Well met. Introduced into the Texas state house today.
Oh good
It's like this whole routine actually written into lawRead the whole thing, it's brilliant. The folks being lampooned are, of course, utterly clueless. You can't fix stupid.
“Even after I left office,” McCrory continued, “people are reluctant to hire me because, ‘oh my gosh, he’s a bigot,’ which is the last thing I am.
I’m actually in some ways rather liberal on some of these issues. I’m a libertarian on many of these issues. But I don’t think a city government or state government or federal government should be able to tell the private sector what the new definition of gender is.”
Posted this in the religion thread, and I'll post it here, too. North Dakota Blue Laws won't be repealed yet...
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friend...tizens-should-use-that-time-to-go-to-worship/
The prairie bible belt is alive and well and stuck in the 16th century.
NJ still has blue laws.
Just one more way east coast pseudo-intellectual puritans got this country off on the wrong foot.IINM, blue laws are "blue" because the MA book was blue.
But the high caliber f-ckwittery of the Christian Sharia types emanates from the prairie states and of course (nuke) the south. From Cheyenne to Westboro an iron curtain has descended, blocking people's brains.
Just one more way east coast pseudo-intellectual puritans got this country off on the wrong foot.
That's what a lot of people don't realize. While the religious wacko who stands up and makes the speech on the Senate floor gets all the publicity and derision from the left, the real reason repeal of these laws get defeated, behind the scenes, is the Chamber member businesses in there saying we don't want to be open on Sundays. One more day of overhead for the same weekly sales.I have to admit, I kind of liked the blue laws when I lived in North Dakota (worked in retail), just like I kind of liked no Sunday liquor sales (football!) in Minnesota when I worked at a liquor store. Neither law should have existed then or now, but we got a ton done in the 4 hours before we opened on Sunday that would have taken at least the full day if we had people in the store shopping.
They don't. I'm not a supporter of blue laws. I think if you want to be open you should be allowed to be open.And they still dont have to be open now.
My point was that he (and many other businessmen like him) spent a lot of time fighting against this and couldn't give a rats azz whether they or any of their employees have time to go to church.
They don't. I'm not a supporter of blue laws. I think if you want to be open you should be allowed to be open.
But I have a friend who runs a liquor store and he was constantly complaining to me about efforts to allow liquor stores to be open on Sundays in Minnesota, which as you know just passed. He knows he doesn't have to be open, but he also knows the big retailers will be, so to stay competitive he'll have to be as well.
My point was that he (and many other businessmen like him) spent a lot of time fighting against this and couldn't give a rats azz whether they or any of their employees have time to go to church.
I worked in a bar when the smoking ban hit in certain areas...I heard many of the same worries and complaints.
They don't. I'm not a supporter of blue laws. I think if you want to be open you should be allowed to be open.
But I have a friend who runs a liquor store and he was constantly complaining to me about efforts to allow liquor stores to be open on Sundays in Minnesota, which as you know just passed. He knows he doesn't have to be open, but he also knows the big retailers will be, so to stay competitive he'll have to be as well.
My point was that he (and many other businessmen like him) spent a lot of time fighting against this and couldn't give a rats azz whether they or any of their employees have time to go to church.