T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
316.1 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Wed Aug 22 1990 17:36 | 5 |
| hmmmmm
Sounds a lot like "Daughters of a Coral Dawn"....
-Jody
|
316.2 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Mon Sep 03 1990 23:41 | 11 |
|
This is fascinating.
Whatever it may sound like, 316.0 has got to be the most insulting and
offensive note that has ever been entered into this Notesfile.
I find it amazing that a Moderator allowed it to be placed in here at
all, not to mention actually entering it for someone. It says a lot about the
state to which this file has fallen.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.3 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | And leave behind the things I love | Mon Sep 03 1990 23:52 | 4 |
| Du sollst ein Electriker werden, Du hast so lange eine Leitung. :-)
...and in any event, Robert, you've got your directions mixed I think:
it's "risen", not "fallen".
|
316.4 | | SHIRE::BIZE | La femme est l'avenir de l'homme | Tue Sep 04 1990 03:33 | 17 |
| Robert,
Before you protested against this note, I had just skipped it, as I had
over 2000 unread notes to catch up with. I have just gone back and
read it and I fail to see where it's insulting, and against whom.
I realise I may be playing into your hands by raising to the bait (if
it is one) or failing to see the irony (if your note is sarcastic), but
I really don't see a problem with the base note.
As far as I'm concerned, it's just yet another Bible-type parabole, or
maybe something that could be used as an intro to a science-fiction
book... I am not saying there isn't more to it than that, but to
qualify it as "the most insulting note, etc.." strikes me as fairly
bizarre, to say the least!
Joana
|
316.5 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Tue Sep 04 1990 15:00 | 30 |
| Referencing 316.3 (Maggie):
Please trust me, Maggie: this Notesfile really has FALLEN if it has
allowed such an insulting entry to be placed here. I see your node address
on the basenote; my statements about it are not meant to reflect on you,
because I doubt if you would have allowed the basenote to be entered,
anonymously or otherwise, if you really knew what it was about. I am going
to assume that you didn't, because based on disappointments in our dealings
in the past I do not believe that you would even passively endorse the insults
contained in 316.0.
And assuming that your quote is german (a language which I don't speak),
could you please give me a translation? I am infinitely curious; it is
best for me to know what someone is saying when hir "talks" to me.
Referencing 316.4 (Joana):
There is no "bait" here, nor am I being sarcastic. I am very serious.
It appears that you are correct in calling it a parable. The way I read it,
based on what the author said in the introduction, it is a kind of symbolic
history of this Notesfile. The individual who had it entered (I assume, based
on the wording in the introduction, that the person was female) was conveying
a message which was very insulting, and the parable conveys it in a very
offensive manner.
The offensiveness of this entry -- and the biases that this entry
exposes-- are fascinating!
-Robert Brown III
|
316.6 | .5 says more about the author than the parable | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Tue Sep 04 1990 15:04 | 9 |
| Robert
It seems to me that the biases and the offensiveness may well be
in the mind of the viewer..
I found it an interesting parable on different types of people
(not sexes as you appear to be implying)...
Bonnie
|
316.7 | So what? | CUPMK::SLOANE | It's boring being king of the jungle. | Tue Sep 04 1990 16:24 | 8 |
| I found the so-called parable pointless and boring. As a matter of
fact, I fast forwarded through it the first time, and had to go back
and reread it (yawn ...) to see what all the fuss was about.
Of course, this is just one opinion, and it comes from a nerdy,
over-the-hill, head-in-the-clouds male.
Bruce
|
316.9 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Reality, an overrated concept. | Tue Sep 04 1990 18:07 | 40 |
| Hmm. I'm not insulted. I guess that's because it's impossible to insult
me or else I'm to dumb to know when I've been insulted.
I'm not sure just how to be offended. If the author is male, then the
parable is offensive, because it assumes that this is typical behavior
from the majority of the members of this conference and possibly by
extension, all women or men-who-support-equality. If the author is
female or male-who-supports-equality-and-what-this-file-promotes, then
the parable is offensive because it assumes that the people who don't
agree with what is being said in this file are all nasty, vile,
creatures that are out to destroy them and their file.
Neither viewpoint is true in and of itself. They both have some
elements of truth and some elements of falsehood. Both mostly center
around the more vocal people in here (I'm not one, just semivocal) Some
people come in here and feeling threatened by what they read, become
verbally violent. They threaten, whine, and scream like my kids did
when they were 2-3 years old. They threaten to run to personel if
everyone doesn't change to their viewpoint or else just rant and rave
on and on ad infinitum.
The other type in this file sees the intruder as a threat to what they
are trying to build in this file. They try to answer the 1st type
mentioned with calm reasoning, and when that doesn't seem to work
increased verbal violence. This escalates on both sides until finally
either everyone gets sick of it and just lets things calm down for a
while or else stops talking to each other. (I joined THE LIST also)
Either way, I don't think I'm offended. I am saddened that someone has
to resort to this and I hope that if the author is type two that they
realize not everyone who disagrees with what is said in here, screams
violently about it. If the author is type one, they must feel awfully
threatened by what goes on in here. Well pahdnuh, I'm here to say that
what goes on in here is the most positive, joyful, kind, sharing, and
wonderful flow of ideas and love that I've ever been priveliged to be
allowed to be a part of. We will go to any lengths to protect it.
Of course a lot of the above is generalisation and as always IMOHO.
Phil
|
316.10 | er yuk = waste of time and energy. | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Tue Sep 04 1990 19:42 | 8 |
| G'day,
Without knowing where R_Brown III is coming from, I can understand
that _any_ text which is a PARODY, not a parable of the Bible,( and
clearly this is) can be offensive to some. I ignored it for this
reason. Whether I agree or otherwise with whatever sentiments it may be
trying to express is another issue. I happen to dislike the mechanism.
Derek
|
316.11 | alter egotist | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Wed Sep 05 1990 10:11 | 29 |
|
Hummmm, are some individuals taking "A Story" to personally?
Of course I am biased, but I read it (after having passed
over it due to backlog) last night and it seems to me to be
address behaviour not bodies. We can all modify
our behaviour, but for the most part we can not change the
physical characteristics we were born with.
I was not insulted (but then I am not male though I am
Her Fieldmarshall Ma'am Sir) and I am not sure if there is
anything to be insulted about (other than the previously
mention of a paradoy of a biblical story).
The names and places are not really identifable (that is
unless one see oneself as the center of the universe, which
is okay as long as one admits to oneself that that is what
one is doing) and the situation is one that has been a
re-occuring theme though out recorded history.
So I ask, quite honestly, Just what is the problem?
_peggy
(-)
|
I find anything that I did not write
tedious and boring anyway....
|
316.13 | Comments and Clarifications | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Fri Sep 07 1990 17:38 | 49 |
| Greetings, all:
Frankly, I must admit to being suprised by the responses that have
been entered here since I entered 316.5. They are certainly not what
I expected.
Certain individuals, who usually tended to make assumptions
about what I say regardless of my attempts at clarification (no names mentioned
here for obvious reasons) didn't really do so this time. Even a certain bird we
know, who had of late been making feeble (mostly ignorable) attempts at
personally attacking me, actually asked for more information!
I am truley impressed. Does this mean that I can engage in an intelligent
discussion this time? I hope so.
My only disappointment is that Maggie did not translate her german (I
think it is german, at least!) quote that she entered in 316.3. I am still
very interested in what it means.
Enough of this. Please understand that I inadequately expressed the nature
of my "protest" in my previous entries. For one thing, it wasn't fully a
"protest" at all, though there are some issues raised by my interpretation of
the basenote that I did, indirectly, have problems with.
I, personally, did not feel insulted by the basenote, because after looking
closely enough at the basenote I became aware that it was not intended to
be insulting to me or men at all.
What bothered me about the basenote is that it is, actually, an insult to
the women of this Notesfile. It doesn't matter what it appears to talk about,
and it doesn't matter what sex the author is (though I maintain, for various
reasons, that the author must be female). The fact is that when I
translated some of the terms used in the basenote, I realized that it is an
insult to every female who participates in this Notesfile, as well as the
Notesfile itself.
This is why I was so suprised that a Moderator actually entered it --
and now that I think about it I was also suprised that it was entered by the
Moderator that it was entered by.
But since so many of you who have read it apparently miss the insulting
contents of 316.0, I now understand why this entry was allowed and why no
female WOMANNOTERs protested against it. I had assumed that some of them
(especially those familiar with ancient history) would have known the things
that I did, and would have seen what I saw in the basenote. Obviously, I was
in error.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.15 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | to live with the Devilish Mary | Fri Sep 07 1990 18:38 | 4 |
| "You should be an electrician, you have such a long wire"
(Said, mutatis mutandis, to me by my landlord in Wemewaarden whenever I
was slow on the uptake)
|
316.16 | <*** Moderator Response ***> | MOMCAT::TARBET | to live with the Devilish Mary | Fri Sep 07 1990 18:40 | 2 |
| Unless the bona fides of the author are in question, or the content of
the note violates our policy, the mods will post any note.
|
316.17 | just a simple question! | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Sep 10 1990 10:15 | 15 |
| > What bothered me about the basenote is that it is, actually, an insult to
>the women of this Notesfile. It doesn't matter what it appears to talk about,
[...]
> But since so many of you who have read it apparently miss the insulting
>contents of 316.0, I now understand why this entry was allowed and why no
>female WOMANNOTERs protested against it.
Well, Robert, if you are so convinced that it is insulting, and that we
are missing something by not interpretting it as insulting, why don't you...
GASP!...tell us what you consider insulting about it. You've gone on
about how we should be insulted but have yet to say why.
So I am asking you...why? Pray tell, *what* is insulting about the story?
D!
|
316.18 | I like happy endings. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 10 1990 10:48 | 4 |
|
Well, it seems to me that if no one is personally insulted after
all, then all's well that ends well.
|
316.19 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Mon Sep 17 1990 16:41 | 36 |
| Referencing 316.15 (Maggie):
Personal attack from a moderator? Interesting...
Referencing 316.17 ("D!"):
Before launching into a description of how insulting the contents of the
Basenote really are, please note that at no point have I suggested that anyone
"should" be insulted about anything. At first I expressed suprise that what, to
me, was an obviously insulting entry was (a) allowed to be placed in this
Notesfile, and (b) allowed to remain without protest. When I later realized
that others missed its insulting contents, I realized why there had been no
protest and acknowledged my error in assumption (though I was, admittedly,
suprised that certain noters here did not recognize the insults that I saw).
It is not my policy to tell others in this Notesfile how they "should" feel
about anything.
Suzanne may be correct in saying that as long as no one feels insulted,
perhaps the whole matter should be dropped. Ignorance may, in fact, be bliss in
this instance.
Maybe. Unfortunately, what is not known can, indeed, be harmful. The best
way to mock a person, or a group of people, is to do so in a way that others
can recognize and laugh at, while the group being mocked totally misses the
point. The female who entered this basenote is apparently very good at mocking
people.
But some may desire a "happy ending", so I have placed my explanation in the
next entry. The primary purpose of this entry is to act as a buffer for those
who may be inclined to disbelieve that I have reason for 3calling the basenote
insulting -- yet who may be less- than- willing to discover how insulting it
really is. It is a warning to those who want a "happy ending": if you haven't
already, hit NEXT UNSEEN here.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.20 | The information | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Mon Sep 17 1990 16:44 | 95 |
| As I stated in my previous entry, the way to mock someone most effectively
is to insult them in such a way that others get the joke, while those being
insulted miss the punchline. The writer of 316.0 does this very effectively.
This was done in much the same way that Maggie did when she spoke german to
me ( except that Maggie's was relatively gentle and on a much smaller scale):
by speaking in a language that the reader does not know.
When I saw the title of the "story", I was struck by the words "Hem" and
"Hemutlund". Something about them seemed familiar. The familiarity bugged me
for a while, but it was only later that it hit me: the word "Hem" was something
that I had encountered when studying ancient Egyptian heiroglyphs.
