Mister Scratch wrote:Either you did receive it, and you have been lying about it, or it was somehow "funneled" back into BYU, so that the Mopologetic Machine could be kept alive. If you didn't receive the 20K, by the way, then it would seem that you lied to the IRS.
Thus, by the magic of Scartchoscopics, I'm a liar either
way! "Scratch . . . always tries to see the good in people." (Gadianton, 7-11-08, MDB)
"The truth of the matter is that there is literally no way that this [as yet unseen] letter is not damning in some way." (Scratch, 7-30-08, MDB) "Actually, you lose either way." (Scratch, 7-31-08, MDB) "Why not admit defeat. . . ? There'd be more dignity in it." (Scratch, 8-12-08, MDB)
Anyway, you're wrong. If the $20K is what I think it was, it was "funneled back into BYU" -- which is to say, it was transferred in a very routine manner from one BYU entity to another -- in order to help the
Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages "be kept alive." My time was purchased from my department so that I could devote it to directing and editing the Middle Eastern Texts Initiative. Since my department still had to teach the classes that I taught even though I would not be available to teach them, it was only fair that (what is now) the Maxwell Institute compensate my department for the loss of my services.
I've explained this to you before.
Mister Scratch wrote:Probably because he told the truth to the IRS---i.e., that you were raking in thousands for your apologetics.
This is flatly untrue, Scartch, and you're a malevolent character assassin.
Mister Scratch wrote:LOL. I'm the only person involved with the Maxwell Institute who's even aware of Scartch's nonsense on this issue.
Nope---Bill Hamblin is aware too, as is, I would imagine, Lou Midgley.
I doubt that very much.
Mister Scratch wrote:It seems that criticism of apologists getting paid was a hot topic at the FAIR conferences, as evidenced by K. Shirts's YouTube videos.
The fact that Kerry Shirts may perhaps have been aware of your claims -- he's apparently posted here occasionally, so he may know of you, but you're far and away not the only loon who fantasizes about my mythical Mopologist riches -- scarcely means that it was a topic of general discussion (let alone a "hot" one) at the FAIR conference.
Dr. Shades wrote:Dr. Peterson has stated that the $20,000.00 figure was paid to BYU's Department of Near Eastern Languages in order for the Maxwell Institite (or its equivalent back then) to "borrow his time," if that makes any sense. In other words, the same BYU department kept paying him, but the MI was essentially renting his labor from BYU and compensating them for his absence.
Ergo, money changed hands between his bosses, but his own paycheck never changed.
Someone else--The Nehor, if I recall correctly--said that in Academia this sort of thing happens all the time.
What do you think of that situation/state of affairs? I have to admit that it sounds legitimate enough to me; am I mistaken, and if so, how?
You got it right, Shades.
Mister Scratch wrote:It may very well be that DCP earned a smaller salary for teaching fewer classes.
As I've repeatedly explained to you, my salary was unchanged. I taught fewer classes but did more editing. My department hired me to teach classes, so it was only fair that its contribution to my salary be decreased with the decrease in course instruction. The Institute wanted me to edit texts, so it was only fair that it contribute a proportionate share of my salary. This was worked out between the Institute and my department.
Mister Scratch wrote:Supposing that The Nehor is right, DCP was still paid quite a large sum by an apologetic organization.
An apologetic organization that also publishes entirely non-apologetic materials like Averroës's
Middle Commentary on Aristotle's De Anima, the
Metaphysics of Avicenna, the
Medical Aphorisms of Maimonides, and etc. My time was purchased so that I could devote it to editing those and other such texts.
Mister Scratch wrote:This means that it could have been dumped back into FARMS. (And he's never denied that this happened, probably for good reason.)
The money was not dumped back into FARMS.
Mister Scratch wrote:I have to admit, when I first looked at the tax forms, I was sort of stunned.
It was a watershed moment in the history of Mopologetics, and apologetics was rocked to its very core. Or something like that.
Mister Scratch wrote:After all, here was concrete evidence that DCP had been paid---and how!---for doing apologetics. But, as more information came to light, I began to worry that The Good Professor might find himself in some major-league hot water over this. After all, as he made clear to Gadianton, if FARMS had engaged in tax fraud, he (i.e., DCP), as Chair of FARMS, could very well be culpable.
I don't much appreciate anonymous public insinuations that I may be guilty of a federal crime. It's just one of my little eccentricities.
Mister Scratch wrote:I don't really think there was any "tax fraud," though.
It's true that Max was standing over the body with a smoking gun in his hand, but, even though I'm sharing this with you as an eyewitness, I really don't think that he killed her.
Mister Scratch wrote:Failing to disclose the rather sneaky financial relationship between FARMS and BYU
There was and is no "rather sneaky financial relationship" to "disclose."
Your obsessive and malevolent gaze doesn't discover crimes so much as it invents them.
Mister Scratch wrote:I still wonder, for example, if the 20K was actually in excess of DCP's salary, but he arranged for it to be funneled back into apologetics.
I didn't. (What nonsense.)
Mister Scratch wrote:I also wonder why the accountant who filed those 990 forms was fired.
Jersey Girl's description of you as a "gossip whore" was right on target.
The reasons for his dismissal are absolutely none of your business.
Mister Scratch wrote:Does the firing suggest that the forms are inaccurate?
There was absolutely no connection between his firing and this form. But we weren't satisfied with his work.
Mister Scratch wrote:DCP was the Chair of FARMS and was thus his own boss.
I was the chairman of the board, not the director or CEO. We hired people to take care of administrative details, taxes, etc. The board was made up of academics, and we concerned ourselves with academic matters. The business matters we left to others, so far as we were able to do so.
Mister Scratch wrote:He acts all aloof about where the $20,000 went, claiming that he "hates" tax forms and the like, but, if he were Chair, I would imagine that he knew exactly where it went
Even better: As the recipient of my salary, I know where that $20K
didn't go.
Mister Scratch wrote:and, increasingly, I suspect that he funneled it back into FARMS and apologetics. I doubt that it went to BYU at all, and suspect instead that he collected the money, and simply "donated" it back to FARMS.
Your suspicions are unfounded and false.