Doctor Scratch wrote:Here's my question: Why are the people at Patheos allowing him to do this stuff? They need to kick him off and let him carry on with this sort of thing without their endorsement. He's going to wind up dragging them down, too.
This is the question that nags at me most. It seems that Prof. P. has decided to use Patheos as a platform to continue to fight his battles. For all of those who are not familiar with his online spats, this has to be rather discombobulating. They click on his blog to see what a prominent BYU professor has to say about the Gospel of Jesus Christ and they are treated to something like this:
Daniel Peterson wrote:I understand that there are several people out there in the ether (I’m betting, from long experience, that they’re anonymous, though I haven’t seen their statements at first hand) claiming to have read the now notorious paper about the work of John Dehlin that the late Mormon Studies Review was instructed not to run, and claiming, further, that it attempts to tie John Dehlin to a missionary’s death in Central America, or, even, to the deaths of several missionaries there.
These people have not read the paper. Or, if they did, they are lying about what they saw.
Er, what?
It appears that we are not the only ones to have raised such questions either:
Daniel Peterson wrote:I did see one comment, though, that wondered whether this blog represents the kind of thing that ought to be on Patheos. I’m not competent to speak to that subject. (I’m aware that at least one vocal individual out there has voted an emphatic and public “No!”) But I can say this: For months before I came to Patheos, I was blogging elsewhere about religion, politics, movies, music, and just about anything that came to my mind. I was happy doing it, and happy where I was. I even had some readers. (Far more than I had expected.) Now that I’m here, and for as long as I’m here, I intend to continue doing what I was doing. I didn’t approach Patheos to blog on their site. They approached me, knowing full well the kind of things I blog about. I responded that I didn’t want to change my approach, and they replied that I didn’t need to change my approach. I had already turned down an invitation to move the blog to a place where they wanted me to concentrate only on religious issues.
So, either the Patheos folks did not look at his various posts very closely, or certain apologetic allies have connections. Or, I suppose it could be that rants about warfare with anonymous people are exactly the kind of thing the Patheos is looking for.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist