Mister Scratch wrote:The fact of the matter is that you have no idea how much of them I have read. I haven't told you, and you are just guessing.
I tested you on the Novick/Midgley matter. You floundered for a while, but you plainly failed the test. And, in the course of your floundering, you acknowledged that you hadn't read it all -- which, it seems fairly obvious, is putting your unfamiliarity
mildly.
Mister Scratch wrote:You asserted earlier that "friendly" authors (e.g., yourself) have been given harsh treatment in the pages of FROB.
I didn't assert that we had been treated "harshly." I don't grant your accusation that we give "harsh treatment" to
anybody.
Mister Scratch wrote:I defy you yet again you prove that this is so.
All of the reviews are up on line. All of them have been published in hard copy.
It's not surprising that you're unfamiliar with this, since your knowledge of what we've published is obviously quite superficial and spotty, but that's not our fault. The reviews are all easily accessible.
Mister Scratch wrote:Dr. Robbers carefully culled a set of quotations from Bill Hamblin
Indeed he did!
Mister Scratch wrote:which are clearly aggressive and vicious in nature.
LOL. No they're not.
Mister Scratch wrote:LOL! What an embarrassing slip up for you!
In your fevered and fantastical dreams, Scartch.
Mister Scratch wrote:Here, you state that you have no problem deleting "posts about Midwestern winters, Oregon blueberries, Aotearoa, Mt. Hood" and so on, and yet when I've asked you about your "archive" of emails in the past, specifically in regards to messages from critics---SusieQ and Infymus, for example---you claimed that you saved *ALL* of your emails!
I absolutely
don't save
all of my e-mails. My computer would no longer
run if I'd saved
all of them from the past
decade or two. I receive hundreds daily.
But I save -- or, rather, fail to delete -- many if not most of them. My in-box alone contains more than ten thousand e-mails at the present moment.
Mister Scratch wrote:It is as I suspected all along: you vindictively hang on to messages from critics in the hopes of someday being able to use their own words against them.
The standards of proof in Scartchworld have always been remarkably low.
Mister Scratch wrote:"Creepy dossiers" indeed, Professor P.!
Yes, Scartchmeister, "creepy dossiers," indeed.
You have them. I don't.
Mister Scratch wrote:What an embarrassing slip-up. I expect you'll be reeling all day.
What a loon.