This is topic Card at his Worst, and Best. in forum Discussions About Orson Scott Card at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
Card's newest column, as of Oct. 29, shows him at his worst, praising a book entitled "The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy." In fairness, I have not read it. However, even the conservative Economist thought it to be tasteless and, of course, blatantly partisan, comparing it with Michael Moore's work. He played is overused card (no pun in-ten-did), of pointing out the flaws of the United States Left, I use the term loosely, while ignoring the flaws of the Right.

But then, he hits home with his very accurate picture of Airlines and air-routes.

SUCH IS THE DICHOTOMY OF CARD!!

Don't worry OSC, thats why we love you, even when you make us angry, becouse you are human like us.

P.S. I have not heard you read, but I am sure you read like a human too.
 
Posted by antichris (Member # 8785) on :
 
I'm gonna have to side with Jello Biafra on this one:

"We live in a one party system masquerading as a two party system - where your choice is between conservative and... ultra-conservative"
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

Card's newest column, as of Oct. 29, shows him at his worst

Really? You think so?
 
Posted by Will B (Member # 7931) on :
 
quote:
"We live in a one party system masquerading as a two party system - where your choice is between conservative and... ultra-conservative"
Which explains why abortion through birth is law of the land.
 
Posted by Storm Saxon (Member # 3101) on :
 
quote:

SUCH IS THE DICHOTOMY OF CARD!!

SO SAYS BARON VON DOOM PELEGIUS, AND SO SHALL IT BE!

[Razz]
 
Posted by Irregardless (Member # 8529) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by antichris:
I'm gonna have to side with Jello Biafra on this one:

"We live in a one party system masquerading as a two party system - where your choice is between conservative and... ultra-conservative"

LOL... More like socialist & communist.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
I'm not sure that the opposite of the word "conservative" is "socialist."
 
Posted by JaimeBenlevy (Member # 6222) on :
 
I thought it was between Communist and Dictatorship.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by antichris:
I'm gonna have to side with Jello Biafra on this one:

"We live in a one party system masquerading as a two party system - where your choice is between conservative and... ultra-conservative"

But if you are a conservative, your view might be that the choice is between liberal and leftist...

I'm thinking that Howard Dean might be surprised to learn that he's a conservative. Or is he an ultra-conservative? Yeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaargh!
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
quote:
Card's newest column, as of Oct. 29, shows him at his worst, praising a book entitled "The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy." In fairness, I have not read it.
I'm not sure how him expressing his opinion of a book you haven't even read is an example of his "worst". Seems a little uncalled for, to me.

If you don't agree with him, then that's fine. But criticising his review because he didn't draw the same conclusions as some other reviewers is just unnecessary.

They're just opinions, I don't think we should grade them good or bad. They're good if you agree with them and bad if you don't. So by your logic "good" would be 6 billion yes-men; everyone would agree on everything.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
I ran across an aphorism the other day which I rather liked : "If two men agree on everything, one of them is useless. If two men disagree on everything, both of them are useless."

Apart from that, yes, you really do have the choice between conservative and ultra-conservative. Your average Democrat here would be considered a frothing right-wing loonie in Europe, and undoubtedly do very well in the polls, but that's another matter.
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
EI, this book was found to be tasteless and overly partisan by a conservative newspaper. I am not surporting censoring it, but why do I need to read something that The Economist found to be too right-wing.
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 233) on :
 
The odd thing about conservatives...they actually think that being partisan is tasteless.

Card doesn't care about "taste" in that sense. He goes for the jugular--in his writing anyway. So of course that's the kind of book that wins his admiration.

And of course, he also laments the title, the only part of the book that you have actually formed an opinion about. So really, insofar as you have bothered to check, he fully agrees with you.
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
You don't need to read it. But you also don't get to criticize someone else's take on a book that you're not bothering to read.
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
Reading books by the U.S. right is pointless. They all say the same things about how terribly persecuted they are, only controlling all three government branches, and how evil liberals hate America. Most a racists, OSC thankfully is not, all are militaristic. All believe in things that would embarrass even the most conservative European.

Note: reading books by the U.S. left is pointless. They all say the same things about how terribly persecuted they are (although, in fairness, they are pretty persecuted.)
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
I don't read them either. But I realize that takes away my license to criticize someone else's opinion of them.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
That's very kind of you, calling most conserviatives racist. I can't think of a more respectful comment.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
To be fair about it, I do think Europe has gone a bit far in the weenie-treehugging-hippie direction. There is such a thing as a national interest which weapons can protect effectively.
 
Posted by Princess Leah (Member # 6026) on :
 
There is such a thing as a global interest which weapons can destroy even more effectively.
 
Posted by Will B (Member # 7931) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pelegius:
Reading books by the U.S. right is pointless. They all say the same things about how terribly persecuted they are, only controlling all three government branches, and how evil liberals hate America. Most a racists, OSC thankfully is not, all are militaristic. All believe in things that would embarrass even the most conservative European.

Note: reading books by the U.S. left is pointless. They all say the same things about how terribly persecuted they are (although, in fairness, they are pretty persecuted.)

You might try reading political books some time. It shouldn't take much to change that opinion, since few books fit those descriptions.

[ October 30, 2005, 11:46 PM: Message edited by: Will B ]
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
I have. I am constantly sick of the fact that my country has only one party of any worth (the Greens) and that they are marginal. Germany has the Social Democrats and the CDU and CSU and the Greens, all of which are better than either the Republicans or the Democrats.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
I think that you have a stunning gift to see other people's sides of the issues. Very impressive. I can't for the life of me see how anyone would consider you biased.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
[Laugh]
 
Posted by texico (Member # 8670) on :
 
I haven't read the book, but I thought the worst of the last revue, was the comments about the airlines. I found it especially interesting that OSC condemns Al Franken for not knowing history, but makes comments about low cost airlines cherry picking routes that make it clear he at least doesn't know that history. The largest low cost airline and the largest domestic carrier is Southwest Airlines. They started out on short hauls and flying where others wouldn't go or would gouge. In fact the originally business plan was to compete with busses, not other airlines. Personally I would rather fly them than many of the full fare airlines because they deliver everything they promise. In fact I would say they under promise and over deliver compared to competing lines.
 
Posted by Orson Scott Card (Member # 209) on :
 
Southwest was a regional. When they went national, they cherry-picked.

Pelegius, you haven't read Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy. You don't know what you're talking about. It's baffling that you judge that I'm at my worst, when you haven't even bothered to check.

I expected VLWC to be biased; I was surprised that it was as calm and rational as it was, and as well documented. Isn't it just as possible that the Economist reviewer was reviewing the book he expected to see, rather than the book that was there?

I've read the wacko conspiracy books, or rather, read AT them, and when I bother to review them, I shred them - Left and Right.

But your way, Pelegius, is so much simpler. Condemn somebody else for being pleasantly surprised by a book YOU haven't read....

So easy to come on my website and attack me ... too much trouble to find out if I'm wrong first. Are you like this at parties, too? Loudly condemn the punch even before you've tasted it?
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
I would think so.

Punch is awful.
 
Posted by Princess Leah (Member # 6026) on :
 
Please, a little respect. I rather like punch.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
Then I would think you'd be happy I don't. More for you, neh? [Wink]
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
There's nothing worse than Mormon Punch. Who got the idea to add 7-up to Kool-aid? All the yucky feeling of spiked punch without getting drunk enough to ignore the taste.
 
Posted by Princess Leah (Member # 6026) on :
 
Kool-aid is the true cause of global warning. I am convinced of it. I am starting a revolutionary society to topple the Kool-aid companies. Join me and fight for the lives of your fellow men before it is too late!
 
Posted by Orson Scott Card (Member # 209) on :
 
Interesting. People can come on here and write about me with utter contempt, and hardly anyone calls them on it. But let me respond, and immediately the "peacekeepers" on Hatrack change the subject and bury the topic.

I guess the message is that you can use Card's website to speak of Card as if he were someone's idiot child, without even the ordinary concern that you know what you're talking about first. No one protests this. But let Card call you on it, and suddenly THIS must be prevented at all costs.

There are plenty of places on the web to vilify me to your heart's content. What special pleasure is there about doing it here on my own site? And why am I forbidden to answer the attacks?

I've checked. This doesn't happen on ANY other author's website.

Thank heaven for those sites where I'm repeatedly called a fascist and worse. Otherwise I'd get confused and think I was tolerant to the point of madness.

So even though it will be overwhelmed by "punch" posts, let me, just for the record, point out the obvious: Those of you who actually like my novels might make some connection between what feels important and true in those books and my lifetime of reading and research. Maybe, after all that study and those thousands of books and the many hours of analysis, I actually know a few things, here and there, about human behavior and history. And therefore, just maybe, my ideas on other subjects might be worth THINKING ABOUT for a couple of seconds before spitting on them, on the remote chance I might not be an utter fool. And maybe, even if you disagree with me, you could write about my ideas on my own website with ordinary human respect instead of the condescension that began this thread and which permeates it.

Of course, the very fact that I have to ask for respect is probably a clear indication that I don't deserve it and am never going to get it here.

[ November 01, 2005, 02:14 AM: Message edited by: Orson Scott Card ]
 
Posted by Dan_Frank (Member # 8488) on :
 
Mr. Card, you could not possibly know how many people like me frequent this site.

Well, maybe if you checked a sitemeter or something.

I have maybe four posts, but I've been reading here for years. I check for your articles several times a week even though I know you write them weekly. Every now and then, a new article pops up out of the regular scheme, and I giggle like a schoolgirl and count my good fortune.

I also read these forums, though I don't post. And though I enjoy reading thoughtful insights by many of your posters, if this were not the Hatrack River Forum, and Orson Scott Card were not an actual honest to God poster here, I simply wouldn't check back. For quite a long time, I didn't, because you weren't.

I think it's absolutely awesome that yours is the ONLY author's website where people come to frequently trash the author. Anne Rice recently attacked negative Amazon reviewers of her latest book... on Amazon. You put up with negative reviewers on your own bloody site. That's incredibly admirable.

I don't always agree with you (heck, I don't know that I even usually agree with you), but I think you are one of the most thought-provoking columnists I've ever read, and I have never felt that my disagreement was due to a lack of knowledge on your part (typically it's a difference in principles).

I pray near every day that I could one day be as insightful as you, that I could write with such truth. Being as successful as you couldn't hurt either.

Now I'm coming very close to deleting this. But I've always wanted to send you some email or message of how incredibly grateful I am that you do what you do, it just seemed to presumptuous to bother you with my thoughts. But if you can spare the time to read an attack, it seems you ought to be able to read some compliments too. So here it shall stay.

If it weren't for the fact that to send you an email I need to send it to the Help Desk or some such thing first, I would've sent you all this (and several more pages of disgustingly smitten adulation) years ago. But, I was always too embarrassed that it would be read by someone else, such as your webmaster, first.

I have nothing left to say but this:

Thank you.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
quote:
Interesting. People can come on here and write about me with utter contempt, and hardly anyone calls them on it.
I tend to ignore idiots of all stripes. And anyone who comes to an author's website just to heap contempt upon them is an idiot.

Thus, I ignore.

Posts of people I like and/or respect, I do not ignore. But that does not necessarily mean I reply as they might expect . . . [Wink]
quote:
But let me respond, and immediately the "peacekeepers" on Hatrack change the subject and bury the topic.
Not peacekeeping. Fluffing. Totally different.

Now, I can't take a serious topic and turn it completely to fluff. There are others here with that skill, but I am still learning at their feet. Some day I will learn the secret . . . I just hope it's not punch.
 
Posted by Gansura (Member # 8420) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Orson Scott Card:
Of course, the very fact that I have to ask for respect is probably a clear indication that I don't deserve it and am never going to get it here.

Please don't say never. I respect you and will do my best not to post anything to demean you or anyone else. Any disagreements I have will only be posted after I have considered the facts, the analysis, and done my own research. I am not saying this to boost my ego or to place myself upon some pedestal where I can wave my arms and scream that I'm OSC's biggest and most respectful fan.

Rather, I write that because I believe that this is the attitude that most people take towards the forums. By most people, I do not include only those that post or have accumulated more than x number of posts. The majority of people that read these forums do not post often. (this is complete speculation, but from what I've learned on other sites, I'd wager it is accurate). I like to believe that the reason many of us do not post often is because we take the time to reflect upon what we are writing. It is the nature of the internet as an anonymous forum that some people do not feel the need to filter what they write or say. Without such a filter they become the most vocal and most prolific posters. If I posted every thoght that came into my head while reading these forums and your columns, I would certainly have hundreds more posts than I do now.

I read this forum for years before registering. I was finally motivated to register when I realized what an amazing opportunity I had to interact with one of my favorite authors. Additionally, I was becoming more confident in my knowledge of current events and my ability to express my opinion in a well thought out manner. I anticipated becoming an active member of the Books, Film, Food, and Culture forum.

Unfortunately, I realized soon after registering that discussions move too quickly for me. For example, your column on abortion in Freakonomics disturbed me greatly. I did not want to agree with you. But instead of writing that on the forum, I first directed some of my friends to the column. Then we discussed it. Still, I did not feel prepared to offer a opinion without first reading, or at least skimming, the book itself. By the time I had gotten to this point, though, the discussion on the forum had moved far beyond the original topic. An debate that took well over a week in my head and my life was over in a few hours on the forums.

This is a very long-winded way of saying that I, and I think many that read this forum, subscribe to two rules: (1) If you don't have anything nice to say (or can't state your alternative opinion nicely), don't say anything at all. (2) Better to keep your mouth shut and have everyone think you're a fool than leave it open and let everyone know it.

I only post when I have something worthwhile to say. Sometimes a silly comment can be worthwhile; just so long as it is appropriate for that thread's intent. You have the respect of many of us. Please don't take our silence to mean that we support the disrespect of others. We'd just rather ignore the meanyheads as best we can.

Hmm... A hypocritical post. I haven't thought about it as much as I would have liked before posting. Now I fear that even the above will come off as condescending, though I intended it to be no such thing.
 
