RockSlider wrote:An anonymous poster, referred to as Doctor hiding behind a fake university, for all these many years. I find this cowardly and irritating.
Rockslider, I respect that you feel this way. Heaven knows I've had my tussles with Doctor Scratch. Having said that, I will respectfully disagree with your take on Cassius University. Cassius University is a send up of the pomposity that characterizes a good deal of Mopologetics. It is not emulating Mopologetic haughtiness as flattery or agreeing with that posture.
You should also be aware that some of the "faculty" of Cassius actually do have PhDs and teach in respectable universities. We are appalled at the misuse of academic training and bona fides to cow laymen into submission and discourage them from investigating things for themselves. In some cases, Mopologists may have actively frustrated better understanding of important historical subjects because they felt they knew better than the rest of us. If true, such behavior smacks of professional misconduct which I will not be a party to or leave free of criticism.
Finally, Mopologists often treat criticism of Mopologetics as an attack on Mormonism. Non-believing or non-mainstream scholars of Mormon intellectual issues have been targeted for harassment and substantive, real-life harm by Mopologists. Since I cannot count on individual LDS people not to target my job or membership in the LDS Church, I prefer to remain as anonymous as possible for fear that they just may choose to come after me. For this reason, I am less likely to be critical of Doctor Scratch and Gadianton for maintaining strict anonymity, although I do not agree 100% with everything they may do.
I recently had a conversation with a friend who turned her unpleasant experience as a young professional in Utah into a comic. The comic depicted aspects of Mormon culture in a fairly negative way, but mostly through the behavior of people she had known on the job. It was not an anti-Mormon-faith smear job. Still, when she posted the comic online, she received hundreds of angry and hateful comments from members of the LDS Church. While I am sympathetic to the fact that it is not pleasant to see something one holds sacred depicted in a less than flattering way, I think this points to a real problem that Mopologetics typifies in its nasty attacks on unsanctioned representations of Mormonism.
Cassius University and its faculty stand steadfastly against this kind of behavior.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist