Thursday, December 30, 2004

Comments are now allowed 

I've enabled comments, but this setting may only apply to new posts. Any comments for older posts (like is anybody at all reading this blog? hello? is anybody out there?) may be added as comments here. [Revision:] Apparently comments may be added from the permalink page for any given post, which is reached by clicking the octothorpe (#) to the left of the byline. This may work for older posts too. Next: How to show comments (all one of them) on the main page, even if that clutters it up. [Another Revision:] Apparently all it took to get comments on the main page was to remove the ItemPage tags in the Blogger template.

Comments:
Commenting works.
You've got to hit the little octothorpe (#) to the left of the byline.
 
Hey, listen, I may have never read your blog before, but Google brought it to me and I can't thank you enough 'cause your posting on making all the comments show up on the main page was EXACTLY what I was lookin' for. Thanks for posting what you know!
 
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The 'stingy' slur 

New York Post Online Edition: postopinion Jan Egeland, a Norwegian who holds the lofty title of Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, now claims he was “misinterpreted” when he charged Monday that “there are several donors who are less generous than before in a growing world economy. “It is beyond me why we are so stingy, really,” he told reporters. Where do I go to join the protests against the President Bush for giving this aid unilaterally, before getting a consensus from other nations?


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But some are more equal than others 

Boston.com / Business / U.S. court backs firing of waitress without makeup The Lambda Legal Defense Fund, a gay rights group that backed Jespersen's suit, had argued that forcing female employees to have different standards than men was unlawful under rules, known as Title VII, against discrimination on race, color, religion, sex or national origin. The ruling found, however, that the casino's appearance standards were no more burdensome for women than for men. "Of equal burden" is not the same as "the same as".


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Monday, December 27, 2004

Gender Pay Equity 

Boston.com / News / Local / Maine / Settlement reached in strip search lawsuit against York County Jail The agreement stipulates that women members of the suit will get double the payout as men because previous jury verdicts have generally given higher awards to women because of the perception that strip searches are more intrusive and humiliating for them than for men. Where are the advocates for pay equity when you need them?


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