Nevo wrote:Doctor Scratch wrote:Okay, wait a second. I thought that Dehlin said that he received word about the essay from an M.I. employee, who did indeed call it a "hit piece"? Is this not the case?
No, it is not. Dehlin's informant was not a Maxwell Institute employee, but a friend of a Maxwell Institute employee:Hi, John. I don't want to get in the middle of any drama, and especially don't want to get any started up, but I did think you deserve a heads up, in case you are not already aware: I spoke with a friend (who also happens to be one of your Facebook Friends) who works at the Maxwell Institute today, and he mentioned that some of the other guys there are working on publishing something about you that I imagine will be something of a hit piece. You may already be aware of it, and maybe aren't too concerned what a paranoid ultra-conservative apologetic group was to say anyway. My friend did say that he will be attempting to dissuade them over the next few days from putting out the piece. Hopefully he will be successful and the drama will be avoided completely. (source)
You will notice that it was Dehlin's informant—not the Maxwell Institute employee—who stated: "I imagine [it] will be something of a hit piece."
I'm curious what you think is under debate here: the smaller, semantic issue of whether or not anyone at the Maxwell Institute used the phrase "hit piece" (which is neither confirmed nor denied by any of this), or the more substantive debate over whether or not people at the Maxwell Institute found the Dehlin article sufficiently objectionable to oppose it.
Let me ask you this, Nevo: Why do you think the article's publication was canceled? What explanation would you provide that would be acceptably accurate to both critics and the Mopologists? DCP and Hamblin have complained that Dehlin has engaged in censorship, and yet they also insist that no GA was involved. So who do you think pulled the plug here? And what do you think was the ultimate tipping point that influenced this decision?