One of my many interests is in ancient languages. I have a number of
references at home, though some of them are old and are by no means complete.
Without going into too much detail into how I did so, I will simply say that
after checking a number of my references I determined that the names and places
mentioned in 316.0 are derived from bad ancient Egyptian and even worse Hebrew.
Hem, for example, is sort of egyptian for "woman" (the heiroglyph actually
describes the female organ, though it also seems to mean woman), and "hemut"
is plural (the ancient Egyptians, according to my sources, used "ut" and "th"
in much the same way that we use "s" for plurals). "Hemutlund", therefore, must
be a fancy way of saying "women's land", while Hem is a slightly insulting way
of saying woman (I say slightly insulting because the Egyptians had other and
better ways of saying "woman" than to use a word which also talks about the
female organ!).
Conversely, the "evil" Reth, who invaded Hemutlund, is ancient egyptian for
"men" (ret meaning "man", reth plural).
At this point, one can say that the "story" is an insult directed at men,
since the "People" of Hemutlund (women) are being plagued by the "evil" Reth
(men) who do not respect the "Great One". But then, the particularly bad Hebrew
makes things even more "interesting".
The name of the narrator, priestess Hedyut'a, is derived from the word
"Hedyut", which describes an ignorant, uneducated person.
The names of some of the goddesses and their agents are corrupt forms of
the names of Klippoth (those familiar with Jewish mysticism may know of them),
which are liars, poisoners, and bringers of strife and cruelty.
Other names come from words which mean "hatred", "illusion", "wrath", and
"ignorance".
And most insulting of all, the name of one of the "gods" of the Reth is
derived from Egyptian words meaning "light and truth" -- words when put
together also describe an important ancient Egyptian GODDESS. The name of the
other "god" is another Egyptian word meaning "Light".
Because the introduction to the story speaks of an "old tradition" (parables
being originally a vehicle used by "wise women" or "crones" to teach lessons to
people) which gives a message to all of "us here", my feeling is that the story
is a parable, written by a female, to describe something about this Notesfile.
I could be wrong (only Maggie knows for sure), but I do not believe that a man
writing this parable would have made reference to that tradition, and would
ghave used the word "you" instead of "us". In this Notesfile, women tend to use
"us" more than men.
Based on all I've said above, I interpreted the basenote as follows:
The People of Hem (women) came to Hemutlund (WOMANNOTES) to find a place
where they can communicate with each other in peace. Certain priestesses heard
of this place and brought "goddesses" (attitudes, maybe?) of ignorance, hatred,
unfairness, and anger. They "built temples" to the "Great One" (built up
attitudes based on the accumulation of all the bad qualities) and ruled
Hemutlund (WOMANNOTES), "teaching" the "people" the True Word (of hatred and
intolerance). But then the blaspheming Reth (men) came, bringing different ways
which endangered the status quo (truth and light, I imagine, would threaten
those who promoted ignorance and hatred), and so "goddesses" like Aurphel'a
("Aurphel" means Darkness, Fog, Ignorance) rose up to fight the "evil" Reth.
That the "People" as a whole (those left after the priestesses took over.
Section 9 of the basenote mentions people with "sin and violence" in their
hearts who were made to leave. In the context of the rest of the story, this
section is a particularly sarcastic statement, especially since the narrator
making it has a name which means "an ignorant person"), suggests that the
inhabitants of Hemutlund (the women of WOMANNOTES) agree with and support the
regime of hatred and ignorance imposed on them.
This is why I considered 316.0 to be insulting to the women of this
Notesfile. This is also why, in the erroneous belief that others saw the
insults I did, I expressed amazement that no one protested the note (as certain
other notes had been protested about in the past).
There are other satiric elements of 316.0 that I saw and can describe, and
there are more details I can give about certain names. I believe, however, that
I have given sufficient information to prove my contentions.
This discussion -- indeed this entire Topic -- has been very instructive to
me. I have learned a great deal which will be very useful to me in future
discussions.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.21 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Mon Sep 17 1990 16:58 | 8 |
| Hm. I had no concept of what the names were, I thought they were just
made up. Interesting interpretation.
I thought it was highly similar to the science fiction book "Daughters
of a Coral Dawn". I still don't choose to be offended by it, but I
understand how if that is the way you interpret it you might be.
-Jody
|
316.22 | fine, so I'm nekulturnaya. | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Mon Sep 17 1990 17:19 | 29 |
| Robert,
So what "says a lot about the state to which this file has fallen"
is that most/all of us don't recognize it when we've been insulted
in Ancient Egyptian? Robert, this is Womannotes, not a conference
of experts in Middle Eastern linguistics. There is no reason to
be condescending just because we do not share your specialized
knowledge. (reference: "ignorance may, in fact, be bliss...", .19.
I interpret this as saying that those who don't understand why this
parable might be found offensive are ignorant).
You find it objectionable that Maggie uses German to you, and yet,
by entering repeated notes about the offensiveness of this note
and how shocking it is that no-one is objecting to it -- *without*
explaining *why* you find it offensive, you are in effect doing
the same thing to the readership of this conference. By stating
your conclusions (such as "the biases that this entry exposes are
fascinating") without providing either evidence or reasoning to
support them, you're playing an elaborate game of cat-and-mouse
with your reader. If intelligent conversation is indeed your goal,
you may want to rethink this sort of noting etiquette.
I also think that it is inappropriate to speculate on the identity
of an anonymous noter, even in such a broad realm as gender.
That said, thank you for the explanation.
Sharon
|
316.23 | how bizarre | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Sep 17 1990 17:34 | 18 |
| Well, if the author was indeed using Egyptian and Hebrew words to insult
us, then the insult was sufficiently obscure as to be pointless. I am
not insulted...rather, given this interpretation, I am bemused that someone
took the effort to write it. I mean, surely, even if s/he was trying to
be insulting, is does seem strange to insult someone so that (virtually)
no one knows it was an insult.
I don't really care one way or another, don't object to the note. You
analysis, though, was very interesting. Thank you, Robert, for providing
it. Like Jody, I had no idea the names meant anything and so didn't
even think twice about it.
I'm curious though...given that the naming *is* so obscure, and that is
the real root clue that it was intended as insulting, and that even you
had to go look up obscure words in obscure tomes, why did you consider the
implied insult "obvious"? Why did you expect that we should get it?
D!
|
316.24 | something's rotten in the state of Hemutland, er, Denmark | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Sep 17 1990 17:42 | 27 |
| Mythinks I smell a fish.
Maybe I'm being paranoid here, but I have an honest question to which I would
appreciate an honest answer:
Robert, did *you* post the base-note?
It just seems strange that you were the only one to say anything about
this note; that you recognized so many obscure references in it; that
you seemed so insistent on discussing the note when no one else was
paying attention to it and kept bringing it up; that you were evasive
(and continue to be so) in explaining why you considered the base-note
"obviously insulting"; that you keep making vaguely threatening
references to "what this has taught you about the file" and how you
are going to "use what you have learned", without mentioning what you've
learned or how you plan to use it.
I just reread all the notes in the string, and in retrospect, find some
of the things you said, and how you said them to be *very* *odd*.
Care to illuminate us as to, for instance, why on one hand you said you
had to look up references in old book and on the other hand were so shocked
that we didn't recognize the implied insult? Or what exactly it is that
you have learned about the community and how you plan to "use" that
information?
D!
|
316.25 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 17 1990 18:39 | 13 |
|
RE: .24 D!
Don't mind Robert - he really *is* a bit slow on the uptake here.
He doesn't understand that people are deliberately avoiding being
baited by all the Gee_what_insults! and No,_YOU_were_all_insulted
and the Well,_I_guess_ignorance_is_bliss_if_you're_all_too_stupid_
to_realize_when_you're_being_insulted (even though HE had to do a
tremendous amount of research to DIG UP these insults.)
The fish you smell is just the bait. ;^)
|
316.26 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | when he come home, | Mon Sep 17 1990 18:58 | 9 |
| No insult intended, Robert. I certainly never found an insult in it
when directed at me (which it quite often was :-) and I tend to do my
insults in whatever the insultee's native language is, not much point
to insulting someone if they don't know it's happening. I used german
in this case mostly because that's the language of the original and it
sounds klutzy in translation if you don't *know* it's a translation.
Trust me, I've got better things to do with my time and energy than
toss obscure insults at you.
|
316.27 | Another valid interpretation... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 17 1990 19:55 | 9 |
|
By the way, another valid way of looking at the names used in the
Story is to note that what is clearly defined as "love" by the
story-teller bears obscure, but decidedly FALSE labels of hate,
etc. (bestowed, no doubt, by a civilization that finds such love
so very threatening.)
Thus, I find the story insulting to our culture. ;^)
|
316.28 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Wed Sep 19 1990 15:35 | 145 |
|
Fascinating.
I honestly did not expect responses to my entry 316.21; my assumption was
that it would only be read by the curious and that any others who would be
inclined to be angered by this discussion would, like Suzanne suggested, "avoid
being baited" -- despite the fact that it was never my intention to "bait"
anyone.
Obviously, considering all the responses, both Suzanne and I were incorrect.
Equally obviously, I am not as "slow" as Suzanne prefers to believe; if I was,
this discussion would, indeed, have ended without my having to enter 316.20 in
the first place.
But if it is easier for some to believe that I am "baiting" or otherwise
trying to cause trouble, so be it. Believe what you want. I was asked questions
by a number of people, but it was suggested that others may not need/want to
"hear the answers. I tried to accomodate all by creating a "buffer" reply. That
some chose to read my reply and use it as a platform for their attempts to bash
me simply weakens their own moral position. I shall address their concerns
if/when they are ever ready to have a civilized discussion with me.
Otherwise:
Referencing 316.22 (Sharon):
First of all, I did not find it "objectionable" for Maggie to use German. I
stated twice that I was curious, that's all. Second, I am sorry that you were
offended by some of my statements in previous entries in this discussion;
please understand that they were not directed at you. The fact is, however,
that I am as condescending to others as they are to me; I had previously (in
another Topic) been insulted and condescended to by certain noters here. Until
I feel that I can say something in this File without having people be rude,
disrespectful, and condescending to me, then I will continue to defend myself
by being rude, disrespectful, and condescending in return. For future
reference: I DO NOT direct any general statements I make at EVERYONE in this
Notesfile. General statements I make are really directed at certain people
here, since the guidelines in this file prohibit me from properly responding to
personal attacks directed at me (such as 316.25), and I have no adequate means
of insuring that such attacks will not be performed again. So again: I am sorry
that you were offended. I truley apologize to you, and to everyone else who has
not behaved offensively towards me.
Referencing 316.23 & 316.24 (D!):
First, I must as gently as possible suggest that you are, indeed, being
paranoid. Believe me: if I had posted this note anonymously, I would have no
reason to expose its insulting contents. To do so would be incredibly stupid;
after going through so much nonsense having to deal with people who have
accused me of attacking this Notesfile when indeed I wasn't, the last thing I
would do is deliberately attack this Notesfile, then talk about it when people
missed the insults! Such an action would only give the bashers here ammunition
to use against me in the future ("Robert Brown attacks the women here! Need
proof? Check out 316.0!").
I'm sorry: I am not the person who sent Maggie the basenote. I wish I was
that subtle! If I had, I would have congratulated myself and shared a laugh or
two with certain friends of mine telling them how easy it is to mock the women
here. I would have given the information in 316.20 to anyone EXCEPT members of
this community, and you probably would have gotten it thirdhand from one of
this file's enemies while they laughed at you.
