But the telling point — or points — come in the last paragraph and in his responses to the comments left
by readers of the post.
George Sink, P.A. Injury Lawyers is honored to announce that Attorney George Sink has been voted Charleston's Choice
by readers of the Post and Courier for Best Individual Attorney and Best Personal Injury Attorney for 2016.
Not exact matches
This worked great for awhile — publishers like the
Post signed up millions
of readers and their apps were promoted heavily
by Facebook.
According to a leaked screenshot
of Fusion's web traffic that was
posted by Gawker, the site had less than 35
readers looking at its top story on a recent day.
It's best to make it as easy as possible for
readers to share your great
posts, and you can do so
by including share buttons in the header, footer, or sidebar
of your content.
A
reader asked on my
post, The Average Savings Rates
By Income, whether I consider paying down debt part
of my personal savings rate calculation.
Make sure you subscribe
by RSS to get all
of my
posts straight into your favorite
reader.
Normally I would close this
post by thanking all
of you, my
readers, for making this possible.
But when written in the right voice, native ads and product promotions, which take the form
of editorial - written articles or sponsored
posts written
by a separate Gawker «commerce team,» can lead
readers to engage and buy products.
With more than 30 years
of recommending stocks under his belt, Charles has knocked the cover off the ball
by compiling an amazing record
of success and
by posting gain after gain for his loyal
readers.
Readers may recall that we have talked about the theory espoused
by our previous guest speaker Ben Hunt with respect to price inflation in a period
of monetary tightening in a series
of recent
posts entitled «Business Cycles and Inflation» (see Part 1 and Part 2 for the details).
«In Internet slang, a troll (/ ˈtroʊl /, / ˈtrɒl /) is a person who sows discord on the Internet
by starting arguments or upsetting people,
by posting inflammatory, extraneous, or off - topic messages in an online community (such as a newsgroup, forum, chat room, or blog) with the deliberate intent
of provoking
readers into an emotional response or
of otherwise disrupting normal on - topic discussion.»
In Internet slang, a troll is a person who sows discord on the Internet
by starting arguments or upsetting people,
by posting inflammatory, extraneous, or off - topic messages in an online community, either accidentally or with the deliberate intent
of provoking
readers into an emotional response.
To help our
readers wade through this drivel, I've
posted what Keller wrote followed
by a «translation»
of what he I think he really meant:
By writing a
post for this blog, your name and content will appear before thousands
of readers and blog subscribers.
You don't want to miss a single one
of these
posts, so bookmark this page and check back often, or better yet, subscribe to this blog in a Feed
Reader or
by Email.
We know fison isn't doing that because
of the first statement where fison takes full ownership
of what he says, and the bible doesn't specifically name Gandhi as being in hell (although the text would be interpreted
by many thoughtful
readers as saying he is) but, taken as a separate statement, the second
post reads as «don't blame me, it's the bible's fault.
Readers following facebook and other social media will likely have run across this quotation
by Sister Joan Chittister
posted repeatedly in the wake
of the release
of the notorious Planned Parenthood videos:
I am reciprocating
by writing this blog
post to inform my
readers of the service (and because I'm passionate about health education).
Readers could enter the contest on AllFreeSlowCookerRecipes.com once per day, and could earn an extra entry each day
by commenting (one comment per day) on each
of our 7 blog
posts throughout Slow Cooker Week.
Two
readers of the below pancetta
post, Gareth, who has a very nice blog, and Carrie, who has become obsessed
by what Gareth said in comment # 1, have given me a great idea!
I dream
of that November when there was a
post per day... chaotic, I'm sure, but beloved
by all your
readers.
As I stated before, I have never had any difficulties with the recipe and several
of my
readers haven't either, as noted
by their comments on this
post.
And then proceeded to tell me that if I didn't
post the recipe
by the end
of the week, OLC was going to be removed from your
reader.
For those
of you who have been long - time
readers, this is the same Nikki who took my site
by storm when I
posted her Healthy Cookie recipe forever ago.
This «3 Simple Ways to Calm Down in Seconds»
post is sponsored
by Parker Naturals, but I only recommend products and services that I have personally tried and believe are
of value to my
readers.
