Sujet : Re: Egg Fail
De : nobody (at) *nospam* home.com (Janet)
Groupes : rec.food.cookingDate : 14. Apr 2025, 10:13:07
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <MPG.4266e201508f78542ad@news.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : MicroPlanet-Gravity/3.0.4
In article <
vthmkb$2j8o$1@dont-email.me>,
esp@snet.n says...
On 4/13/2025 6:40 PM, Jill McQuown wrote:
On 4/13/2025 12:13 PM, Ed P wrote:
On 4/13/2025 11:05 AM, Jill McQuown wrote:
On 4/13/2025 9:05 AM, Ed P wrote:
Yesterday our community had an Easter Egg Hunt. I figured it would
be a great way to score breakfast for the next week or two.
>
Turns out, they have some silly rule that is is for kids only!
Seems like discrimination to me. I tried to tell them I'm
handicapped and at a disadvantage as you have to bend over to pick
them up.
>
Next year I'm taking my lawyer with me to resolve this inequity.
>
Easter isn't until the 20th. I'd be questioning why the were hunting
for rabbit eggs on the 12th. Cheaters looking for an early egg
score? ;)
>
Jill
>
The same mentality that puts Christmas decorations on sale the day
after Labor Day.
I'm still wondering what rabbits have to do with Easter... ;)
Jill
Even the theory below is sort of sketchy. I don't see the connection of
Christ on the cross and banging bunnies.
The job of Christianity was to persuade people that
Jesus had miraculous powers, including, being born of a
virgin, being definitely dead then coming back to life in
Spring.
There are many ancient beliefs about hares having
mysterious powers, including sexless virgin reproduction,
shapeshifting, etc.
If Jesus had been crucified in America and come back to
life on the third day, Christians would probably celebrate
Easter with possums.
Janet UK