Doctor Scratch wrote:The Review can be whatever you want it to be. But let's not pretend that it's not bellicose, and that it's not using a stunningly rigged peer review system.
I don't have to "pretend."
It's not "bellicose," though it can be combative. (The two words have very different connotations.) And it certainly doesn't use "a stunningly rigged peer review system."
Remember, I'm the one who runs the confidential peer review system for the
FARMS Review. You're the one who knows nothing about it, and makes stuff up. So, if we're not going to pretend, let's not pretend any more that you have any real idea what you're talking about.
Doctor Scratch wrote:One wonders why a review-based "journal" would need peer reviewers at all. Most scholarly book reviews, after all, don't receive peer review.
That's correct. I've made that point to you a great number of times. It seems that you've finally begun to internalize it.
Here's the reason we use peer review: It helps us with quality control. We don't
need it, but we do it
anyway. For which, predictably, you damn us.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Then, of course, one remembers that you need this component to add credibility to what is, on the whole, essentially a jokey---or "satiric," in your phrasing---attack journal.
If we had ever made a big deal about our peer review, you might have had a point. But we never even mentioned it -- for years -- until a few critics such as yourself began to criticize us for supposedly having none.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Cue the predictable response: "Hey! You criticize us for having a rigged peer review, and then you criticize us for having peer review at all!"
That response was predictable because it's so precisely spot-on.
You criticize us no matter what we do. You criticize
me for everything
I do and, even, for things that I
don't do -- including, irrelevantly, my alleged taste in music, humor, literature, movies, and art. Your hostility is bizarre, obsessive, virtually unlimited, and transparently irrational.
Doctor Scratch wrote:If you are going to have a peer review, at least use one that brings some even-handedness and balance to the publication; or, you can dispense with the process entirely. I mean, it's not really relevant to what you're going, in the end, is it?)
It helps us produce a better product. That the product represents a point of view, and specifically one that you abhor, is perfectly fine with me.
Doctor Scratch wrote:You yourself have said that satire far too often is used to do harm. How interesting, then, that you'd admit that the Review "often" has a "satirical bent."
I think satire can be misused. That doesn't mean that satire, as such, is bad.
Doctor Scratch wrote:As for "ironic".... Well, I've never seen any evidence that you know what the word actually means.
Whatever.
Doctor Scratch wrote:For many years you used to call RfM the "ironically-named Recovery Board," though when it was pointed out to you that, in fact, there wasn't much surprising or "ironic" about the fact that people who'd lost their faith would be angry and upset, you mysteriously ceased calling it "ironic."
I don't remember this saga, and I still find the name "Recovery Board" ironic.
Doctor Scratch wrote:The issue was not whether "people whose opinions [you] value" like the Review. The issue is whether "fair minded" people, following the links you endlessly post, would "like" it, or would approve of the "ironic, satirical bent." The total number of "fair minded people" you've so far named is: Zero.
What would be gained by naming them? If you think I'm lying now, I could just as easily make up their names. What difference would it make? Would it reduce your hatred of the
Review or of me? Wouldn't it simply expose them, at least potentially, to your obsessive malevolence? They haven't done anything to merit your malignant attention.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Please refresh my memory about Richard's comment.
No. Surveying three decades of your vendetta-fueled treatment of critics has shown me that you are the last person for whom I should do any favors. Use the search engine if you want a memory refresher.
LOL. Fine.
Richard and I get along really well. We're friends. This will be the second time I've spoken for him down in Claremont.
If he really doesn't like what I do, I'm sure he'll tell me himself someday. It's not as if I trust you to represent anybody else's opinion on anything. You virtually never get
mine right.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Especially those who are hell-bent on revenge against critics. (E.g., Gary Novak, Scott Lloyd, William Schryver, Stan Barker, William Hamblin. Wow! See how easy it is to cite actual people?
I see how easy it is, yet again, for you to make things up.
Not one of these people is among those I had in mind. Nor do I agree with your characterization of them. (But that's hardly news. I see you projecting your malevolence onto others virtually every day.)
Doctor Scratch wrote:It seems to me that you'd be better off admitting that it is indeed "rigged," and that you stack the deck in such a way that the articles will have maximum assault power against critics.
How would telling a lie benefit me?
Your lies don't seem to have done much good for
you.Doctor Scratch wrote:You "certainly hope" that reasonable and fair-minded people will continue to have a problem with the journal's unfortunate vindictiveness and pettiness? Okay.
Your malignant misrepresentations aren't even
subtle.