But I found a bunch of Christian schools in the UK that say that a kid gets preference if his or her parent regularly attends church.
Christianity doesn't cross ethnicity/religion lines. My parent attending church doesn't affect my ethnicity.
They should have enforced that preference at the convent school my sister went to. She mistakenly took communion (we're godless heathens) and was scarred for years because of it.
Hmm. I'm reading through the decision, and it seems like part of the argument is that, if they say that Jewishness is not a race or ethnicity, then that will set a precedent that antisemitic acts can't be prosecuted under the laws against racial or ethnic discrimination. But wouldn't it be an immediate corollary of that reasoning that this decision would set a precedent that Jewishness is an ethnicity and this kid (and all other people who are the children of converts, or are converts themselves) are not ethnically Jewish and therefore antisemitic acts against them could not be considered ethnic discrimination? I mean, the court can't rule that the same person was discriminated against for being part of an ethnic group and also for not being part of that ethnic group, right?
Sorry for the bad night, msbelle.
Sorry about the bad night, msbelle.
I'm taking a poll. If you were getting a meal of chilli, would you prefer corn muffins or crackers with the chilli?
What kind of chili?
Texas - corn bread / Cincinnati - oyster crackers
Corn muffins. Yellow corn always with red chilli, even if it is bastard midwestern or texas chilli.
t ducks
Now if it is green chile stews, then you go with white corn tortillas.
The corn bread muffins win.
It's black bean chilli.