rcrocket wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:Huh? Oaks's admission came via the mouth of Church gopher-boy Paul Richards. C'mon, Bobby---you made it sound like you actually bothered to read the article.
I have this article. Please tell me exactly what it is Elder (then President) Oaks was supposed to have said which constituted the admission of ethical lapses you assert he admitted, above.
Oaks, via Richards, admitted that BYU security had been engaged in tracking down and "staking out" homosexuals. Feel free to post the full-text of the article, Bob.
Pdf the Trib article please to rcrocket[at]msn.com
How dumb do you think I am? I'm not going to be emailing you *anything*, Bob. Particularly in light of the fact that you have provided no print sources for your claims regarding BYU spying, nor have you provided the names of these professors you supposedly interviewed.
I think they are unrelated issues.
Really? But they're both related to the BYU spy ring....
I would appreciate it if you would demonstrate to me that you actually possess the Trib article by emailing it to me. You know I have charged you in the past of citing sources as primary sources when you don't have the source. When I have asked in the past for proof you have the source it is always the same -- you aren't going to do my spade work. In any event, I don't have it, I'd like it and I am very interested to see if it supports your assertion of Oaks' admissions. Consider a request for a personal favor to add it to my library. I will concede your argument about Oaks if it says he or the Church admitted to ethical lapses.
I don't care what you would concede, Bob. I'm not emailing anything to you. Further, I never said that this article stated that Oaks' "admitted" to anything. I said that you could find an account of the "Oaks-related debacle"---i.e., referring to the admission that BYU unethically was using stake-outs, polygraph machines, and electronic surveillance equipment to spy on "dissidents."
As to the BYU spying case, it is fairly well discussed elsewhere. I particularly found Gregory Prince's work on David O McKay a compelling read on the subject, naming names. The spy ring was instigated by students.
This is according to Prince? Or Wilkinson? Or you? Care to cite an actual passage of text? Further, is BYU security purely "student-run"? I don't think so. And it was BYU security, apparently, who were responsible for using "electronic devices" to spy on students, especially suspected homosexuals. Feel free to cf. Quinn's
The Mormon Hierarchy: Extensions of Power, pg. 309 for more on this. Quinn apparently looked at a document indicating that BYU security was in contact with the FBI during this period.
Pres. Wilkinson (who denies commissioning it in his edited multivolume history of BYU) with a wink and a nod apparently listened to its results. When Wilkinson pressured the seven profs to resign, they appealed to my grandfather who took the matter to the Board of Trustees, which then understood what was going on and offered to reinstate the profs. Not all accepted the offer. One, accused by the students of being disloyal to the Church, not attending meetings and being a communist, went on to be a Reagan kitchen cabinet member and then a General Authority.
Still no sources? Still no names? Hmmm..... I have to say, your claim that the spy ring was "student-run" may land you in some very hot rhetorical water, counselor.... This may be as grave a slip-up as your MMM article omission.