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Amazon, Pedophilia, and Censorship – It isn’t a Dirty Word

Censorship – It isn’t a Dirty Word.

What is wrong with censorship? I’m all in favor of it. Censorship is not a dirty word. Liberals decry censorship as some kind of fascist plot to destroy personal freedoms and shut off political debate, and yes, censorship improperly used can do that. But there is a difference between unbridled individual expression and the right of a community to police itself through established and accepted moral norms. What is lacking in our debate about individual rights is the idea of civic or social responsibility. Freedoms do not exist in a vacuum. Freedoms imply a necessary responsibility to uphold the society which makes those freedoms possible. In other words, you are free but you are not free to destroy the very communities which grant you those freedoms. And the right of the community to police itself and remove criminal behaviors and influences is something equally as important as “doing whatever makes you feel good.”

A case in point is Amazon’s ridiculous defense of its right to sell a “how to” guide for pedophiles as defending the First Amendment. Pedophilia is a criminal act. Promoting such literature in the name of resisting censorship is such a perversion of the First Amendment as to make a mockery of the original intent of that freedom.

The First Amendment was never intended to protect lewd, obscene, or pornographic speech and writing, otherwise laws against blasphemy would have been immediately repealed. But the Founders saw no inconsistency between the First Amendment and restricted speech. The First Amendment was meant to protect political speech and differences of religious beliefs. The confusion by modern cultures of license with liberty has prevented the people of the United States from censoring pornography on the public airwaves and in libraries and in school systems. In concert with the rejection of fundamental moral values by our courts, our society has gone into such a moral decline that we even have to debate whether pedophilia is wrong or not.  When the people lose their freedom to decide for themselves as a community what is immoral, then their ability to rule themselves been replaced by the judiciary. Censorship of extremely violent and sexually explicit materials, including graphic depictions of rape and torture, would do much good in changing the tenor of the social whole.  But as the courts have removed that right from the people, then all hell has broken loose, and the call for “civility” in political debate seems like asking a robber politely to stop hitting you with a baseball bat while you are being mugged. Too little, too late.

To consider the judges as the ultimate arbiters of all constitutional questions would be very dangerous doctrine indeed and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy… The Constitution has erected no such tribunal, knowing that to whatever hands confided, with corruption of time and party, its members would become despots.  – Thomas Jefferson

Pedophilia – It is Only a “Sexual Orientation”

One of the most pernicious defenses of these pedophiles and pedophile advocates is that to discriminate against them is to discriminate against them because of their sexual orientation, a discrimination which is now prohibited by many states and the federal government. Yet this argument is predictable and follows the exact same line of argument made by the homosexual community:  “I did not choose to be this way. God made me this way. I cannot help that I am attracted to other  of my own sex…”   Now homosexuality is a sexual orientation. So is pedophilia, so is bestiality, so is necrophilia, so is fornication, rape, and adultery. The pedophile can legitimately say that he did not choose to be attracted to children and that he cannot help himself, therefore he too must be accepted and not discriminated against. Yet for the community not to be able to discriminate between acceptable and unacceptable, moral and immoral, practices means that the community cannot defend itself against lawlessness and license.

The problem is that society can no longer distinguish between freedom and license, and the courts have adopted a view of human nature that has no purpose or design. For Christians, Jews, and Muslims, human nature is seen as liable to unrestrained selfishness that must be overcome through self-discipline. All have desires, but not all desires should be acted upon, and the ability to govern oneself and resist temptation is a sign of maturity and strength. By contrast, our culture has promoted unrestrained self indulgence as a virtue, and that any limitation society would place upon that self indulgence is  a restriction upon individual liberties and rights, rather than being a necessary restraint placed upon the individual for the welfare of the society as a whole.  But without this ability to govern ourselves as a society, we have lost the greater liberty of being our own rulers. Therefore, I call for a return to censorship of immorality as a necessary step in restoring the welfare of the nation to something we wish it to be. Censorship is not a dirty word; it is the right word for the right of a community to govern itself and resist the impulses of evil.

There is a great legal brief showing the history of the development of the understanding of the First Amendment, laws against blasphemy, and the attempt to restrict pornography as degrading to women in this PDF file here.

