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Old 07-10-2013, 10:38 AM   #221
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Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post
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Originally Posted by neilgodfrey View Post

I do not believe Joel ever deliberately set out to shut down my blog, let alone "silence me". I understand Joel wanted one blog post of mine removed. Unfortunately he did not send me any prior request as per the DMCA directive, and Wordpress sent me nothing more than an email to my gmail account -- leaving no indication whatever on my blog as to the reason they had changed the status of the post from Public to Private, or rather, they left me not a single hint it was "They", the "Company", who had changed its status! (I assumed my co-blogger had changed it for some reason or that he had done so by accident.)
I think Tom is right.

I have not followed the details of all this very far, but it seems clear that things could have been better handled. However it also does seem quite clear that Joel never had any intention to take down Vridar, and that Neil accepts this. If so, much of what has been written is now unimportant.

It is equally clear that Joel did not want one of his posts to be used, not to comment but to subject him to personal abuse of a fairly aggressive kind, attacking him as dishonest etc. I should add that I have myself experienced that kind of knife-twisting malicious libel (although I don't suppose Neil intended that), and so I entirely understand his point of view. He did not write it for that purpose. Why should he assist his enemy, so he probably thought?
Roger, I don't see how it was that aggressive, certainly no more hyperbolic than terms used against Neil all the time. I have followed many of those exchanges and Neil takes a lot of abuse from McGrath, Hoffmann, and the like.

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Originally Posted by Roger

It is entirely understandable if Joel did not email Neil directly. I wouldn't email someone that I thought was doing that to me, because I wouldn't want to give my personal email address to a maddog troll. He asked the webhost to look after the matter. Again this is understandable: if I had some troll trying to "get me", hurling abuse at me, and I actually felt hurt (I have cultivated a layer of detachment, even indifference, these many years, and I recommend all sensible people do likewise), I might well do the same.
Roger, the ToS on Automattic suggest that the offended party contact the blogger directly on their blog, not by email. Watts did not do that. In order to file his claim, Watts had to read through those suggestions and ignore them. By filing the claim, he acknowledges that he did indeed read the terms.

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Originally Posted by Roger
It is entirely understandable, though, that Neil would feel that such drastic action as actually happened might reasonably have been preceded with an email.
It is understandable, because it is Automattic's policy. In fact, it is policy to comment directly on the blogger's site. There's a reason for that, a blogger might not check email before blogging.

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Originally Posted by Roger
Wordpress don't seem very user friendly, PR aside. At this point it all went bad. Who did what and in what order is probably not constructive; what happened was not Joel's fault. The point we need to take away from that bit of the story is that we need to keep our own archives offline of our content.
Ultimately, it is because Watts filed a petty DMCA claim protecting a few insulting introductory comments to his list of links.

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Originally Posted by Roger
The allegations of forged emails and the like all seem a bit extreme to me. People do what they do, but they rarely intend anything of this kind. Joel had no need to forge anything, remember. He probably merely uploaded whatever he had, when the question was raised, without worrying about it too much, and then found (if this is the case) that what he had put online wasn't correct. He wasn't under oath at the time.
It seems that Watts has been caught red-handed in his attempt to deceive. Whether "Joel had no need to forge anything," doesn't matter. It appears from the evidence that he did forge bogus emails. So it could be that upon reflection, Watts felt a need to forge evidence, even though he may have not had an actual reason to.

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Originally Posted by Roger
Let's have a little understanding of human fallibility here. I dislike mob-lynchings, where every little thing anyone does is subjected to the most hostile examination possible, and the worst conclusions drawn from any inconsistency. Viewing this, I felt considerable sympathy for Joel.
If it had been a mere moment of blogger rage that resulted in an ill-thought out DMCA claim being filed, followed by a comedy of errors that led to Vridar being taken down by WordPress, then I would agree. However, the apparent attempt to forge an email all the while implying (and others outright accused) Neil of being a liar is really very contemptible behavior.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger
I think we need to remember the cockup theory of human existence; that, while malice does exist, most of the bad things that happen do so because of carelessness or bad luck, rather than a conspiracy to do someone an injury. It can be hard to remember this, of course, if one feels upset or maltreated.
Up to the point of lying about sending an email, forging an email, and implying that Neil was lying, I would agree. After that, we part company on the "People will be people line."



Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger
This is an over-statement which does the author no favours. All that happened was a blog was taken down. Nobody was harmed. Severe consequences are when a man turns up at your house and arrests you, or the like. Let's have some proportion here, hmm?
It was damaging to free expression, potentially damaging. It also had collateral damage in that if Watts had told the truth and Neil claimed he had received no email, then Neil would appear to be lying. That is damage to Neil's reputation and there is no doubt that Watts had no regard for that when he made the false claim that he notified Neil and then apparently forged an email. It was also damaging in that Vridar had to spend considerable time and funds to get the site back up elsewhere.


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Originally Posted by Roger
No doubt so. Such is the effect of Murphy's law in every area of human existence; and likewise, one can't help feeling that Neil has been on the receiving end of what must have felt like a beating. As has Joel. So ... would you stop hurting each other please? Just ignore each other henceforth, I suggest. Neil ... this means you.
Watts' actions have been fairly reprehensible. Why would anyone want to let him off the hook?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger
Quote:
Originally Posted by neilgodfrey
Now that I have been free to answer your innuendo implying that I have complained that Joel was deliberately trying to shut down my entire blog, will you kindly allow the various comments I have sent to your blog answering your other outrageous allegations against me to be made public? Alternatively, I invite you to write a post citing the evidence for the claims in your other personal attacks against me.
I wouldn't make demands like this. If you were foolish enough to post stuff like this on his blog, and Tom has moderated your complaints, then he has done you a favour. Your tone here is one of whining self-entitlement. It's unmanly, to say the least, and does not attract sympathy from bystanders. Trust me on this.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
I disagree completely. Tom Verenna has implied all along, and even in that last post, that Neil Godfrey is dishonest. If anything, this case demonstrates Neil's honesty compared to Watts.

1.Watts claimed that he sent an email.
2.Godfrey maintained he had not received an email.
3.Watts produced a screenshot sent to Godfrey.
4.Godfrey continued to maintain that he had not received an email and was confused by the proffered evidence.
5.Watts continues to maintain that he sent an email to Godfrey, which Godfrey ignored.
6.Inconsistencies were noticed in the screenshot evidence which led to conclusions that Watts forged the email.
7.Watts has attempted to explain the inconsistencies, but the explanations have failed to explain the inconsistencies.


I think it is pretty clear what happened here. Wouldn't it be quite a coincidence if just the very email in question had suffered some sort of time glitch that made it appear to have been forged?

The easiest and best explanation is that Watts forged an email to make a) Neil look like a liar, b) cover his DMCA complaint and Automattic policies actions, c) deceive his friends and enemies, alike.

What else can be said?
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Old 07-10-2013, 10:40 AM   #222
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The allegations of forged emails and the like all seem a bit extreme to me. People do what they do, but they rarely intend anything of this kind. Joel had no need to forge anything, remember. He probably merely uploaded whatever he had, when the question was raised, without worrying about it too much, and then found (if this is the case) that what he had put online wasn't correct. He wasn't under oath at the time.
Roger, his system time shows the same time as the (supposedly) sent e-mail to Neil and his time and date settings is open on the screenshot.

Why is it "a bit extreme" to think that the guy changed the system time so he could "send" an e-mail at that time? :huh:
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Old 07-10-2013, 10:56 AM   #223
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What is so depressing about this thread is that no member of a party - whether 'atheist,' 'mythicist,' 'believer' etc - seems to be able to apply any objectivity to the treatment of another individual from an opposing camp. In this particular case the mythicists have a point. The bottom line is that there was a creative commons license for the very use that Neil was making of Joel's writings. I don't see how this can be gotten around. Joel probably forgot that he had the CC on his blog and treated this as a Wordpress issue. I don't blame him for that because until now I ignored the implication of my own Creative Commons license on my blog.

Of course I don't walk around thinking I am Polycarp incarnate clubbing infidels over the head all day so I wouldn't try to 'shut down' someone for saying nasty things about me. But maybe if I did think that way I would at least try to find it in me to apologize for my mistake and put this behind me. I think it is extremely likely that Joel forgot about the implications of the CC license. But it is depressing that his 'friends' and like-minded in the 'believers' camp can't admit that he is in the wrong here because of it. The CC license changes everything. That's why Joel appears to have removed it from his blog subsequent to his 'outing' as the one who filed the complaint.

