Doctor Scratch wrote:You. Though it wouldn't surprise me if Clark wants to say, too.
Well, it's very kind of you to focus on me. To answer your line of questioning, I would say that a) contra Gadianton, I don't believe the Mesoamerican model to be dead now or in the future or that Clark is saying that it is dead. And b) if the Mesoamerican model
were to die, then no, I don't think it would be any kind of threat to the overarching idea of LGT. (Exhibit A would be Clark's article.) You obviously disagree, but I'd like to hear your reasoning.
Doctor Scratch wrote:There is no real and/or meaningful difference, J Green.
Based on Clark's comments, do you think there is a meaningful difference to
him? And do you agree with Dean Robbers that Clark is distancing himself from the low lying fields of the specific model and reatreating to the high ground of a generic template? If so, could you explain Pickett's charge to me?
Doctor Scratch wrote:The only thing even remotely resembling a difference is the theory proposed by Meldrum, but you're content to allow your "good friends" at the M.I. to label him a "charlatan," a mountebank, etc.
I guess I haven't seen where my "good friends" have called Meldrum a "charlatan." But now that I've been alerted, I can assure you, good citizen, that I will pick up the red phone on my night stand and call it in. Stand by for action.
Doctor Scratch wrote:I suppose there is that bizarre model that proposes a Book of Mormon geography in southeast Asia. Would you like to count that as well?
Actually, I'm rather partial to Darth J's Italian model. And I'm even more partial to Andrea Bocelli singing "La Habitudine" with Helena.
But now it's your turn. Where do you stand on the whole James Blunt thing? Disturbing, isn't it?
". . . but they must long feel that to flatter and follow others, without being flattered and followed in turn, is but a state of half enjoyment" - Jane Austen in "Persuasion"