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TSA Pat Downs – Profiling Doesn’t Sound So Bad Now, Does it?

What Price Are We Willing to Pay for “Security”?

Groin groping, nude scanning, breast grabbing… all citizens are made to pay a high price for avoiding the obvious. For the sake of lame-brained political correctness, we won’t do what is the most logical choice. What is that choice that would prevent not only an inconvenience to the large majority of the US population, but which would also protect their civil liberties?  Profiling.   End of argument.  Anything else just shows our unwillingness to state the obvious: Islamic fanatics want us dead. Have you been to Pakistan or Yemen or Somalia recently?  Then you need extra scrutiny. If you’ve lived all your life in Omaha and are a grandmother, then you get a pass.  This isn’t rocket science folks; it is just common sense. Something, apparently, our legal-political ruling class seems to lack in great abundance.

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Pair.com and WordPress – update

I received this reply from Pair about my slow WP install, which apparently can be remedied by buying an extra software manager (access to the Software Installation Manager costs $2.95/month which is really kicker when you are already paying $360 a year for a webmaster account) :

Thank you for contacting pair Networks.
I see that you do not have the Software Installation Manager on your account, so I assume you installed WordPress manually. If the files you are trying to update were created manually by your username, WordPress may not be able to update them on its own. WordPress (or PHP in general) would try to do so as the username nobody. The username nobody would not be able to write to files owned by your username, and vice versa.
You can instruct WordPress to write to files with your username using php-cgiwrap. Our Knowledge Base explains how to set that up:
http://kb.pair.com/f25
After you have PHP running as you username you may want to have us change ownership of any files owned by nobody to your username. That would allow PHP to write to them.

All fine and dandy, but the mods you have to make to php-cgi to fix my situation may not be worth the time it takes to make it.  I hate messing around with base code.


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iPage.com… Biggest isn’t always the Best for hosting

Pair.com and Bluehost.com

I am a longtime user of Pair.com for web hosting for my clients. The service has been outstanding, but it is a little pricier than the hosting farms like Bluehost.com and iPage.com. The problem with Pair.com for me is that it does not play well with WordPress. Updating plugins or adding plugins to an existing WP site shuts down access to the browser on the site. It is so much trouble that I won’t put a new WP site on Pair because it slows down my workflow to the point where I lose money.

Bluehost is recommended by WordPress.org as a WP compatible site, and it is. It works seamlessly with WP installs. It is also cost-effective for hosting. Bluehost allows you to host virtually unlimited websites for a single fee, but that low-cost can come at a price: slowdowns on a shared server. When I added my latest client, Isaiah 61 Ministry, to Bluehost, I immediately noticed a slow down on the server. It turns out another user on this shared server was either hogging the server’s bandwidth or had caused some other trouble.  Bluehost was quick to fix it and their tech support has been very good, but I read some recent reviews about their use of a proprietary software that “throttles” down high demand sites. If someone on a shared server is hogging the bandwidth, it could cause all websites hosted on that server to slow down as well. Also, their claim to unlimited bandwidth or file limits turns out not to be quite true.

iPage.com

So, it was with interest that I read both of the problems with Bluehost and the newly recommended replacement called iPage.com on a web-hosting review site. And so for  my next client, IGOTASTI.com, I recommended he use iPage for his account. While this is only day 5, I must say at this point I cannot recommend their services to anyone.  First of all, tech support is slow to respond. When you have mission critical stuff and you are new user, to have to pay for expedited service to fix their basic server related problems is not my idea of being  a low cost provider.  I can only give a litany of issues we’ve experienced so far with iPage.

  1. The first day of the install, the home page came up as a template, but my VirusBarrier kicked in and said the page was a possible virus threat. This was the default page set up by iPage, not by us. In fact, after installing WordPress for the first time, our home page could not be seen. It took a day to get that virus page fixed and I suspect they had a security breech on their shared server.
  2. The control panel offers a WordPress auto install, but for some reason, it installed 2 nested versions of WP into the website and it locked us out of editing and logins.
  3. It failed to uninstall the WP using the uninstall button.  I had to manually delete the existing installs via ftp. And I then had to reinstall a fresh copy of WP, but all our work was lost.
  4. There have been incredible slowdowns with errors like “Failure to connect to the Database” and blank pages.
  5. I think I’ve traced the problem to dropped packets between their hosting DNS and the actual shared server. Using a TraceRoute, I see many **** asterisks when attempting to see the site.
  6. These slow connections with their DNS have caused slow updates, failed logins, and all sorts of frustrations for my client. And I feel partly responsible for recommending it, so I’ve done a lot of work gratis (aka losing money), trying to remedy the problem with iPage tech support.  I’ve pointed out the traceroute problems and the dns problems and it has been almost 24 hours with no response.

