How do you know when your post has been deleted, other then it just not being there? Are you to get an explanation? If you find the deletion to be unwaranted, can you appeal so to speak?
How do you know when your post has been deleted, other then it just not being there? Are you to get an explanation? If you find the deletion to be unwaranted, can you appeal so to speak?
"No one wanted to be mayor of Philadelphia. It was a thankless job, which for the first 56 years offered an annual salary of zero. In 1745, two men turned down the position and instead accepted large fines. In 1747, Anthony Morris fled to Bucks County to hide and thus avoid notification of his election. After Morris’s disappearance, a new election was held, and William Atwood was re-elected."
Typically the mod should send you a PM after deleting your post. Unless you are acting like a 4 year old, blatantly flaming people, maliciously taking a thread WAAAAAYYY off topic or just starting trouble in general. I've had my posts deleted before and I never thought to 'appeal' since I knew I was in the middle of a flame fest or somewhere I shouldn't have been.
edit - I just looked at the moderator log, and the reason for deletion seems pretty obvious. IMO personal battles are best handled in person or over the phone...or simply avoided.
"No one wanted to be mayor of Philadelphia. It was a thankless job, which for the first 56 years offered an annual salary of zero. In 1745, two men turned down the position and instead accepted large fines. In 1747, Anthony Morris fled to Bucks County to hide and thus avoid notification of his election. After Morris’s disappearance, a new election was held, and William Atwood was re-elected."
"No one wanted to be mayor of Philadelphia. It was a thankless job, which for the first 56 years offered an annual salary of zero. In 1745, two men turned down the position and instead accepted large fines. In 1747, Anthony Morris fled to Bucks County to hide and thus avoid notification of his election. After Morris’s disappearance, a new election was held, and William Atwood was re-elected."
Help! Landlord's in jail...
Today, 03:06 PM in Relocation - Moving to Philadelphia