For readers of the Daily Courier in Prescott, Arizona. Comment and discuss. Be nice, now.
Muggs archive
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Letter: America still remains a Christian nation
PS to the awful headline writer: "still remains" is irredeemably redundant.
3 comments:
I encourage you to share your own views and experience with me and other readers. How you do that matters, and I'm committed to maintaining a place where readers and commenters can feel safe from adolescent BS. So here's the deal:
There are two kinds of anonymous comments: those by people who have a genuine fear of revenge from the dark side, and those from darksiders just hiding to avoid accountability. You may post comments anonymously, but I reserve the right to treat anonymous comments as found items that belong to me and do with them as I see fit.
If, on the other hand, you're willing to stand by your convictions and post under your own name or a regular handle, your comments belong to you, and I'll edit them only on egregious violations of respect for others.
If this doesn't work for you, I'm sure you'll be happier somewhere else.
while in a perfect world I would decry Seaman's call for the Courier to stop printing such letters, I sorta agree with him here for one simple reason: The Courier already censors their letter page. I have written about ten letters for print and have never gotten so much as a callback.
ReplyDeleteI think there is good evidence that they only run the worst and most embarrassing letters written from a liberal perspective. It is also the reason they run a recurring op/ed from that moonbat instructor from Prescott College. If they aren't going to run every letter they receive, then calls for better community representation among the letters they do run is perfectly legit.
BTB: That's a good point. The limited page space at least sometimes forces choices about which letters to print, leaving some behind, and snail-mail letters carry more overhead in requiring that someone type them up. (I think it'd be easy for the Courier to carry every electronically submitter LTE on the Website, since it has no space limitations, but we can probably be confident that ain't gonna happen.)
ReplyDeleteI long ago stopped submitting LTEs because they were being so badly mangled (see my only post to this blog in '08, for example), so I have no good sense of current policy at the paper. I'd like to know more.
I'll be happy to publish unaccepted Courier LTEs here, as well as comparisons of original LTEs and the Courier edits. Its capricious and often politically motivated screwing around with letters is particularly irritating to me.
Excellent points, both of you. I think I might like it here. I've just spent the last half hour reading posts, comments, opinions, etc. and I don't feel like slamming my head into my monitor.
ReplyDelete