On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 08:51:51 -0700,
 "Gerald B. Cox" <gb...@bzb.us> wrote:
This has got to be the silliest thing I've ever seen, but whatever.
You enter the command dnf remove dnf, and guess what?  It removes dnf.
You enter the command dnf remove kernel, and guess what, it removes
the kernel.  What a concept, it does what you tell it to do.

Try yum update when the oldest installed kernel (and the running kernel) is the only one that works and there is a new (still broken for your system) kernel update available. In that case one really wouldn't expect the running kernel be removed. Having to remove a specific kernel before doing an update (to make sure the wrong one wasn't removed) would be a pain.
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