Languages Available in: The download links above has Indecent Proposalsubtitles in Arabic, Burmese, Chinese Bg Code, Danish, Dutch, English, Farsi Persian, French, Indonesian, Korean, Norwegian, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Urdu, Vietnamese Languages.
any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image, or other communication which is obscene or indecent, knowing that the recipient of the communication is under 18 years of age, regardless of whether the maker of such communication placed the call or initiated the communication;
any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image, or other communication that, in context, depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory activities or organs, regardless of whether the user of such service placed the call or initiated the communication; or
'(a) Requirement: In providing sexually explicit adult programming or other programming that is indecent on any channel of its service primarily dedicated to sexually-oriented programming, a multichannel video programming distributor shall fully scramble or otherwise fully block the video and audio portion of such channel so that one not a subscriber to such channel or programming does not receive it.
'(1) on the basis of recommendations from an advisory committee established by the Commission in accordance with section 551(b)(2) of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, guidelines and recommended procedures for the identification and rating of video programming that contains sexual, violent, or other indecent material about which parents should be informed before it is displayed to children, provided that nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to authorize any rating of video programming on the basis of its political or religious content; and
(A) established voluntary rules for rating video programming that contains sexual, violent, or other indecent material about which parents should be informed before it is displayed to children, and such rules are acceptable to the Commission; and
Please note that the report logic ignores subtitles and minor punctuation differences. The reported differences usually warrant some kind of action. Some very old publication records are translations linked to canonical titles; they will require a separate VT instead.
Either way, merge or variant, there is the remaining question which version of the title under which to merge or to make parent of the other versions. In one large class, the original title is long, with one or more subtitles, and a later title is identical except to omit subtitle(s).
I do have a proposal for improving the DB. I think that the three short introductory texts should each be given a master title entry whose title is their opening words. This will be completely unambiguous. We then can note for any publication which of them are included, and how they are titled there. I don't think that "There be islands..." should be given the master title "Preface" because there is just too much potential for confusion, being as Gutenberg uses "Preface" to refer to "In the mists..." and Bleiler uses it as the collective title for all three texts. Explanatory notes will become much simpler if we always refer to all the texts by their opening words.
I originally wanted to propose a new wiki template which should be added to each thread started on the Rules_and_standards_discussions page and which should help to keep track of the status of each discussion. It's goal is that with this template it's a lot easier to see if something has to be added to the rules changelog (see previous discussion thread) after a discussion is finished. Here is my proposal for this template: User:Hitspacebar/Template:RuleDiscussionStatus. This template can be seen as something similar to the status fields used in many ticket and bug tracking systems. They usually have a "status" ("open", "rejected", "resolved", "closed" etc.) and some also have a separate "solution" field ("done", "not relevant any more" etc.).
This book is an installment in editor Cary Wolfe's Posthumanities series. It contains seven chapters and a preface that ostensibly address disciplinary philosophy's failures to meaningfully address animals. Of the seven chapters, the first is entirely new, written in response to Derrida's posthumously published work The Animal Therefore That I Am. The other six chapters have already appeared elsewhere in various states and in other formats. Though the subtitle suggests that a central focus of a critique of animal rights might join the chapters together into a cohesive oeuvre, readers should abandon such hopes at the outset. The chapters are disparate.
Last year we put forward crucial proposals for improved inter-Korean relations and national reunification and made sincere efforts for their implementation. Our efforts, however, could not bear due fruit owing to the obstructive moves by the anti-reunification forces within and without; instead the north-south relations have been on a headlong rush to aggravation.
 38c6e68cf9