[stylist] censorship

Judith Bron jbron at optonline.net
Thu May 7 17:22:59 UTC 2009


Lori, First of all Republicans aren't so narrow minded that Democratic 
politicians can't do something right.  That opinion should be so yesterday, 
but today it is being perpetrated as if it were plain fact.  The propoganda 
from the left is so potent that if all of us bought it we would be demanding 
that everyone who is conservative or Republican should take their place on 
death row.    If it were true nothing proposed by Democrats since the 
beginning of the Republic would have ever passed the Congress or vice versa.

Maybe if these people learn that they can't get anyone to do the job if they 
continue censoring every other word that people write they'll get the 
message.  Perhaps if they end up having to do all of it themselves they'll 
realize the errors in their ways.

By the way, you can substitute generic names for brand names.  Kleenex can 
be a tissue, Hershey's product can become chocolate candy and Heinz can 
become catchup unless that name has been patented by Heinz.  The founder of 
Heinz, a man who turned out to be a Republican Congressman, was the one to 
first market his catchup, pickles and other items that we take for granted 
today.  His widow married John Carry.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <LoriStay at aol.com>
To: <stylist at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, May 07, 2009 11:40 AM
Subject: Re: [stylist] censorship


> Is there anyone else willing to do it, that's the question?   Mary, one of
> our members, is capable, but she's angrier than I am about it, since it 
> was
> her work that was the main target!
>
> From what I can gather, we are a Republican town, so can't say anything
> nice about the Democrats, but this is just speculation.   They don't like
> political references.   One of our members has done a limerick on each of 
> the
> presidents, and now we are concerned they won't let him use them.
>
> The product references were not dangerous.   The commissioner may have 
> been
> thinking someone would believe we were touting the products.   It's hard 
> to
> write about life as it is today without mentioning Kleenex, Coke,
> Hershey's, and Mallomar, but I suppose I'll have to do it.
> Lori
>
> In a message dated 5/7/09 3:09:49 AM, tamara.8024 at comcast.net writes:
>
>
>> Lori,
>>
>> Crap! I would muse upon this, but I have no inspiration...
>>
>> I don't actually know what to tell you, or what I would do in your
>> situtation. It sounds like censorship to me, but I'm not well enough
>> versed
>> to judge it more than that.
>>
>> Questions: If you refuse to edit the magazine, won't they just censor
>> someone else? Is there any valid reasoning behind these
>> arbitrary-sounding
>> nitpicks? I'm thinking of the product references, in case they refer to
>> something that might be dangerous but were discussed favorably enough to
>> convince an unwary senior to buy them without realizing the danger. (I
>> can't imagine, but I'm trying to look at it from more than one angle).
>>
>> Tami Smith-Kinney
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
>> Behalf Of LoriStay at aol.com
>> Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 5:22 PM
>> To: stylist at nfbnet.org
>> Subject: [stylist] censorship
>>
>> I may have mentioned that I edit a magazine called Musings of Maturity.
>> Last year, the Town commissioner for senior affairs decided to edit my
>> editing, and instead of consulting me, cut and pasted (literally!) little
>> squares of corrections, editing out names of products, and words she
>> considered
>> obscene, such as crap. (I'd already substituted that for the more
>> pungent
>> word). Can't recall what she put. Probably something that didn't
>> belong
>> there. She also decided to change the word "muse" to "inspiration," thus
>> changing the meaning of the article entirely.
>>
>> This year, I've asked for guidelines, and suggested that I'd be glad to
>> make corrections so the publication doesn't look unprofessional with 
>> messy
>> cuts
>> and pastes. I was told, "But we don't do email."
>>
>> Strange. Doesn't the U.S. Postal Service still function? I'll be glad
>> to use it if the commissioner will.
>> Or I could hand carry the corrections. It's not as though town hall is
>> that far away.
>>
>> I'm one step away from refusing to edit this magazine. It's not a paid
>> position. Also, the writers who contribute to the magazine are quite
>> angry.
>> Last year was the first time our work was censored like this. We were
>> even told we couldn't rewrite a song such as "You're the top" if we said
>> Obama
>> was the top. (For heaven's sake, he's the President! Can't we surmount
>> politics? Apparently not.) The song writer gave me three possible
>> verses
>>
>> to replace, and all had product names, another no no.
>>
>> Has anyone else run into this? Yes, I have, by the way, since on
>> occasion
>> Slate & Style has had to change a word or two. but nothing like this!
>> Lori
>>
>
>
> **************
> Big savings on Dell’s most popular laptops. Now starting at
> $449!
> (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1222382499x1201454962/aol?redir=http:%2F%2Fad.doubleclick.net%2Fclk%3B214663472%3B36502367%3Bg)
> _______________________________________________
> Writers Division web site:
> http://www.nfb-writers-division.org <http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/>
>
> stylist mailing list
> stylist at nfbnet.org
> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/stylist_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for 
> stylist:
> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/options/stylist_nfbnet.org/jbron%40optonline.net
> 






More information about the Stylist mailing list