Posted by Cali-Angel-Cat (Member # 8799) on :
 
Okay, I cannot stay quite on this one. I am going to join Dan in saying Thank You!

I originally found the site somewhere between 1999 and 2000, and I posted quite a bit under a different nickname, which I have since forgotten.

I really like the fact that you post here Mr. Card, and are not just a name on the wall. You have made me laugh, cry, scream, and rant with things here as well as in your books!

Saints will always be my favorite novel, although, I have yet find a book that you have written that I dislike. Your writing books and articles are some of my most treasured possessions.

I have five years of posts to catch up on along with articles. Wow.

I just wanted to express my gratitude to you for all that you have done and will do in the future.
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
I've poked my head into this thread once or twice since it's been around, and it's really kind of ticked me off. But I haven't responded for one simple reason: I've been around long enough to know a troll when I see one. El JT de Spang (and, to some extent, Survivor and a few others) made some obvious and true comments near the top of the thread, and I don't think I could have added anything to them. I could have tried, but people like Pelegius make their deliberately stupid posts because they feed on the inevitable smack-down and the chaos that ensues. If I'd called him on his idiocy, it would only have achieved his goals, and I was hoping that this pointless thread would wither up and die, leaving room for the parts of this forum that matter.

I can't speak for anyone else, but I like to believe that the reason Pelegius got off as lightly as he did is because most people who read this thread were trying not to feed such an obvious and hideous troll. But as long as I am making what will hopefully end up being the only reply I ever post in a Pelegius thread, I'll just take this opportunity to say that I think he's a moron. And the worst kind of moron: one who thinks he's clever, and has enough time on his worthless hands that he wants to prove that to a bunch of strangers and one person he's delusional enough to think should give a damn about him. If he ever crawls out of his parents' basement and gets a job, he may realize that there are ways to make himself happy by contributing positively to society. But I won't hold my breath.

And as far as the actual content of his posts, I'm not going anywhere near that.

[ November 01, 2005, 01:08 PM: Message edited by: Speed ]
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
Pelegius at his worst.
And best.
 
Posted by Katarain (Member # 6659) on :
 
Mr. Card:

You only gave us an hour to come in this thread and agree with you before you got annoyed at the punch talkers. According to my timestamps, it was also the middle of the night.

I was asleep. [Smile]

Hatrack threads get derailed sometimes. Sometimes I say really witty and clever things that get ignored, too. At least I think they're witty and clever. Instead, people go on talking about other things. But then, a couple pages later, somebody responds to my point and I feel better about it. It's just the way forums work.

There are also some people on this board who are so often clearly wrong that it can really annoy me. I wish more people would call them on it. If I wait long enough, they do. (Or sometimes, I do.)

If I wait even longer, I start to understand why those people who can really annoy me are tolerated as long-standing members. People earn their right to be here and to be heard, I think. This Pelegius guy hasn't earned that right, so hardly anybody takes him to task. It doesn't help that he makes threads like this one with such profoundly stupid suppositions.

Personally, I'm used to people whose handle is hardly recognizable coming to this side of the board to nitpick one area or another of one of your essays. It's ridiculous and most definitely NOT clever and new. It's done to death. If other Hatrackers are anything like me, they find it tiresome. A few people might set the poster straight, and after that, nobody else needs to. There are all sorts of exciting things to be discussed on the other side, after all. [Smile] And sometimes there are respectful, valid posts on the subjects that become really interesting threads instead of personal attacks.

Anyway, don't assume that we sanction people like this guy just because we aren't posting or because we might post jokes instead. Traffic on this side of the board is typically slow...and it's even slower in the middle of the night. And really, Pelegius of the 136 posts hardly deserves the effort of typing out a rebuttal or a reprimand. But now it's been done, and those of us who usually read and rarely post (like me, lately), will nod sagely at the reprimands that he got and agree that he was out of line, but having nothing new to say, we'll click on another thread... and move on.

-Katarain
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
I'll reply to the punch talking thing, as I'm one of those that did it.

I'll liken it to this: Compare this to a grand opening of an art gallery, featuring the works of a great artist. It's a public opening, and all kinds of people are there, drawn primarily by the fact that they like the artist's works. The artist himself is there, but there are so many people, and sometimes he's circulating the room, but most of the time he's in his private studio. So you never know if he's in the area. Most of us like and admire him, and he is the main topic of discussion.

One of the conversations is started by this dude who's a bit irritating. You know, he's got poor spelling and grammar, is an extreme political bigot, can't see anybody else's side of the issue, and is very offensive in doing so. You know, your typical university professor in California.

Well, Professor Seaperson disagrees with some of the artist's opinions, and he's got no tact in doing so. Perhaps he thinks he's back at the U "teaching" a class. But anyway, he's rude and offensive, and he's pretty much alienated everyone listening, even the ones who might think his opinion has merit.

Those of us in the conversation with him, however, are mystified by his attitude, and we're poking mild fun at him, but we don't get worked up over him because he's just not worth it. We know that as offensive to us, he's got to be even more infuriating to the artist, who we respect. But seeing as the artist isn't in the area, we think, we don't slap the guy down quite as hard as we could, and besides, what's the use - he won't get it.

However, the artist has left his studio and is now circulating among the guests. He comes by our conversation and overhears the offensive guy saying really mean and idiotic things about him. The artist gets mad (understandably) and snaps at him. Also understandable, but surprising.

Silence. Awkward silence. What do we say? How do we react? We didn't mean for the artist to get angry. We understand the artist's sentiments, and some of us agree. We're uncomfortable because not only is this the artist's show, but we also like and respect the artist. You know, it's different if we get mad, it doesn't really matter as much, because it isn't our show.

So, then, someone gets the idea of saying something mild and humourous to ease the tension.

Relief. We can move the topic to something a little less charged, like punch. We're not trying to make peace, we don't care if the irritating guy is offended, but we want to avoid the awkward situation.

It's not that we don't want to defend the artist, it's just that we don't take the offensive guy seriously. There is condescension in the conversation, but we're condescending to the offensive guy, not the artist.

Stepping out of the analogy now.

This guy (at least on this thread) is a Grego, except that he's not family, either. Gregos = trolls.

My thought is that Hatrack really is a reflection of Card's works. In the majority of Card's books, underlying the story, is an exploration of morality. Ender's Game. Was what Ender did moral? Why or why not? Stilson, Bonzo, the Buggers, were their deaths moral? On Hatrack, as well, there is an exploration of morality. When we have this exploration, we have all types of people, all types of views. Some are like Card. Some are not. But opposing views and different people are necessary to fully explore these issue. Sometimes we get lost, sometimes we end up in dead ends or down in bad neighborhoods. Sometimes the people who are in front of the exploration are idiots. But we keep exploring. Hatrack is an OSC novel writ large.
 
Posted by Irregardless (Member # 8529) on :
 
If *I* was going to start a petty, pointless thread bashing OSC's writings on his own site, I'd definitely complain about his use of the spelling 'cooky' instead of 'cookie' in his recent essay. I still can't stop shuddering.
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
You mean if you were going to start a petty pointless thread...

It's called the subjunctive. It's your friend. [Wink]

[/meta-pettiness]

[ November 01, 2005, 01:06 PM: Message edited by: Speed ]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
Okay, I'll admit that I had to really try to find an example of Davidson's Law in your post, Speed, but there IS one: you need a comma after "petty."

*wipes brow*

------

BTW, tern, I know you and I don't always see eye-to-eye, but I thought that was a beautiful explanation of the phenomenon. May I save that post?
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
Yes! Well done. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
Thank you Tom, feel free to save it - I'm happy to know that I'm not the only one who feels that way. [Smile]
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
It is indeed a great post. I am going to have to object to one section, though.
quote:
You know, he's got poor spelling and grammar, is an extreme political bigot, can't see anybody else's side of the issue, and is very offensive in doing so. You know, your typical university professor in California.

My parents are both university professors (in CA). So are many of the people they invite into their home. And I attended UCLA.

You unfairly slander the majority of "university professors in California." Not that there are none like your description; but that is far from "typical."

[Razz]
 
Posted by Princess Leah (Member # 6026) on :
 
Good post, tern.
 
Posted by Storm Saxon (Member # 3101) on :
 
quote:

You know, he's got poor spelling and grammar, is an extreme political bigot, can't see anybody else's side of the issue, and is very offensive in doing so.

Excluding the poor spelling and grammar bit, I would say this is true of about 90% of the posters on this forum. As we all know, everyone is crazy but you and me, and I'm not so sure about you. [Smile]
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
Or as I say, "Between you and me we know everything. You know everything except that you're an ***hole, and I know that."
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
Heh. Guess I'm still bitter from my undergraduate years in the CSU system. ;P
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
People can come on here and write about me with utter contempt, and hardly anyone calls them on it. But let me respond, and immediately the "peacekeepers" on Hatrack change the subject and bury the topic.

I guess the message is that you can use Card's website to speak of Card as if he were someone's idiot child, without even the ordinary concern that you know what you're talking about first. No one protests this.

Not true. People protest this on a regular basis.

I myself have been told I have no integrity because of some of the defenses of you I have posted, both here and on Ornery.

Many others take the tack that you yourself described so well from Rasa's perspective in Ships of Earth concerning Kokor and Sevet's quips against Shedemai being ignored by the polite company and the subject changed.

Remembering that passage is one reason I often abandon my resolution to avoid conflict and wade in to fight some of the grosser attacks. It's also the reason that, when I can't bring myself to invoke another near flame-war, I sometimes send emails to people telling them I think they are being treated unfairly and that I recognize the injustice of the comments aimed at them.

I am not the only one who does so. Rivka has taken aim at some of the more idiotic comments directed your way, and she seems to have less taste for conflict that I do.

In this case, I saw the post was from Pelegius and didn't bother reading it at first.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
Actually, I was going to make a post similar to tern's this morning, but taking the analogy from the opposite side.

You know how, in the Bronte-esque movie dinner parties, there's always that one lady wandering around during the really awkward, dramatic moment, trying to distract everybody by offering them tea or somehow otherwise pretending there isn't an awkward moment happening?

That's how I see the fluffers.

I'm sure, like the lady who's trying to change the subject while the serious characters are staring daggers at each other, that they think they diffused the situation and that their tea and cookies kept anyone from noticing anything was happening.

In reality, if they were successful at all, it is only in keeping things from being resolved.

It cracked me up to come back tonight to find nearly the same analogy used to argue the other side.

Fluffers fiddle while Rome burns.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by tern:
Heh. Guess I'm still bitter from my undergraduate years in the CSU system. ;P

Be nice! My mom has been a CSUN lecturer for a number of years (and was at CSULB for a year or two a while back). [No No]


And Dags is correct. While I have little taste for conflict, I will fray away when I consider it necessary. [Wink]

But sometimes I don't. And then I will discuss punch. [Razz]



And docmagik, sometimes Rome isn't really burning. Pour enough gasoline on it, and that can change, though . . .
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
What did your mom teach at CSUN? How long ago was she there?

In all fairness, there are certainly some quality teachers in the CSU system, and even some at the University of Last Resort (CSUN). And I didn't mean to tar every professor with the same brush...just most of them. ;P

Doc, Pelagius isn't a serious character or a main character in this little melodrama. Card is, but Pelagius is just a troll who needed to go back under his bridge, and there was no serious discussion here.
 
Posted by docmagik (Member # 1131) on :
 
: Heroically resists urge to mention that his Mom teaches at CSUSB :

Actually, serious discussion has started here--about fluffing.

The whole reason I didn't post this morning was that in the context of the thread as it stood, I didn't think it was worth it, and it wasn't entirely accurate to this particular situation.

But now that the discussion has turned to the virtues of fluffing and everybody's getting all warm and fuzzy about it, I felt that my original thoughts might need to be said after all.

But there are still smoldering embers of grand blazes on this forum that had a deafening accompaniment.

Just sayin'.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
quote:
What did your mom teach at CSUN? How long ago was she there?
She is there now. (Well, not this very minute. [Wink] ) She has taught math classes there for something like 15 years. Um . . . maybe longer. I don't remember what year she started.


quote:
In all fairness, there are certainly some quality teachers in the CSU system, and even some at the University of Last Resort (CSUN). And I didn't mean to tar every professor with the same brush...just most of them. ;P

You know, I not only know several CSUN staff members, I know quite a number of current and former students.

All of them are nicer than you are being. [Razz]
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
Look, I believe in trying to treat others with respect, give their ideas real consideration, and respond with the presumption that they've given those ideas at least as much consideration.

But this is a little ridiculous.

Mr. Card, this isn't a "writer's page" like the blogs of Neil Gaiman or Piers Anthony, a place where the author picks and chooses which correspondence he or she will respond to in his own time, perhaps editing said correspondence so his or her response appears in the best possible light. This is a forum, and that means that along with some interesting ideas and undoubtedly a good dose of praise (since virtually everyone who comes here does so out of appreciation for your writing) there will undoubtedly be some comments you find less appealing and critical. When you open the table to discussion, you accept that you relinquish some control in favor of the flexibility to create and throw out ideas. That's the price. Bully to you for showing that much bravery- but accept that that bravery has this cost!

Mr. Card, I have had many teachers who have used the argument- usually when backed into a corner- that they were wise, learned, and well read. That their arguments and tactics should be given the benefit of the doubt because of it. Many of these people were in fact wise and well read, and I'm grateful that I was able to learn from them because of that.

But none of their wisdom or learning prevented them from being, on occasion, dead wrong.

-

To the other respondents,

With Mr. Card responding as infrequently as he does (reasonably enough- he does have to do some of the writing that actually puts bread on the table, now and again), it seems like people trip over themselves in placation at this kind of interjection. That booming voice from on high- the creator is actually paying attention, scurry, scurry! Suddenly Pelagius is a troll, and people look for quotes that allow for his ideas' dismissal, and sneer at his grammar and syntax.

Pelagius was ill-equipped to comment on criticism of a book he had not read. True.

