November 27, 2006

Announcements: Comment Form, Post Times, Notable Blogroll Adds

Filed under: General, Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 6:21 am

A cosmetic improvement:

I held my breath and went into the WordPress theme myself to change the size of the comment box at individual posts. The blog didn’t blow up (whew), and the box is more than double its original size now. The pop-up for comments is the same size; I’m not brave enough to mess with that one, and Webmaster Charles has higher priorities.

A post scheduling change:

I’m moving all of the early morning posts back two hours, just after each day’s Positivity post, so they’ll be able to be read in the relatively early AM by the entire USA. In case you haven’t figured it out yet and are concerned about my sleep patterns, I schedule most of my posts to go up at a later time, sometimes even a few days out, or in the case of Positivities, sometimes even a couple of weeks.

A few blogroll additions worth noting:

I usually don’t bring specific attention to these, but three recent ones deserve mention –

  • America’s Victory ‘08 is a new enterprise being spearheaded by Justin at Right on the Right and several others that deserves at least a couple of visits a week, and maybe more as more site features are developed. It’s in the main Blogroll.
  • The Americans for Prosperity Blog“AFP is an organization of grassroots leaders who engage citizens in the name of limited government and free markets on the local, state and federal levels. The grassroots members of AFP advocate for public policies that champion the principles of entrepreneurship and fiscal and regulatory restraint.” Works for me; it’s in the “Money” section of the blogroll.
  • I’ve also blogrolled FairTax.org, the home site of Americans for Fair Taxation, in the Money Section of the blogroll. FairTax.org advocates a consumption tax to replace ALL income and other taxes — ideally, every, single, one. Their proposals have a chance to gain momentum IF we have a truly open-minded 110th Congress (insert cynical comment here). Regardless of its near-term success, the idea will not, and should not, go away.

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