October 28, 2010 @ 4:49 a.m.
I'm making a copy of some of my blog for my own records. I'm also going to try to remove as much of the personal side of it as I can, people's names and so on, except when I feel that removing names and explanations will endanger me in some way.
My feelings haven't changed about anything, and nobody should expect that they will.
One thing that I think was unfair about the fact that I was locked out of my blog the other day is that I had already said that I was going to take out the personal things that I had written about in the previous couple of days. I got locked out of my blog on the day that I already said I was going to edit it for personal content that night; I think that's unreasonable, especially considering the scope of what's been going on and how significantly my life gets affected by the whims of the people whom I occasionally mention.
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October 28, 2010 @ 7:15 a.m.
Yesterday afternoon I called and left voicemail messages at The New York Times and The Boston Globe, protesting the fact that I'd been blocked from several different Internet accounts that I have, including Weebly. I also protested the harassment and gave reasons for why I feel the way I do about it.
Here are pictures of what the websites for The New York Times and The Boston Globe looked like several hours after I'd left those voicemails:
I'm making a copy of some of my blog for my own records. I'm also going to try to remove as much of the personal side of it as I can, people's names and so on, except when I feel that removing names and explanations will endanger me in some way.
My feelings haven't changed about anything, and nobody should expect that they will.
One thing that I think was unfair about the fact that I was locked out of my blog the other day is that I had already said that I was going to take out the personal things that I had written about in the previous couple of days. I got locked out of my blog on the day that I already said I was going to edit it for personal content that night; I think that's unreasonable, especially considering the scope of what's been going on and how significantly my life gets affected by the whims of the people whom I occasionally mention.
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October 28, 2010 @ 7:15 a.m.
Yesterday afternoon I called and left voicemail messages at The New York Times and The Boston Globe, protesting the fact that I'd been blocked from several different Internet accounts that I have, including Weebly. I also protested the harassment and gave reasons for why I feel the way I do about it.
Here are pictures of what the websites for The New York Times and The Boston Globe looked like several hours after I'd left those voicemails:
MOST OF THE REPUBLICAN POLITICIANS ARE AS MUCH A PART OF THE HARASSMENT AS THE DEMOCRATS HAVE BEEN. UNTIL RECENTLY I'VE TALKED MOSTLY ABOUT THE DEMOCRATS BECAUSE THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE FACT THAT THE HARASSMENT OF ME BECAME A FEDERAL ACTIVITY AND THEN A MAJOR PART OF PEOPLE'S CAMPAIGNS, BUT IT'S BEEN A MAJOR PART OF BOTH PARTIES' CAMPAIGNS FOR THE APPROACHING NOVEMBER 2, 2010 ELECTIONS.
NOBODY SHOULD THINK THAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY AS A GROUP HAS ANY MORAL EDGE OVER THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY IN THIS SITUATION.
Copyright L. Kochman, October 28, 2010, except for material that I've taken pictures of or quoted as noted.
Copyright L. Kochman October 28, 2010, except for material imported from other sources as noted.