Daniel Peterson wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:I find the notion of these "meetings" to be extremely intriguing.
As a result of the 1972 meeting, Morgtech 200-X analog implants were embedded in the brains of all A and B class Mopologists. At the 1999 meeting, these were upgraded to Morgtech 666-Xq series digital implants, and each operative was given a plastic decoder ring.Mister Scratch wrote:For example, was the "go ahead" given to start monitoring "over 1,500 anti-Mormon websites" right after one of these "debriefings"?
No, that was communicated via the new Morgtech 666-Xq digital implant, directly to each field operative.
(For the record, I don't believe the claim that the Church is monitoring "over 1,500 anti-Mormon websites." Based on my own personal experience with people at Church headquarters, I would be surprised to learn that anybody up there is monitoring even fifteen. My friends up there regard me as the expert on this topic -- the subject arises briefly every few years -- and I look in from time to time on maybe four or five such sites.)
Thanks for brushing off what was a genuine question. If you want to make it seem as if the Church and the Brethren aren't actually concerned about Church critics and anti-Mormonism, do you really think this is the best way to do it?
Mister Scratch wrote:Do these administrators answer to the GAs in any way, shape, or form?
No.
That certainly seems to fly in the face of accounts written by D. Michael Quinn, Brian Evenson, and others. Are you absolutely, 100% certain about this?
Mister Scratch wrote:1. LDS apologists get paid to engage in Mopologetics. This is generally not a huge sum,
As in, "It's typically nothing at all, but can, in some cases, rise to two figures or even soar into the very low three figures."
I'm glad we agree. I also think it's worth pointing out that these sums are supplemental to apologists' normal incomes. So, really, you guys are getting paid to engage in what you have tried to portray as a "hobby". I sure wish I got paid for *my* hobbies!
Mister Scratch wrote:though in some cases it can run up into the thousands of dollars, such as when someone publishes a book.
Which, being interpreted, means that, if a book sells really well, its author could make as much as two or three thousand dollars in royalties, which come not from the Church but from the pockets of those who buy the book. The Church is not involved in the situation at all. But this extraordinarily lucrative system of rewards is not yet fully in place at FARMS. See (5), below.
Are authors for Deseret Book and FARMS not paid advances?
Mister Scratch wrote:2. You do not receive *salary* to "write" apologetics, although part of your salary does cover "administration" and "editing" and other such things relating to apologetics.
Especially when, as in the case of antishock8, texts like Suhrawardi's Philosophy of Illumination and searchable databases of the Dead Sea Scrolls and recovered papyri from Petra are labeled "Mormon apologetics"!
Yeah, funny, but this does mean that you lied to Infymus and others when you said that "not one dime" of your salary had to do with Mopologetics.
Mister Scratch wrote:4. Apologetics is funded mostly by "outside donors." However, some portions of it, such as the part of your salary which covers editing FARMS Review, is paid for by BYU.
No part of my salary covers editing the FARMS Review. (You plainly haven't been following the bouncing ball. Please try to focus.) I receive a token payment, quite separate from my salary, when an issue of the FARMS Review appears. This is to cover my editorial work. It is a pittance.
Okay, right. I think I follow you. (This all seems far more labyrinthine than it should.) You get a supplemental income for editing FARMS Review. Entirely apart from that, a part of your salary is devoted to some sort of Mopologetic administrative duties.
Mister Scratch wrote:Now, the biggest point of contention (and the reason why you apparently took my statement out of context) has to do with whether or not the institutional Church---I.e., the Brethren---have anything whatsoever, in any way, shape, or form, with the way that Mopologetic funds are disbursed. My contention is: yes, they do.
Your contention is both baseless and false.
Why do you say that?
Mister Scratch wrote:Now, I could be wrong
You are.
FARMS would be your best shot -- FAIR and other such efforts are wholly and entirely independent of any ties to the Church, even indirect -- but the Brethren have nothing whatsoever to do with the way that FARMS disburses its funds.
Really? Not even in a distant, "We're looking over your shoulder" sort of way?
Mister Scratch wrote:Is this not tacit admission on the part of GBH that, in fact, the Church was offering up a means to fund FARMS?
No, and it doesn't say so.
I assume that you're fixated on the word professional. I can only assume that President Hinckley meant that the work was well done, as in the compliment that "Frank did a very professional job."
Which means that the Brethren are overseeing Mopologetics, and that they have given their official approval.
Mister Scratch wrote:The real truth is that the Church is culling together funds to support a cadre of professional, paid apologists.
Flatly untrue.
But you're going to persist in this tinfoil-hat nonsense regardless of what I say, so why should I bother to interact with you any more?
I don't know, Professor P. I'm not really sure what it is you're so anxious to disprove. I stated pretty plainly the purpose of this thread: to explode the old myth that LDS apologists receive no compensation. As far as that goes: Mission Accomplished. Following that, I've found it interesting to explore the relationship between the institutional Church and the Brethren and Mopologetics. You seem very, very anxious to put a lot of distance between Mopologetics and the Church, and I can't quite figure out why. Do you think that LDS apologetics somehow reflects badly on the Church? Or is it upsetting for you to think that the Church needs apologists? (Which is a good and pertinent question, by the way.) It seems pretty clear to me that, regardless of whether the Brethren feel that they "need" apologetics (and even this is questionable given your report about being summoned to these shadowy "meetings"), they definitely "approve" of the Mopologetic effort, and in fact are willing to revise FP statements in order to support it. (That seems an awfully big concession of doctrinal power.)