Now, I recently read that the review sites also receive kickbacks of $$$ for everyone who registers through their links, so the impartiality of these reviewers is now suspect to me.  I recently went on WordPress.org forums and some of the long-timers there have recommended A Small Orange, whose prices seem reasonable and whose reputation seems intact. They are a much smaller outfit than Bluehost or iPage, so their service might be a lot better.

Their prices are similar to Pair.com’s, since you pay for the storage and bandwidth for all your hosted clients under your account. But I would say their 2 major advantages (untried by me at this time) are the ability to allow sub-accounts (clients) to have their own access to their own websites through CPanel or Fantastico;  and they are supposedly very friendly with WordPress.   So, for now, I’m in a holding pattern. I’ll let you know if things improve for my client on iPage….

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A Financial Tower of Babel – Run to Goshen

September 25, 2010

I hear the Spirit saying two things:
Of the World:
“It is a Financial Tower of Babel”
And to the Church:
“Run to Goshen”

There has long been a message in my spirit over which the Holy Spirit has brooded and impressed within me like a vise. The more I read His Word, the deeper the furrow that is planted in my heart. This is what I hear the Lord saying: there will be a financial collapse, but there will be supernatural provision for the Church. The Holy Spirit is calling, he is warning, he is giving guidance, he is letting us know what is to come and how to prepare for it. See the full article here: http://www.scholarscorner.com/prophecy/Goshen.php

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Returning to Entourage… for now…

Well, folks, I beta tested Postbox 2, and aside from the fact that there are things I love about Postbox, I cannot make it my new email program. First what I love: the search features are outstanding. The program is fast as lightening and very clean in operation. I never got around to setting up filters, though, and I’ll tell you why.

My major problem with Postbox is that I while don’t mind previewing some mails online in IMAP, I tend to use filters on local folders to store essential copies of my correspondence to and from clients. These records are for my protection. There is no reason nor desire for me to save 40,000 emails in the cloud, and I don’t trust or want the cloud to have that information.

In Entourage, if I click “unread messages,” it shows me all my unread messages in newsgroups or in local folders. Postbox only shows me online unread messages in my in box. All my filtered messages, placed in local folders, remain invisible unless I select each folder individually. This means I am having to look at my online folders and my local folders separately and essentially duplicating my efforts. It means that pre-filtering my messages will cause me problems rather than help me sort incoming messages. And if I don’t filter the messages, then I must manually move every message I want to keep from the online box to a local folder. For me, it is a lot easier to download all my mail and then delete unwanted messages than to manually sort through drag and drop all my incoming mail into folders.

Also, Entourage has a slightly better visual interface for mail preview lists. The tiny lines between messages makes it easier to read and focus, and you can adjust the size of the list fonts.  Postbox causes more eyestrain when viewing in list view.

There are problems with Entourage and I’m not happy with it. It is slow on search. Powermail is also faster for search. There are plenty of crashes in Entourage, and it really doesn’t integrate with Apple’s AddressBook.  I am hoping that the new 2011 version fixes some of these problems. If not, I feel like I’m going to be stuck in limbo Waiting for Godot.

I’ll be waiting on reviews Office 2011 before actually buying an upgrade. I will be using Postbox on my mobile laptop however, since there is no point in downloading and filing messages when I’m on the road. Postbox makes it easy to delete unwanted mail and keep the rest for later filing on my desktop.

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Why Merit Pay for Teachers is a Bad Idea

My wife has been a teacher for about 30 years. She is devoted and dedicated and works primarily with the learning disabled.  There are two primary reasons that merit pay for teachers is a bad idea and will backfire: parental responsibility (or irresponsibility) is not part of the evaluation; it will cause persecution and resentment towards slower students and the learning disabled by teachers who are threatened with bad evaluations for low class scores.

