- The Comic Strip Series continues as Dr. Bobbs spanks the same spoiled brat he did last week!
- We're nowhere near finished with organizing all our new Dr. Cylon material, but we don't see any reason why CSR readers shouldn't enjoy seeing some of the many treats he did long ago that were somehow mislaid, including this additional animated version of I Dream of (Spanking) Jeannie.
I'm going to include the March spanking search report in a separate post. I've also begun a series of self-evaluations in which I look at CSR and talk about what I'd like to do with the site and what I'm actually likely to be able to get around to - two different things, of course. I would like to mention here one change I made on the
Home Page last week which probably no one has noticed: I replaced the Google search with Bing search (this allows you to search all of
CSR including this board and works better than the old search box here on the board, which caused a lot of data base problems). It's actually quite a nice tool and probably works faster than browsing the galleries if you want to know where all the
McLintock material on the site might be found, for instance.
Why replace Google with Bing? I'd actually been fed up with Google as a company for some time, but didn't know how to code the Bing search even though I knew it had to be fairly easy. I'd also been growing more and more angry with YouTube, which removed two of my videos including the excellent
Wagon Train scene with Robert Horton spanking Susan Oliver. Apparently some little social justice warrior complained that it was "violence against women" or some such rot and YT took it down despite my pointing out to them that it was pretty much standard TV fare of the day.
The plain fact is that Google/YouTube have been engaging in a pattern of viewpoint discrimination for a long time - political conservatives have been discriminated against, and even videos that weren't overtly political but that did challenge the multi-culti orthodoxy would get removed for no reason. Google was biasing their search engine to avoid conservative websites and YT was de-monetizing the videos of the people who had made them successful, which is no way to treat your business partners.
Dennis Prager sued and others had been forced to get lawyers involved to get their videos re-posted (an option I didn't have as none of mine were monetized in keeping with my personal philosophy of providing spanking material for free).
As a side note, it was obvious that sooner or later someone with a few loose screws who took a financial hit because YouTube pulled his videos down was going to get angry and quite possibly resort to violence, and this week someone did when Nasim Aghdam, a nutcase several times over who suddenly found her income cut off, shot three people at their headquarters. I hope it's clear I'm not suggesting she was in any way justified; I'm only saying that when you mistreat a lot of people there are likely going to be consequences.
But the last straw for me had come a week earlier, when YouTube decided to wage war against the right of every American to keep and bear arms. Gun-oriented channels, many educational in nature, were already being discriminated against by their videos being de-monetized; now they were being pulled down completely for no good reason. Understand, these were not channels that somehow advocated gun violence; people who merely talked about the 2nd Amendment or showed you how to clean your AR-15 were being silenced by the smug California progressives who run Google/YouTube.
So enough is enough. I only visit YouTube now when I absolutely have to, and I no longer search with Google. I advise everyone to do likewise (try
Bing or, if you don't want your personal data being kept,
DuckDuckGo) until Google/YouTube lose their dominant positions. Monopolies have always been dangerous, and it's taken a long time for many of us to apply this understanding to the Information Age, but Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg will soon be squirming before a congressional committee, and it looks like some sort of overdue reckoning is going to take place. End of editorial.
Next Week: The Comic Strip Series continues with Part 3 of a three-part mini-series on
Doctor Bobbs.