As for your other questions: once I knew where to look the effort wasn't
that great at all. Some of my referenes were old, but that is simply because I
have been too lazy to update them. You can get the information I have easily by
going to certain bookstores -- one source of which is the New Words bookstore
in Cambridge, which contained information on ancient Goddesses whose names I
recognized (such as Ma- At, which is Maat, the Goddess of Truth and Light) in
the story. I'm also a little absent- minded; I didn't immediately recognize the
word "Hemut" because unless something is visual I usually depend on references
for memory. But like a UNIX function, the word rang a bell with me, and once I
remembered it was Egyptian all else fell into place.
In other words, it was, indeed, obvious to me that words in ancient
languages were being used to mock this Notesfile. But I made the mistake of
assuming that the Goddess- names (like Maat) would be recognized by the women
here who have shown familiarity with (and sometimes preferences for) the
ancient goddesses and their worship. That the women who know of ancient
goddesses did not protest the entry at first angered me because I assumed that
their biases towards women (I still maintain that the author was female.
Despite Sharon's protests the politics of this notesfile make the gender of the
author important) prevented them from responding to the insult while allowing
them to attack me for even SEEMING to insult this file. That is why I reacted
the way I did. That this Notesfile's Goddess- worshippers and others who are
familiar with the ancient female deities ("the many forms of the Goddess")
would miss the mocking references to ancient goddesses and ancient matriarchal
civilizations never occurred to me. As I stated before: my assumptions were
incorrect; otherwise I would not have said anything in the first place.
Also: I didn't need to know the ancient languages or goddesses to recognize
the insulting contents, though I chose those references here because they left
absolutely no room for doubt that what I had to say was true. Anyone familiar
with satire (and there are, I understand, many literate noters in this
community) will recognize the sarcastic elements in the basenote. In fact,
after my initial protest I did a sanity check by directing others to the
basenote. To a person they recognized the satiric elements in the story -- I
only dug into my references afterward.
In other words, my initial protest was related to the satiric elements in
the story; though before then I had recognized the word "Hemut", I didn't
bother to check my references. Before I entered 316.13, I was sure
that it was an insult directed against the women here, but I decided to check my
references because based on what some others were saying, I realized that I
could have been wrong. After checking my references, however, I had enough not
only to say that, indeed, it was insulting to women here -- but that it was
even more insulting than I originally thought! With that knowledge, I entered
316.13.
And believe me: I wasn't "insistant" on discussing this. You've reread all
the replies; after my initial protest all my other replies were responses to
questions asked and statements made. As I once told Ann Broomhead (in my entry
91.80): my policy here is to give a little information initially, then expand
on it when others express interest in more information. This enables me to
"screen out" those who choose bashing over discussion, and have real
discussions with those who want them. All that I have entered in this reply
and in the previous ones are within this policy.
And I wasn't the only one to notice that the basenote was insulting. After
my initial protest (316.2), and after other entries, I discovered that others
noticed the insulting contents of the Basenote. I simply happened to be the
only one who said anything.
And as for what I learned: quite a lot. Some of what I learned I will not
tell you. I will, however, tell you one thing I did learn: that in this
Notesfile, once you are pegged as being "anti- WOMANNOTES", then no matter
what you say your words will be interpreted that way. I notice, for example,
that initially I was called "slow" and was semi- condescended to because I was
thought to be protesting something that insulted me. When I made clear that it
was women being insulted, and showed how, now I am being semi- condescended to,
and even insulted, because I am supposedly "baiting" or making a big deal over
"obscure" references. I am in a no- win scenario; no matter what I say, I'll
always be the "bad guy". This knowledge will have a great influence on my
future entries in this conference; the Frankenstein Principle applies greatly
to my relationship to this community.
Referencing 316.26 (Maggie):
Thank you for your clarification, such as it is. If I've angered you, my
apologies. But the fact is that whatever you intended, being called "slow" is a
great insult to me when it comes from someone I respect like you. I may have
misinterpreted your intent, but I'd prefer it if you didn't say things like
that to me again -- in ANY language.
Peace, all!
-Robert Brown III
|
316.30 | | RAMOTH::DRISKELL | I want you to be independant and available... | Wed Sep 19 1990 17:38 | 13 |
|
Intresting. I've read the parable several times, and each time
end up with the same meaning. That by the end of the story, I'm
no longer sure *who* is telling the *truth*, and *who* is telling
the lies & propaganda. In fact, it leaves me pondering the
exact meaning of *truth*, realizing anew that each of us have
our own version.
How this applies to this file & it's community? I'm not sure.
But the controversy is *very intresting*.
m
|
316.31 | Alternatively... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Sep 19 1990 17:54 | 23 |
| Robert,
The Cambridge, Massachusetts radical feminist organization is
Wildly Independant Thinking Crones and Hags. Do you think
that it has not occured to them that "Crone", "Hag", and their
acronym are usually considered to be terms insulting to women?
No? Good.
Now perhaps you could try looking at the basenote in another light.
It is written by a humble and unworthy servant, as the standard
formula goes. The names of the women and the agents of the
Goddess are the usual names given to such `uppity' women by men.
For Ma- At, substitute Minister of Enlightenment and Persuasion,
meaning the head of the propaganda and torture department. Try
reading it again. (I'll wait.)
Well, are your feelings about it the same? Or do you find it
insulting to men -- or, rather, to some men? Or do you think that
what the story means depends on what you bring to it? Or have
you stopped having any opinion of it at all? :-)
Ann B.
|
316.32 | Notes collision! (.30 and .31) | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Sep 19 1990 18:07 | 0 |
316.33 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Wed Sep 19 1990 18:15 | 26 |
| RE: .28 Robert
Poor Robert.
Did you think I meant "bait" in a bad sense? Must have, I guess.
I only meant it in the sense that you seemed to want a discussion
and there were few "takers," so you tried a number of different ways
to attract attention to this topic.
Also, saying you're "slow on the uptake" is not the same thing as
saying you're "slow." It only means that you haven't "caught on"
in spite of hints or clues. It has nothing to do with anyone's
level of intelligence.
If you don't understand what someone means by a certain expression,
it is more polite to ask them than to start launching false accusations
about being bashed.
Meanwhile, YOU DO NOT KNOW FOR A FACT THAT THE BASENOTE WAS MEANT
AS AN INSULT TO WOMEN, unless you wrote it (and you say you didn't.)
So, your lengthy analysis of all this is completely meaningless,
except as opinion.
This is why no one seems shaken up or upset at the thought of being
insulted. It's just your take on the basenote. So what?
|
316.34 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Wed Sep 19 1990 19:47 | 17 |
| By the way, Robert, about another mistake you made in this topic...
When I wrote my note about "the happy ending" (that no one seemed
to be worried about being insulted,) you translated my words as
"ignorance is bliss" (meaning that the women here are ignorant in
this situation.) You couldn't have been FARTHER from the real
meaning and intent of my note.
Thus, your ability to discern the meaning of notes is in serious
question, as far as I'm concerned, so I have even less reason to
accept your interpretation of the basenote than I did before.
However, this isn't an insult to you. Not everyone can interpret
another person's words accurately, so I don't consider it insulting
to point out your apparent failing in this area.
Peace.
|
316.35 | *snort* | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Wed Sep 19 1990 23:27 | 8 |
| Chortle.
This made my evening. I've had to wipe the tears of laughter off my
face twice.
Heh heh. Hee hee.
D!, highly bemused
|
316.36 | "We are not at war with Eastasia" | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Danger! Do Not Reverse Polarity! | Thu Sep 20 1990 05:28 | 34 |
| re:.19
� Personal attack from a moderator? Interesting... �
No, personal attack (if indeed that's what it was) from a noter
who sometimes also happens to be a moderator. Note that Maggie's
subsequent reply had "Moderator Response" at the top, whereas her
"personal attack" didn't.
re:.22
� I interpret this as saying that those who don't
understand why this parable might be found offensive
are ignorant). �
And that's exactly how it *should* be interpreted. Robert's use of
"ignorance" here is not a veiled insult. "Ingorance" is not a
synonym for "stupid". "Ignorance" simply means "lack of knowledge"
or a state of being "unaware" or "uninformed". It's the same as
in the phrase "Ignorance of the law is no excuse [for a criminal
act]", which does no presuppose that the person who is ignorant
of the law is stupid.
Anyone who does not understand the allusions in the parable (and
I count myself in thi) *is* ignorant. That's simply a statement of
fact, not judgment.
re:.31
I'm in total agreement, Ann. After reading Robert's "explication
de texte", my first reaction was, "Is *he* now missing the obvious?
That perhaps the nomenclature was intended as *irony*?"
--- jerry
|
316.37 | my response as a noter | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Sep 20 1990 11:26 | 18 |
|
I'm one who missed a lot of the deep inner meaning of the story in .0,
and so I didn't feel insulted by it. I did feel insulted, however,
by the way in which Robert insisted that we *ought* to be insulted.
I felt that Robert took delight in having this "knowledge" that the
rest (or many) of us didn't have, so I mostly tuned out. I think that
if someone cared about me and were outraged because I had been
insulted, he wouldn't use a tone and language that hurt me more than or
as much as the original "insult." I think whoever wrote .0 is very
clever, but I didn't see a direct reference to Womannotes. I think
the reference was to the world, which, I think, was a peaceful place
when nature (as personified by woman's ability to give birth) was
worshiped instead of the more modern gods that seem to glorify violence
and warfare. It made me want to learn more about goddess-worshiping
cultures.
Justine
|
316.39 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Thu Sep 20 1990 11:52 | 60 |
| From the following excerpts, although at one point he states he does not
mean to tell us what to feel (in the excerpt from .19 below), it STILL
feels like he's rubbing our noses in it and telling us how insulted we
should all be. Can you see how we could feel that, despite his
statement that he does not mean to make us feel that?
-Jody
--------------------------------------------------------------------
from 316.2
Whatever it may sound like, 316.0 has got to be the most insulting and
offensive note that has ever been entered into this Notesfile.
-Robert Brown III
from 316.5
Please trust me, Maggie: this Notesfile really has FALLEN if it has
allowed such an insulting entry to be placed here. I see your node address
on the basenote; my statements about it are not meant to reflect on you,
because I doubt if you would have allowed the basenote to be entered,
anonymously or otherwise, if you really knew what it was about.
-Robert Brown III
from 316.13
What bothered me about the basenote is that it is, actually, an insult to
the women of this Notesfile. It doesn't matter what it appears to talk about,
and it doesn't matter what sex the author is (though I maintain, for various
reasons, that the author must be female). The fact is that when I
translated some of the terms used in the basenote, I realized that it is an
insult to every female who participates in this Notesfile, as well as the
Notesfile itself.
-Robert Brown III
from 316.19
Before launching into a description of how insulting the contents of the
Basenote really are, please note that at no point have I suggested that anyone
"should" be insulted about anything.
from 316.28
Also: I didn't need to know the ancient languages or goddesses to recognize
the insulting contents, though I chose those references here because they left
absolutely no room for doubt that what I had to say was true. Anyone familiar
with satire (and there are, I understand, many literate noters in this
community) will recognize the sarcastic elements in the basenote.
After checking my references, however, I had enough not
only to say that, indeed, it was insulting to women here -- but that it was
even more insulting than I originally thought! With that knowledge, I entered
316.13.
|
316.41 | Let's speak for ourselves | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Sep 20 1990 12:08 | 16 |
|
Eric,
I said how Robert's replies to this topic have made me feel, and I
offered an opinion or two, carefully preceded with the words, "I think"
so that everyone would know I was stating an opinion.
Why don't you let Robert stick up for himself, if he feels the need to
do that, instead of asking us to apologize to him?
Robert, the thing I do want to apologize to you for, though, is for
referring to you in third person instead of directing my comments about
your notes right to you. If you'd care to respond directly to me
(or about me), feel free -- here or in mail.