Homework , the Role of Parents, Administration Support,
and the Criteria for Merit Pay

Yes, there are bad teachers out there. Some are lazy, some are incompetent, and some just don’t care. Yes, education suffers under these circumstances, and there ought to be a way of identifying and getting rid of bad teachers, but how can you hold good teachers responsible for things beyond their control? A straight line merit pay system for good test results overlooks key factors in the child’s education.  Here are a few quotes from parents heard by my wife more than once over the years:

“I shouldn’t have to do homework with my children, that’s your job.”
“We were too busy to do homework last night. We were at cheerleading… (or the game, or visiting friends, or at the bar, or at work)”
“Oh, we went to Disneyland last week, and we didn’t want the children to have to worry about homework…” unexcused absence.
“Stop sending homework, it takes too long (or it is too hard for him)…”
“My son won’t do homework, and I can’t make him. All he wants to do is play video games.”
“I told him to do his homework every night, and he say he doesn’t have any (or he did it already)…” from the child who never brings in any homework.

These are some actual quotes from parents. While many parents are  responsible and active in their children’s lives, some are more like children themselves,  raising children. They take no responsibility nor are they interested in helping their children succeed.  Now, if you are a teacher, and you are being judged on your performance based upon test results for these children, how would you feel? Would you want those kids in your class, knowing they will lower your pay or get you fired?  Where is the evaluation of the parent’s role in the education process?

And what of the children who, through no fault of their own, have a terrible home life? What of the child who doesn’t know where he is sleeping from night to night; or whose mother works in a bar and the child comes with her because she cannot afford a sitter; or whose parents are drug dealers; or whose parents who believe education is not important because welfare is the preferred way of life? What of the child who is physically or sexually abused, but Children and Youth Services are so over extended and the judges so lenient that the children are left in the homes? And what of truancy? There are children who miss  40 days of school a year and nothing is done to enforce their attendance. How can you hold a teacher responsible for  THAT? Can the teacher be held responsible for not being able to instill values and ambition in a child who gets no encouragement or reinforcement of them at home?

What I’m saying is that we are witnessing a breakdown of society at the macro level, and while we can focus on test scores and ‘no child left behind,’ it is unrealistic to put the entire burden of success on the shoulders of the teachers who are doing the best they can under less than ideal circumstances. The question I’d ask is “Whose merit? The teachers? or the parents?”  Without solving that question, merit pay is a scapegoat.

All these circumstances say nothing of children with learning disabilities, where the problems above are only compounded by their greater obstacles.

Resentment Against Slow Learners, the Mentally Retarded,
and the Learning Disabled Fostered by Merit Pay.

My wife has dealt with discrimination against her special students by other teachers from time to time. First of all, often the learning disabled have very high IQ’s but they may have a physical limitation of some sort, like dyslexia or an auditory processing problem. They are not stupid but may be slow learners because of these issues. None-the-less, teachers will often fight with the administration over how many special ed students will be in their classrooms, and fight with each other over who is having an unfair advantage.  Can you imagine what will happen to those teachers and to those students who are perceived to be a drain on the rest of the class and who are lowering the overall test scores?  Can you understand why a teacher might feel threatened in her livelihood by the learning disabled if she were being evaluated by a merit pay system of rewards and punishments?  Could you blame her?

Merit pay would lead to a system of unconscious, if not overt, discrimination against all those children deemed to be responsible for lowering overall class performance and reducing test scores. Mere resentment would turn into all out warfare against administrators and between teachers. The social environment of the school would become hostile and morale would be shattered. Forget cooperation between teachers and pity the poor slow learner, the mentally retarded, or the socially disadvantaged.

If you want a recipe for ruining the school system, introduce merit pay and punishment.

Politics and Evaluations – a Bad Mix

Finally, and this is a bit cynical, but unfortunately true.  If merit pay is based upon popularity of teachers with parents and the administration, you will further weaken the hand of the disciplined and dedicated teachers. There are teachers who know how to play the game, who play politics. They are popular with parents because they flirt with mothers or fathers, or they are coy and adoring of administrators. They are popular with the kids because they give extra long recesses or play a lot of movies, and so they report to their parents how nice their teachers are.

