Daniel Peterson wrote:I understand that passing on information to a father about his son's misbehavior can be viewed as "meddling," and that the son will almost certainly view it that way.
I have decided to leave the GoodK affair alone.
Daniel Peterson wrote:...
I wouldn't consider it "meddling in family business" to tell a friend that her thirteen-year-old daughter is having sexual encounters with a fifty-year-old internet predator.
...
Chap wrote:I asked for a URL link to a list of your non-LDS academic publications. You say that there isn't one, because for some reason you have not posted a CV online. Instead you mention some pieces you are currently working on, and refer to a recent luncheon engagement in connection with editorial work you describe.
Well, if you don't want people in general to be able to form an estimate of your scholarly contribution to your chosen field in a way that is now quite common amongst academics (by looking at the range of your publications online, and reading a sample them), that is your right.
For a contrast, see for instance http://humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/ne ... es/ritner/. Or even http://farms.BYU.edu/viewauthor.php?authorID=24
Daniel Peterson wrote:For antishock8: You need to get back on your lithium.
I wouldn't consider it "meddling in family business" to tell a friend that her thirteen-year-old daughter is having sexual encounters with a fifty-year-old internet predator.
beastie wrote:DCP excels at this particular type of gossip - the hinted at, the insinuated. I criticized him for this many years ago at ZLMB, so he's been doing it a very long time.
DCP "hints" that he knows more about the person in question, and that "more" would definitely change people's minds about the trustworthiness of the person in question.
in my opinion, this is an even more harmful type of gossip than to actually share the information, because it leaves the audience free to imagine all sorts of horrible things as the "more" that DCP knows, but is too "ethical" to share.
by the way, my memory of the GoodK affair isn't just that DCP alerted his father about this one incident, but that he also emailed his father with other tidbits, having drawn the erroneous conclusion that chap was GoodK.
I think any parent who "wants to know" any and every possibly negative thing their children may say about them behind their backs has control issues. In the process of separating from parents, it is normal and expected for children to sometimes react negatively to their parents' traits.
Daniel Peterson wrote:harmony wrote:Why? In your world, do children never mock their parents?
GoodK isn't a child. But no, good sons don't typically mock their fathers as superstitious fools and fanatics on public message boards while their fathers are watching over possibly dying daughters. Not in my world.
harmony wrote:You just characterized GoodK's behavior as "misbehaving". That's a judgment. Or do you now consider that to not be serious?
By "serious" judging, I would have in mind denouncing him, writing a condemnation of him, publicly criticizing him, and the like. Even talking about him. But I did none of that. All I did was to send a URL to his dad, suggesting that he might want to have a look.
harmony wrote:When in doubt, don't.
I'm not sure that's a sound rule.
harmony wrote:meddling in family business of which you have no part.
If that's how you want to view sending a URL to a friend when something at that address concerns that friend, that's fine. We disagree.
harmony wrote:Once again, if it wasn't meddling, what was it?
Meddling has a negative connotation.
I don't grant that this was a negative thing. It was a duty that I feel I owed my friend. I don't think it would be "meddling in family business" to inform a friend that his son is down at the corner strung out on meth .
I wouldn't consider it "meddling in family business" to tell a friend that her thirteen-year-old daughter is having sexual encounters with a fifty-year-old internet predator.
I don't consider it "meddling in family business" to let a friend know that his son was ridiculing him behind his back on a public message board in a way that made it impossible for me (and, apparently, for at least one other person here) not to recognize who the son and the father were.
As I say, if the shoe were on the other foot, I would have wanted to know.
You don't have to agree with my moral judgment. I certainly disagree with yours. Still, I think there are others here who will plainly be able to see, even if they too disagree with what I chose to do, that my action was not the sort of deliberately evil thing that Scratch et al. continually ascribe to me.
harmony wrote:What do your publications have to do with the way you live your life?
They represent a great deal of my life. Of which, while you judge much and harshly, you know next to nothing.
GoodK wrote:How did I miss this thread??!
I think the issue is the "mocking" of the priesthood, or the "mocking" of faith in general rather than the "mocking" my parents.
Here is a link to the original post to put things in perspective:
http://mormondiscussions.com/discuss/vi ... sc&start=0