Category: Blog

Re-Registration Needed For Some Users

It has come to my attention that a software glitch may have resulted in some users not being presented with the correct form at registration. If you registered without seeing a form with real name as a required field, it will be necessary for you to re-register before commenting.

My apologies for the inconvenience.

Archive Is Available

Maintenance has been completed on C&C’s archive blog, containing posts from the beginning in 2006 through 2019. The archive is now available here. The link is also at the bottom of the right sidebar on the home page of the current blog.

Maintenance

Crime and Consequences Blog will be in maintenance for the rest of the weekend.

Comments posted during this time could be lost in transition. I suggest saving any posted comment in a plain text file on your own computer (such as Notepad on a Windows computer) so that it can easily be replaced if lost.

Update (5/17): Maintenance has been completed and the site appears to be fully operational. Please email ccadmin at the blog’s domain if you have any difficulties.

Comments Are Now Open

A number of people have asked me to turn comments back on for the blog. We have made the necessary tweaks to the software and are now able to accept comments again. Commenters will need to register first, and there is a link on the login page for that. A link to the comment policy is at the bottom of the sidebar. Continue reading . . .

Under Construction

We are making some changes to the blog regarding comments. Please do not attempt to leave a comment until we announce that comments are open.

Welcome Back, Bill Otis

C&C is pleased to welcome back Bill Otis, returning as an “outside blogger” after an extended hiatus. His first post is here.

As a reminder, our outside bloggers are like columnists in a newspaper. We invite them because we think their posts will be interesting to our readers. They are not otherwise affiliated with CJLF, however, and do not speak for the organization. The views they express are their own and are not screened in advance.