But was he wrong? Completely off-base, off-the-charts, wrong? So inherently wrong in every facet that his comments warrant derisive dismissal without examination but for what examination furthers that dismissal?

I'll grant, I certainly have my biases. In some cases I try to overcome them, in others, to justify them.

But what I find is that at least part of what Pelagius says is true: many of Card's articles accept such ideas as a powerful and corrupt left-wing political establishment, a morally bankrupt Hollywood, a uselessly pseudo-intellectual academic structure- without bothering to examine whether the association is appropriate for the given subject, or even true in general. These things have become "givens", self-evident truths that require no examination.

I could be wrong, Pelagius could be wrong. But you'll never know if you retreat from the issues rather than examine them. Now your pardon while I dismount my high horse.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Sterling wrote:
Mr. Card, I have had many teachers who have used the argument- usually when backed into a corner- that they were wise, learned, and well read. That their arguments and tactics should be given the benefit of the doubt because of it. Many of these people were in fact wise and well read, and I'm grateful that I was able to learn from them because of that.
But none of their wisdom or learning prevented them from being, on occasion, dead wrong.

And if Mr. Card's response was at all aimed at the idea that we must believe what he says because of his wisdom, learning, and reading, this might be relevant. Rather, he said this:

quote:
Orson Scott Card wrote:
And therefore, just maybe, my ideas on other subjects might be worth THINKING ABOUT for a couple of seconds before spitting on them, on the remote chance I might not be an utter fool. And maybe, even if you disagree with me, you could write about my ideas on my own website with ordinary human respect instead of the condescension that began this thread and which permeates it.

quote:
Sterling wrote:
But was he wrong? Completely off-base, off-the-charts, wrong? So inherently wrong in every facet that his comments warrant derisive dismissal without examination but for what examination furthers that dismissal?

Interesting. You seem to be demanding that we give Pelegius something which you just took OSC to task for when he asked for that himself. And frankly, Pelegius gave us NOTHING to analyze except his word that the Economist reveiwed the book the way he said it did. Mr. Card actually dealt with that argument, quite successfully.

quote:
Sterling wrote:
But what I find is that at least part of what Pelagius says is true: many of Card's articles accept such ideas as a powerful and corrupt left-wing political establishment, a morally bankrupt Hollywood, a uselessly pseudo-intellectual academic structure- without bothering to examine whether the association is appropriate for the given subject, or even true in general. These things have become "givens", self-evident truths that require no examination.

I could be wrong, Pelagius could be wrong. But you'll never know if you retreat from the issues rather than examine them. Now your pardon while I dismount my high horse.

And we've actually had discussions on these very topics on this very board.

Here's a hint: if you want to actually engender discussion, don't just post your conclusions and expect us to do your analysis for you. Both you nad Pelegius have posted conclusory statements without providing citation or other evidence. There's nothing to discuss here until you do so.

As for retreat and dismissal, why don't you apply that analysis to "the creator is actually paying attention, scurry, scurry! Suddenly Pelagius is a troll, and people look for quotes that allow for his ideas' dismissal, and sneer at his grammar and syntax."

Sounds like dismissal to me. And if dismissal is retreat, it sounds like retreat.
 
Posted by Omega M. (Member # 7924) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Irregardless:

If *I* was going to start a petty, pointless thread bashing OSC's writings on his own site, I'd definitely complain about his use of the spelling 'cooky' instead of 'cookie' in his recent essay. I still can't stop shuddering.

I found this jarring too, but the dictionary lists both spellings.
 
Posted by Somnium (Member # 8482) on :
 
I think we should start a pointless arguement about how dictionary.com is far superior to dictionary.reference.com !

Honestly, I could care less about someone's beliefs until they start to cause harm to others. [Smile]
 
Posted by Somnium (Member # 8482) on :
 
That is, as long as they are totally unfounded. Then it drives me nuts.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
>> I could care less about someone's beliefs until they start to cause harm to others.<<

"Harm" is entirely subjective.
 
Posted by Orson Scott Card (Member # 209) on :
 
When I was young, "cooky" was definitely the preferred spelling. In English, we take many "y" endings and pluralize them with "ies." Occasionally, we back-form and take the plural "ies" and make a singular "ie" ending out of it. I haven't checked recently, but I do believe "cooky" was the original; and it remains the spelling that feels most natural to ME, though I usually bow to current convention and use the now-more-common "cookie" spelling as often as not.

I'm grateful to Sterling for demonstrating exactly the condescension-while-not-actually-paying-attention-to-what-I-actually-said that I have been talking about. Consider his posting to be a "viz.:" footnote to my earlier post.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
According to Random House, both "cookie" and "cooky" were regional spellings derived from the Dutch word "koekie," which was itself a dialectal variant of "koekje," or "cupcake." The "cooky" variant was apparently common in the American West until the late '50s, at which point "cookie" became the generally-accepted standard.
 
Posted by Tammy (Member # 4119) on :
 
quote:
You know how, in the Bronte-esque movie dinner parties, there's always that one lady wandering around during the really awkward, dramatic moment, trying to distract everybody by offering them tea or somehow otherwise pretending there isn't an awkward moment happening?

I'm disturbed by this discription, it describes me to a tea.

*takes a bite of her cooky and drinks her tea*
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
I have no desire to condescend to you, Mr. Card. Quite the opposite; I hold you to a high standard. When I compare you to my past teachers, I am not being sarcastic; I hold that you are a person of some standards, intelligence, experience, and reading.

And to berate Pelegius for rudeness and failing to read the book without actually engaging the underlying question of whether there is a prevading right-wing bias is beneath you. That it would have been better informed to have read the book than just the criticism, I've recognized. This does not mean the question of bias is the result of failing to "think about your ideas for a couple of seconds without spitting on them."

You may feel, as Dagonee appears to, that these points have been sufficiently, even excessively, worked over in this and other forums. That's a legitimate point of view, but it's not what comes across in your post.

Dagonee, however one might dislike the phrasing Pelegius' post may have been, it did not dismiss Card's point of view. It stated that there appeared to be a dichotomy between Card's (my terms) "slanted" political writings and his "lucid" examination of the airlines. If I have been dismissive, explain. If you're just playing to the bench, give it a rest.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
Actually, I think Dagonee is referring to the comments made by other posters than Pelagius when he refers to dismissive posts that sneer at Pelagius's grammar and style. Like the ones I made. [Smile] But hey, as has been aptly pointed out, I am mean, and Pelagius is a troll. While trolls might have good points or not, feeding them is still a bad idea.

I don't think that Card was wrong to call out Pelagius nor was he out of line in the manner that he did. I don't think it was useful, because if it registered at all on this Pelagius character, it probably was to give him satisfaction that he got a reaction.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Sterling, you seem to have an interesting and inconsistent idea of dismissive. Here's what Pel said about OSC's review of the book:

quote:
Card's newest column, as of Oct. 29, shows him at his worst, praising a book entitled "The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy." In fairness, I have not read it. However, even the conservative Economist thought it to be tasteless and, of course, blatantly partisan, comparing it with Michael Moore's work. He played is overused card (no pun in-ten-did), of pointing out the flaws of the United States Left, I use the term loosely, while ignoring the flaws of the Right.
In other words, he said this was Card at his "worst" because Card liked a book the Economist did not.

That's not analysis. Card wrote a couple of screenfuls on this topic, and Pelegius dismissed it with a reference to a single article in a magazine, with no particular reason why we should credit the Economist's view over Cards.

That's dismissive.

As for you being dismissive, we see it in your most recent post: "If you're just playing to the bench, give it a rest." You were also dismissive when you posted: "the creator is actually paying attention, scurry, scurry! Suddenly Pelagius is a troll, and people look for quotes that allow for his ideas' dismissal, and sneer at his grammar and syntax."

A whole bunch of people posted different thoughts on Pel's comments, and you summed them all up and assigned them the motive of currying favor. That's dismissive.

tern, I have not commented on the dismissiveness of anyone's posts toward Pelegius.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
My bad, I just reread the post. You're absolutely right, that was Sterling. *checks eyeglasses*

So, Sterling, why should we take a troll like Pelagius seriously? Do you feel that he in any way showed an interest in a serious discussion?
 
Posted by Jhai (Member # 5633) on :
 
*waves*

The Economist isn't what I would call a conservative magazine. They aren't liberal either. Like, you know, the vast majority of people or groups, they can't be simply given an overarching label of one or the other. On one issue they may take the "conservative" view (such as monetary policy) and on another the "liberal" view (like the War on Drugs).

I'd just like to clear that bit up.

Feel free to continue. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
In other words, he said this was Card at his "worst" because Card liked a book the Economist did not.

That's not analysis. Card wrote a couple of screenfuls on this topic, and Pelegius dismissed it with a reference to a single article in a magazine, with no particular reason why we should credit the Economist's view over Cards.

That's dismissive.

Having failed to read the book (shame), Pelegius took a single review (a regrettably narrow sample) as context to the premise that Card in particular approved of the book, above and beyond a general concensus of others whose points of view are typically classified as "right wing" (The Economist) and might thus be expected to approve of a book such as _The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy_.

However, given Card's willingness to, among other things, refer to the "Clintonistas" (a term I'm going to presume was not present in the book), perhaps Pelegius has some grounds to suggest that Card's comes from a point-of-view that is right of center, and that this may have influenced his favorable review of said book. His grounds to criticize the book itself are sketchy; his grounds to judge the lens through which Card observes that book, less so.

quote:
As for you being dismissive, we see it in your most recent post: "If you're just playing to the bench, give it a rest." You were also dismissive when you posted: "the creator is actually paying attention, scurry, scurry! Suddenly Pelagius is a troll, and people look for quotes that allow for his ideas' dismissal, and sneer at his grammar and syntax."

A whole bunch of people posted different thoughts on Pel's comments, and you summed them all up and assigned them the motive of currying favor. That's dismissive.

I can't quote every single post in the forum every time I make an argument; no one would read them. And I can't speak for every post that is made, but I can point to a tone. That's shorthand, it's not dismissive.

Before Card's post, there was a combination of banter and serious discussion:

quote:
SO SAYS BARON VON DOOM PELEGIUS, AND SO SHALL IT BE!
quote:
I'm not sure that the opposite of the word "conservative" is "socialist."
quote:
I'm not sure how him expressing his opinion of a book you haven't even read is an example of his "worst". Seems a little uncalled for, to me.

If you don't agree with him, then that's fine. But criticising his review because he didn't draw the same conclusions as some other reviewers is just unnecessary.

quote:
The odd thing about conservatives...they actually think that being partisan is tasteless.

-Being a few examples.

After Card's posting:

quote:
I think it's absolutely awesome that yours is the ONLY author's website where people come to frequently trash the author.
quote:
I tend to ignore idiots of all stripes. And anyone who comes to an author's website just to heap contempt upon them is an idiot.
quote:
Please don't take our silence to mean that we support the disrespect of others. We'd just rather ignore the meanyheads as best we can.

quote:
Saints will always be my favorite novel, although, I have yet find a book that you have written that I dislike. Your writing books and articles are some of my most treasured possessions.
quote:
I've been around long enough to know a troll when I see one. El JT de Spang (and, to some extent, Survivor and a few others) made some obvious and true comments near the top of the thread, and I don't think I could have added anything to them. I could have tried, but people like Pelegius make their deliberately stupid posts because they feed on the inevitable smack-down and the chaos that ensues.
quote:
People earn their right to be here and to be heard, I think. This Pelegius guy hasn't earned that right, so hardly anybody takes him to task. It doesn't help that he makes threads like this one with such profoundly stupid suppositions.
quote:
It's not that we don't want to defend the artist, it's just that we don't take the offensive guy seriously. There is condescension in the conversation, but we're condescending to the offensive guy, not the artist.
-And yes, I understand when he spoke of "the artist" he was speaking metaphorically.

quote:
If *I* was going to start a petty, pointless thread bashing OSC's writings on his own site, I'd definitely complain about his use of the spelling 'cooky' instead of 'cookie' in his recent essay. I still can't stop shuddering.
That's not all of the posts, but it's a large sample. And most of those not in that line were, as has been discussed, "fluffing", which while it doesn't imply attempting to curry favor, certainly suggests an attempt to mollify the author's sudden and unexpected flare. Card posted, and things changed completely. And while some would argue that the tone before Card's post was lightly contemptuous of Pelegius, the tone afterward was openly and venomously so, and certainly no one saw fit to speak in a fashion *contrary* to that tone.

I asked, seriously, if you weren't "playing to the bench" that you illuminate what you found dismissive in my post.

You have attempted to do so. Thank you. If you found the manner of my posting abrasive, I would say likewise of your suggestion I "take a hint" as to the "proper" manner to engender discussion and your supposition as to what the [royal?] "we" see in my prior post.

Tern, we may well have different impressions of what defines a troll. But most of the internet posters I would consider trolls don't praise their targets as they rake them:

quote:
But then, he hits home with his very accurate picture of Airlines and air-routes.

...

Don't worry OSC, thats why we love you, even when you make us angry, becouse you are human like us.

And if they bother to post again at all, it's usually only to pour more fuel on their own fires and insult people who post to the contrary. Admittedly, Pelegius hasn't posted back to this topic recently, but then, I can't exactly blame him for that.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Sterling, you seem to be under the impression that I've claimed Pelegius wasn't dismissed. I haven't.

quote:
And I can't speak for every post that is made, but I can point to a tone.
But you didn't point to a tone. You stated what the motives of the posters were when you had no way of knowing that.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
quote:
Reading books by the U.S. right is pointless. They all say the same things about how terribly persecuted they are, only controlling all three government branches, and how evil liberals hate America. Most a racists, OSC thankfully is not, all are militaristic. All believe in things that would embarrass even the most conservative European.
Yep, that's a troll post.

