fathers were indeed Christian but didn't think they had the right to make that decision for others.