This issue is black and white. Had the internet not provided 'instant' information and people ended up 'picking up' the story as it was still unfolding and decided to make up their minds prematurely, no one would be taking Joel's side on this. I think he overreacted to criticism which it must be said drifted into personal attack (something I am guilty of too). In retrospect, I don't know that Joel tried to destroy Neil's blog. I think he just overreacted. Maybe he was mad, hurt, offended - whatever. It really doesn't matter though. 'Hulk will smash' still has its consequences.
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Old 07-10-2013, 10:56 AM   #224
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Nor was he connected to the Internet at the screen time he allegedly sent this email.
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Old 07-10-2013, 01:46 PM   #225
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Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post

It is equally clear that Joel did not want one of his posts to be used, not to comment but to subject him to personal abuse of a fairly aggressive kind, attacking him as dishonest etc.
We are talking about someone who abuses, insults, misrepresents "mythicists". I caught Joel out in one of his comebacks in which he attempted to ridicule his targets "with facts". I do believe in holding to account "public intellectuals" who use their status to influence the thinking of a wider public.

There IS a time to call a spade a spade.

Here was my "personal abuse" in response to Joel of which you speak:

Quote:
In the past I have posted on biblical scholars I have caught out promoting and citing Wikipedia articles, books, journal articles, archaeological finds in support of their views that in fact directly contradicted their arguments and claims. Mercifully the names of these scholars have been relatively few. I have posted far more on many excellent biblical scholars who produce informative and interesting work.

But there is one more published biblical scholar who has come to my attention as another charlatan. I would hope that this post will embarrass him enough to pull him up and lead him to mend his ways. I really would much rather argue with a competent and honest scholar than an incompetent charlatan.

Recently Joel Watts referred to "the science of history" in a blog article. My blogging colleague queried the meaning of that phrase, and someone tweeted Joel to protest, so Joel Watts has come back like a steam-roller to squash any suggestion that history is not a science.

Normally this sort of ignorance can be overlooked. But Watts is a PhD student and a published scholar so he has attained the status of being a "public intellectual". As a public intellectual he deserves to be held accountable for what he publicly writes.

Joel Watts has no specialty in historical studies that I am aware of. I suspect few New Testament scholars have any idea of landmark names in the history and philosophy of historiography like von Ranke, Collingwood, Carr, Elton, White or the various schools of history. Yet he is quite prepared to publish on something he knows nothing about and insult others who do know what they are talking about.

Joel, if there's one lesson I'd like you to take from this post, it is this: Don't treat your reading public as fools. They really are smarter than you think. You even explicitly call us stupid, imbeciles, etc. yet you produce blatant charlatanry like the following.
I then copied Joel's post here, and commented . . . .

Quote:
So what is Joel's method here? How does he prove his point that history is a science? It appears he Googles the phrase "history is a science" or similar, collects a quick grab-bag of URLs that pop up, and posts them as a "There! Gotcha!" But he can't help but notice a few at least don't support the idea, so he mentions that too.

What he doesn't grasp is that the whole collection is nothing but a testimony to the fact that history is not today considered a science -- the main exceptions being some Marxists. The days when many historians thought of it as a science are now over a century gone.

This is the very method that his good friend and Associate Professor at Butler University has been caught out doing repeatedly -- and unrepentantly -- with Wikipedia articles on historical method and with citations from historians. How is it possible that such "scholars" continue to do this sort of thing? I can only presume they assume everyone else is as lazy and incompetent as they are and no-one will bother to check their citations.

Unfortunately for Joel Watts I have checked every one of those links and not a single one of them demonstrates that history is a science. Many/most (not "some") of them actually argue the very opposite! Many plead that they would like it to be a science, and most of these are from the nineteenth century or modern Marxists.

Let's look at each of those sites and ask what we learn about this scholarly fraud in the process: . . . .
As for your pearls of wisdom re Tom's slander against me, I can simply repeat: I challenge Tom to post the evidence on which he bases his accusations -- or allow me to post a defence on his blog. He won't. One reason is that Tom is exposed as falling into the same fundamental professional gaffes as his friends Watts and McGrath when targeting certain mythicists.
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Old 07-10-2013, 02:14 PM   #226
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I think perhaps it honestly isn't clear to you what's wrong with your post. If so, perhaps I can offer a suggestion or two?

