First of all, for harmony's sake, I want to declare my agreement with everybody, and my appreciation for their valuable insights.
Brent Metcalfe wrote:But you again misrepresent the facts. "[F]I've or six or so... were printed and bound"?! I know from multiple sources that many were printed and bound. Are you seriously disputing this?
Yes. I'm contradicting it.
My understanding and my memory have it that perhaps slightly more than five were printed and bound (and released), but fewer than ten. If I'm wrong, I'm not wrong by very much. There were very few printed and distributed, and virtually all were successfully recalled. So I was told, and I've never had any reason to doubt it.
beastie wrote:Well, I suppose Brent can take comfort in the fact that he was only called a butthead
Brent wasn't called "a butthead."
Unfortunately, you're wrong again (as is your wont).
To be precisely accurate, Brent was equated in an essentially invisible acrostic with "
Butthead," a then-popular television character. That's a rather different thing.
Having watched you on this board and elsewhere, I know you're not into nuances or "parsing" or the careful reading (or even beholding) of texts, but the difference between, say, "a mouse" and "Mickey Mouse" is not without significance: Exactness is a virtue.
And the acrostic was unknown to the leadership of FARMS, which neither approved it nor supported it. Demonizing and dismissing the entire organizaton (and, sometimes, even all "apologists") as some critics continue to do fully a decade and a half and many personnel changes after this very trivial little inside joke, is simply ridiculous, and, as it's often used, represents as clear an illustration of the
ad hominem fallacy of irrelevant diversion as any Logic 101 textbook writer could possibly desire for a chapter on the "practical fallacies."