Justine
|
316.42 | simple man, simple buttons :-) | HEFTY::CHARBONND | Free Berkshire! | Thu Sep 20 1990 13:33 | 3 |
| I'm never insulted by people who talk over my head. If someone
wants me to be insulted they should come up in my face (and use
short words :-) )
|
316.43 | This is more the case... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 13:39 | 5 |
|
Considering how little concrete information we have about the intent
and meaning of the basenote, I think Robert has been doing a gross
misrepresentation of it and owes the basenote author an apology.
|
316.44 | | CONURE::MARTIN | Lets turn this MUTHA OUT! | Thu Sep 20 1990 14:21 | 3 |
| "the case"???
ahem! and WHO, ah said, WHO made you the judge and jury?
|
316.45 | RE: -.1 | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 14:25 | 6 |
|
"Case" has more than one meaning - your assumption that I meant
a "court case" is a gross misrepresentation of what I said.
You owe me.... Oh, never mind. :)
|
316.46 | such boredom *sigh* | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Sep 20 1990 14:56 | 21 |
| I found "the story" in .0 to be very tedious and boring reading. I
have also found many of the replies to be tedious and boring as well.
I guess the "the story" went way over my head because it didn't seem to
me to be at all relevant to anything. Obviously, there's no way that I
could be insulted by it under these circumstances.
I guess the main thing that I don't understand, Robert, is why you made
such a big deal out of it? Why do you even care whether somebody
insults this conference, since my impression is that you don't think
much of it yourself?
EDP, not to speak for Justine, because she's certainly more eloquent
than I am, but it seems to me that all she did was state the way she
feels, and I don't think she owes Robert an apology, for the way she
honestly *feels*? Why should she apologize for how she *feels* about
something?
BTW, I do think notes have a "tone."
Lorna
|
316.47 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:25 | 11 |
|
If I were given the option of having all cultural insults against
women delivered in Ancient Egyptian instead of English, I'd go for
it in a hot minute.
It would be so much closer to "equality" than our society is now
- what an improvement!
(Not that I think the basenote meant to be insulting to women, of
course.)
|
316.50 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:45 | 11 |
|
Robert said (quite specifically) that the basenote insults all the
women of Womannotes, and the conference itself.
The basenote didn't say a single WORD about the parable applying
to Womannotes, so Robert committed a gross misrepresentation of
it (by describing something that was NOT in the basenote in any
way, shape or form.)
Robert misrepresented. This is an undeniable fact.
|
316.51 | let's not bore the others with our conversation | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:49 | 6 |
|
OK, Eric. I believe I understand your point, but I have decided
to stand by my opinions as I stated them. If you would like to talk
more about this with me, let's take it to MAIL.
Justine
|
316.52 | | SELECT::GALLUP | u cut out your eyes, u refuse to see | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:49 | 44 |
|
I actually went back and re-read the base note and thought
about it quite a bit. What follows is my thought process and
how *I* feel about the basenote.
If I apply the story as a reflection on the world today then
I, as a woman, am actually offended by the stereotype it
portrays of women.
I do not feel that I, by virtue of being a woman, am
blameless in the quest for equality. I feel that in certain
cases the oppressed are guilty (maybe not AS guilty, but still
guilty) of allowing themselves to be oppressed....for not
fighting, for allowing such oppressive thoughts to ever take
root.
My interpretation of the basenote portrays "women" to be
totally blameless in seeking their "peace" from oppression.
However, it never addresses why they had to seek that peace
to begin with.
Basically, I feel that if women had never "allowed"
themselves to be oppressed to begin with, we wouldn't be
where we are today. Remember, please, that I will never
condone the oppression of women, I will NEVER say that I feel
men are blameless in this.
I feel that while a very large percent of the blame goes on
"the man's" shoulders, I will always feel that a certain
amount of blame resides with the "woman" as well. Women have
not "become strong" in the last century, they always had that
strength within them, but rather chose not to use it.
So, basically what I guess I'm saying is that I don't
appreciate being portrayed as blameless in anything because
that makes me feel that I have no power over any situation
which I find myself in.
Maybe my view is much to "simplistic" as well....I don't
know (but I'm sure I'll get shit for voicing it).
k
|
316.53 | agree and agree to disagree | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:56 | 28 |
|
Kath,
When I read the first few paragraphs or your reply, I did feel
angry. And I didn't want to "give you sh*t," but I did want to
disagree strongly, but in a way that would be respectful of you.
Then I read this part:
> So, basically what I guess I'm saying is that I don't
> appreciate being portrayed as blameless in anything because
> that makes me feel that I have no power over any situation
> which I find myself in.
This is something I can understand. I think there comes a point where
taking some responsibility is a way of moving past the pain of
oppression and victimization. So I'm uncomfortable with the idea
of women being somehow to blame for their own oppression, but I agree
that taking responsibility is a good way to become empowered. For
example, I think of survivors of rape and incest who have learned to
defend themselves or battered wives who go back to school and start
a new career. This is not self-blame, but it does require focusing
on yourself instead of on the oppressor.
Justine
|
316.55 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 16:43 | 13 |
| Robert's suggestions about the basenote did not (in fact) appear
in the basenote. They were mere "guesses" about the meaning and
intent of a note he did not write.
Robert made claims about the basenote that were not stated in
the basenote.
He clearly misrepresented, per your original definition, edp.
Let's agree to disagree on this, though, since I doubt we have
the life spans to survive the decades it would take for either
of us to convince the other of these points of view.
|
316.56 | I've said this before. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Sep 20 1990 17:09 | 17 |
| There is, of course, the problem fomented by the language, English.
"I think" and "I feel" are often construed as meaning the same
thing. However, if I were to say "I feel the Copenhagen
Interpretation of Quantum is correct.", I would be expected
to back my "feeling" -- actually meaning my carefully thought
out line of reasoning with mathematical backing -- with facts.
Equally, if I were to say, "I think _Dahlgren_ is a great book.",
I would expect to hear back, "Well, that's your opinion, and I
suppose you're entitled to it." (For the record, I know too little
about either subject to make any statements about them.)
The trap of equating the validity of emotion-triggered "feeling" <A>
with the validity of chain-of-thought-summary "feeling" <B> is an
easy one to fall into. I'm sure I've done it myself.
Ann B.
|
316.59 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 18:41 | 17 |
|
RE: .57 edp
Reply .39 made a case for the idea that Robert was "insisting"
that women should be insulted.
This is beside the point, though.
Robert made unsupportable claims about the basenote (adding
material that was NOT PRESENT in the basenote.)
Robert misrepresented.
Now, let's drop it. If you live to be 1000 years old, you'll
never find an argument that will convince me of something I
know to be false. Let it rest.
|
316.61 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Thu Sep 20 1990 19:29 | 14 |
| Robert made no case whatsoever about why we should assume that
the parable was written to apply to Womannotes instead of our
society at large, so it simply isn't possible to insist that
this claim was supported.
The basenote itself did not say the parable applied to =wn=
and in the absence of any evidence or argument in support of
the idea that the parable *is* about =wn=, his claim amounts
to misrepresentation.
However, we obviously agree to disagree, so I guess we'll have
to be satisfied with an impasse.
See ya 'round.
|
316.62 | ***comod request*** | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Thu Sep 20 1990 20:31 | 8 |
| Suzanne and edp I would like to request that the two of you agree
that you disagree and drop the subject or else take the discussion
to mail.
Thankyou
Bonnie J
=wn= comod
|
316.63 | it jumped out from the screen | DCL::NANCYB | but people would go *nonlinear*! | Thu Sep 20 1990 21:11 | 33 |
|
re: 316.52 (Kathy Gallup)
> So, basically what I guess I'm saying is that I don't
> appreciate being portrayed as blameless in anything because
> that makes me feel that I have no power over any situation
> which I find myself in.
Wow, Kathy. That says a lot.
I think I have to read if over a few more times to
really understand _what_.
Did you see Harrison Ford's latest, "Presumed Innocent"?
You know how in the ending where
YES, THIS IS A BIG SPOILER COMING UP!!
he removes _all_ responsibility from his wife for killing
the detective and kind of accepts it himself? I thought that
was a really sexist thing to do, but I couldn't really
decide why.
Like you said above, he was essentially removing all
responsibility / power etc., from her with that statement...
hmmmm.
nancy b.
|
316.64 | my opinion... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:58 | 17 |
| re .63, I think that Kathy's statement, if carried to the extreme,
becomes dangerous, especially taken out of context as Nancy has. If I
read it at surface value I could assume that children who are sexually
abused are not blameless, that women who are raped at knife or gunpoint
are not blameless, that women who beaten by their husbands are not
blameless, that gays who are beaten up by straight men are not
blameless, that blacks who are lynched by the KKK are not blameless,
that people stabbed to death by gangs in the NYC subway are not
blameless....and on and on. It completely does away with the concept
of someone being a victim of the violent actions of others. I think
that the scary fact is that there are times in our lives when we do not
have any power over the situations we find ourselves in. I don't have
anything against self-defense or positive thinking, but when carried to
the extreme it becomes ridiculous.
Lorna
|
316.66 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Fri Sep 21 1990 12:12 | 24 |
| RE: .64 Lorna
> I think that the scary fact is that there are times in our lives
> when we do not have any power over the situations we find ourselves
> in.
True. Kath made a point about how being "blameless" seemed to imply
to her that she would have no power in any situation in her life
(or some such.)
Her feelings are valid for her, of course, but I'm having trouble
seeing the connection between blame in one situation and presence
of power in all other situations.
Even the most "powerful" person on Earth can be over-powered in a
moment. Presidents of the United States have been shot, for example
- does this mean that no future Presidents will ever have power in
any situation?
As human beings, we're all capable of being put in situations where
we are the targets of abuse/murder/robbery/etc. Admitting that we
were caught in a powerless moment (or, in the cases of women and
some minorities, a powerless few hundreds or thousands of years)
doesn't mean we can never have any power in any situation (ever).
|
316.67 | ***co-moderator nudge*** | LEZAH::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Fri Sep 21 1990 12:31 | 8 |
| Could someone start a new topic for power/blame/control/etc please if
you're going to continue to discuss it? I think it has a lot of
potential for discussion and has grown beyond the basenote here...
thanks...
-Jody
|
316.68 | | SELECT::GALLUP | u cut out your eyes, u refuse to see | Fri Sep 21 1990 13:03 | 21 |
|
Lorna.
My statement wasn't meant to be taken to the extreme.
It's meant to reference cases where, indeed we can be at
blame for not remedying an unsavory situation. As a woman I can
choose to be oppressed by men, or I can choose to stand up for
what I believe in....I have "choice" in many situations where I've
been the victim.
I feel there are many cases where people are victimized continually
because they did not choose to get out of the situation causing
them to be victims.
However, this is only a subset of all victimization cases. The
statement was NEVER meant to be generalized to all cases.
kathy
|
316.69 | Back to the subject... | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Sat Sep 22 1990 09:11 | 111 |
|
This discussion continues to be both fascinating and illuminating.
It is quite a learning experience.
First, some direct replies:
Referencing 316.31 (Ann):
While terms like "crone" and "hag" are indeed used as insults in our
culture, their original usage was to describe female, old, and WISE teachers.
There is a growing amount of feminist religious/philosophical literature that
is bringing back their original meanings; consequently it is not suprising that
a group of radical feminists would call themselves "crones" or "hags". In so
doing they would be going back to the original meanings of these terms, which
as I've indicated are not really insulting at all.
Of all the replies entered since my last one, I find yours the most
difficult to comprehend. What exactly is your point? That the names, etc. were
intended to reflect the bad names given "uppity" women by men, and are thus
intended to be a kind of left- handed sarcasm directed at (chauvanistic) men?
Yes, I guess that is possible. Highly unlikely, though. As I stated in my
previous entry, the names were not the only elements in the basenote that
pointed to its insulting nature. The story is full of archetypical elements of
satire which even someone who has only read Jonathan Swift can recognize! Not
to mention the basic theme of the oppressed becoming the oppressors that is
woven throughout the story.
In other words, your logic does not hold. Your idea is a good one, but my
interpretation is better supported by the actual text and tone of the story
than yours is.
