CSS If You Change WordPress Themes

What happens to your custom CSS and CSS revisions if you change WordPress themes? Normally it gets lost.

But not with Jetpack. I have the Jetpack plugin installed but with very few options activated. One option I have activated and which I like is Custom CSS.

Yes, there are other CSS plugins in the WordPress repository, and I’ve used them.

And of course one can always use a child theme.

In fact I am using a child theme of this WordPress theme here at the moment, but I still change CSS with the Jetpack plugin.

One of the advantages of using Jetpack to change CSS is if you mess around changing from one theme to another as much as I do.

The reason is that the Jetpack CSS Revisions module shows previous versions of your custom CSS. Each time you click Save Stylesheet a revision is saved.

That means that if you add some CSS, change themes, and then want to revert back to your old theme, then you can find the custom CSS you added previously and revert to it.

That’s because Jetpack stores the last 25 CSS revisions made to any theme on your blog.

It’s very handy to be able to click on the CSS revisions and look back at the recent changes and revert to an earlier version if you need to, and I use it quite a lot.

Update Feb 2017

In the latest version of WordPress there is now an option to add CSS via the customiser.

Still David

The 2014 film Still Alice follows the descent of Alice, suffering from early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.

She is, of all things, a linguistics professor at a prestigious American University, and when the film starts she is starting to go downhill. She is only 50 years old.

Alice has early-onset familial Alzheimer’s. The ‘familial’ factor means it is hereditary. And as we learn in the film, one of Alice’s daughters tests positive for the gene.

So in addition to the descent of Alice, there is a long-term ‘death’ sentence hanging over the head of the daughter.

And Alice’s husband has to deal with this tangled situation.

As the film progresses, Alice becomes more incapable. She becomes incapable of even carrying out the plan to kill herself that she formulated earlier.

She promised herself she would kill herself when things got really bad.

She got the pills ready, but now she can’t recall what she was supposed to do.

By the end of the film, she can’t speak and she can’t do very much at all.

Vegetables

Today I chopped a parsnip and put it into some soup. I used our little Kenwood thingy to chop the parsnip up very small, and when I served up the soup my wife Tamara asked me whether it was rice that was in the soup.

I told her it was a vegetable and she asked me what it was. I couldn’t remember the name and I had to reach inside the fridge and hold up a parsnip so she could see it. She said ‘parsnip’.

For a few seconds I felt as though I was hearing the word parsnip for the first time. Not only did I not know it was a parsnip, I was learning parsnip anew.

Then after rolling the word around in my mind, I got back into the swing of things. And the parsnip went back to being a parsnip.

But for those few seconds I had an intimation of what it must be like to be Still Alice, but slipping away.

Corbyn’s Deleted Articles

The World Socialist website noted in March that Jeremy Corbyn had deleted hundreds of articles and speeches spanning decades, from his own web site.

The World Socialist argued it was to conceal his previous opposition to the EU. That may be so, and it fits because as I have said before, it seemed clear to me during the referendum campaign that he was lukewarm at best over his support for remaining in the EU.

And it was obvious when immediately after the result he was quick to close the door and say that there was no going back from the vote on Brexit.

But there is another article he deleted from his website. It was there when I first looked, and then later it was gone.

Gone, but not lost.

Thanks to the Internet Archive, a non-profit site that has indexed over fifty billion pages, you can read articles from current and defunct websites that would otherwise be lost forever.

Here is Corbyn’s article on Palestine that starts with a sentence that describes, as he puts it, the “running sore of the illegal occupation”.

Want to see the text without accessing the webarchive? It’s at CloudUp Corbyn and you can read it there.

Other Articles

There are other articles on Palestine and Gaza that Corbyn cannot delete. He cannot delete them because they are not on his website. They are on The Morning Star newspaper web site, to which he has been a long-time contributor.

In article after article, Corbyn makes a pretty damning case against Israel – everything from screaming warplanes to snipers shooting old men in wheelchairs. And woven in is praise for Hamas.

I looked through his articles on the Morning Star and I found one article critical of Saudi Arabia and one article critical of what was happening in the Congo.

But the greatest number of articles by far, are about Israel and critical of Israel. He sees nothing good in Israel, only something to condemn.

By only writing about Israel and not about all the other countries around the world about which he could speak, I know that under all that righteous anger, he is antisemitic.

He says at some points that he is right to speak about Israel because of Britain’s role in helping to establish Israel.  I don’t think that is much of a reason given the number of countries in which Britain has played a role. But even given that logic, what makes Britain’s role the benchmark about what injustices (as he sees them) he should write about and speak about?

I think it is a smokescreen for his hatred of Jews – one that he may not be able to admit to himself. I don’t know what he thinks of Jews at an individual level, one person speaking to one person. But as a group I think he sees them through the eyes of his version of the playing out of world history, and thus condemns them.

One-Party State

I see a quote in an article in the New Statesman from August 2015 where Paul Anderson, a former editor of the socialist weekly Tribune says that the Morning Star

..runs articles extolling the virtues of single-party ‘socialist’ states on a regular basis – North Korea, Cuba, China, Vietnam. Its default position on just about everything happening in the world is that anything any western power supports – but particularly the United States – must be opposed, which has led to it cheering on Putin, Hamas, Assad and a lot of other real nasties.

I think that is where Corbyn’s heart lies, towards that single-party State.

A Question About Postmatic Comments

I don’t get very many comments, but I value those I do get. So when spam comments get through it’s a pain.

I use Postmatic for commenting and I haven’t set comments to be moderated. If I were to set comments to be moderated it would slow down the conversation because every commenter would have to wait for me.

This Is How I Catch Spam

I catch spam comments with two plugins: WPBruiser and Akismet.

WPBruiser catches automated bot comments.

Akismet catches almost all of the other spam comments, but it doesn’t catch them all.

When Akisment lets a comment through it doesn’t just appear on the site but in genuine subscribers’ email inboxes.

I think the annoyance factor is magnified by that and if you think so too, then I have to decide what to do.

So a quick question – do spam comments appearing in your email inbox annoy you?

Solutions

I could upgrade to Postmatic Pro. Then Postmatic would analyse comments for content and hold those about which it is suspicious.

However, the cheapest subscription level for Postmatic Pro is $50.00/month, so that is not an option.

That leaves me with either dropping Postmatic completely and moderating comments or keeping Postmatic but moderating comments.

If you are a genuine subscriber and you are seeing these spam comments, just know I am watching it and will decide what to do over the next week or two.

To help me, would you let me know whether spam comments appearing in your email inbox annoy you?