«This appetizer is a «tease» for upcoming flavors and textures,» says Stanford Inn
by the Sea co-proprietor Jeff Stanford about the following recipe; we're
posting it as extra credit for VT
readers of our January / February 2012 «Paradise Found» feature, which showcases recipes... read more
By eradicating these recipes it helps
readers of this
post better obtain the saucy suggestions instead
of trying to play mad scientist in an attempt to duplicate what someone had liked.
In a really busy year, this month seems to have been the busiest
of the lot; I've tried to be creative
by combining as many entries to blog challenges as possible — regular
readers will have spotted this from earlier
posts.
This
post was inspired
by a link I was sent
by one
of our regular
readers (thanks John — the link is further down the page, incidentally) and it's a really great article, a real conversation starter, so
In the last week or so my attention has been grabbed
by a number
of posts that inform
readers exactly what the statistics reveal.
-LSB-...] few weeks ago I ended my
post, «Confessions
of a Sideline - Sitter,»
by urging Lunch Tray
readers to get actively involved in improving school food (as well as food -LSB-...]
Anxious that I would be inviting drama and attacks from other breastfeeding supporters, educators, blogs, organizations, and my own
readers, I didn't want to risk being accused
of being a WHO Code violator
by posting pictures
of my babies with their bottles.
This
post is part
of our «You Asked» series, featuring questions posed
by our
readers.
But if this topic is
of interest to you, definitely check out the comments on my latest
post, wherein I'm taken to task
by several
readers, including Mile Hi Mama, for taking Walmart's side on this one.
There have been lots
of responses to my Huffington
Post piece «Why Men Need to Cheat» (at last count, 4,042 comments and a lot
of responses throughout the web, including one
by Chopper Papa), but I then I got an email from a
reader who calls himself U.G. Gold.
So, as 2016 kicks off, in keeping with my annual tradition
of featuring the hints that resonated most with
readers (and maybe were the most helpful), today's hint is a look back at HintMama.com's top 10 hints
of 2015, as measured
by post traffic.
A few weeks ago I ended my
post, «Confessions
of a Sideline - Sitter,»
by urging Lunch Tray
readers to get actively involved in improving school food (as well as food outside the school setting).
(
By the way, that's why I ask
readers at the end
of each
post to consider «liking» the FB page — it really does offer «value added» content to the main blog.)
But I'm guessing most
readers of this
post clearly understood my use
of «bipartisan» as meaning, per Merriam Webster: «marked
by or involving cooperation, agreement, and compromise between two major political parties.»
I thought you and TLT
readers who are feeling a little worn down
by packing thousands
of lunches might appreciate this advice for delegating I shared recently in the Washington
Post.
I recently read a
post by another mom, a terrific writer who fills her numerous blogs with all kinds
of «great mother» articles: gardening, cooking, natural parenting, crafting, just the kind
of articles that make the
reader (me) feel inadequate that I'm not doing those kinds
of things on a regular basis in MY house.
That's why I've been very interested in the comments left on yesterday's
post by two
readers — Dana Woldow, the San Francisco school food reformer, and Justin Gagnon, CEO
of a school lunch catering service, Choicelunch.
In next Fall's online debates, Yahoo gets good PR
by being all nice and public service - y, Huffington
Post can try to build up legitimacy as something other than a partisan organ, and Slate can get in front
of more eyeballs than those belonging to its usual smarty - pants
readers.
Some specific campaign tactics backfired as well, with «e-watchmen,» whose job was to monitor opposing blogs and
post comments in her support, ending up alienating many bloggers and their
readers by posting unsophisticated messages in large numbers — essentially, committing the sin
of comment spam.
The
Post online ad serving system is capable
of slicing and dicing
readers to target
by location and (for the registration - requiring
Post.com site) demographic, so I can't tell if these are running nationally or only in the DC area.
And, as a
reader pointed out, it was produced and
posted by the Senate Democrat - controlled (and taxpayer - funded) media services unit just two weeks before Espada faces off against his two primary opponents: Gustavo Rivera (who is being backed
by a number
of the majority leader's colleagues and labor unions) and Dan Padernacht.
It is also a great disservice to the innocent
readers of Daily
Post to be fed falsehoods from the malicious mind
of a writer driven
by hate and prejudice.
However, it appears the
post disappeared because
of an attack coordinated
by Tumblr blogger Moneyries, who urged his
readers to report it under Facebook's «racism / hate speech» category.
Could such a problem be solved
by the
readers of his blog — simply
by posting comments?