My "feelings" (actually they are observations) concerning the basenote have
not changed. If you look only at the names being used and take them out of
context, then you can, indeed, ascribe any interpretation you desire. But as I
stated in my previous entry 316.28, the translation of the names is not the
only element of the story which led me to call it insulting.
I am, however, certain that you will present other arguments that support
your alternative interpretation. I am very interested in reading them.
Referencing 316.46 (Lorna):
Interesting entry. My only reply to it is to tell you that your impression is
incorrect.
Referencing 316.52 ("k"):
I particularly liked your entry. You have expressed a theme that I once
discussed back in Version 2. As I recall, I was "beaten on" for suggesting the
things you suggested in your entry. That particular entry was the last of the
"peaceful" entries I made; the beating I took after entering it was the final
straw that caused me to reevaluate my style of noting, and is a major reason
why I approached this and other Topics in the (obviously unpopular) manner that
I have.
That your presentation here has met with minimal resistance demonstrates
much, but it is also very heartening to me that someone else has independently
realized certain things that I have.
______________________________________________________________________________
The rest of the replies are interesting. Unfortunately I do not consider
most of them really significant arguments against my interpretation of the
basenote. In fact, after 316.31, nothing of importance is said about my entry
316.28 until Jerry's entry 316.36.
I sincerely doubt that most of those replying to this Topic have really read
my replies through, because most of the responses betray a singular lack of
knowledge about certain things that I've said. Even 316.39, in its redisplaying
of certain of my statements (many taken out of context) displays this lack of
knowledge by including a number of statements which actually contradict Jody's
beliefs concerning my overall attitude. That certain others can point to 316.39
as "proof" that I was telling women here that they "should" be insulted is
illogical. The only thing that 316.39 "proves" is that at least one woman in
this Notesfile (well, actually at least two) chose to be insulted by the way my
message was delivered. It certainly does not adequately validate the
accusations directed against me.
The only person who appears to really know all that I've said in this Topic
is EDP. Unfortunately, since EDP is so unpopular in this Notesfile, I am
assured that the fact that he has demonstrated this knowledge will ensure that
no one else will bother to look more closely at my replies or consider the
possibility that maybe their accusations are wrong.
The emphasis on how my notes made certain people "feel" is interesting, but
this is, in my opinion, impertinant to the topic under discussion. I presented
my arguments logically and based them on certain facts. The only thing that can
invalidate my interpretation is "better" logic and facts which neutralize mine.
That so many have chosen to attack the way I presented my facts, instead of the
facts themselves, simply tells me that they are unable to adequately dispute
the facts that I have presented.
With the exception of Ann Broomhead, no one has presented any real
alternative interpretation of the basenote. And even Ann's arguments do not
explain all the elements of the "story" (Yet! I suspect that Ann will improve
her arguments and offer a viable alternative interpretation). That certain
people simply choose not to accept my interpretation of the basenote is
insufficient reason to say that my "misrepresentation" of the basenote is an
"undeniable fact". I see such statements, entered without a complete
understanding of how I arrived at my interpretation in the first place (despite
my enumeration of the thought processes I followed to arrive at my
interpretation at least twice), as being an attempt to invalidate my arguments
made by people who know that they have little or nothing that can really
dispute or disprove those arguments.
In other words, my interpretation is correct, and most of you know it is.
Many would prefer me to be wrong because they didn't like the way I made my
case, but the fact is that I did make it most effectively. The rest is, as a
friend of mine used to say, "just wrapping paper".
-Robert Brown III
|
316.70 | | VINO::BOBBITT | the warmer side of cool... | Sat Sep 22 1990 11:26 | 65 |
| re: .69
<<< MOMCAT::PIGGY:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V3.NOTE;3 >>>
> The rest of the replies are interesting. Unfortunately I do not consider
>mst of them really significant arguments against my interpretation of the
>asenote. In fact, after 316.31, nothing of importance is said about my entry
>16.28 until Jerry's entry 316.36.
Perhaps they are not meant to be arguments - perhaps they are merely
alternate ways of looking at it. And what you judge to be unimportant
others may feel have equal validity, as notes go, to your own. Why
must they be arguments rather than alternative viewpoints? And if they
are "merely" alternative viewpoints, is that what gives them little
importance to you?
> I sincerely doubt that most of those replying to this Topic have really read
>y replies through, because most of the responses betray a singular lack of
>nowledge about certain things that I've said. Even 316.39, in its redisplaying
Why do responses which don't necessarily hold what you expect or intend
betray a "singular lack of knowledge" - perhaps people don't want to
look at this discussion as seriously as you do, or do not wish to
belabor points as you would like them to. Of course, it has been
proven many of us DO lack certain knowledge, otherwise your
interpretation would not have had to be spelled out in so step-by-step
a fashion...
> The emphasis on how my notes made certain people "feel" is interesting, but
>his is, in my opinion, impertinant to the topic under discussion. I presented
>y arguments logically and based them on certain facts. The only thing that can
>nvalidate my interpretation is "better" logic and facts which neutralize mine.
>hat so many have chosen to attack the way I presented my facts, instead of the
>acts themselves, simply tells me that they are unable to adequately dispute
>he facts that I have presented.
Perhaps nobody wants to invalidate your interpretation - I concur your
interpretation is valid but it may not be correct (as the basenoter
offered no couching statemenets to their note). Perhaps nobody WANTS
to neutralize your statement, and they choose for themselves whether to
buy into it or not. I didn't attack how you presented your facts, I
stated how they made me feel. I have no intention of disputing your
so-called "facts", but I continue to believe that the tale is much like
the Kate Forrester novel "Daughters of a Coral Dawn". That is MY
theory. Which is Mine. Ahem.
> In other words, my interpretation is correct, and most of you know it is.
>any would prefer me to be wrong because they didn't like the way I made my
>ase, but the fact is that I did make it most effectively. The rest is, as a
>riend of mine used to say, "just wrapping paper".
Until you are aware of the original intent of the basenote author, you
can not know your interpretation is right. Such is the way of people
analyzing poetry by authors long dead - so many state so clearly,
"well, Emily Dickinson obviously meant this" when indeed she may not
have. I would neither prefer you be right nor wrong, but I have a
perfectly valid opinion that I still think is the initial intent of the
writing, that is not exactly like yours, which I still hold to. Facts
and logic hold no charm for me, nor do the tactics you choose to use
that since you've done all this research, research makes you right. It
could be a parable about butterflies on Mars for all you actually know.
Unless, of course, you wrote it.
-Jody
|
316.71 | "How to Create a Gigantic Issue Out of Absolutely Nothing." | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Sat Sep 22 1990 17:35 | 30 |
| After all these replies, there still doesn't still to be much
point to this discussion.
The question seems to be whether or not the basenote is insulting.
Well, quite frankly, who cares whether it is or not???
We've been insulted in English so many times already - are any of
us supposed to sweat out whether or not we've now (also) been
insulted in Ancient Egyptian? Even if it were true (and I seriously
doubt that it is,) why would this be worse than the insults we've
already received in English?
Hell, some of the stereotypes about Womannoters in the replies to
this topic are worse than the alleged insults in the basenote -
so why is the basenote such a big deal?
Second, we don't even KNOW who the basenote author is - so even
if the basenote was meant in an insulting way, it doesn't alter
our individual perspectives of the "truth" about what happens in
this conference.
By the way, if the basenote *IS* critical of Womannotes, then
whoever regards it as an "INSULT" to us must necessarily be
acknowledging the unfairness of the alleged accusations.
So, even if we all were to AGREE that the basenote is insulting,
all we would be saying is that we accept that an UNFAIR set of
accusations has been launched against most of us.
The bottom line is - WHO CARES?
|
316.72 | my 2 cents | ASABET::RAINEY | | Mon Sep 24 1990 10:38 | 49 |
| RE: - 1
Perhaps *you* don't care Suzanne ( but the amount of your
replies suggests otherwise), however, your desire not
to pursue the subject matter shouldn't interfere with others
who are seeking to discuss and learn. My impression is that
you are trying to invalidate Robert's desire to pursue this
simply because it holds no interest for you.
Further, how can you state, as fact, that Robert misrepresented
the basenote. I think it was you who said that unless Robert
actually entered the note, he really can't lay claim to knowing
the motivations behind the entering of the note. If such is the
case, they you can not accurately accuse him of misrepresentation
unless you were the author. Robert did enter a note where by he
presented his researched facts and applied it to the basenote in
order to provide an interpretation for discussion. Robert did
ask for alternative viewpoints, but I felt that most of the
replies attacked Robert not based on his facts, but for having
them and wanting to have a discussion about them. So, please,
explain again where Robert misrepresented the basenote. It's
presumptuous on your part to completely dismiss his thoughts on
this subject as you seemingly don't have anything pertinent to
add to the discussion.
Robert-
I think your views on this are very interesting. I must admit,
I did not get through the entire note, because I became disgusted
with it very early on. For reasons of my own, I did indeed find
it very insulting and I really don't care to share my reasons. I
only wanted to let Robert know he wasn't alone.
Kath-
Thanks for adding the comments about blame/blamelessness. I have
found many situations in which one could have kept from being
oppressed by taking a stand. Also, I did not think that you
intended your comment to be all-inclusive. I find your notes
to be well thought out and intelligent (even if not always in
agreement). I also didn't feel that you regarded "blame" as,
"ok, I'm scum and deserved the horrible treatment I got", but
rather "ok, what can I learn about my own behaviours and actions
so that I may not find myself in this position again". I could
be wrong, please feel free to disagree. Again, thank you for
entering a viewpoint which I feel has a lot of merit.
Christine
|
316.73 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 11:00 | 45 |
| RE: .72 Christine
> ...your desire not to pursue the subject matter shouldn't
> interfere with others who are seeking to discuss and learn.
The suggestion of alleged hidden meanings (insults) in the
names is a rathole at best, and I'm certainly not the first
person in the history of notes to suggest that unproductive
ratholes can be, well, unproductive.
Further, what is actually being discussed? Robert says he
is dead right and we know it. Most of us say this isn't
at all true. In other words, we've reached an impasse.
When it comes down to it, does it really matter whether the
parable was meant to insult us or not? Regardless, we'll
each take it the way we want, so why argue about HOW we
should take it?
> Further, how can you state, as fact, that Robert misrepresented
> the basenote.
"Misrepresentation" was defined in this topic, and Robert satisfied
the requirements. He states things that were not written in the
basenote (such as, definitively asserting that the parable applies
to Womannotes when the basenote author said no such thing.) Per
the definition of misrepresentation in this topic, he committed it.
> Robert did ask for alternative viewpoints, but I felt that most
> of the replies attacked Robert not based on his facts, but for
> having them and wanting to have a discussion about them.
No one attacked Robert! He thought this happened, but it's already
been shown that he was mistaken, so don't make false statements
about this.
> So, please, explain again where Robert misrepresented the basenote.
> It's presumptuous on your part to completely dismiss his thoughts on
> this subject as you seemingly don't have anything pertinent to
> add to the discussion.
I haven't dismissed his thoughts. He can think anything he wants
about this. However, he has no right to claim or suggest that
all or most of us agree with him (or should agree with him) when
it's obvious that this isn't true.
|
316.74 | Sorry to continue the rathole for another note, but... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 11:17 | 16 |
|
By the way, with regard to the alleged hidden insults in the
names used in the basenote, did anyone else notice that the
words supposedly come from not ONE Ancient language, but TWO:
Ancient Egyptian and Ancient Hebrew, per earlier notes.
Further, the names are "BAD" Ancient Egyptian and "BAD" Ancient
Hebrew, per Robert.
If someone went to the trouble of trying to insult us in two
Ancient languages, I have a hard time believing they'd be
careless enough or would choose to use these words badly. It
would be like creating a sloppy nuclear missile. ;^)
It leaves some questions that can't possibly answered by anyone
except the basenote author, that's for sure.
|
316.75 | Time for individual judgments (as always) | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Sep 24 1990 11:27 | 48 |
| In reply .69, Robert Brown spoke of "the basic theme of the oppressed
becoming the oppressors that is woven throughout the story."
