Pahoran wrote:What "tattoo incident" is that?
Are you referring to the incident where the haters went nuts over a photo of an athlete that supposedly had a tattoo "airbrushed" out of it; I defended BYU for that; and then when it turned out that the athlete in question didn't have the tatt at the time the picture was taken, so the "airbrushing" accusation was false -- and the accusers therefore had egg all over their faces -- somehow that made me look bad?
That "tattoo incident?"
Indeed, you may be right.
You left out the important part. When people mistakenly believed that the tattoo had been airbrushed out, you created a spin in which you asserted that the player would have wanted to tattoo airbrushed out as part of the repentance process. Then the subsequent article showed that he got the tattoo AFTER the picture, which had been from the previous year, so it had nothing to do with the repentance process and wanting to "wash out a statement" about how he perceived himself. But you just ignored how you had gotten it totally wrong and declared victory.
It's a real gift you have, the ability to see yourself victorious no matter what. That's what is funny here.
(snip P's blahblahblah)
Of course I understood that you were parsing and playing semantics, claiming you were only talking about THAT ONE PARTICULAR PIECE. Of course, you and SGW are asking us to accept that it's reasonable to believe that SGW wrote that piece of erotica as an apostate within one month of his previous apologia, and before asserting that he was interested in writing erotica at the same time as he was LDS. I think that strains credulity.
In addition, if you were really claiming that he just wrote that ONE PIECE OF EROTICA as an apostate, while recognizing that he wrote other erotica as a believer, it would be extraordinarily uninteresting and unimportant. It would not be giving you the opportunity to associate his erotica, of which you disapprove, with "YOU LOT."
So why, exactly, did you make the "YOU LOT" comment at all?
Again, your explanation strains credulity.
But I understand that you still view yourself as victorious. You've always been your loudest cheerleader.