But pity the teacher who holds the administration responsible for enforcing IEPs (Individualized Education Program – required for all special education students, a violation of which allows either a teacher or school district to be sued, or both). Guess who is resented for calling administrators to account on behalf of her students?  Who is likely to be recommended for merit pay: the blonde who bats her eyes and laughs at all the principal’s jokes, or the thorn in his side?

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Illegal Immigration Myth – Jobs American’s Don’t Want

While visiting Cape Cod last year, we were approached by an independent painting contractor. He asked if we had many illegal immigrants near Pittsburgh, PA where we live. I told him that we had very few and asked him “Why?”   He said, “I am losing all my bids on house painting here because I charge a fair price, but I pay Social Security and Workman’s Comp for all my employees. But I’m losing all my bids to people who hire illegal immigrants and pay them under the table. I can’t make a decent living here… ”

That one instance explodes several myths about illegal immigration:

Myth#1 – Illegal immigrants only take the jobs that no one else wants.

Truth: The hiring of illegal immigrants by business allows them to pay lower wages to undocumented workers, who cannot complain, and to pay wages that no US citizen can live with, especially when the US worker has to pay taxes, Social Security, Medicare tax, and workman’s comp. In truth, illegal immigrants  lower the wages for all Americans by allowing businesses to hire under the table.  There are plenty of workers who would be willing to paint houses and do other jobs for legitimate wages, but those jobs are lost to illegal workers. So, US jobs are lost and the whole economy suffers by the influx of illegal immigration. US businesses are forced to shut down and taxes are lost to the government.

Myth#2 – Those who want to stem illegal immigration are racists, since it is really about Mexican and Spanish speaking immigrants.

Truth: The painting contractor informed us that in New England the majority of the illegal workers were from Ireland, Russia, and Brazil: White, White, and Portuguese, not Spanish or Hispanic.

So, one painting contractor, representative of hundreds of thousands of small business owners, cannot compete and is driven out of business by unfair competition, what are the implications:

  1. Decent, paying jobs to US Citizens are lost to under the table workers.
  2. Tax revenues and Social Security revenues are lost  to States  and the Feds by payments to undocumented workers who pay no tax nor SS.
  3. Small businesses who try to operate honestly and pay taxes are undercut, if not destroyed, but those who use illegal immigrants.

A Possible Solution for the problem of Illegal Immigration:


Temporary Worker Visas: Give everyone who wants to come to the US for  the “low wage” jobs that “Americans don’t want to do”  a Temporary Worker Visa, allowing a legal stay of 6 months, after which time they have to return home for a period of at least 3 months. They can apply for an extension if they are actually hired and if the business applies with them for the extension.  All illegal residents currently in the US could immediately apply for and receive a 6 month worker visa, but failure to do so would result in the strictest of penalties if caught. While in the US, workers would be required to pay a portion of their income on catastrophic healthcare insurance.

Violations of the 6 month stay would be met with severe penalties, including the revocation of any future visas or citizenship.  If the person does not return to their home country within 1 week after their visa expiration, if they do not or did not pay taxes and SS on their incomes, or if they fail to register for a visa and are here illegally, they would not be eligible for new visas or citizenship.

A temporary worker program, similar to the one in Canada, would solve several problems:

  1. Illegal immigration would no longer be necessary. Visas would be readily available.
  2. Temporary workers would not and could not be hired under the table, or they could not stay and they would be prevented from receiving new visas if they did not pay taxes and SS on their incomes.
  3. Incomes and revenues to the States and the US would not be lost to unpaid taxes, undeclared wages, etc.
  4. Businesses would be forced to pay decent wages and declare wages for all employees, thereby insuring a level playing field for all businesses and secure their contributions to State, Local and US taxes, SS, etc.
  5. The hospitals would be protected against overuse and abuse by uninsured illegal immigrants.
  6. The problem of undocumented aliens would be greatly decreased since there would be a legitimate motivation for all illegal aliens to register and the threat of immediate deportation would not be an issue.
  7. Previously undocumented workers would have to declare and pay back taxes as would the businesses that hired them.

