Thursday, August 28, 2014

Code policies

August 28, 2014

I had meant to write at this blog, "Things I Wrote," about things that I felt like thinking and writing about.  It was not meant to be a blog of documentation of the conglomerate's behavior.

I did not try to make this blog show up on the first page of Google search results for my name.  When I saw that it had done that, it also seemed that people would probably read what I wrote more quickly if I wrote at this blog rather than at my WordPress blog, "endtherapeofchildren."

The conglomerate onslaught is so constant and overwhelming that, especially when I'm at the shelter and the television is on, there are literally hundreds of things to document every hour.

At the beginning of this blog, I said that I didn't want to have to keep reprinting pages describing my code policies.  I don't want to have to keep doing that; the conglomerate also knows what those policies are, even though it chooses to ignore them.

I don't use code for anything unless I specifically say that I am using code.  What that means is that if I use a code word instead of the word that the code has replaced, I will write or say "code."  If the code word is written, I'll write (code) before or after the code word.

I don't use articles or excerpts for code purposes.

Those are the rudimentaries of my code policies; all of my more elaborately defined code policies are based on the same principles.

I felt that I had to create my code policies a few years ago, because the conglomerate attacked literally everything that I did, screaming accusations and ridicule that it obviously felt were both amusing and entirely justified.

I don't know if there was ever a time in the history of the world that so many silly people have caused so much damage to so many victims.

I have not stopped writing at my WordPress blog, although WordPress's promotion of the conglomerate's agenda, and the difficulty that I often have publishing pictures at that blog from my phone, are both frustrating.

The conglomerate is insidious.

Copyright L. Kochman, August 28, 2014 @ 8:47 a.m.



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