I will grant that there are far worse trolls, but little gems like that are what it's all about, saying something incredibly inflammatory in order to elicit reactions.

quote:
And if they bother to post again at all, it's usually only to pour more fuel on their own fires and insult people who post to the contrary.
Yes indeedy, see the first quote.

quote:
And most of those not in that line were, as has been discussed, "fluffing", which while it doesn't imply attempting to curry favor, certainly suggests an attempt to mollify the author's sudden and unexpected flare. Card posted, and things changed completely. And while some would argue that the tone before Card's post was lightly contemptuous of Pelegius, the tone afterward was openly and venomously so, and certainly no one saw fit to speak in a fashion *contrary* to that tone.

Fair enough, the tone certainly did change because of Card's post. Before he posted, nobody was really taking the thread seriously. However, we all take Card seriously. So the posts after Card's post were a response to Card's post, even when they were talking about Pelegius.

So if our "fluffing" was an attempt to mollify Card's flare, what is so bad about that? Were we required to continue on in the same lightly contemptous vein? Why not lighten the tone? It's kinda like we're with friends, and everyone's joking around, and suddenly one of the guys gets mad at what was said. So we're like whoa, didn't know that bothered you so much, let's talk about something less charged.

You used the Bronte movie analogy. It falls apart, because there weren't any "main characters" who were staring daggers at each other. This wasn't a discussion between say, Pelegius and Card. Pelegius made three posts before Card replied to him, and Pelegius never replied to that. There was no back and forth between them, and the vast majority of the posts were other people including the fluffers. There wasn't going to be any resolution, either. What, you think Pelegius was going to post back that he was wrong, maybe he should have read the book? Several other people called him on it before Card, and he told them that he was firm on the fact that he didn't need to read it to judge it.

Again, when we changed our tone after Card's second post, what was so bad about that? I rather think that the "venomous contempt" was what we felt beforehand, but we didn't have a reason to post it. I felt he was offensive and idiotic beforehand, but I try not to haul out the artillery right at the start.

So yes, Card's posts changed the tone of the discussion. After all, this is the Official Web Site of Orson Scott Card. At least on this side of the forums, everything really does revolve around him.

I think you do us a disservice by implying that we changed our tone in order to suck up to Card.
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:
Having failed to read the book (shame), Pelegius took a single review (a regrettably narrow sample) as context to the premise that Card in particular approved of the book, above and beyond a general concensus of others whose points of view are typically classified as "right wing" (The Economist) and might thus be expected to approve of a book such as _The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy_.

However, given Card's willingness to, among other things, refer to the "Clintonistas" (a term I'm going to presume was not present in the book), perhaps Pelegius has some grounds to suggest that Card's comes from a point-of-view that is right of center, and that this may have influenced his favorable review of said book. His grounds to criticize the book itself are sketchy; his grounds to judge the lens through which Card observes that book, less so.[/QB]

[Roll Eyes]
Translating Leftspeak into English:
quote:
"OK, so Pelegius reviewed a book review without bothering to read the book. That's not good. But Card uses words like "Clintonistas" which proves that he's right of center. So it was good for Pelegius to start a whole thread that dismisses Card's review. You don't have to know anything about the topic to dismiss an argument, once you know that the argument was written by a <gasp> conservative.

 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
In the final analysis, Sterling, that's not that different than the Ayatolla Khomeni school of thought, where all you need to act as judge, jury, and executioner on any matter is a penis and a Qu'ran. You've essentially said, like Khomeini, that all you need in order to proclaim your authority on any matter, is ideological correctness.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Let's get this straight -- anyone who dislikes Clinton is right of center?
Oh, let's not get this straight. It might prevent the grinding of axes, and nobody wants that.

Translating what I actually said into a straw man argument:

quote:
"OK, so Pelegius reviewed a book review without bothering to read the book. That's not good. But Card uses words like "Clintonistas" which proves that he's right of center. So it was good for Pelegius to start a whole thread that dismisses Card's review. You don't have to know anything about the topic to dismiss an argument, once you know that the argument was written by a <gasp> conservative.
You can dislike Bill Clinton or the Clintons in general without referring to them by defamatory nicknames. God knows I don't like everything he did in office. It was, as I said, one example among other things, which spares me from having to quote the entire article in every damn post.

If the topic was the book, he was insufficently informed. However, if you will look at the topic line, it isn't talking about the book, it's talking about Card and the point of view from which he reviewed that book and other things.

And even IF someone is to the right of Genghis Kahn or to the left of Karl Marx, that doesn't mean their point of view should be dismissed out of hand. Nor did I say anything of the sort. It just means you consider that they're coming from that perspective when they venture an opinion.

I'll thank you not to think to put words in my mouth again.

Moving on...

quote:
But you didn't point to a tone. You stated what the motives of the posters were when you had no way of knowing that.
I just _did_ point to a tone, but putting that aside for a moment, what I said was

quote:
it seems like people trip over themselves in placation at this kind of interjection
That's my personal interpretation. That seems to be the goal of many of the posters. Do I look into their brains to dredge out the absolute basis of the reasons of their posting? No, and no one does. That doesn't prevent me or anyone from interpreting the intentions of a post. If it did, no one could call Pelegius a troll in the first place.

Beyond that, I said that people were calling Pelegius a troll (they were), referencing quotes they claimed typical of his prior behavior (they were) and criticizing his spelling and grammar (which may have been a slight mis-reading of one of Tern's posts.)

Mmm, actually, come to think of it, "curry favor" was actually _your_ term.

Okay. Tern? Have a seat.

quote:
Yep, that's a troll post.

I will grant that there are far worse trolls, but little gems like that are what it's all about, saying something incredibly inflammatory in order to elicit reactions.

That's one interpretation, and I won't deny that it has a certain validity. Personally, I find that when someone makes a statement that is so obviously false by way of over-generalizing, I presume they're exaggerating for the sake of effect. Which may or may not be troll behavior. I just can't take a post that says *all* works from the left and right are useless seriously... Until I see a pattern of such comments, at which point my mindset goes from amused incredulity to the dread that comes from realizing you're sitting on the bus next to a crazy person.

quote:
Yes indeedy, see the first quote
Yeah. But... That's one quote. In every other quote, Pelegius is at pains to mollify his statements (Card isn't a racist, of course I wouldn't condone censorship...) If he's a troll, he's a peculiarly Hatrack variety of troll.

quote:
So if our "fluffing" was an attempt to mollify Card's flare, what is so bad about that? Were we required to continue on in the same lightly contemptous vein? Why not lighten the tone? It's kinda like we're with friends, and everyone's joking around, and suddenly one of the guys gets mad at what was said. So we're like whoa, didn't know that bothered you so much, let's talk about something less charged.

Hmm.

Blast it, tern, you're so reasonable.

I guess it depends on whether what was happening before had, or could have had, some value. I like to imagine it could have, but that's kind of spilled milk. I think what's here now is probably going to disintegrate once this segment of the discussion is done, for better or worse.

When Card interjects opinions in the general course of things, offers an insight, shares some bit of personal experience- it's great. It _is_ like being among friends, and pretty cool friends at that.

The Card who showed up here was more like the father yelling "You live under my roof and you will obey by my rules, or you will leave!" I'm not saying he explicitly threatened anyone- he didn't. But it was a reminder of The Owner, The Authority Figure, The Looming Presence. Or to use another inapt metaphor, it's like having a joke with someone over lunch and then suddenly being forcibly reminded that the person you're having lunch with is your boss. Watching the effect of that here has been eerie. It makes me hope it doesn't happen often.

quote:
You used the Bronte movie analogy
Uh, I'm sorry, I can't comment on this, because I _didn't_ use the Bronte movie analogy. That was... Lemme see...docmajik. I haven't even touched on that one.

quote:
So yes, Card's posts changed the tone of the discussion. After all, this is the Official Web Site of Orson Scott Card. At least on this side of the forums, everything really does revolve around him.

I think you do us a disservice by implying that we changed our tone in order to suck up to Card.

"Suck up" is too harsh. To your point of view, you moved to soothe the ruffled feathers of an offended friend so the party could continue (I guess I am moving into Bronte territory. <sigh>) To mine, the entire conversation took a dip and a swerve because of one poster, probably heading towards a dead end. In most cases, that wouldn't happen. But the poster was Card. Would anyone else's indignation be treated so?

(Edit for minor spelling/UBB error)
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
You can dislike Bill Clinton or the Clintons in general without referring to them by defamatory nicknames.
Defamatory nicknames? [ROFL]

As anyone with minimal knowledge of Spanish (e.g. has eaten twice at a Mexican Restaurant) knows, -ista means "supporters of." Clintonistas means supporters of Clinton. Bushista would mean supporters of Bush.

Not defamatory. Descriptive.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
Heh, you're right...the Bronte analogy wasn't you.

*checks glasses again*

*wait, realizes doesn't wear glasses*

I'm sorry - it looks like it's my day to mis-attribute people. Probably because we covered the correct way to do citations in class recently, brain hurtssssss.

quote:
But the poster was Card. Would anyone else's indignation be treated so?
This is something I've been thinking about ever since Card posted. I believe I have an answer.

No. Nobody else's indignation would be treated that way.

A polite fiction is maintained at times, that Card is just another poster and should be held to the same standards (good and bad) that apply to all the other posters. Is Card just another poster?

No. He's not.

There - I've said it. The way I see it, Card is unique on Hatrack. He is special. Card is the common thread binding all of us here. He's the reason for the season, if you will pardon my blasphemy. Why do most of these political discussion threads get started, on both sides of the forum? In response to Card's essays. Why is there a forum labeled "Discussions About Orson Scott Card"? He is the topic of the discussion in every thread on this side. This is Card's official website. He pays for it and he provides it. Regardless of anyone's opinion of him or his beliefs, he is the central figure on Hatrack. He has authority and influence here. I'm sure there are some exceptions, but almost everyone comes here because of Card. Nobody comes in the beginning because of me, nobody comes in the beginning because of anyone else on this website. Just Card.

The fact is, almost everyone here cares about Card. We want his approval, we want his comments, we want him to be happy, we want him to write many more books. Especially if they are like Enchantment or Pastwatch.

And so, for these reasons and many similar reasons, Card is treated differently and percieved differently. There are different standards for Card. And rightly so.

So should Card avoid posting in the forum?

Absolutely not. He's different, and he's special, but it's not a bad thing. It's just a different thing. He should continue posting, and we all, including Card, should remember that there are different rules for him.
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:
Translating what I actually said into a straw man argument:

quote:
"OK, so Pelegius reviewed a book review without bothering to read the book. That's not good. But Card uses words like "Clintonistas" which proves that he's right of center. So it was good for Pelegius to start a whole thread that dismisses Card's review. You don't have to know anything about the topic to dismiss an argument, once you know that the argument was written by a <gasp> conservative.
You can dislike Bill Clinton or the Clintons in general without referring to them by defamatory nicknames. God knows I don't like everything he did in office. It was, as I said, one example among other things, which spares me from having to quote the entire article in every damn post.

If the topic was the book, he was insufficently informed. However, if you will look at the topic line, it isn't talking about the book, it's talking about Card and the point of view from which he reviewed that book and other things.

And even IF someone is to the right of Genghis Kahn or to the left of Karl Marx, that doesn't mean their point of view should be dismissed out of hand. Nor did I say anything of the sort. It just means you consider that they're coming from that perspective when they venture an opinion.

I'll thank you not to think to put words in my mouth again.

Oh, I'm not putting any words into your mouth. Just trying to get the English meaning of what you said.
quote:
"OK, so Pelegius reviewed a book review without bothering to read the book. That's not good. But Card uses words like "Clintonistas" which is somehow "defamatory," proving that Card is unapologetically right of center. So it was good for Pelegius to start a whole thread that critiques Card's review. You don't have to know anything about the book to criticize the book review, once you know that the book was reviewed by someone whose point of view is so twisted that he commits atrocities like put a Spanish suffix on Clinton, and to say other awful things that I don't want to go into here."
Does that cover it, or am I misunderstanding you still?
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

As anyone with minimal knowledge of Spanish (e.g. has eaten twice at a Mexican Restaurant) knows, -ista means "supporters of." Clintonistas means supporters of Clinton. Bushista would mean supporters of Bush.

Well, no. I'm aware -- and I'm sure that Card is aware -- of the connotations of "-ista" in English. "Clintonista" is almost as loaded as the term "feminazi."
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TomDavidson:
quote:

As anyone with minimal knowledge of Spanish (e.g. has eaten twice at a Mexican Restaurant) knows, -ista means "supporters of." Clintonistas means supporters of Clinton. Bushista would mean supporters of Bush.

Well, no. I'm aware -- and I'm sure that Card is aware -- of the connotations of "-ista" in English.
Really? Please illustrate, other than "Clintonista," where that's been used as a pejorative.


quote:
"Clintonista" is almost as loaded as the term "feminazi."
If that's true (and that's the first I've heard it), it's probably because after Clinton was out of power, many of the people who screamed and rallied to support and protect him, now want to deny that they ever did such a thing. The pejorative, if any, probably has more to do with the "Clinton" than the "ista." Although to be fair, these fair weather friends seem more contemptible than Clinton himself, who had his strengths as a president as well as his weaknesses. I'll never understand OSC's loathing of Clinton, but I find Clinton's fair weather friends far more disturbing.

In LDS American culture, I've heard folks who like to argue with anti-mormons refer to themselves as "zionistas." [Big Grin] Maybe it's because we're more friendly with Latinos rather than dispising them, that we don't see "ista" as innately pejorative.
 
Posted by BannaOj (Member # 3206) on :
 
So does that make beach bums sandinistas?
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
>_<

AJ! That was AWFUL!
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
Or we could all be Orsonistas, since Cardista doesn't roll off the tongue.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
It does if you say it with a Spanish accent. Cahr-DEES-tah! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by BannaOj (Member # 3206) on :
 
I grew up in a hispanic community. To me "-ista" generally implies militarism, as a result of the widespred usage of sandinista and the connotations thereof.

It isn't a complimentary familiar form to my knowledge. I think any one who would choose to self-identify as a Zionista is sadly unaware of larger scale marketing implications and/or linguistic derivations outside of Utah. To me it immediately implies someone in a militaristic quasi-christian looney fringe such as Fred Phelps. But with guns.

AJ
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BannaOj:
I grew up in a hispanic community. To me "-ista" generally implies militarism, as a result of the widespred usage of sandinista and the connotations thereof.

It isn't a complimentary familiar form to my knowledge. I think any one who would choose to self-identify as a Zionista is sadly unaware of larger scale marketing implications and/or linguistic derivations outside of Utah.

BO, I grew up in Mexico, DF, and I also lived in Spain. I don't know what the suffix means in "hispanic community," USA, but I do know what it means in countries that speak real Spanish. People in Utah are more familiar with what the word means in Latinoamerica, since most in Utah has either been to Latinoamerica or has a close friend who has been there. So please don't make presumptuous, condescending, and innacurate remarks about the state with the highest number of advanced degrees and the greatest familiarity with foreign cultures.

[ November 03, 2005, 03:32 AM: Message edited by: Ghengis Cohen ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Sterling, if you're going to read that much into "Clintonista," then surely you're capable of realizing the obvious insulting connotations of "eople trip over themselves in placation at this kind of interjection. That booming voice from on high- the creator is actually paying attention, scurry, scurry."
 
Posted by Katarain (Member # 6659) on :
 
Might I suggest that way too much attention is given to the sterlings and pelegiuses of the world?
 
Posted by BannaOj (Member # 3206) on :
 
I wasn't concerned about what "Zionista" was taken to mean in actual spanish speaking countries. I was more concerned about how it would be interpreted in the rest of the US, since, you know, they generally live in the US for most of their lives dispite possible missions elsewhere.

In some hispanic communities in CA it is actually pretty sad, because the parents don't teach their kids Spanish because they want them to learn English, but only know broken English so the kids aren't really fluent in either language, but a wierd bastardized English is all they've got. If someone I knew called themselves a Ricardo-ista it would probably mean that Ricardo was their local gang leader, and I'd double check their shoes to find out which gang they belonged to.

I realize Zion-ist has already been taken. I don't know if Zion-ite has. I am just amazed anyone would chooose to self identify as a Zion-ista, because the PR problem is the same as Clintonista, Bushista, or anything else. In common US journalistic usage, that I have seen, it implies one is militant follower of whatever is in the noun being modified, and is very rarely self-chosen by the group.

Someone who was a Clinton follower would generally *not* self-identify as a Clinton-ista or a Gore-ista any more than a Bush follower would call themselves a Bush-ista, or a Rove-ista. They would likely self-identify as liberal in the former and conservative in the latter, and be insulted if the adjective was thrown their direction. Neither would be conducive to productive dialog, if your goal is actually productive dialog.

As a non-LDS if I met an LDS that self-identified as a Zionista, I would tiptoe away. Very Carefully.

AJ

[ November 03, 2005, 10:13 AM: Message edited by: BannaOj ]
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
The term Zionista is self-deprecating, but that's not quite the same thing as derogatory. And it's not a common phrase; just a self-deprecating joke among a few LDS internet warriors. I used to be zionista myself until the late 1990s when political discussions became more interesting to me than being a religious apologista. All it entailed was refuting ridiculous anti-LDS rumors like orgies in LDS temples, that we believe bizzare things about Mary, and other nonsense. Nothing particularly dangerous or militant. Just humilliating people who circulate falsehoods about LDS beliefs and practices. It was a hobby of mine for a couple years after my sister's life was threatened in Bulgaria because of such rumors.

In Mexico, -ista identifies members of the major political parties. Panistas are members of the PAN, and Pri-istas (that's how they say it; I don't recall how they say it) are members of the PRI. It's no more derogatory than "democrats" and "republicans."
 
Posted by BannaOj (Member # 3206) on :
 
But we aren't talking about Mexico. We are talking about how the appelation -ista has been used in US journalism. And if, you are actually comparing a US polititical group using the mexican suffix as you defined above I think it is even more derogatory and insuinating of corruption and groupthink loyalty, given the level of political corruption in Mexico vs. the US.

I think the militarist interpretation is actually kinder than the corruption implications in your definition above.

quote:
Just humilliating people who circulate falsehoods about LDS beliefs and practices. It was a hobby of mine for a couple years after my sister's life was threatened in Bulgaria because of such rumors.

I'm sorry about your sister. Do you really believe humiliation produces a productive change in attitude at the individual level? I tend to think it leads towards resentful bitterness in the main.

AJ
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

The term Zionista is self-deprecating, but that's not quite the same thing as derogatory.

And if someone called himself a Clintonista, it would also be self-deprecating. Calling someone else a Zionista or a Clintonista or most sorts of -ista is therefore merely deprecating. Which is pretty close, IMO, to being derogatory.
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BannaOj:
But we aren't talking about Mexico. We are talking about how the appelation -ista has been used in US journalism.

We are? I thought we were talking about how Card used it. Card is not a journalist.

quote:
And if, you are actually comparing a US polititical group using the mexican suffix as you defined above I think it is even more derogatory and insuinating of corruption and groupthink loyalty, given the level of political corruption in Mexico vs. the US.
America's far worse than Mexico on the groupthink front.

PANistas have done more to end corruption in Mexico than any other group -- DESPITE the efforts of Clintonistas like Carville who personally went down to try in vain to stop the corrupt PRI from losing the first free and fair presidential election in 70 years.


quote:
I think the militarist interpretation is actually kinder than the corruption implications in your definition above.
You know, just after I said all those nice things to me, you thow out Utah = Ignorant, and now you're saying that Mexican = corrupt. Please understand these stereotypes of people I know and lived with really try my patience. I don't think you're intending to offend me, but please go easy on the regional/cultural slurs, OK?

quote:
Just humilliating people who circulate falsehoods about LDS beliefs and practices. It was a hobby of mine for a couple years after my sister's life was threatened in Bulgaria because of such rumors.
------
I'm sorry about your sister. Do you really believe humiliation produces a productive change in attitude at the individual level? I tend to think it leads towards resentful bitterness in the main.

I don't think that humilliation produces any productive change in attitude at the individual level. It's PR. If I just correct the error, people have a better chance of remembering the colorful lie, than the dull boring facts. To counter a colorful lie, you need to present something that people are going to remember. I'm fairly creative, but with a really pernicious liar, I'd eventually run out of time, patience, and mental energy, and so I'd humilliate them, make clear why their idea was rediculous, their sources corrupt and bankrupt.

It wasn't much fun, and after a while, I moved on.

[ November 03, 2005, 05:58 PM: Message edited by: Ghengis Cohen ]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

I thought we were talking about how Card used it. Card is not a journalist.

But, um, you are. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
I am *not* a journalist, Tom.

And mildly deprecating is a LONG way from derogatory. Hell, man "zionista" is affectionately deprecating, like "little brother."
 
Posted by odouls268 (Member # 2145) on :
 
quote:
If *I* was going to start a petty, pointless thread bashing OSC's writings on his own site, I'd definitely complain about his use of the spelling 'cooky' instead of 'cookie' in his recent essay. I still can't stop shuddering.
Definition of Cooky

cook·ie also cook·y Audio pronunciation of "cookie" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (kk)
n. pl. cook·ies

1. A small, usually flat and crisp cake made from sweetened dough.

Three seconds of research.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

And mildly deprecating is a LONG way from derogatory.

I submit that it's not the person doing the deprecating who gets to make that assessment.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Tom's submitting again!
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
As anyone with minimal knowledge of Spanish (e.g. has eaten twice at a Mexican Restaurant) knows, -ista means "supporters of." Clintonistas means supporters of Clinton. Bushista would mean supporters of Bush.

Took Spanish to mid-level in college, thanks. And that doesn't change that the group most familiarly referenced by the -ista suffix in the United States is the Sandanistas, a paramilitary Marxist group. Effectively, calling them "the Clintonistas" is implying that that they're marxist in their leanings and boderline violent in their fanatacism. Which might be why, strangely enough, you wont hear anyone referring to "Bushistas", let alone from within the group of Bush supporters. And, gee whiz, you could even know that without having ordered food in a Mexican restaurant!

quote:
Oh, I'm not putting any words into your mouth. Just trying to get the English meaning of what you said.
And either failing miserably, or not trying.

quote:
Sterling, if you're going to read that much into "Clintonista," then surely you're capable of realizing the obvious insulting connotations of "eople trip over themselves in placation at this kind of interjection. That booming voice from on high- the creator is actually paying attention, scurry, scurry."
First, the "Clintonista" thing was one example. I'm not reading everything into that alone, but as I said, I'm getting a little tired of postings that consist largely of quotes, especially if I'm going to have to reply to multiple people each time. I'll provide more examples if you really want, but I don't think this topic is moving that direction.

People _did_ trip over themselves in the attempt to placate Card, in the sense that all conversational momentum swung in that direction.

The "the creator is paying attention, scurry, scurry" comment was intended to be dramatic, perhaps was excessively so, but was not intended to be insulting. You recently chided me to not presume to know the motives of my fellow posters, so I'm going to ask you take my word for it on my motive for this one.

quote:
Might I suggest that way too much attention is given to the sterlings and pelegiuses of the world?
You may, but if all you have to contribute is lumping us together (under "trolls", I presume?) and vaguely wishing I'd go away, I wish you wouldn't.

quote:
The fact is, almost everyone here cares about Card. We want his approval, we want his comments, we want him to be happy, we want him to write many more books. Especially if they are like Enchantment or Pastwatch.

And so, for these reasons and many similar reasons, Card is treated differently and percieved differently. There are different standards for Card. And rightly so.

So should Card avoid posting in the forum?

Absolutely not. He's different, and he's special, but it's not a bad thing. It's just a different thing. He should continue posting, and we all, including Card, should remember that there are different rules for him.

I wouldn't be here if I didn't like his writing (well, his fiction writing, and his writing _on_ writing, anyway) either.

And, no, I wouldn't want him to stop posting. But I worry about the effect of posts like the ones here on the forum as a whole. It would be a pity for someone to see that and leave, thinking this was only a place for people who were in lockstep with Card. He didn't demand such submission, but growling anger provoked a reaction like screaming violent retribution.

It's unnerving, to see the very thing that unites us, divide us.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
You may, but if all you have to contribute is lumping us together (under "trolls", I presume?) and vaguely wishing I'd go away, I wish you wouldn't.
Instead of lumping us together?
 
Posted by FIJC (Member # 5505) on :
 
quote:
"Card's newest column, as of Oct. 29, shows him at his worst, praising a book entitled "The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy." In fairness, I have not read it."
I don't think you should criticize Card's opinion if you haven't even read the freaking book! Who cares what the Economist said or thinks? Don't use it to justify your opinion. Why don't you read it and then tell us what you think? lol.

Off the subject, but I find it humorous that you consider the Economist a right-wing rag. It seems the Brookings equivalent of fairly moderate to me.
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TomDavidson:
quote:

And mildly deprecating is a LONG way from derogatory.

I submit that it's not the person doing the deprecating who gets to make that assessment.
How strange to say that a person's not allowed to determine what he meant by a remark!

Since Pelegius was using the phrase to discuss OSC's POINT OF VIEW, the intelligent and relevant question is, what did OSC mean by that remark. Not, what would a typical prejudiced-against-mexicans gringo mean if he used that term. Not even what others may reasonably construe the term to mean in this culture. If you're talking about OSC's point of view, that's a subjective analysis, and OSC's the ideal person to make that analysis.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
Tom's submitting again!

Maybe Christy's into that sort of thing.
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:
Took Spanish to mid-level in college, thanks. And that doesn't change that the group most familiarly referenced by the -ista suffix in the United States is the Sandanistas, a paramilitary Marxist group. Effectively, calling them "the Clintonistas" is implying that that they're marxist in their leanings and boderline violent in their fanatacism. Which might be why, strangely enough, you wont hear anyone referring to "Bushistas"

Google search on "bushista"

Results 1 - 10 of about 25,900 for bushista. (0.31 seconds)

Any more factoids you'd like to spin off your head for us, Sterling? [Wink]


Examples:
quote:

El arma religiosa bushista-thatcheriana de la globalización [Voltaire] - [ Translate this page ]
El arma religiosa bushista-thatcheriana de la globalización | Los cristianos
renovados | El Estado de Texas se ha convertido en un centro difusor del ...
www.voltairenet.org/article120615.html - 44k - Cached - Similar pages

bushista-thatcheriana refers to supporters of Bush and Thatcher. The difference in suffixes does not mean that they like Thatcher more than they like Bush. Bushiana and Thatcherista just don't roll off the tongue as easily as bushista-thatcheriana. We have similar suffix sets that mean the same thing but get used alternately according to what's easier to say.

Here's another one:
quote:
John Kerry ataca a Venezuela para ganar votos de anticastristas de ... - [ Translate this page ]
"Más bushista que Bush". Muchos progresistas parecen no percibir a Kerry como una
... "Kerry parece ser mas bushista que Bush cuando de Cuba y Venezuela se ...
www.aporrea.org/dameverbo.php?docid=16322 - 27k - Cached - Similar pages

Translation: John Kerry seems more "Bushista" than Bush himself with regard to Cuba and Venezuela.

Ah, now here's another kind of usage I'd forgotten about:
quote:
Americas Program | Commentary | La victoria de Bush y América Latina - [ Translate this page ]
¿Cómo afectará la victoria bushista al resto del mundo y del continente?
La victoria de Bush y América Latina. por Isaac Bigio | 22 de noviembre de 2002 ...
americas.irc-online.org/ commentary/2002/sp_0211bush_body.html - 11k - Cached - Similar pages

Here, the word Bushista doesn't even refer to Bush's followers. It's simply the genetive form of Bush: "la victoria bushista" simply means Bush's victory. "¿how will Bush's victory affect the rest of the world and the continent?

There are some in English, too, including this US military link:
http://www.google.com/search?q=bushista&hl=en&lr=&start=20&sa=N

quote:
DoD News: Pentagon Spokeswoman Steps Down
Pentagon Spokeswoman Steps Down. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld announced
today that chief Pentagon Spokeswoman Victoria Clarke would step down ...
www.defenselink.mil/releases/2003/nr20030616-0102.html - 29k - Cached - Similar pages

Most of the other Bushista links in English appear negative. But not communist. One compares him to Hitler, who while many bad things, was not a Marxist.

[ November 03, 2005, 09:44 PM: Message edited by: Ghengis Cohen ]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:
Most of the other Bushista links in English appear negative.
Well, duh. Which is what I've been saying. [Wink]
 
Posted by Kit the Odd (Member # 4975) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sterling:

People _did_ trip over themselves in the attempt to placate Card, in the sense that all conversational momentum swung in that direction.

Do you suppose that this could be because we like him, want to be happy, and want him to like us too?

An internet forum is a poor place to try for those last two, but it is cheaper than moving to Greensboro and trying to become his buddy. Especially since that would probably make him unhappy and really dislike us.

"I'm your 2059th biggest fan! Unless you are counting wieght, then I move up considerably."
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
*giggle*

Kit, are you a SuperLurker, an alt, or have you not visited for a while?
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TomDavidson:
quote:
Most of the other Bushista links in English appear negative.
Well, duh. Which is what I've been saying. [Wink]
Indeed you have, which is why I said your response was merely irrelevant; Sterling OTOH was dead wrong. [Razz]
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
I'll even concede that most of the English usages of the word were derogatory, Tom; but as I've explained above, that's irrelevant.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
Except that you appear to be claiming that it is unlikely that Card was familiar with the common English usage and connotation of the suffix, and I disagree with that assessment. Your own Google examples -- and other Google examples; try Googling "Clintonista" some time -- suggest that I'm not wrong about how "-ista" is generally used, and I don't think it's unreasonable to believe that a professional author and culture analyst of Card's caliber would be aware of it.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
You may, but if all you have to contribute is lumping us together (under "trolls", I presume?) and vaguely wishing I'd go away, I wish you wouldn't.
Instead of lumping us together?
I described actions, Dag. If you think that description applies to you, I'm not the one lumping you together, certainly not under a term like "troll".
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
You did not decribe actions. You ascribed motives to actions with no basis for doing so, lumping together everyone who performed those actions under a common motive.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
Yes, in Spanish you can find the -ista suffix used in conjunction with Bush. In a Spanish culture, it doesn't have the negative association. It would mean, as said, "followers of Bush". Beyond that, you've done an admirable job of suggesting my original point, that an -ista suffix in the United States in the midst of an English essay implies a strong negative sentiment towards the parties so described.

Before I could be dead wrong, you would have to show that you understood what I said in the first place. Still waiting.

And if the only person whose interpretation of a writing mattered was the author, Dagonee wouldn't be suggesting my earlier post was insulting, and whole bodies of literature wouldn't exist.
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
As I post under the name Pelegius, which, aside from clearly being difficult for many to spell, obviously attracts hatred from all who worship at the Alter of the Sacred Nation-State and offer blood-sacrifices to their War-Gods, my opinions are judged to be useless and immoral. I am constantly attacked, yes I, for I am personally the subject of many more attacks than anything I say is, for holding views that do not coincide with the those of the far-right wing.

Yet, I recant, I recant, I recant: in the future I will read everything I call partisan and tasteless, with Mein Kampf being first on my list.

I am no censor, nor I am a hypocrite, although gladly to my critics ascribe such titles to me: I firmly hold to the right of every human to practice his or her own brand of idiocy, providing that, in doing so, they injure none. I also do not support partisan leftist literature that pretends to be scholarly. There are certain standards which must be met in order for a treatise to qualify as being sound in a logical empiricist way. A freedom from political bias is almost always held to be one of these standards.

Thus, I dislike books like "The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy" because they are anti-intellectual, polluting as they do the already tainted air of political philosophy.

If this is a narrow-minded viewpoint, then I know not how to be broadminded, nor, perhaps, do I wish to learn.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

for holding views that do not coincide with the those of the far-right wing

No. That's not why.
It's because you're scornful and intolerant and dismissive of your opponents' intelligence and integrity, and don't seem to recognize the irony of dismissing a book for being "anti-intellectual" when you haven't actually read a word of it.
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pelegius:
I am no censor, nor I am a hypocrite, although gladly to my critics ascribe such titles to me:

I couldn't find anyone who called you either of those names here. "Moron" and "troll" maybe, but not "censor" or "hypocrite".

Just thought that might make you feel better.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
[Laugh]
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
Okay. So I've never been on Hatrack before, but some of you know me from Ornery under another, cleverly impenetrable guise. [Big Grin]

Now I happily risk permanent expulsion because I seem to be the only one here (perhaps because I am not really a fan of Card's fiction) willing to call him out on this:

quote:
Interesting. People can come on here and write about me with utter contempt, and hardly anyone calls them on it. But let me respond, and immediately the "peacekeepers" on Hatrack change the subject and bury the topic.

I guess the message is that you can use Card's website to speak of Card as if he were someone's idiot child, without even the ordinary concern that you know what you're talking about first. No one protests this. But let Card call you on it, and suddenly THIS must be prevented at all costs.

There are plenty of places on the web to vilify me to your heart's content. What special pleasure is there about doing it here on my own site? And why am I forbidden to answer the attacks?

I've checked. This doesn't happen on ANY other author's website.


Now, I will grant you that Pelegius walked into it big-time by coming to a totally unfounded conclusion.

But look at these words. "Utter contempt," "idiot child", "forbidden to answer my own attacks."

Folks, you are all walking into it. There is no escaping it. This man, like many famous people, has a pathological desire to be loved by one and all, and when he isn't he gets his nose bent out of joint.

You are way too easy on him. If someone invited me over to their house for an evening of conversation, and said host only every spoke up to complaim about how he was being victimized by those guests who disagreed with him, I would consider that host to be rude and boorish. I would suspect that his only reason for inviting people over was to have them meet his need for approval.

No one in this thread even came close to showing "utter contempt" to OSC. Pelegius even explicity used the word "love" in his opening post. And THEN, at 2 am no less (by my time zone) Card shows up and reads the absence of anyone rushing to his defense and/or agreement as, in his own words, an active attempt to "bury the topic." From this, he infers that he is "forbidden" to answer the attacks.

Fobidden. On his own website. Is this not the height of absurdity?

This debate about OSC's political columns vs. his books will never be resolved. It has nothing to do with logic, and everything to do with what he reveals to us of his own personality. He does not respect you as equals, he prefers you as a meek and obedient flock. Look how carefully you tiptoe around him...and still he shows up just to berate you! And so many of you respond afterwords, still so gently, as one would to the grumpiest of red-faced grandads, to no avail. No concilliation from his end.


quote:
I've checked. This doesn't happen on ANY other author's website.

And this would be...why, exactly? [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
TomDavidson, books are as good as their ideas. I could write a book consisting of the words "Affiliate Marketing Forum" and nothing else. I could not expect it be considered good. Logic, being a science, cannot afford to be as partisan as a book entitled "The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy" clearly is. Political Science must be held to the same standards as other sciences. I am 100% sure that "The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy" is not unbiased, and thus 100% sure that it is of no use whatsoever to anybody, save to the writer, who profits, and the politiques, who love propaganda. Yes, I do consider propaganda, that is to say all works of "philosophy" not held to the standard of logical analysis of, say, Geometry.
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
quote:
I am 100% sure that...
Yet you still seem to have trouble grasping that this statement is ridiculous. I'm not 100% sure I'll live through the night, but you're 100% sure that a book you've not read is biased and useless. That shows me nothing but that you no nothing of logical analysis beyond how to correctly spell it. The fact that you still haven't figured out why it's criminally stupid to judge something you know nothing about explains why you took offense to everyone's reaction to said judgement.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
quote:
You are way too easy on him. If someone invited me over to their house for an evening of conversation, and said host only every spoke up to complaim about how he was being victimized by those guests who disagreed with him, I would consider that host to be rude and boorish. I would suspect that his only reason for inviting people over was to have them meet his need for approval.
First, one of the reasons that I am so offended by the attacks on OSC is BECAUSE in the same evening that he is required to defend himself, he will graciously answer many questions and even make comments congratulating people on babies or make silly comments in the fluffier threads. I don't think he comes here looking for a fight.

Second, and I don't think I've ever written this to anyone before, so count yourself special, your post makes you look like a total a$$. How can you attribute such base motives to someone who you don't know personally?

I've seen Card accused of alot of things, but stupidity isn't one of them. If he only wanted sheep, he could delete posts and ban members until he'd tailored his flock to fit his needs. I think that there is a big difference between not wanting to be bashed whenever he enters the forum and wanting people to hang on his every word.

Come on, KidB. Ornery is a comfy rock. Can't you crawl back under it?
 
Posted by Paul Goldner (Member # 1910) on :
 
"How can you attribute such base motives to someone who you don't know personally?"

Probably in the same way OSC does it?
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
Pelegius,

I haven't read the book either, but I'm guessing the title is a wee-bit ironic.

Here's the lowdown from Amazon:

quote:
Democrats raised an unprecedented level of funds in their attempt to elect John Kerry to the White House, and not just through contributing to directly to Kerry's campaign. Led by George Soros and his multimillion-dollar donations, money flowed to liberal groups like MoveOn that tried to push hard on President Bush's record. They failed, York argues, because rather than bringing new voters into the party, the activists perpetuated "closed loops" that preached solely to the choir. When such emotionally zealous activists made their way into Democratic inner circles, their scorn for anyone who held opposing points of view, York contends, may well have hurt efforts to reach out to swing voters. A detailed financial breakdown takes aim at the hype surrounding Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11, demonstrating its failure to reach significant audiences outside the bluest parts of the blue states. York, the White House correspondent for the National Review, hits the Democrats particularly hard on allegations that they tried to skirt campaign finance laws by blurring-perhaps even crossing-the lines between the presidential campaign and issue advocacy groups prohibited from endorsing candidates. He largely refrains from taunting the liberals for their electoral failures, making his analysis of the flaws in the left-wing's self-insulated power structure valuable to readers on either side of the political fence.

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1400082382/qid=1131163037/sr=2-1/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_1/103-5803964-9042254?v=glance&s=books

It actually sounds kind of interesting. And, as a member of the "Left" I can say that many of us are not comfortable with how the most hysterical (and wealthiest) members have taken it upon themselves to speak for all of us. York's critique actually has a lot in common with the Left's critique of "itself."
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
quote:
I've seen Card accused of a lot of things, but stupidity isn't one of them. If he only wanted sheep, he could delete posts and ban members until he'd tailored his flock to fit his needs. I think that there is a big difference between not wanting to be bashed whenever he enters the forum and wanting people to hang on his every word.

No, he is not stupid in the least. This is nothing to do with his intelligence.

I "know" OSC only insofar as he presents himself to us.

C'mon, LadyDove. C'mon. He claims he checked other authors' websites to see if he was the only one being vitimized by his fans.

What does that say to you?
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
El JT de Spang, the title is indication of the bias. I might suspect that book entitled "A Study of Corruption in America's Left-Wing" was biased, but I would not be sure. However, anyone who thinks that there is "A Vast Left Wing Conspiracy," and writes a book on the subject, cannot expect to be considered an unbiased critic of modern politics, for the same reason that someone who writes a book entitled "Space-Aliens Among Us" cannot be held to be an unbiased researcher on the subject of extraterrestrial intelligence.

P.S. I like how you proved my point that all attacks are directed at me personally, rather than any ideas I put forth. I found that you calling me "Criminally Stupid" was a nice touch and greatly improved the quality of debate, keep up the good work.
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
Pelegius,

Again...the author no doubt has a certain sense of humor and is deliberately aping one of Hillary Clinton's more famous flatulent expulsions.

Try to see the humor in it...
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
Note: the Previous Post was written before KidB's post came onto my screen.

Yes, it does sound vaguely interesting, but a true philosopher-historian would have also looked at the Right-Wing. This person might also realize that the events being chronicled were too recent to be well analyzed. In 2000 years, this book will be, if the author is very lucky, thought of as Suetonius is today.
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
KidB, www.tinyurl.com is your friend.

Pelegius, the title is an indication of the marketing. It's using a technique whereby the publisher purposely selects an inflammatory title to create a little controversy, which will create sales.

And a careful reading of my post will show that is the phrase 'criminally stupid' was directed at your action, not at you. But then, I take it you don't like it when other people judge a book by its cover?
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
I am part of an industry that is fairly small. All the players know each other or have heard of one another. If my clients were constantly badmouthing me on an open forum, not only would I hear about it, but I'd be teased about it on a regular basis.

Yes, Hatrack is a forum, but it is also connected to a business. Can you imagine what someone like Michael Collins, who has written both Card's and King's biography thinks of Card's onsite fans vs King's onsite fans?

Card wouldn't need to be paranoid to look into other author sites, he'd just have to have his nose tweaked a couple of times by a colleague.

Of course, the above is based on my conjecture of how he came to his conclusion based on how the business world works. Your conjecture is based on something else. Mine's as good as yours anyday. And without knowing Card personally, yours still makes you look mean.
 
Posted by Paul Goldner (Member # 1910) on :
 
"And without knowing Card personally, yours still makes you look mean."

So, out of curiosity, do you think OSC is mean? He projects evil motives onto whole GROUPS of people he hasn't met, in almost every one of his columns.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
With very few exceptions, (Bill Clinton being one)I've never seen target an individual. I've never seen him stalk any individual with the intent of picking apart his words. So no, I don't think he is mean.
 
Posted by Paul Goldner (Member # 1910) on :
 
"With very few exceptions, (Bill Clinton being one)I've never seen target an individual. I've never seen him stalk any individual with the intent of picking apart his words. So no, I don't think he is mean."

You don't think assigning evil motives to many individuals is mean, but assigning evil motives to one person is?
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
LadyDove,

I see your point.

However, don't you, as a forum participant, feel nary a twinge on the tip of your own probiscis at statements like this:

"I question my own beliefs far more rigorously than anyone here has shown any signs of knowing how to do."