I think this solution would work. What do you think?

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Burning the Qur’an (Koran)?

Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville, FL plans to burn the Koran on September 11th.  I wrote this appeal to their leadership:

Dear Friends,   I understand your desire to challenge the politically correct culture of our day with the serious challenge it faces from Islam, and to call attention to the way in which liberalism shows a self-defeating toleration for the very ideology that wants to destroy it.  But I question the wisdom of your methods. I too thought of the precedent of the book burning in Ephesus. However, I want to compare the actions, then and now.  First, the people who burned their books of sorcery were those who had repented and turned from their false practices and lifestyles. Paul did not take a bunch of these books and burn them as an open challenge to the idolatry of the people, much less use that as a means of getting them to convert. In other words, it was not an “in your face” attack against false religion by Paul, but a spontaneous movement of repentance by the people.

Secondly, Paul did not make a habit of attacking the false religions of the cities where he preached. If you take his work in Athens, for example, he used their own intimations of the divine to bring them a further revelation of the fulfillment of their hopes in God. Did you know that in Islam there is an annual sacrifice of a goat for the sins of the people?  God has not left himself without a witness or without a cultural key.  Is there not something there that will preach?  Just as the high priest laid hands on the scape goat to transfer the sins of the people to that animal, which was sent out into the wilderness to die, so we have Jesus, struck by the high priest, put out of the city to die on a tree to take away the sins of all the people.  Islam has a type, but it does not have the fulfillment. Jesus is the scape goat who takes away their sins.

While your work serves as a challenge to the complacent church, which compromises itself and seeks peace when their is no peace,  is your work done in the same manner and Spirit as was that of the great evangelist? “All things are lawful, but all things are not profitable.”

Consider well, whether your work is done in with wisdom or by a fleshly counterfeit of that wisdom that comes from above. If you throw rocks at a hornet’s nest, all you’ll do is make the hornets mad. If you offer them honey, you may lead them where you want them to go.

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Transitioning to Postbox – Day 19

The Transition Process from Entourage – initial observations

I am now on day 3 of the transition to Postbox.  I went ahead and bit the bullet, and got version 1.1.5 and am beta testing version 2. If you buy the program on the first day you download it, it is $29.95 instead of $39. Since I had demoed it on my laptop, the fresh download on my desktop gave me an opportunity to buy it for the discount price.

The Quirks and Laborious

Rather than try to import from Mail, I decided to do it longhand and export the mbox folders from Entourage. I tried the scripts I mentioned before, but not all the mail boxes in subfolders export, so I ended up dragging and dropping some of them from Entourage to a folder on my desktop and then dragging them into the Application Support>Postbox folder inside my Library, as they tell you to do in the link I posted previously.  So, I finally got my local mail transferred and I then manually reorganized the folder hierarchy to suit me.

I have started creating filters to sort incoming mail. I suspect this process is going to take several days, so for now I am using a 2 email system, both Entourage and Postbox, getting duplications of my mail in each program. No problem with that.

What I like about Entourage is that when I go to POP mail, it definitely downloads the mail to local folders. The Inbox is the inbox on my computer. But with Postbox, the Inbox for my POP account is on my server. I could manually drag the emails to my local inbox, but that defeats the purpose, and I would have to duplicate my filters to filter both the online mailbox and on my local folders.

BUG!!!!... I lost all my filters from yesterday. Apparently, if you close down the program while the filters window  is open, you lose all your filters. This bug exists on all versions of the program, 2 and 1. It is a real show stopper.  I lost all my work from yesterday.

Cosmetic complaint: After years of using Entourage, I have gotten used to the font sizes and faces in the list view. There is even a little light line that separates the messages in the list so it is easier to read across.  While Postbox can change default font faces and sizes in html and plain text emails, there doesn’t seem to be any way to control the message list view’s appearance.  After 3 hours working with the program, my eyes were fatigued in a way they are not with Entourage.  I need to be able to modify the views.

I’m starting to think that Postbox, while full of wonderful features, is not quite ready for prime time. It is better than Powermail and Eudora, but I might have to maintain Entourage as my work horse for a while longer.