Holy smokes---this is incredible. Let me try to deal with one thing at a time. First, DCP's suggestion that Brent and I are one and the same:
DaniteDan wrote:"I had never, until yesterday, even thought of the possibility that Brent might be connected with my Malevolent Stalker, let alone seriously considered it. It hadn't occurred to me."
I find that hard to believe.
DCP hates me, and he hates me primarily for what he characterizes as "peering," or in his phrasing, "malevolent stalking." What I have always taken this to mean is that he doesn't like me---or anyone---looking closely at apologetic materials, looking for flaws or ethical problems. I'm not the only one who has done this, of course: Joey and antishock were both pretty persistent in their efforts to learn the truth about the 2nd Watson Letter, but the basic psychological explanation is the same. DCP is transferring his hatred of me onto Brent because Brent has delivered a devastating blow to apologetic credibility. Others pointed out the apparent desperation of DCP's inquiries:
Daniel Peterson wrote:Who is Scratch? Do you know? Do you two exchange off-board messages? What is the nature of your connection with Scratch, if any?
This is motivated purely out of a spirit of revenge. It has nothing to do with the Watson Letter, or the issues it raises. And I'm sorry, Dr. Peterson, but you do not deserve to know whether or not (if at all) Brent and I have exchanged messages.
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Apart from all that, there are two separate, highly problematic issues for the apologists:
(1) The authority of the text which turns up four different times: in the purported Watson Letter, in the Ogden Fax, in the EoM entry, and in Hamblin's article. For what are perhaps obvious reasons, the apologists are sticking to this issue. They are going to argue tooth and nail that this whole hullabaloo establishes the primacy and authority of their views---i.e., a victory for Internet Mormonism. (A sidenote: the fact that Oaks and Maxwell were involved in overseeing the very first version of this text only adds more material to the growing body of evidence in favor of the Packer-Meldrum/Oaks-FARMS divide.)
To me, the above is kind of a moot point. For me the real interest lies in:
(2) The way that the text has been used, handled, cited, etc. The amount of questions this raises are both mind-boggling and staggering. There is literally no way for the apologists to truthfully account for this without also admitting that they: plagiarized, incorrectly cited text, brazenly lied, sought to change doctrine, and so on and so forth.
Out of curiosity, I looked back at some of the old threads in which myself and others tried to get to the bottom of the mystery surrounding the 2nd Watson Letter. Here's an interesting quote:
Daniel Peterson wrote:Because they're trying to defend themselves against potential attack -- protesting a bit too much, in my view, since nobody that I know has ever accused them of actually forging evidence -- and also because they favor a manner of presentation (rather like that of Robert and Rosemary Brown on the other side) that often includes photocopies of documents.
By contrast, like the standard academic journals and books that form the background of its editors and publishers and the large majority of its writers, the presentation-style or format of the FARMS Review virtually never features photocopies of documents. (If we've ever included such a photocopy, I can't remember it off hand.) Moreover, in the world in which the Review's editors, publishers, and writers live, while books and articles cite correspondence from time to time, the presumption is always that the cited correspondence actually exists and has been accurately transcribed. Accusations of gross transcription errors or deliberate falsification are extremely rare; accusations of deliberate wholesale forgery are virtually unknown, and the career of any scholar who would do such a thing would come to an immediate, catastrophic, and humiiating end.
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=6994&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&start=273Daniel Peterson wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:and they have pretty obvious motivations for wanting to bury it and keep it hidden away from critics.
How have "we" buried it and hidden it from "critics"? (You're the only critic, so far as I can recall, who's ever demanded to see it.)
I simply don't care to reminisce with you about it. I think I saw it once, somewhat more than fifteen years ago. It wasn't a big deal. Nothing memorable about it. My memory of it is pretty hazy. And you've already decided that it's bound to make us all look bad "in some way," so anything I say can only add fuel to the flames of a fire that you yourself have already lit -- which would lead to an interminable conversation about . . . what, exactly? My vague memories (which you'll constantly demand that I specify and expand as you look for something self-contradictory or damning) and your predetermined negative conclusions?
This is the best one, though. I guess that friends of DCP can only hope he was just exaggerating here:
Daniel Peterson wrote:Unless one presumes us to be conscious deceivers who didn't scruple at forging a letter to support our ideological position and then falsely attributing it, publicly and in print (and, it must be said, at considerable potential risk to our employment at BYU and our membership in the Church), to the Office of the First Presidency -- or, alternatively, unless one views us as so staggeringly incompetent or partisan that, even pooling our efforts, we were unable or unwilling to quote a brief letter (two sentences long) without introducing changes that grossly distorted its intent -- the reasonable response to the appearance of the letter in Professor Hamblin's edited and source-checked article would be to assume that it was real and that it said what it was quoted as saying.
Man, oh, man.
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14