If any one other than OSC had said this here or at Ornery, they would rightly be called out as a pompous ass. He essentially is saying "take my word for it, I'm more skeptical than thou." He is adressing everyone, which means you included.

Following up on your point...if Hatrack is a business, and Orson find that he gets an undue share of guff from the rabble on his business venture, might he not ask himself why and wherefore?

I see two possible conclusions:

1) The fates have conspired so as to give OSC only the meanest, most dogmatic and most hostile fans in the world.

or

2) There is something OSC is doing which invites hostility.

Occam's Razor.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
Yes.

For instance, Card is against homosexuality because he believes that it threatens the health of community. He may even believe it is evil and that homosexuals could make the choice to not engage in that behavior. Yet, when Janis Ian wrote to him and thanked him for the way his work had influenced her, he wrote back to her and told her how much he admired her. He made her feel very special and they have since become friends and Card has introduced her to other SF writers. (This is all from an article she did for an SF megazine.)

I saw her at a concert sponsored by Card. They really like each other as people.

As an individual, she is not required to defend her group because she is not being defined as her group. She is being defined as Janis Ian.

When you attack a particular individual by name, how can they help but be offended? And if the attack is filled with venom and accusation born of conjecture, then yeah, I think it's mean.
 
Posted by Paul Goldner (Member # 1910) on :
 
"When you attack a particular individual by name, how can they help but be offended? And if the attack is filled with venom and accusation born of conjecture, then yeah, I think it's mean."

I'm also not sure how a person can't help but be offended when someone writes that a group that person belongs to is trying to destroy america, for example. And when the attack is filled with venom and accusation born of conjecture, then yeah, I think its mean. And I think its foolish to deny that.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
KidB-

The same quote came up in another thread:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------
I question my own beliefs far more rigorously than anyone here has shown any signs of knowing how to do.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
tern said:
With all due respect, that is a comment that lowers the effectiveness of your precis.

tern-
I don't see how anyone aside from OSC could "know how" to question his beliefs more rigidly than he does. There is no way for anyone, except maybe his wife, to understand the personal experiences that have led him to place more value on one thing than on another. IME, a belief systmem is a combination of both fact and personal experience. Though someone else may be better able to judge the accuracy of a given fact, I think that claiming authority over the ability to judge another's beliefs is akin to saying, "I know you better than you know yourself."

I'm certain that I would be offended if anyone else presumed that they were better equipped than I am to decide what I should believe in.
...................................
Obviously, I read the quote as a defense and not as an attack.

As far as why there are so many hostile people here... I don't think that they are hostile so much as disappointed that no matter how often they try to parent Card, he continues to misbehave.

I think that much of the anger is born of a false sense of ownership and a real frustration that makes them think that if they keep beating him long enough, he'll play nicely. He is well loved here, but unfortunately, the flavor of late has been "tough love".
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
Good for Janice Ian.

G. Gordon Liddy and Timothy Leary did a lecture tour together together, and could be seen laughing and smiling together for the cameras.

"Individuals" can be freinds all the time. So? When Card writes a column and attacks the homosexual community from a point of demonstrable ignorance, none of my gay freinds here in NYC are going to give a rat's nether regions that OSC and Janice Ian have their occasional mutual Hallmark moment.

When they hear this...


quote:
And even if few people care enough to defend the old family values against the screaming hate speech of the Left -- which is what they're counting on, of course -- the end will be the same. Because with marriage finally killed, America will no longer be able to raise up children with any trust in or loyalty to or willingness to sacrifice for that society.

So either civilized people will succeed in establishing a government that protects the family; or civilized people will withdraw their allegiance from the government that won't protect it; or the politically correct barbarians will have complete victory over the family -- and, lacking the strong family structure on which civilization depends, our civilization will collapse or fade away.


...they hear the voice of the thugs who beat them up in high school, who sent them running and screaming for dear life from the pain and persecution that awaited them in the 'burbs, and into enclaves like NYC, San Fran, etc.

OSC is so far away from anything resembling a rational argument here, so driven by raw rage, that he is impossible to even respond to seriously. The fear-mongering is preposterous.

LadyDove, I read conservative columnists all the time. Brooks, Will, and countless names at American Conservative (all of these folks are to the Right of OSC). With the possible exception of Pat Buchanan, none of these writers sink to this level. It is appalling.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
Paul,

Let's look at the difference.

1)Men need a strong deodorant.

2)Paul, you need a strong deodorant.

Coming from a stranger, which one of these opinions is more offensive?
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
quote:
I think that much of the anger is born of a false sense of ownership and a real frustration that makes them think that if they keep beating him long enough, he'll play nicely.
I agree. That was (part of) my point at the beginning, albeit from a different direction.
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
LadyDove,

1) Men need a strong deoderant.

2) Homosexuals who want to get married will bring about the end of civilization.

Coming from a stranger, which of THESE opinions is more offensive?
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
KidB-

I'm not saying that I wouldn't prefer to see him leave the barbs out of his editorials, I'm just saying that it is ridiculous for people to try to beat him into changing his style.

I'm reminded of Dr. Phil's "So, how's that workin' for ya?" The attacks aren't working. They're getting boring and predictable. If everyone is really just trying to help Card communicate his message more effectively and the attacks aren't working, how about trying a different method?
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
quote:
LadyDove,

1) Men need a strong deoderant.

2) Homosexuals who want to get married will bring about the end of civilization.

Coming from a stranger, which of THESE opinions is more offensive?

<laughing> Alrighty, so you have a good sense of humor. I'll give you that.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Eh. People get old and set in their ways. Sometimes you just have to outlive them. If you think OSC is bad, consider what his grandfather was probably like; then think about his son. Things get better; sometimes it's slow, that's all.
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
quote:
I don't see how anyone aside from OSC could "know how" to question his beliefs more rigidly than he does.
There's not really any way to say how this statement was supposed to be interpreted, but pretty much everyone except you seems to have taken it to means, "I question my beliefs far more rigorously than anyone else here has shown themselves able to question their own beliefs." Unless the guy who wrote it wants to clarify.

But you seem to be basing a large part of your argument on the interpretation of a statement that no one else interpreted the same way.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
Granted, JT-

I guess we'll just have to wait and see or agree to disagree.
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
Lady D,

I halfway agree with your point about "us" trying to get "him" to be be a certain way. We can only do so much...in the end, we should stop beating our heads against the wall and move on.

OSC, judging from what he writes, seems to be genuinely hurt by "our" treatment of him here and elsewhere. However, until he decides to change, he will continue to reap what he sows.

And...I'm glad I made you laugh.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
KidB-

[Smile]
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
[post relocated so's not to break the flow of last night's debate]
The subject has drifted pretty quickly, but I'm going to respong to P's last post.

quote:
Originally posted by Pelegius:

El JT de Spang, the title is indication of the bias. I might suspect that book entitled "A Study of Corruption in America's Left-Wing" was biased, but I would not be sure. However, anyone who thinks that there is "A Vast Left Wing Conspiracy," and writes a book on the subject, cannot expect to be considered an unbiased critic of modern politics, for the same reason that someone who writes a book entitled "Space-Aliens Among Us" cannot be held to be an unbiased researcher on the subject of extraterrestrial intelligence.

Pelegius' chain of "logic" reminds me of a conversation I once had with a friend of mine. We were going through my fairly sizeable music collection, and I pulled out my original first-pressing cassette copy of Synchronicity by The Police. I told him that it was the first album I ever owned, purchased for me when I was 8 years old by my father. It's always been a tiny source of pride that (through no fault of my own) the first album I ever owned was one of the greatest of the era in which it was made. Of course, I now own all of their albums, and I've known them backwards and forwards for about 2/3 of my life.

As I showed my friend what may be considered something of historical significance, he responded to me that he didn't like The Police, and he thought that they were overrated. That argument could easily be made of late-era Sting, but I'd never heard anyone say that of The Police. Nevertheless, he seemed to state it as though it were fact, and thought that I was a fool for being sucked into the hype.

As I pressed him for details, I finally came to the source of his opinion. It turns out that he had never heard any more of The Police than whatever was on the radio or on MTV 20 years ago. The reason that he decided that he didn't like them was that he'd once heard someone in a band he did like say that they were proud that they never faded out their songs at the end, and that people like The Police always faded their songs out as a cop-out because they couldn't think of a good way to end them. The actual content of the songs, the quality of the musicianship, the caliber of the live performances, the influence they had on legions of fans and other musicians even two decades later... my friend had no knowledge or interest in any of these things. He hated the band solely based upon a second hand opinion of a decision most likely made by their albums' producers.

To this day my friend refuses to listen to The Police or acknowledge any good they may have done. He still considers me a sheep for appreciating their music. And, having had this conversation before, I'm sure you'll end up feeling the same way about OSC, although you're stubbornly going to refuse to obtain a single clue to what you're talking about.

*****

And as far as titles go, let's consider a few examples. Jon Stewart's The Daily Show has given itself the almost-official subtitle: "The Fake News". Yet it has gained a reputation for having some of the most astute and incisive analysis of the news, not to mention some of the most enlightening interviews with actual political figures, available anywhere on television. Compare it with SNL's Weekend Update, a similar enterprise with a much more respectable title that is nothing more than a few insignificant jokes. Going by name alone, there's no way I'd watch a program that called itself "The Fake News", and I'd be all the poorer for it.

Finally, consider The O'Reilly Factor, which calls itself "The No-Spin Zone". Sounds like a very fair and even-handed analysis of news and politics. Since you judge everything by titles, and you hate a title as clearly biased as "The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy", I'm just going to go ahead and assume that you're a huge, rabid fan of "The No-Spin Zone." And don't try to correct that assumption. I've already made up my mind.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

I'm not saying that I wouldn't prefer to see him leave the barbs out of his editorials, I'm just saying that it is ridiculous for people to try to beat him into changing his style.

Except that's not what you're saying. You're attempting to persuade us that we shouldn't feel insulted at all, not that we shouldn't try to persuade him not to insult us.
 
Posted by Pelegius (Member # 7868) on :
 
El JT de Spang, I am sorry, despite my youth, I must belong to an older, more civilized age, where a book called "Tractus Logico-Philosophicus" was considered to be controversial enough to sell. On the other hand, this book can still be found in just about any medium or large bookstore in the world, so maybe there is something to its "marketing.
Speed, comedy operates under different rules than philosophy. Bill O'Reilly is well known for his "spin" on world affairs, and is thus no more trustworthy than any of the other spewers of hate-sermons that pollute the airwaves, dragging ideas down to their basest level.
 
Posted by Will B (Member # 7931) on :
 
quote:
This man, like many famous people, has a pathological desire to be loved by one and all, and when he isn't he gets his nose bent out of joint.
Unsolicited psychoanalysis is way, way, way out of line.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I'm not saying that I wouldn't prefer to see him leave the barbs out of his editorials, I'm just saying that it is ridiculous for people to try to beat him into changing his style.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Except that's not what you're saying. You're attempting to persuade us that we shouldn't feel insulted at all, not that we shouldn't try to persuade him not to insult us.

Tom, are you still focussing on the one essay? If so, I said that the one quote shouldn't be taken as an insult. Aside from that, I don't think that I've tried to take away anyone's right to feel insulted. Go for it.

What I did try to show is that there is a difference between insulting a group and insulting an individual.

When I talked about being insulted as a group vs being insulted as an indivudual, I said that the same words directed at at individual were mean. Those words, directed at a group can be tossed-off as opinion and we should be able to avoid focusing on the insult and instead, focus on the substance.

And, you're right. I'm not trying to stop you from pursuading him not to insult you. What I am saying is that
1) not everything should be taken with the same indignance as a personal insult,
2) you aren't trying to just stop him from insulting you, but you are trying to brow beat him into behaving as you would have him behave stylistically.
3) the beatings aren't working.
4) if your altruistic goal is to help him communicate more effectively, you should try another tact.
 
Posted by KidB (Member # 8821) on :
 
Will B,

I'm just meeting the man on his own terms - those that he has set himself. He's already cast his collective insults to forum participants that go way beyond my slight - in your adoration of him, you let him get away with it.

That being said, I happily retract the word "pathological" - for the time being.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
LadyDove, insults are substance too.

Now, you have a point that "the beatings aren't working". What other tack do you recommend?
 
Posted by Speed (Member # 5162) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pelegius:

Speed, comedy operates under different rules than philosophy. Bill O'Reilly is well known for his "spin" on world affairs, and is thus no more trustworthy than any of the other spewers of hate-sermons that pollute the airwaves, dragging ideas down to their basest level.

[ROFL]

A couple times a year I have to respond to trolls, just so I can remember why I never respond to trolls.

That was perfect. Molto gratzi.

[ROFL]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

What I did try to show is that there is a difference between insulting a group and insulting an individual.

I'm not sure I'm willing to concede this, LadyDove. I don't see why I should take "all fat men are stupid" to be less of an insult than "you, Tom Davidson, are stupid." That one is more demonstrably false (and to clarify, I'm referring here to the former) does not make it less insulting. When King of Men -- just as an example -- posts that he believes all religious people are deluded, I do not see a queue form to reply to his detractors that, hey, he didn't say that some specific religious person was deluded.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
As I said, if you want to feel insulted, you can.

What about the rest of my post? Do you think that the beatings are getting you closer to the goal?
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
quote:
Molto gratzi.
:grinds teeth:

Molte grazie
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
Okay, the first part was a snippy way to answer and I apologize. However, I do think that we have control over how closely we identify with any given group, whereas we don't have a choice over how closely we identify with ourselves.

That is the difference, IMO.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
No. But I have asked repeatedly what better way anyone has come up with to get Card to stop insulting large swaths of the population, and what individual or individuals would be willing to make the attempt, and so far the silence has been deafening. If you've got a better idea, please put it forward.