I have gone through the basenote, and culled out phrases and
sentences which describe the deeds of the various groups described.
With one exception (marked with quotes, so you can't miss it), I
have ignored all the quotes, on the grounds that those are hearsay
claims and are therefore not admissable. The conclusion as to
whether or not Robert has misrepresented the basenote is left to
the reader.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deeds of men and of the Resh Deeds of the Hem
The men of the other lands ... ...[T]he People fled from persecution.
did torture and persecute the
People... ...some of the Priestesses built
temples....
saying: " ... Let us subdue them.
Let us beat them with whips...." Others claimed groves and lakes
for their worship.
...[T]he Reth call[ed] the
Priestesses liars and witches. ...[T]he Priestesses told the real
history of the People.
They brought ... books full of
evil and forbidden words. They taught the People....
They defiled the temples and Those with sin and violence in their
groves. hearts were made to go far from
the Land.
They attacked the groves and
clearings. ... They became deaf to the
heresies of the Reth.
They burned the temples.
These warriors ... scattered the
...[T]heir god ... gave them armies of the Reth to the corners of
machines and weapons which they the World.
used against the Tagiriron.
...[They fought] the Reth...
...[They overturned] the blasphemies....
Ann B.
P.S. I should note that I have never met an author (and I've met and
talked with a lot) who said that anyone else ever represented her or his
writings 100% correctly.
|
316.76 | sigh | ASABET::RAINEY | | Mon Sep 24 1990 11:29 | 34 |
|
Actually, nothing much about the basenote is being discussed
because (IMHO) most of the attention his being directed at Robert in
a negative manner and implying that he has a hidden agenda in
wanting to discuss his thoughts. I'm sure he'd be willing to
discuss other viewpoints, however as he pointed out, Ann was
really the only one who offered a differing view, to which he
did respond. Yes, Robert did state he was right, but that was
quite late in this string and although I really can't speak for
Robert, I felt he was getting frustrated with all the notes about
"who cares what you think" and "you wrote the note" and "so and so
should apologize for such and such" and the like, which only
detracted from the discussion he was attempting to start. Perhaps
as some have indicated, he was persistant in wanting to discuss this
because it obviously interested him. Maybe nobody wants to discuss
it, but please, don't negate his desire in wanting to do so. Tell me
you've never been persistant when something interested you.....
Again, Robert is not arguing about how readers should take the note.
He offered his thoughts and presented an arguement which was supportive
of his thoughts and waited for further discussion. Instead, he got a
lot of rhetoric about how he shouldn't tell women they should be
offended. Robert did not state that we should be offended, and he
explained why he was surprised nobody was. He was stating his own
opinions, but I forgot how necessary disclaimers are for certain
participants here.
I think Robert was attacked, you say he wasn't. Don't accuse me of
making false statements when I am entitled to my opinion and in
MY opinion, he was attacked, maybe not viciously but I think he was
put down nevertheless. It is your opinion that Robert wasn't attacked-
but that doesn't make it fact. So, you stop creating facts from what
have been responses to Robert's notes.
|
316.77 | Double sigh. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 12:24 | 75 |
| RE: .76 Christine
It's funny how you didn't mention Robert's attacks against
the conference (which started back in his first reply to
this topic.)
.2> I find it amazing that a Moderator allowed it to be placed
.2> in here at all, not to mention actually entering it for someone.
.2> It says a lot about the state to which this file has fallen.
He characterizes the whole file by this one parable (which, by
definition, can be interpreted any number of ways.)
.5> Please trust me, Maggie: this Notesfile really has FALLEN if it
.5> has allowed such an insulting entry to be placed here. I see your
.5> node address on the basenote; my statements about it are not meant
.5> to reflect on you, because I doubt if you would have allowed the
.5> basenote to be entered, anonymously or otherwise, if you really
.5> knew what it was about.
Pretty condescending tone to Maggie, wouldn't you say? She's
fluent in more languages than anyone I know.
Meanwhile, he continues to characterize the whole conference in a
very negative way for this one note, in spite of the fact that he
also thinks some/many of us don't know what it means.
.5> The offensiveness of this entry -- and the biases that this entry
.5> exposes-- are fascinating!
If we don't understand the real meaning of the topic (and he does,)
then what biases are being exposed by the fact that he's the only
one who has protested it (at that point)?
Meanwhile, the stereotypes and offensive comments about Womannotes
go on, even though no one appears to be disagreeing with him yet!
THEN, he seems very pleased with the responses so far, but look
at the backhanded compliment he offers for them:
.13> I am truley impressed. Does this mean that I can engage in an
.13> intelligent discussion this time? I hope so.
Then, he explains that he really feels that the basenote (as a
history of Womannotes) is insulting to EVERY SINGLE FEMALE IN
THIS CONFERENCE:
.13> The fact is that when I translated some of the terms used in
.13> the basenote, I realized that it is an insult to every female
.13> who participates in this Notesfile, as well as the Notesfile
.13> itself.
Why EVERY WOMAN who participates here, even though some of the
women here typically go AGAINST the mainstream in the conference
at every available opportunity? Why would these women be included
in the insult (while the feminist MEN here are not, although they
DO support the mainstream!)
Remember, this is back before most of us came anywhere CLOSE to
the topic, yet he's already attacking us - and for what?? Our
silent response to the basenote?
It seems to me that most of us ignored his insults for quite
awhile before finally showing some (understandable) annoyance.
Myself, I was very quiet, until he took MY WORDS and turned
them against the file (misrepresenting my note.)
If he didn't want a negative response to his ideas, he shouldn't
have written them in such an offensive, negative way. It isn't
fair to claim (now) that we're picking on him.
Believe me, I think most of us made valiant attempts to ignore
his negative remarks. Perhaps we simply need to try harder
to ignore his notes next time - I'll agree to this much.
|
316.78 | calm again | ASABET::RAINEY | | Mon Sep 24 1990 12:35 | 17 |
| Suzanne,
First of all, thank you for rephrasing the last note. The last line
of the original .77 would have caused a more knee jerk response.
I never really took Robert's remarks (as you outline them) to be
negative to the conference, but I will look at it again. I'm not
convinced his intent was to malign or insult, but I can see what
you mean about being a bit abrasive. I apologize for ignoring or
missing it earlier.
There are other points I'm sure we'll never agree with, but we can
agree to disagree (I hope)
Thanks.
Christine
|
316.79 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 12:45 | 15 |
|
RE: .78 Christine
Thanks, I'm calmer now myself (after 4 tries at .77). ;^)
I appreciate your seeing the earlier notes in a new light
(and recognizing the abrasive tones Robert used so early
in the topic.)
As to other points, it's fine for us to agree to disagree.
In fact, when it comes to interpreting parables, it's really the
only course open.
Thanks again!
|
316.80 | | SELECT::GALLUP | u cut out your eyes, u refuse to see | Mon Sep 24 1990 12:48 | 14 |
|
Suzanne.
*WHY* do you think the basenote author entered the note to
begin with?
Frankly, I think, as this discussion progresses, I'm becoming
more and more aware of WHY it was entered. Intriguing!
kath
|
316.83 | my $0.05 | AV8OR::TATISTCHEFF | my brother likes him... | Mon Sep 24 1990 14:06 | 21 |
| re the parable - i kind of liked it. there is a part of me that enjoys
such fantasies. but i get plenty of them (longer and easier to read on
my own time) in my trashy sf. trashy sf can be anti-male or
anti-female, but must be pretty extreme before i find it insulting.
re robert's original comments - i found them offensive, probably for
irrational reasons. i would strongly prefer a different "tone of note"
from robert (not just in this topic or conference), because it is
simply too difficult for me to be reasonable when it feels like someone
is condescending. not to single robert out, though: i feel the same
about many wo/men.
re robert's interpretation - interesting. if i had time, and thought
.0 was worth *any* effort, i would do a bit of research to confirm/deny
his analysis (as i am not a trusting soul). but .0 is a piece of fluff
(sorry, anonymous writer; it's *nice* fluff, but fluff nevertheless,
imho), similar to my trashy sf readings. and like trashy sf, it would
have to be MUCH more extreme in its bigotry before it became
unenjoyable for me.
lee
|
316.84 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 14:21 | 14 |
|
RE: .80 Kath
> *WHY* do you think the basenote author entered the note to
> begin with?
Assuming motives of another person, Kath??
> Frankly, I think, as this discussion progresses, I'm becoming
> more and more aware of WHY it was entered. Intriguing!
One's own creative assumptions are bound to be more interesting
than what's really happening, I grant you.
|
316.85 | | SELECT::GALLUP | u cut out your eyes, u refuse to see | Mon Sep 24 1990 15:23 | 26 |
|
RE: .84 Suzanne
> > *WHY* do you think the basenote author entered the note to
> > begin with?
>
> Assuming motives of another person, Kath??
I ASS-U-ME nothing, Suzanne. I'm merely asking you to ponder WHY
you FEEL the basenoter entered the topic in the first place. I'm not
asking you to attribute anything to the basenoter, just to
simply sit back and ponder why you think it might have been
entered in the first place.
BTW, it's a rhetorical question. One meant only for inner thought.
> One's own creative assumptions are bound to be more interesting
> than what's really happening, I grant you.
Or maybe not. But it might tell you something about yourself.
kathy
|
316.86 | (so what does this tell me about myself?) | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Mon Sep 24 1990 15:30 | 5 |
|
Well, shoot. I think the basenoter entered the note to see what sort
(and quantity) of response it would elicit, and how it would be judged
by whom, and in what context.
|
316.87 | moving right along | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Sep 24 1990 15:44 | 8 |
|
If I wrote a coded story that contained insults to women and whose main
purpose was to insult the women of womannotes, and if that story got
little or no attention, I'd sure be disappointed. But if someone
took up the flag and got folks to talk about my story for some 86 replies,
I'd sure be pleased.
Justine
|
316.88 | "FEEL" means "opinion" in this case, not feelings, BTW... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 16:40 | 16 |
|
RE: .85 Kath
> I ASS-U-ME nothing, Suzanne. I'm merely asking you to ponder WHY
> you FEEL the basenoter entered the topic in the first place.
Oh, really?
Then what was this all about, if you weren't making some
assumptions:
.80> Frankly, I think, as this discussion progresses, I'm becoming
.80> more and more aware of WHY it was entered. Intriguing!
Do you think you know something we don't know about the motives
of the basenoter, or not?
|
316.89 | I don't know why I ever bother.... | SELECT::GALLUP | u cut out your eyes, u refuse to see | Mon Sep 24 1990 17:29 | 26 |
| > <<< Note 316.88 by CSC32::CONLON "Cosmic laughter, indeed...." >>>
Suzanne, your incessant arguing of semantics is really starting
to piss me off. I am NOT a grammar school teacher, forgive me
for chosing another profession.
> .80> Frankly, I think, as this discussion progresses, I'm becoming
> .80> more and more aware of WHY it was entered. Intriguing!
Allow me to RE-POSITION the words "I think" in that sentence, after
all, it still means the same thing.
"Frankly, as this discussion progresses, I'm
becoming more and more aware of WHY I think
it was entered. Intriguing!"
kathy
|
316.90 | Not trying to upset you, but... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Mon Sep 24 1990 17:43 | 8 |
|
RE: .89 Kath
Sorry, but "why I think [a note] was entered" still amounts to
making assumptions about someone else's motives.
You don't need to be a grammar school teacher to know this.
|
316.91 | Boring | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Artemis'n'me... | Tue Sep 25 1990 04:52 | 15 |
|
One possible motive for entering/championing the base note *IMO*:
To see if, after all that fuss a few weeks back( and all those "lists" of
people who would "ignore" or "refuse to be goaded" by various styles
etc etc), the people of this conference would still resort to
"debating" an issue by bitching at each other about other (or even related)
subjects rather than calmly discussing the issue.
The finding?
Yes, they still respond like that.
How tedious.
|
316.92 | Silence ("ignoring") isn't the simple answer we thought... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Tue Sep 25 1990 09:24 | 16 |
|
RE: .91
Along those lines, a possible motive would be to see if women
could be made to feel guilty if we were silent about the basenote,
then (in turn) made to feel guilty if we then discussed it.
We're great targets for guilt trips coming and going, it seems,
so silence isn't the total answer, either.
Personally, I still don't think the basenote author had any bad
intentions at all, though. I think it was a parable, pure and
simple.
We found out that silence can be attacked as a statement, too,
which is good to know.
|
316.93 | Last topic entry | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Artemis'n'me... | Tue Sep 25 1990 09:47 | 21 |
|
> a possible motive would be to see if women
>could be made to feel guilty if we were silent about the basenote,
>then (in turn) made to feel guilty if we then discussed it.
Possibly.
My own belief is that no-one can be *made* to feel guilty about
anything.
I do not choose to respond to anyone else's input in this string
by feeling guilty. We all have this power of choice.
>We found out that silence can be attacked as a statement, too,
Interesting watching someone work themselves into a frenzy over,
literally, nothing...isn't it?
^^^^^^^^^
'gail
|
316.94 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Tue Sep 25 1990 09:51 | 10 |
|
RE: .93
Quite right. No one can be "made" to feel guilty, so when others
try by making snide remarks about the way women respond in this
file, why listen? We can respond any damn way we want.
Yes, I do think it's amazing to see someone build a whole crisis
out of our silence (but it's been done before.) ;^)
|
316.95 | A close reading of .0 | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Tue Sep 25 1990 15:40 | 180 |
| re: .0:
I dunno, was I just the only one who didn't get the joke, or what.
.0 seemed perfectly clear to me when I first read it, and my subsequent
readings haven't changed a bit -- it looks like an obvious re-telling
of the history of Womannotes from the point of view that says Womannotes
was intended to be a safe place where women could discuss whatever they
wanted to discuss -- and where men were unwelcome.
The rest of this is a line-by-line analysis of a few paragraphs -- feel
free to skip it. (Also, the moderators should feel free to set this hidden
if I'm giving away the punch-line.)
Martin.
ps: It's just my interpretation of the text. The concepts, such as the truth,
if any, of the claims made by my interpretation, are best argued elsewhere.
In particular, you should be very cautious in assuming that I believe that
my interpretation of this parable actually represents my thoughts about
Womannotes.
The following story follows a very old tradition. Its message speaks to
all of us here.
The "old tradition" is the use of parable/metaphor. The "message" is
the ever-popular "what is the purpose of Womannotes." I've cut out some
of the following -- marked by ...
1. In the beginning, the Land was green and good.
Before "Eden" and the forbidden fruit.
...
3. ...The men of the other lands closed their eyes to
Her message of love and peace, and did torture and persecute the
People, saying:
Men "torture and persecute" women.
4. "They are prideful and arrogant, ... Let us beat them with whips. Let us
remind them of what they should be."
Uppity feminists.
5. And so the People fled from persecution and came to the Land. ...
Women create "safe space" (aka Womannotes).
They built homes in the land and grew content, forgetting their
history and their heritage.
Ignoring the outside (non-Womannotes/non-safe space) world.
...
7. And some of the Priestesses built temples to worship the different
forms of the Great One. Others claimed groves and lakes for their
worship.
Discussions within Womannotes.
8. And in all the temples, forests, and lakes the Priestesses told the
real history of the People.
More discussion, more safe-space.
10. But there came blasphemers from the other lands, who did threaten
the peace of Hemutlund. They saw the beauty and the bounty of our land,
and their hearts grew cold with envy. They were the Reth, the sowers of
discord and strife.
11. And the Reth spoke against the Great One and the True Word, calling
the Priestesses liars and witches.
Non politically-correct visitors.
12. They brought with them books full of evil and forbidden words. And
these books were full of untruths about the People and their history.
The s0-called "real history" of feminism.
13. Their priests were the fathers of lies and heresies. They defiled
the temples and groves where the Great One was worshipped. They mocked
the words of the Priestesses, saying:
Here, I'm confused. If it were "mothers of lies" one could say that this
was a schism among the women, but "fathers of lies" suggests either that
men (who worship men) have invaded Womanspace, or that there are renegade
women who (still) worship men. The latter seems to make most sense.
14. "You People have had power throughout the history of the World, yet
you cry so much about how you are always persecuted and powerless! ...
Whining feminists attacking non-pc women.
15. "You are as sheep, led around under the yoke of your Priestesses!
Feminists led astray by NOW.
16. And the Reth did fight the Priestesses of Hemutlund.
Non-pc women sowing discord in Womannotes.
17. The Priestesses cried out to the Great One, pleading for vengeance
against the defilers of Her temples. Their laments and cries rose up
throughout the Land.
??? Desire for FWO notes, perhaps?
18. The Goddess Aurphel'a heard Her daughters and came upon the Land ...
19. Ajbah rose from the earth like a great Mother, giving birth to
daughters who became terrible warriors. These warriors, who were the
Tagiriron, scattered the armies of the Reth to the corners of the
World.
Womanspace saved by the glass-chewing feminists's attacks on non-pc
interlopers.
20. And the blasphemers of Reth cried out to the Priestesses, saying
that they had come in peace. In their hypocrisy they asked: "why dost
thou persecute us?"
Non-pc saying, "why are you picking on us." Men saying "why are you
saying "men attack women" when you know I don't.
21. And the Priestesses said: "We persecute no one who has love and
peace in her heart. Those who accept Truth are welcome to live among
us. Forsake your heresies and your false god! Follow the True Word,
that you may live with us in peace!"
Become pc and you'll be welcome here.
22. But when they heard the commands of the Priestesses, the Reth
became prideful and arrogant. Their hearts became hardened.
23. And they called upon their god of lies, who gave them machines and
weapons which they used against the Tagiriron.
24. And one of their machines was the Light of Ma- At, which they used
against the Goddess Aurphel'a.
You're violating company policy.
25. But the Great One has many forms. She came as RuGiz, Yarah and as
the great and wonderful Samael'a. She came in many similar but diverse
forms. She taught Her Priestesses to fight the Reth, and to overturn
the blasphemies of the false god.
No, we're not.
26. And so it has been through the generations. For to this day the
invaders move through Hemutlund, spreading their lies and discord. ...
See the meta-discussion notes in V1, V2, V3, for more detail.
27. Listen not to the lies of the Reth. They will tell you that they
want equality, but they really want to rule over us all. They will tell
you that they are persecuted, but it is they who are the persecuters.
Pitiful. whining, hopeless men.
28. They will tell you that they want to share their truths, but theirs
are the lies of the false god.
29. This land is given unto the People. It is our place. But the
invaders want to destroy us and our place, because they are hateful and
fearful of Hem, and are envious of our land and of our love.
Pc women can't have Womanspace because of the nasty, evil, men.
30. Beware the priests of Reth, for to follow them is to take the path
of darkness. ... Only through Her love and wisdom
can we hope to bring back the joy that once dwelled with us in
Hemutlund.
Only Womanspace brings us "joy.
|
316.96 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Tue Sep 25 1990 15:51 | 28 |
| RE: .95 Martin
Another way of looking at it, that's for sure.
While I take issue with a great many points, I'd like to address
one in particular.
If we assume the parable is about Womannotes, I think you lose the
consistency of your interpretation here:
> 14. "You People have had power throughout the history of the
> World, yet you cry so much about how you are always persecuted
> and powerless! ...
> Whining feminists attacking non-pc women.
This makes no sense, even in the context of your interpretation.
You might want to amend it to:
"Whining men attacking feminists and denying that there
is inequality between the sexes."
Feminists would be the last ones to tell other women "You've always
had power (throughout history,)" right?
I'll let most of the rest of your interpretation stand (but don't
take this as tacit agreement with it, ok?) ;^)
|
316.97 | | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:08 | 38 |
| .69 'my interpretation is correct ...'
I know that the point has been made, but [I'm nursing a near-fatal bruise] I
object to this statement. I believe that your interpretation is 'valid' but
this it is 'correct' is arguable.
Given your research, I find your analysis of .0 to be quite interesting. I
still cannot feel insulted. If insult was the intent of our anonymous
base-noter, I am pleased that at least one member of the community had the
erudition to feel the slap.
I would not choose to invalidate your interpretation -- interpretations are
by their nature touchy/feelie and difficult targets for logic to bring down.
I respect your right to live by your interpretation until another comes along
that is a better fit to your needs and temperment.
I have my own interpretation, one that works for me.
When I first read .0, I was monstrously irritated by it. Not insulted or
offended; merely that cranky to the nth power. Some of the references struck
a chord and I looked them up, much as you did -- and I got even crankier!
The whole of .0 struck me as a cautionary tale on the dangers and toils of
oppression vs. separatism as means of resolving differences. Reciprocal bigotry
is a tough nut, and one that always gets me cranked.
One one hand you have the proponents of Truth who choose jihad and close there
ears. On the other hand you that seekers of Truth [who actually feel they've
already found it, but don't wish to appear too, _too_ smug] who choose
Utopia and close there ears.
In both cases, Truth is the higher good, not the individual or the community.
The methods of purification are genocide or Coventry. Indeed, if all accept
Truth there _will_ be universal peace.
But what is Truth? and who is the arbiter?
Annie
|
316.98 | A brief comment | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Wed Sep 26 1990 15:01 | 26 |
| Referencing Christine:
At this point I am in the "catchup" mode, and I have just read your
entries (I am at 316.76).
I will probably be composing another reply in reaction to the rest of
this Topic (97 replies??? So much for the "who cares" argument!), but I
want to let you know right now:
THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!!!
With the possible exception of EDP, you are the only person who has
demonstrated any real understanding of what I was doing, what I actually have
been saying, and what my reactions were. I was, indeed, frustrated by how
some individuals were more interested in accusing me of telling them how to
feel than what I was actually trying to say, and by how certain others kept
trying to put me down for even bringing up the subject by first saying no
one is interested and then entering in note after note describing how I
"misrepresented" the basenote.
It is very gratifying for me to see that someone does not let hir biases
against a person get in the way of really getting the facts about what that
person says. So again: thank you very much.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.99 | This is not an attack against you, either, Robert. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Wed Sep 26 1990 15:17 | 31 |
| RE: .98 Robert
If it's possible, I'd like you to accept this as constructive
feedback on your noting style (which might help explain why so
many people here think you're attacking us, while you keep
making the mistake of thinking we're attacking you.)
In your note, you thank Christine profusely for understanding
what you are trying to say, but then look at how you end your
note to her:
> It is very gratifying for me to see that someone does not let hir
> biases against a person get in the way of really getting the facts
^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^ ^^^^^^
> about what that person says. So again: thank you very much.
Do you realize that this makes it sound as though you think Christine
has biases against you, but is able to overcome these biases in order
to understand what you are saying?
Did you really mean to insult one of the few people who have written
supporting notes about your theory in this topic??
Can you see now how easy it is to write something that can be read
as insulting, even when it wasn't meant that way?
This is why you will NEVER, EVER know what the basenote author
really meant by the story (unless this person comes forward to
tell us all.)
Please take this to heart.
|
316.101 | You wouldn't attack someone who offered constructive criticism... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:45 | 15 |
| RE: .100 Herb
Of course, you wouldn't attack me, Herb. You know I'm right,
after all. ;^)
Thanks for demonstrating my point about how people can misinterpret
and over-react (as exemplified by your gross exaggeration and the
use of stereotypes) to what they perceive others are saying.
This is why Robert's mistaken impressions about the note (and about
being attacked all over the place) are such easy noting traps.
See - you fell into it, too. It's all a matter of perspective.
