[mdlug] OFF OFFTOPIC Sigfiles
Aaron Kulkis
akulkis00 at gmail.com
Sun May 31 05:30:20 EDT 2009
Raymond McLaughlin wrote:
> Michael Corral wrote:
>> 2009-05-29, Monsieur Dan Pritts a ecrit:
>>> On Thu, May 28, 2009 at 11:58:39PM -0400, Robert Jim Fulner wrote:
>>>> BTW: . "No one here cares
>>>> about your political views (or those of anyone else).", is not actually an
>>>> accurate treatment as that would exclude me. I care about the political
>>>> opinion of each and every one of you.
>>> It's also an untrue statement on the face of it.
>>>
>>> If the writer didn't care about your political views, they wouldn't
>>> care what you have in your signature file.
>> Not true at all. I'd say the same thing whether a signature was an ad
>> for the Democratic Party, Republican Party, Libertarian Party, Loony
>> Party, etc. Explicit calls to join a political party (of any stripe)
>> should be left off this list, in my opinion, whether they are part of
>> a signature or the main body of an email. It's just in bad taste.
>>
>> For example, MDLUG list moderator Garry Stahl has a pro-Libertarian bit
>> on his website (<http://phoenixinn.iwarp.com/Politicks/whatis.html>),
>> but I've never seen an explicit call to join the Libertarian Party in
>> his posts to the list (please don't start now, Garry! :).
>>
>> Michael
>
> I disagree with you here Michael. I regard signatures like bumper
> stickers. I wouldn't expect anyone to take a sticker off their car to
> come to a meeting, and I don't expect anyone to change their sigfile
> just to post to our list. If you disagree with one that you see write
> your own in reply. Or just ignore it. Personally I find the commercial
> advertisements that some mail services affix more objectionable than
> anyone's considered opinion. But it's really not worth taking issue with.
>
However, the other Ray seems to take GREAT offense when someone
comments on his "bumper sticker" .sig files.
To me, if you don't want a reaction, then don't provoke one.
I prefer that MDLUG be non-political, yet when we get saturated
at times with political messages at the end of postings, then
to let that go constantly unanswered, if one disagrees, is to
make the appearance that all agree with it -- which is how
political correctness and silencing of minority opinions
start...with "groupthink"
> Too much issue has been take as it is.
>
> Raymond McLaughlin
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