(BTW, would you consider it tactful to tell someone who's been raped that "if you want to feel insulted, you can?" I recognize that this is a broad and overexaggerated example, but I put it forward to demonstrate that the "you are only harmed if you acknowledge harm" bit isn't really much of an argument.)

And FWIW, I identify very strongly with the general population of Hatrack. Insults directed at that general population are fairly difficult for me to ignore, as a consequence.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Well, let me point out that I am usually willing to say that specific persons are, indeed, deluded.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
Tom,

Your example would have been closer to the original assertion if you had said that "rape isn't necessarily insulting". That would have addressed a group. Instead, you addressed an individual, and I would imagine that an individual would say, "Insulted? more like violated." In that instance, using the word insulted would be condescending and rude.

Also, I'm not saying, "you are only harmed if you acknowledge harm". I'm saying that all insults directed at a group are not necessarily directly personally at each and every group member. To my way of thinking, the only way to let that kind of gross generalization be taken as a personal insult is to assume that one embodies all the aspects of the group and the group projects one's thoughts without flaw. Aside from this assumption, we can each, as a fully functioning cognitive being, decide whether to be offended and act, challenged and change or to ignore the insult as an hyperbole directed at other members of the group.

As to how to modify someone elses behavior... Behavior is so closely linked to attitude that the answer seems to be to change the attitude.

I know that my attitudes have been changed by many of the things I've read here. It is the reasoned argument and personal stories that have made a difference to me. I don't think that I've ever had my attitude changed until I felt safe in the person's presence. When I felt safe, then I was receptive, but not until then.

I'm not much of a manipulator, so I haven't studied the idea much except where it applies to kids and dogs. Neither of which would work very well in an online forum, so I can only rely on my own experience.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
You did not decribe actions. You ascribed motives to actions with no basis for doing so, lumping together everyone who performed those actions under a common motive.

Dag, that's your interpretation. You're welcome to it, but it isn't necessarily there in what I wrote, nor does that interpretation seem to be the only one held among the other posters.
 
Posted by Storm Saxon (Member # 3101) on :
 
quote:

But I have asked repeatedly what better way anyone has come up with to get Card to stop insulting large swaths of the population

I think he should write the way he wants to write. He knows more about writing and influencing people than we ever will, so I think we should just shut up and defer to his greater expertise, his thousands of hours of research, the many, many, many books he's read.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Dag, that's your interpretation. You're welcome to it, but it isn't necessarily there in what I wrote, nor does that interpretation seem to be the only one held among the other posters.
Sure it is. You claimed that the creator paying attention was the impetus for scurring to placate.

That's what motive means - the reason someone did something.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

I'm saying that all insults directed at a group are not necessarily directly personally at each and every group member.

I'm not sure why you think this is better. To my mind, it's actually considerably worse. I can cope just fine with personal insults; it's the baseless ones that are still somehow supposed to apply to me that bug me.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
::shakes head::
I am a human being, a woman, a mother, an American, a student, white, a Californian, a German, a Liberal, a teacher, a reader, a Hatracker, a Democrat, and the list goes on...

If I choose to attach my self-image to all of these groups, I could spend my entire life offended by the hyperboles or baseless accusation that I hear everyday. But that would be a sad and sorry waste of a life.

Do you disagree?
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TomDavidson:
quote:

What I did try to show is that there is a difference between insulting a group and insulting an individual.

I'm not sure I'm willing to concede this, LadyDove. I don't see why I should take "all fat men are stupid" to be less of an insult than "you, Tom Davidson, are stupid." That one is more demonstrably false (and to clarify, I'm referring here to the former) does not make it less insulting.
If I were to say that "all Fat Men are FAT," that would be true, and nonetheless, in our culture, deeply insulting.
 
Posted by tern (Member # 7429) on :
 
quote:
He knows more about writing and influencing people than we ever will, so I think we should just shut up and defer to his greater expertise, his thousands of hours of research, the many, many, many books he's read
Nah.

quote:
Those who disagree with me show little sign of understanding even the rudimentary principles I'm talking about; and those who agree with me are no better, merely assuming that I'm "on their team" and saying "go Orson!"
This statement seems to indicate that Card wouldn't agree with you that we should just accept everything he says. I hold him in high regard, and he certainly influences me, but I'm going to consider everything he says before I accept it.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

If I were to say that "all Fat Men are FAT," that would be true, and nonetheless, in our culture, deeply insulting.

*nod* And indeed, if some insult were meant by that kind of tautology, the target(s) would not be remiss in taking insult. A line like "hey, you fat guys! You're all fat!" would almost certainly be intended as an insult, even if it's pretty nonsensical on its face, and I'd expect that the people who were its intended victims would react as if insulted even though it's just telling them something they already know.

IMO, the accuracy of an insult does not necessarily determine its effectiveness (although I believe that the worst insults have only enough truth in them to make them hard to dismiss out of hand). Personally, I suspect that the intent behind an insult is the single most important factor.

If KoM were to reply to someone "you seem like a very good Mormon," that Mormon would IMO have a legitimate right to suspect that he or she was being insulted. Which is why, when I was talking to Pete, I made such a big deal out of the importance of trust; it's because OSC doesn't trust my motivations, for example, that he believes I insult him -- despite my protestations to the contrary.

quote:

If I choose to attach my self-image to all of these groups, I could spend my entire life offended by the hyperboles or baseless accusation that I hear everyday. But that would be a sad and sorry waste of a life.

The other component of an insult which is required before it becomes effective is respect for the opinion of the person who delivers the insult. When someone like digging_holes or Baldar insulted me, I was never particularly distraught; their opinions simply don't register on my self-image. In the same way, I don't often find myself worrying too much about what Ann Coulter would think of me. But I do hold OSC in fairly high esteem, so it's often like being kicked in the teeth when I forget and read one of his essays.

So here's my suggested recipe for an infuriating insult:

1) Delivered by someone whose opinion you respect
2) Clearly intended to be insulting
3) Broadly generalized and/or inaccurate, but true enough in broad strokes to require lengthy refutation

What do you think?
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
Well-constructed, Tom. I've read it, circled around it, and can't find a chink. I have to concede.

Constants and other modifiers may be necessary, but I'd go so far as to say that the offensiveness of the insult is almost proportional to the product of the three factors you listed.

It's hard for me to be truly offended by someone whose opinion I don't respect at all.

I agree it's a factor, but I don't absolutely need them intend the insult to be offensive. We had pijama day at school one day, and I came in red Thai robe my wife had given me, and a classmate (intending to compliment me) said that I'd made a perfect impression of Hugh Hefner. As you can imagine, I was horrified and insulted, but not angry with her. Fortunately the robe is reversible to a different color. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
quote:
1) Delivered by someone whose opinion you respect
Tom, I think your formula works well. The problem I see is that I view Card's negative comments as spatter-fire, directed, in the main, at those who don't that he exists.
 
Posted by LadyDove (Member # 3000) on :
 
Tom,

I left after the homosexual marriage essay. I was incensed that someone I respect so much could say things that could be used to hurt my gay friends.

At a kids' birthday party, I was chatting with a gay friend about the party, his job, etc.; basically, small talk. My husband came over and starting talking about how angry he was about the way gay marriage was being denounced.

My friend's eyes glazed over, he nodded his head and put-up with it for a few moments more, then excused himself.

I caught-up with my friend later and he said, "Why do straight people assume that I want to hear how angry they are on my behalf? I don't need to get married, but mostly, I don't need to be their poster boy."

After that, I did alot of thinking. First, I realized that though *I* had been indignant on my friend's behalf, I'd have done him a better turn by not assuming that he would be offended at an issue I hadn't discussed with him.

Second, I realized that he doesn't know Card, so Card's words wouldn't hurt him.

I returned to Hatrack because the good so far outweighs the less than perfect and *I* am a better person for having been exposed to Card's work and to people like you who care so passionately about everything.

Tom, I am sorry that you've been hurt. I know that you love this community and believe that you are doing your best to keep it healthy and grow it. I just don't think that Card wants or needs you to be his editor in his forum. And I think that the attempt is causing more harm than good.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
Dag, that's your interpretation. You're welcome to it, but it isn't necessarily there in what I wrote, nor does that interpretation seem to be the only one held among the other posters.
Sure it is. You claimed that the creator paying attention was the impetus for scurring to placate.

That's what motive means - the reason someone did something.

But your interpretation presumes a number of other things as well. The few other responses I've received seem to agree the intentions _were_ placatory.

But that's never been my focus. I'm more concerned about the mass swing, the effect on the topic, and the potential effect on the forum as a whole.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
If you really were concerned about those things, you would let this topic die.
 
Posted by Ghengis Cohen (Member # 8813) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LadyDove:
My friend's eyes glazed over, he nodded his head and put-up with it for a few moments more, then excused himself.

I caught-up with my friend later and he said, "Why do straight people assume that I want to hear how angry they are on my behalf? I don't need to get married, but mostly, I don't need to be their poster boy."

After that, I did alot of thinking. First, I realized that though *I* had been indignant on my friend's behalf, I'd have done him a better turn by not assuming that he would be offended at an issue I hadn't discussed with him.

Second, I realized that he doesn't know Card, so Card's words wouldn't hurt him.

You're unusual among the non-gay pro-ssm folks I've run into, then, in that you do actually listen and pay attention, and realize that the world does not revolve around your guilt & redemption quest. The most ferocious and vindictive ssm advocates I know are usually self-described heterosexuals. As an anti-ssm hothead, I find that most of the gays in LTSSRs are fairly reasonable people to argue with.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
What I find interesting about OSC is that he is smart enough to know that alot of what his own political "team" says and does is very dumb, just like his opossition is equally dumb most of the time, and yet he still sides with them, (the right) because he considers himself a conservative?

I think anyone smart enough to realize that 95 percent of all politics is dart-throwing, should be an independent, and accessible to BOTH sides of every situation, the better to lend himself to the welfare of his country
 
Posted by Princess Leah (Member # 6026) on :
 
I agree with rivka.
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 233) on :
 
Since when has Card started considering himself a conservative?

His political "team" is the Democratic party. It has been since he was barely out of his teens. On every issue that he sides with Republicans (or whoever, so far he hasn't made any approaches to the Cybernetic Alliance [aka "the Daleks" [Wink] ]), he's crossing party lines for the sake of his own beliefs.

Of course, I can't really understand why he continues to describe himself as a Democrat...I mean, I know about his insane hatred for the free-market system (as if living the consecrated life is even an option under any economic model), but I don't understand it. But then, I can't understand why anyone would be a Democrat other than because of boiling hatred for all that is good and decent, so that isn't really surprising [Wink]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
You said you've found Empire deeply affecting. In what way did it affect you, if not to help you reconsider your partisan biases?
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
quote:
as if living the consecrated life is even an option under any economic model
Within Mormonism, there IS an option for those who want to live the law of consecration. It's called "Fast Offerings."
 
Posted by DDDaysh (Member # 9499) on :
 
Ouch... what possible good could this thread do?
 
Posted by Launchywiggin (Member # 9116) on :
 
I wasn't around when it was first posted and now I've read all of it--and learned a lot.

So I think that's a "good" thing.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DDDaysh:
Ouch... what possible good could this thread do?

And why to my horror do I have the opportunity to look at a vintage Peligius soliloquy, only to jump on over to the last page and see that the person being responded to after 15 MONTHS IS ME!!!

I am quite disappointed that this thread has been brought up. I will not post here again, and if this thread continues I'll also enjoy cherry picking out my contribution to it. Sorry, that's just how it's going to be.
 
Posted by Samprimary (Member # 8561) on :
 
I miss his particular brand of sanctimonious pseudointellectualasim, and I didn't even get to see it for that long!
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Samp,
If you look around, you may be able to find another poster who joined a few days after Pel left who bears a curious resemblence to Pel in many ways, including the sanctimonious pseudointellectualism.
 
Posted by El JT de Spang (Member # 7742) on :
 
Squick, I knew who that was going to be before I clicked on the link.
 
Posted by Hookt_Un_Fonix (Member # 10094) on :
 
Mr. Card, do not take it personal. It is seems to have become American nature to belittle a person to attain self gratification. Most people are quick to discuss negative issues and break down something, and they break it down harder if they can tell a bit of emotion was put into it. Personally I adore your work, and Enders Game is honestly the reason I want to write. That novel hit me from start to finish, and I get more out of it every time I read it. I have read a lot of your work, and I am currently reading "Children of the Mind" again. I have just started reading your reviews, comments and articles. While I do not agree with all of your views, I think you have an uncanny ability to make your point clear. If someone immediately goes into a negative attack against something you said or wrote, please look more seriously into it before you take it so personal. My dad once told me words are only as powerful as you let them be. Essentially somebody can call me a dumb@$$, but I am only one if I believe what they told me. Don't let someone bashing you about a book review that they did not even read the book bother you. The world is full of stupid people, and if you let them all get to you you run around life to angry to enjoy it. You are loved and received, look at all the people registered on your site. As for the other authors not getting bashed on their sites, well pooh on them. Maybe they don't write with enough controversy to inspire emotional arguments. Take it as a compliment that you inspire attackers [Big Grin] PS When I finish my book, the only review that would matter to me would be yours or Isaac Asimov's and I am obviously not getting his.
 
Posted by Samprimary (Member # 8561) on :
 
quote:
But then, I can't understand why anyone would be a Democrat other than because of boiling hatred for all that is good and decent
I think it's because they secretly hate the world! And eat babies!
 
Posted by Hookt_Un_Fonix (Member # 10094) on :
 
I don't hate the world, but I do eat babies. They are way to tender to pass up the chance when it comes, but I guess that is why I am a republican
 
Posted by lem (Member # 6914) on :
 
quote:
Pelegius at his worst.
And best.

Those links were priceless Speed. [ROFL]
 
Posted by Hookt_Un_Fonix (Member # 10094) on :
 
after reading my own post a day later I have to say I sounded so much like a fanboy,... ack
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
You know I just realized that my first post on this page was actually my first post on Hatrack, ever?

That's kind of wierd, that it took like 15 months to get a response to my first post. Is that wierd or what?
 


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