Well, rarely do my effort-posts really warrant actual articles or I might actually be submitting articles on a regular basis.
Most of the platforms that I have submitted articles to in the past have actually been deplatformed shortly afterwards like the
Journal of Historical Review (2002) and
The Revisionist (2005).
I don't think
Inconvenient History has ever published in Print format, which used to be a criteria for all serious authors, and I'm not the only one who has felt that way. Although I'm not an academic, I used to be a Periodicals Librarian (and so did Hannover if I remember correctly). Maybe that has changed but academic Librarians are still vociferously divided on it.
Bottom Line, I just think that a 24 hour limit is beyond ridiculous. A week might be understandable.
Also, it is psychologically difficult to proofread properly (if you are a perfectionist like me) in less than a day because it takes that long for your short-term memory to completely flush the thoughts from your head.
This is the first thing they teach you in High School Composition, i.e., that you need to read your work with a fresh head and to always proofread again when doing so.
The reason for letting it sit (within reason, of course) is that you are then no longer influenced by what you *intended* to say and thought that you said, but what you *actually* said and are (somewhat) interpreting through the fresh eyes of a new reader.
So the typo or even
faux pas that you never saw in reading the piece over a dozen times now sticks out like a landmine right in front of you.
And let's not be so damn paranoid that everything is interpreted as a gotcha.
Yes, you do have to contend with some possible sabotage once in awhile. Welcome to message boards.
For example, with the new RODOH forum I am not happy about having had to mak`e it register-to-read instead of the unerstandable register-to-post convention, but the new forum software billing seems to require it, otherwise I have to pay substantially for Internet bots.
And with the new software, people will post a hundred times or so and elicit some wonderful commentary, and then all of a sudden for no known reason, that person will delete their own account and that is that, effectively destroying the continuity of an entire thread. And maybe worse, it looks like they got banned for "winning an argument" or something.
In having been the top poster at the old CODOH bbs almost back in the 20th century when there was a moderator feud (involving Hannover) that triggered Bradley Smith to close the board down entirely, this issue of needing to limit poster's edits never really came up that I can recall.
And then (given that there was no long any CODOG Forum) Hannover and myself started our own open-debate boards circa 2003 with different moderating styles. And then his board (for some reason that only Bradley Smith knew) got awarded the CODOH name. I wasn't consulted. (And no, I didn't doxx Hannover ─ that is disinformation.)
So anyway, I don't recall disputes about editing past posts other than Hannover thinking it was vitally necessary and tied to his notion of rigid topic policing in order to catalog "slam dunks" reliably (that were somehow going to sink the Hoax). But that rigid style (in my opinion) goes against the grain of open-debate. Bradley Smith didn't agree or disagree but then he never liked message forums in the least.
Anyway, as previously stated, if somebody is really worried about getting their opponents' words chiselled into stone when they are in a critical discussion, instead of like "nailing jelly to the wall" (an idiom that Hitler, Goebbels, and Teddy Roosevelt have all used if I remember correctly) then they can always use the board's Quote function every time. The original person cannot edit the quotes that are posted by others.
In back-and-forths, I don't usually do full Quotes myself because it (in my opinion) tends to clutter up threads ─ so I only quote when it seems necessary for intelligibility and for quoting accuracy.
I am not personally interested in shit-posting and pithy one-liners, but I guess I can balkanize things down more. Mostly, I think, why bother?