Week Links #8

Redbuds

Natasha Sistrunk Robinson: An Opportunity to Take Action Against Human Trafficking (people: click this link to support the estimated 27 million voiceless victims who are currently trapped in human trafficking.)

Angie Mabry–Nauta: Same-Sex Marriage, Mental Illness, and the Church: A Historic Intersection

Women’s Words

Glennon: Quit Pointing Your Avocado at Me!

and Glennon again: I Love Gay People and I Love Christians. I Choose All. (Please read the original piece as well!)

Rachel Held Evans @ Q: Modesty: I Don’t Think it Means What You Think it Means

Words for Thought

E.J. Dionne @ SF Chronicle: Court Conservatives Winning Battle for Power

Random

Tim Kreider: I Know What You Think of Me

My Stuff

What SCOTUS Could Learn From Paula Deen

What SCOTUS Could Learn From Paula Deen

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court struck down part of the Voting Rights Act that was enacted in 1965 to root out racial discrimination in voting. The specific section of the Act that was stricken — Section 4 — set forth a formula for determining which jurisdictions need federal clearance before making even minor changes to voting procedures. The impact of striking Section 4 is that the most important part of the Act, Section 5, is now rendered useless. Section 5 provides that states, cities, and counties with a history of racial discrimination in voting must “pre-clear” changes to voting procedures with the Department of Justice or a special court in Washington, D.C. Without the formula in Section 4 to determine which states, cities, and counties the preclearance should apply to, the preemptive protection provided by Section 5 no longer exists, and any future challenges to changes in voting procedure must happen after such changes are already in effect.

Read the rest of today’s post at Sojourners.