
But that's not the story. The story is that every time I read something on the Sun website, I have to read the comments. I can't help myself. I know reading these comments hurts my head, especially after I bang it repeatedly on the wall, but I can't help myself...
This is just another website for Martin O'malley to put his face on since he can't show it in public. Pathetic O'Malley.
the biggest problem is marty yo'malley and his band of tax and spend bums in the gneral assembly.
He's taking out both sides of his Irish arse. The State is saying it's broke. And they are talking about cutbacks in services.
I know, it hurts my eyes, too.
And then, all of a sudden, this guy...
Can the Sun please monitor these blogs for content? The two previous oafs are off message and contribute nothing to the dialog. This is not about O'Malley-- it is about people in need, so please say on message.
I mean, is that really possible? Can the Sun actually moderate comments to keep only those who say relevant things? Naaa... Personally, I expect a few more comments with variations on O'Malley's name by tomorrow. And something about taxes. And juveniles.
You know, Sun readers, Firefox comes with a built-in spellchecker.




2 comments:
Snarking on the idiocy of the comments' content is fine, but sniping at them for their spelling or grammar makes is silly given there is rarely a link between presentation accuracy and factual accuracy outside of the popular imagination.
Wiseman, the general point I was trying to make was not about spelling or grammar but about people being a little trigger-happy, quick to put down their hatred of O'Malley with no relation to the context of the article, and with no time to waste on rereading their comments.
But to be fair, the one comment I did like also has a mistake ("please say on message"). Also, without the Firefox spellchecker this blog would have been unreadable, I admit.
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