As people try to wrap their heads around the nuances and weird quirks of the Democratic Party's process for determining our Presidential nominee, something that will probably begin to raise some eyebrows and prompt some discussion is that our next president could be chosen by people whose votes for president aren't counted in the electoral college. That's right, the Democratic nominee for President could be determined by the votes of delegates from the US Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa and Puerto Rico.

It now appears that the short of a deal cut between Obama and Clinton, we probably won't know our nominee until the Democratic convention in Denver at the end of August. That means the late contests will be cited by the candidates as evidence that they have the momentum going in to the Denver convention. On May 6th Indiana and North Carolina vote. On May 13th, it's West Virginia. May 20th Kentucky and Oregon will be showered with attention. And the last primaries are scheduled for June 3rd, in Montana and South Dakota.

But note that those are the last scheduled primaries. The last contest is a caucus, on June 7th. In Puerto Rico.

Yes, our final scheduled contest—which could change if Michigan and Florida reschedule their contests and conduct DNC-sanctioned delegate contests in June—is in Puerto Rico.

Will the candidates go to Puerto Rico? Will Iowa-type questions about ethanol be replaced with questions about Puerto Rican statehood and whether the Navy should have kept bombing Veiques? Who will Carlos Beltran and Pudge Rodriguez endorse? And how many times will they mention Roberto Clemente?

It seems like every day there's something new to learn about our nomination process.