I'm done with the "girls" issue. Those who want to consider me a nasty and insulting sexist are likely to continue to do so (because they have already continued to do so) regardless of what I say.
Just as it's boring and humor-draining to explain jokes to those who didn't get them at first iteration, it seems without purpose to attempt solemn explication of a flip term of address. I use
girls less frequently in that sense, by far -- probably a couple of times in any given three-year period -- than I use
amigos,
comrades, and
co-conspirators, though probably about as frequently as I use
meine Kameraden and
pilgrim. You're free to divine (or not to divine) any Deep Incriminating Significance in such practices that you choose.
I think language is fun, and I tend to be playful with it. (I love Shakespeare, perhaps most of all, for the richness of his language, his allusions and his puns.) On the other hand, I realize full well the truth of Senator Thomas Corwin's advice to William McKinley: "Never make people laugh. If you would succeed in life, you must be solemn, solemn as an ass. All great monuments are built over solemn asses." (This principle has come to be called Corwin's Law of American Politics.)
harmony wrote:Oh great. So now our lame apologetics is part of a class on the relationship between
pseudoscience and archeology at SMU, and we're the
pseudoscience part? This doesn't exactly support the "but... but... but... we're very respected in our own fields" lament, does it? How embarrassing!

Before pronouncing final judgment on this, it might be useful to know what Professor Freidel says about Professor Clark's talk, and how he uses it in his course.
Is belief in the Book of Mormon faith-based, a religiously-motivated view of the ancient Americas? Absolutely. For that reason by itself, omitting the Book of Mormon from the course described in Professor Freidel's syllabus would be foolish and damaging.
But including Professor Clark's lecture transcript among his readings by no means entails that Professor Freidel considers Professor Clark the equivalent of Erich von Däniken or a UFO cultist. Perhaps he does, but I doubt it.
Professors Freidel and Clark are scholarly peers, and are, I believe, well acquainted with one another. So far as I'm aware, their relationship is a good and mutually respectful one. Which makes complete sense, because both are very respectable and respected scholars.