Am I alone in finding this remarkably hypocritical?
You usually are alone, aren't you?
I haven't just accused Pahoran of spin, I proved it.
Am I alone in finding this remarkably hypocritical?
beastie wrote:Pahoran wrote:I don't deny that Will provided the ammo. But the fact is that MsJack, by her own up-front admission, decided to go after him only because he was getting somewhere in LDS apologetics.
Evidently LDS apologists must be like Caesar's wife, while anti-Mormons are allowed to be as swinish as they like.
Regards,
Pahoran
That's a distortion of what she said. She expressed concern that someone with a history of misogynist comments would create a climate in which women would be discouraged to participate in discussion.
Isn't that right?
Pahoran wrote:
Yes, I remember seeing something to that effect. I didn't reply to it at the time -- there are always too many posts for me to reply to them all anyway -- but I will address that point now.
I find it an astonishingly arrogant piece of feminist hubris to insist that no serious discussion on any subject should take place unless women "feel comfortable" participating, and that the women in question may predicate their comfort on the behaviour of a participant outside the venue of the proposed discussion. Such an approach assumes that the views of women are at all times the most important ones.
Now I've always thought -- silly me -- that when it comes to Mormon subjects, the views of Mormons ought to figure in there somewhere. Furthermore, if a Mormon actually has something original to say, then maybe having that Mormon's contribution heard might conceivably be more important than whether some random woman who might want to participate in the discussion would be comfortable talking to that Mormon.
Evidently such a view is not politically correct enough. Evidently, here in a forum whose sole reason for existence is "freedom of speech," the muzzling of a Mormon apologist for reasons entirely unrelated to the quality and content of his apologetics is a worthy goal, and its accomplishment is an achievement to be celebrated.
Isn't that right?
Regards,
Pahoran
SeattleGhostWriter wrote:Are you all guilty collectively?
Yes.
Is that clear?
beastie wrote:So LDS women would feel comfortable, say, challenging the ideas of a man who has a history of attacking women's personal appearances and sexual attractiveness in response to being challenged?
I guess the church has changed since I left.
stemelbow wrote:This is all from memory for me and I'm not going to dig into it at all, but it seems to me Wade was hassled for being gay when the topic of homosexuality wasn't even part of the discussion. Perhaps the posters who did so, if my memory is right on that, were treating hm that way because of his views on homosexuality, but I didn't get that impression as the time. I just thought it odd that someone would say he's gay and make many references to that, as if that was some sort of insult in and of itself. Oh well.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
stemelbow wrote:This is all from memory for me and I'm not going to dig into it at all, but it seems to me Wade was hassled for being gay when the topic of homosexuality wasn't even part of the discussion. Perhaps the posters who did so, if my memory is right on that, were treating hm that way because of his views on homosexuality, but I didn't get that impression as the time. I just thought it odd that someone would say he's gay and make many references to that, as if that was some sort of insult in and of itself. Oh well.
Daniel2 wrote:I haven't read through ALL the posts in this thread, but did anyone mention the 2nd Article of the LDS Faith, yet....?
"We believe that man shall be punished for his own sins, and not for Adam's transgression."