Here are my thoughts on the subject:

Lets not confuse emphasis and importance. Emphasis defines how much something 
is stressed. We have
to remember that importance does not change the meaning of content. Something 
that is emphasized
is stressed more in relation to other things. Something that is de-emphasized 
is stressed less.
Using both is incredibly important to human speech, which is why my original 
use case was in
marking up dialogs. 


We should not add an attribute to em we should and a new de-emphasis element. I 
suggest <dem>.
Nesting is already common with current use of em and strong, and the new use of 
heading. Adding an
attribute to do this is a whole new concept and should be avoided. 


We already have multiple elements that do similar yet opposite things (e.g. 
ins/del) so adding a
de-emphasis to match emphasis is not a new concept. If you don't think multiple 
elements that do
similar thing should be in the spec then change <ins>/<del> to <edit 
action="">. But that of
course give merit to allowing an attribute on em to define the level of stress. 


The argument that no-one would use it is pointless. There are plenty of 
elements in the spec right
now that aren't likely to be used often, but they're still in the spec because 
they have merit. 


As for the default styling: I'd say either opacity or reducing text size for 
visual browsers. For
audio browsers, voice-stress seem like the obvious choice. 

Thank you for listening.
___ Jonathan Worent ___


 
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