That'll look great on you, Ginger.
Spike's Bitches 44: It's about the rules having changed.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I think that the bright blue with go well with your coloring and hair.
I can totally see you in that sweater.
Adding my voice to the sweater love.
Joining the sweater love choir. I totally think you'd look great in that, Ginger.
In Me news, that cold I had last week has dumped into my lungs and setting my asthma into full-blown ick. I've had to use my rescue inhaler today and I now have a 'script of prednisone. Joy.
New kids=new germs. I guess I have to get used to this bunch now.
Ethics question.
I was invited to present at a conference with understanding that the conference would pay expenses. Now they say they are out of money and can't pay expenses. My normal response would be to cancel my appearance, but there are some prominent people there I would really like to get this information to.
There are some well-to-do in people in town who I could ask to subsidize expenses. And normally if it was a straight political thing, or the money was going right to the conference I would not hesitate. But in this case the money would go for travel expense for me. To help spread a message they support, but still asking for a donation to attend a conference...
So is this really no different than asking for support for a non-profit thing (other than the lack of tax deduction)? Or would I be a schtunk if I asked some lefty business people and well-to-do progressives if were willing to subsidize this?
Definitely not unethical -- conference travel funds are a totally normal thing to get money for, whether it's part of your compensation or in the form of a travel grant or an informal/personal donation. If you feel personally uncomfortable (as opposed to unethical, and I suspect that I and a lot of other people would), maybe try approaching them through the conference organizers?
If you can't afford it, then you can't afford it. I say the fund-raising burden is on conference organizers.
D just told me he left work about 5 minutes before Anthony Hopkins came in to dine last night.
It's not unethical, but if it makes you uncomfortable, don't do it. You could give their names to the conference organizers and suggest that the organization solicit the donation.