It's always good practice, when talking negatively about something someone else has written, to avoid discussing them -- even if they are lying bastards -- and instead purely discuss what they have written. Do it in such a way as to avoid personal remarks. Why? Because as soon as you say something like "Bart Ehrman is a liar", you lose your audience. It may be true; but you lose your audience. You will of course retain the haters, those who yell, "Hell, yeah!" in the comments; but these are not the people you need to convince, or want to reach. Once phrases like "liar! scumbag! troll! couchon! bastard! (etc)" enter the post, everyone switches off. That's why the House of Commons bans "unparliamentary language"; because it terminates debate. Discuss the scholarship, not the scholar.

What I try to do is make sure I don't use the person's name, or the word "you", very often in the post (sometimes substituting "we" for "you" works, by the way). It does make for a bit of extra work. But it reduces the temperature perceptibly. Everyone has ideas. One can refute an idea, and even the author may be convinced, provided that we don't make it a matter of his personal honour. If we attack him, we get nowhere.

If one can manage it, it is generally better to suppose one's foes are misled, rather than dishonest. It keeps things sweeter.

Just a suggestion.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 07-10-2013, 03:18 PM   #227
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Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post
I have not followed the details of all this very far, but it seems clear that things could have been better handled. However it also does seem quite clear that Joel never had any intention to take down Vridar,
Howver if Joel removed the Creative Commons license on his site then it appears he intended to keep it down
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Old 07-10-2013, 04:19 PM   #228
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Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post
I think perhaps it honestly isn't clear to you what's wrong with your post. If so, perhaps I can offer a suggestion or two?

It's always good practice, when talking negatively about something someone else has written, to avoid discussing them -- even if they are lying bastards -- and instead purely discuss what they have written. Do it in such a way as to avoid personal remarks. Why? Because as soon as you say something like "Bart Ehrman is a liar", you lose your audience. It may be true; but you lose your audience. You will of course retain the haters, those who yell, "Hell, yeah!" in the comments; but these are not the people you need to convince, or want to reach. Once phrases like "liar! scumbag! troll! couchon! bastard! (etc)" enter the post, everyone switches off. That's why the House of Commons bans "unparliamentary language"; because it terminates debate. Discuss the scholarship, not the scholar.

What I try to do is make sure I don't use the person's name, or the word "you", very often in the post (sometimes substituting "we" for "you" works, by the way). It does make for a bit of extra work. But it reduces the temperature perceptibly. Everyone has ideas. One can refute an idea, and even the author may be convinced, provided that we don't make it a matter of his personal honour. If we attack him, we get nowhere.

If one can manage it, it is generally better to suppose one's foes are misled, rather than dishonest. It keeps things sweeter.

Just a suggestion.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
The reason I quoted Joel's post in full was to show that he was the one calling his opponents imbeciles and fools.

The point I was making is that Joel calls mythicists insulting epithets, something I could and usually do ignore, until he claims to add a veneer of scholarly wisdom to justify his insults.

I was doing more than dissecting Joel's "intellectual argument". I do that all the time with full respect of the scholars. I am not in the habit of denigrating scholars whose works I discuss or disagree with.

I do believe that the name-calling of the Watts's and the McGraths and the Verennas Simply.Has.To.Stop. as Verenna would say.

It is quite okay, it appears, for Verenna, McGrath and Watts to carry on the way they do with their abuse -- no protests. But let me call them out on this behaviour when they couple it with blatantly lazy and sham claims -- treating their public as fools -- That.Is.What.Has.To.Stop!
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Old 07-10-2013, 08:51 PM   #229
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post
I think perhaps it honestly isn't clear to you what's wrong with your post. If so, perhaps I can offer a suggestion or two?

It's always good practice, when talking negatively about something someone else has written, to avoid discussing them -- even if they are lying bastards -- and instead purely discuss what they have written. Do it in such a way as to avoid personal remarks. Why? Because as soon as you say something like "Bart Ehrman is a liar", you lose your audience. It may be true; but you lose your audience. You will of course retain the haters, those who yell, "Hell, yeah!" in the comments; but these are not the people you need to convince, or want to reach. Once phrases like "liar! scumbag! troll! couchon! bastard! (etc)" enter the post, everyone switches off. That's why the House of Commons bans "unparliamentary language"; because it terminates debate. Discuss the scholarship, not the scholar.

What I try to do is make sure I don't use the person's name, or the word "you", very often in the post (sometimes substituting "we" for "you" works, by the way). It does make for a bit of extra work. But it reduces the temperature perceptibly. Everyone has ideas. One can refute an idea, and even the author may be convinced, provided that we don't make it a matter of his personal honour. If we attack him, we get nowhere.

If one can manage it, it is generally better to suppose one's foes are misled, rather than dishonest. It keeps things sweeter.

Just a suggestion.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
The reason I quoted Joel's post in full was to show that he was the one calling his opponents imbeciles and fools.

The point I was making is that Joel calls mythicists insulting epithets, something I could and usually do ignore, until he claims to add a veneer of scholarly wisdom to justify his insults.

I was doing more than dissecting Joel's "intellectual argument". I do that all the time with full respect of the scholars. I am not in the habit of denigrating scholars whose works I discuss or disagree with.

I do believe that the name-calling of the Watts's and the McGraths and the Verennas Simply.Has.To.Stop. as Verenna would say.

It is quite okay, it appears, for Verenna, McGrath and Watts to carry on the way they do with their abuse -- no protests. But let me call them out on this behaviour when they couple it with blatantly lazy and sham claims -- treating their public as fools -- That.Is.What.Has.To.Stop!
I have been following these blog wars for some time and it really does get my ire up with McGrath, Hoffmann, and the like lump all "mythicists" as some kind of crank, nutter, conspiracy theorists. It does nothing for the tone of debate. It really does fall into the paradigm framework where instead of engaging in reasonable dialogue, the threat to the paradigm is shunted aside. I can list very many examples of the same happening in other fields, all of which the crank amateurs turned out to be correct (early habitation of the Western hemisphere, for example).
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Old 07-11-2013, 01:13 AM   #230
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Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post
I think perhaps it honestly isn't clear to you what's wrong with your post. If so, perhaps I can offer a suggestion or two?

It's always good practice, when talking negatively about something someone else has written, to avoid discussing them -- even if they are lying bastards -- and instead purely discuss what they have written. Do it in such a way as to avoid personal remarks. Why? Because as soon as you say something like "Bart Ehrman is a liar", you lose your audience. It may be true; but you lose your audience. You will of course retain the haters, those who yell, "Hell, yeah!" in the comments; but these are not the people you need to convince, or want to reach. Once phrases like "liar! scumbag! troll! couchon! bastard! (etc)" enter the post, everyone switches off. That's why the House of Commons bans "unparliamentary language"; because it terminates debate. Discuss the scholarship, not the scholar.

What I try to do is make sure I don't use the person's name, or the word "you", very often in the post (sometimes substituting "we" for "you" works, by the way). It does make for a bit of extra work. But it reduces the temperature perceptibly. Everyone has ideas. One can refute an idea, and even the author may be convinced, provided that we don't make it a matter of his personal honour. If we attack him, we get nowhere.

If one can manage it, it is generally better to suppose one's foes are misled, rather than dishonest. It keeps things sweeter.

Just a suggestion.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
But, in this very thread you called people scumbags, hypocritical, traitors, arrogant, vicious and dishonest.

See your own post #209

Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Pearse
....But those familiar with the restoration period, after 1660, will see a very similar society. It happens when those in power care about nothing but themselves, and consider any other approach contemptible or dishonest. Many of them were traitors, taking money from France; all of them were vicious, arrogant, corrupt, dishonest and hypocritical. A society run on this basis doesn't last - because no society can run on that basis, and such people pass on - but while it does, a great deal of misery is inflicted on the rest of us.

It is also the last period in which a great deal of legislation was enacted on what might or might not be said or done, and in which the category of "dissenter" was created, as a means to power, by these same scumbags. Augustine Birrell said that the rogue who drew up the law boasted that it would damn half the country and starve the rest. It is depressing to find policemen questioning clergymen and preachers, not for their actions, but for what they say. It brings back evil memories.
It is known that human beings can be dishonest--even clergymen and preachers.
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