
The Pew Internet and American Life Project recently released a survey contending that more than one in four online Americans read blogs, and about one in fourteen have a blog. Do you have your own blog or website? Then speak up in the comments section below by posting your site's url, and I will link to it (provided that it's not rated NC-17 or something) in a future post on this blog. If I get enough responses from readers with sites, I'll ask the general readership to peruse each site and vote for their favorite one. I'll then highlight the most popular in a post announcing the winner. Don't be shy: enlarge your readership by posting your site's address in the comments section below, and then we'll open it up to the readers in a few days to determine their favorites.
http://odonnellweb.com
www.WillingtonWorld.blogspot.com "You never knew life could be so fun"
http://www.spongedaddy.com
dedicated to the disabled.
Be well,
Sponge
http://www.blogmaverick.com/
http://stationarybandit.typepad.com/
The article referenced says that 7 percent of **online** Americans (not 7 percent of Americans generally!) write a blog, but it is not clear what percent of the blogs are political blogs, nor what percent of the blogs are updated regularly (it would be interesting to know that also).
I have a personal web site (http://howardwachtel.myeweb.net )
which is not a blog, and I think it would be too time-consuming for me to start writing a blog, but I have considered it. Since there are already millions of them, and many of the political ones are very similar, it would take some effort to create something new and different.
I stand corrected. Thank you for the fact-check, Howard. I will correct on the blog to read "online Americans."
Crafts for conservatives: http://www.livejournal.com/~bowtiecrafts/
http://billysblog.modblog.com/core.mod?show=main
Just one man's opinion.
I have a personal website. Believing that many of the things people firmly believe are mere myths,
my website, wttp://areyoumythguided.bravehost.com,
seeks to awaken them from their "consensus trance." (People who lisp get the joke quickest.)
Sample myths:Neil Armstrong walked on the moon;
Pearl Harbor surprised FDR; 9/11 surprised George
Bush; the author of "Hamlet" was born in Stratford-On-Avon; people make all crop circle
formations.
Hi Dan. Alec Rawls here. (We met when you visited the Stanford Review a couple of years ago.) Just found your blog last week. Here is mine: Error Theory.
Thanks, Mr. Dan. I'm at http://thenightfly.blogspot.com. And naturally you will get a permanent link on the sidebar in return, especially since I've enjoyed browsing in the week I've found your site.
thelastangrymen.blogspot.com
I've been too busy to blog lately, but hope to get back at it on a regular basis again by the end of January:



