My Post said:CNN wrote:
The comments section is intended to be informal, of course, but the strain on resources that night prompted us to take down the “Who won the GOP debate” question.
You don't have the resources on one of your most important hosted events of the year?
You are CNN for crying out loud.
We see right through your article.
Filed under Ron Paul
Posted 6/7/2007 01:45:41 PM | Permalink
132 Comments | Add a comment
it had been one hour. 132 comments. I'd say 90% pro Ron Paul... Seriously! That is some passion for a candidate.
“Ron Paul Phenomenon?”, you ask? I have an answer. Paul’s message is one that excites people more than anyone else. Many people feel strongly about the message of liberty. I can tell you that NO ONE is “organizing” me to come on and vote in polls or post on CNN’s blog. I went to poston the CNN’s “Who won the Republican debate” blog that night because I watched the debate and felt strongly about what Ron Paul had to say and I want to spread that message, I want it to be known that I agree. Many of my family and friends feel the same way although they don’t post online. Paul’s internet support seems big but it is even bigger still (outside of the internet). The other candidates (on both sides) are more of the same, over and over again. The same message wrapped in a different box is only going to cause so much excitement (or lack there of).
The freedom message is a strong one. It creates a strong response.
I’d also like to correct one statement made in this post. Taking down the debate question did actually stop Paul supporters from posting. It stopped me from posting. Perhaps you should have said that it didn’t stop “some” Paul supporters from posting when you redirected the URL to the democrat debate question.
Thank you.
Posted By Erin Roe, Hampton, VA : June 7, 2007 3:08 pm
I don't think they are actively deleting comments. I think it has something to do with the way the internet is programmed.
I don't think they are actively deleting comments. I think it has something to do with the way the internet is programmed.
they are deleting comments again.
Mine was there - now it's gone.
I don't think they are actively deleting comments. I think it has something to do with the way the internet is programmed.
As a computer network engineer....I want you to know I'm laughing my a$$ off at your comment.
Let me help you understand. Once an entry is put on a site, such as CNN, that entry will STAY there forever until someone removes it, either manually, or via keyword search...IE..."let's delete every post with 'constitution' in it. And BAM...gone.
BTW...the internet is not 'programmed'. Just an FYI.
Thanks for correcting me. I have absolutely no idea about the workings of the internet. I still don't think that they would be actively preventing discussion of a presidential candidate.
Third, tech savvy people (like Ron supporters) aren't as likely to own landlines. I haven't owned one for years... cell all the way baby.
Giuliani was especially bad about this. It reflects his disdain for rules/laws -- he thinks they don't apply to him.The “top tier” chose to violate those rules by evading questions and taking much longer than allowed to speak. Then they had to give them another minute to actually answer the questions, which they still did not do. If we cannot trust these politicians to follow the simple rules of a debate, how can we expect them to follow the rules of the constitution?
The comments section is intended to be informal, of course, but the strain on resources that night prompted us to take down the “Who won the GOP debate” question (though that didn’t stop Paul supporters from commenting; they started adding comments to the “Who won the Democratic debate?” post). The intention was not to censor Ron Paul supporters — right now, you’ll find hundreds of Paul posts on the site.