Oh well. ;^)
|
316.103 | more comments | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:54 | 128 |
|
Before I begin this entry in earnest, I must correct a typo error in my
entry 316.98:
My last paragraph in 316.98 reads:
"It is very gratifying for me to see that someone does not let hir biases
against a person get in the way of really getting the facts about what that.."
It should read:
"It is very gratifying for me to see that someone does not let other's
biases against a person get in the way of really getting the facts about what
that..."
meaning that I am glad, Christine, that I am glad that you got the facts
instead of allowing yourself to be overly influenced by the biases of others.
The error in 316.98 makes my entry appear to be an insult. Sorry about that.
Now for my reply:
Referencing 316.70 (Jody):
Of all the entries in this Topic which have confused the issues I have
raised, and misinterpreted what I've said, yours is the calmest and most
reasonably presented. Consequently, I feel that explanations are in order.
In my entry 316.69, I mentioned a lack of arguments against my
interpretation of the basenote. The term "arguments" is not used in the context
of "argue against", but is used in the context of "present alternate facts to
support an alternative viewpoint". In other words, I was looking for what you
call "alternate ways of looking at it" -- but usually when alternate viewpoints
are expressed, "arguments" in the form of alternate facts are presented to
support those viewpoints.
In the context mentioned above, my comments about lack of arguments were
appropriate, because with the exception of Ann Broomhead's entry 316.31, there
were no alternate viewpoints on the interpretation of the basenote presented.
Most of the entries were statements about my supposed attitudes, statements
accusing me of telling this community how it "should" feel, and arguments
against the accusations made against me (mostly by EDP).
In other words, I chose to consider most of the entries unimportant because
they were not addressing the subject, not because they were presenting
"alternate viewpoints". In fact, in 316.69 I tried to make it plain that Ann
Broomhead's entry, because it did present an alternate viewpoint and gave
arguments to support it, was very important to me. I am suprised that you did
not notice this.
And by the way: you quoted my statement in 316.69 which said that the notes
between 316.31 and 316.36 were unimportant. I submit that it is best for this
file that I did so. Consider: 316.32 and 316.33 were, in my opinion, pitiful
attempts at personal attacks against me made by an individual who at the time
really had nothing intelligent to contribute to a discussion that on the one
hand she kept saying was unimportant, yet on the other hand was one of its
biggest contributers. They contributed more to the foolishness of their author
(as, I see, others began to notice) than they did to the discussion. Had I
chosen to take them seriously, the resulting conflict would have been most
unpleasent to everyone. As it was, I laughed, shook my head in pity, and moved
on.
In my mention of a singular lack of knowledge about things I've said, I was
referring to the accusations made about my intentions in starting this
discussion -- accusations made despite attempts to clarify myself. If the
clarifications had been read in their entirety, there would have been little
need to repeat the accusations.
This is still being done. Example: I noted the discussion between Christine
and Suzanne. In 316.77, Suzanne mentions the abraisiveness of my first entries
in this Topic, using them as justification for her continued attempts to insult
and invalidate me. She (and I notice Christine) somehow missed certain
clarifications I made in 316.28 (and earlier, for that matter!), where I
explained why I behaved the way I did and in which I acknowledged that my
behavior was based on an assumption which was wrong. This is the kind of "lack
of knowledge" that I am talking about.
And your statement:
"Perhaps nobody wants to invalidate your interpretation... "
is fascinating, because at least one person here has actively attempted to
invalidate not only my interpretation, but the entire discussion. This same
person, even now, has presented no facts or real logical arguments to justify
this attempted invalidation.
In other words, Jody, I am trying to say that my entry 316.69 was not saying
what you appear to believe it was.
Referencing 316.75 (Ann):
I like your entry, though I am somewhat disappointed that you did not
attempt to support your own interpretation more strongly. I was extremely
curious. Nonetheless, it is possible that an unbiased listing of the actions of
the groups involved is probably the best way of helping others reach an
informed decision about the basenote.
Referencing 316.80 through 316.87:
Dad Blame, what a thought! Gee: could I have been playing into this
person's hands by starting this discussion??? It would be embarrassing to think
that I did!
Referencing 316.89 (kathy):
Congratulations: you have experienced some of the same crap that I have to
deal with every time I "talk" to Suzanne. Also: your points, in my opinion,
are valid ones; questioning why a note is entered is not necessarily making
assumptions about it or the person entering it.
Referencing 316.95 (Martin):
Thank you for your entry. It saved me the trouble of posting a similar entry
(as I was expecting I would have to do despite the fact that I enumerated
similar points in earlier entries -- more evidence of the "lack of knowledge" I
was referring to in 316.69).
That Suzanne did not attack you (as she did me) or attempt to invalidate
your interpretation (as she did mine despite its similarity to yours) is
evidence of the kind of bias that I have so often attributed to her.
Consequently, your entry pleases me in two ways instead of just one.
The analysis of your entry complements the analysis given in my entry
316.20 -- though there are some additional things left out of both our entries
which would make it difficult for anyone to reasonably say that the entry was
not meant to be insulting.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.104 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:07 | 30 |
| Referencing 316.99 (Suzanne):
Please check out my previous entry. Your "constructive criticism" is
unnecessary.
Referencing herb:
Thank you for your previous two entries. I begin to see that others are
noticing the things I am; I feel validated.
To be honest, because of past experiences with Suzanne it is very
difficult for me to consider anything she says to me to be intended
to be "non- insulting" or "constructive". This is because the most
insulting entries I have read from her were the ones where she has said, at
some point, that she was "not" being insulting and was giving "constructive
criticism". She seems to have a knack for being most insulting while saying
that she isn't.
Suzanne's treatment of me, as well as the passive acceptance of her
treatment of me (and others) by this community, is one of the main reasons
why I so often approach this conference the way I do. I am all too aware
that the Suzanne Conlons of this conference will always have something
negative and insulting to say to me regardless of what I say; consequently
I start off defensive and prepared for rudeness until it is demonstrated
that my defenses are unnecessary.
So again: thank you for your entries. They are refreshing to see.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.105 | Who are you, anyway? Sheesh, what egotism. | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Wed Sep 26 1990 18:02 | 17 |
| > It is very gratifying for me to see that someone does not let hir biases
>against a person get in the way of really getting the facts about what that
>person says.
It is hysterically egotistical of you to think that everyone who disagrees
with you is doing so because they have a "bias against you". I don't have
a bias against you - I have no idea who you are. In fact, before this topic,
I'm not sure that I ever heard of you. I have a vague recollection that
you entered something on "Concentration" once, but it was too long, so I
didn't bother reading it. Other than that - I dunno. Do you post often?
If so, your postings haven't been of interest to me to remember your name.
*Now* I know your name. *Now* I might have biases against you. But when I
first started in this conversation, you were just Joe Schmoe. What on
earth would make you think I had an opinion about you?!?
D!
|
316.106 | Didn't read the Concentration note, though, so might be different... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed.... | Wed Sep 26 1990 19:59 | 10 |
|
RE: .105 D!
You haven't missed a thing.
He analyses women (or notes to women) in exceptionally insulting
ways to try to make a name for himself, then wails and cries to
the winds about how we pick on him for absolutely no reason.
It's what he does. It's ALL he does.
|
316.107 | <*** Moderator Request ***> | MOMCAT::TARBET | in the arms of the Gypsy Mary | Wed Sep 26 1990 20:17 | 2 |
| Both sides are sailing quite close to a violation of 1.15. Could we
get a bit more distance please? Thanks.
|
316.108 | | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Wed Sep 26 1990 22:27 | 22 |
| re: .97:
>.69 'my interpretation is correct ...'
>
>I know that the point has been made, but [I'm nursing a near-fatal bruise] I
>object to this statement. I believe that your interpretation is 'valid' but
>this it is 'correct' is arguable.
While I'm not the author of .69, might I say that I would used "my
interpretation is correct" in the sense "my interpretation accurately
represents the intent of the author." Of course, "correct" is still
arguable.
>The whole of .0 struck me as a cautionary tale on the dangers and toils of
>oppression vs. separatism as means of resolving differences. Reciprocal bigotry
>is a tough nut, and one that always gets me cranked.
...
>But what is Truth? and who is the arbiter?
I like this interpretation. In some ways, better than mine.
Martin.
|
316.109 | do I sense a contradiction? | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Thu Sep 27 1990 00:00 | 21 |
| R_BROWN says:
> To be honest, because of past experiences with Suzanne it is very
>difficult for me to consider anything she says to me to be intended
>to be "non- insulting" or "constructive"...
and
>I am all too aware
>that the Suzanne Conlons of this conference will always have something
>negative and insulting to say to me regardless of what I say; consequently
>I start off defensive and prepared for rudeness until it is demonstrated
>that my defenses are unnecessary.
This, from the person who complains that those conversing with him
are coming into the conversation with biases, and not being open minded
to what he is saying?
Can you say "hypocrisy"?
D!
|
316.110 | "Don't shoot me, I'm only the piano player." | CSC32::CONLON | A conspiracy of one... | Thu Sep 27 1990 00:19 | 8 |
|
By the way, who are "the Suzanne Conlons of this conference"???
Did someone form a rock group using my name without telling me?
Perhaps I should start signing my name...
Which_one_of_the_Suzanne_Conlons_am_I? :)
|
316.111 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Thu Sep 27 1990 03:33 | 33 |
| re:.103
I -- and I suspect Ann as well, though I can't speak for her --
don't feel that I need to present contrary "facts" to support my
interpretation. "Interpretation" isn't fact-based, it's intuition-
based. The facts of the case are as you presented them. It's just
that I draw different conclusions from those facts than you.
An analogy. Some years back, during an interview published in a
magazine, author Harlan Ellison described another writer as
"bugf*ck". Ellison meant this as a compliment -- admiration for
the writer having a creative, if off-the-beaten-path, imagination.
The other writer was highly insulted, and sued Ellison and the
magazine the interview appeared in for libel.
The "facts" are clear. Ellison *did* use that word to describe
the other writer -- a word which usually can be taken for an
insult. But there were few people who *interpreted* the word as
insulting. Everyone I knew that read the interview knew exactly
what Ellison meant. Only the object of Ellison's comment, and
presumably those who spoke up for him in court, interpreted it as
an insult. To make a long story short, the suit went in favor of
the defendent rather than the plaintif, so apparently the court
did not interpret the word as being an insult.
Likewise, in the present case, you can say until you're blue in the
face that this word means this and that word means that, and you
may be absolutely correct in a denotative sense. But when you
insist that the author of the parable is being insulting, then
you are straying onto intuitive ground where our interpretation
is just as valid as yours.
--- jerry
|
316.112 | let's move on. | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:03 | 27 |
|
Yet another note saying yet again.
My truth is not necessarily your truth
and you truth is not necessarily mine
for truth like beauty is in the eyes
of the beholder which does not make one
or the other right or wrong just different.
Can't we move on, to something that is not so subject
to "I right you are wrong" exchanges.
This is Ignore 201 - In 101 we learned to not respond
to notes that are clearing goat baiting. In 201 we
will learn that sometimes even clear cool responses
to seemly rational requests can turn into goat baiting
which then does a call back to what we learned in 101.
_peggy
(-)
|
Just the pedegogue in me I guess...
|
316.113 | Wrong to have been brought up in the first place. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Thu Sep 27 1990 12:38 | 14 |
|
Deleted my most recent note here.
A difficulty with discussing the issue introduced in .2 of this
topic is that the idea of "who did what to whom" (such as "who
meant to insult whom" and "who failed to understand the note"
or "who failed to protest when others were allegedly insulted")
puts the topic on dangerous and rocky ground from Square One.
This goes beyond the realm of ideas, smacking squarely in the
territory of judgments, accusations, and hard feelings, which
is clearly inappropriate to include in a forum where we all
work and is wrong to bring up as a debate.
|
316.115 | | CSC32::CONLON | A conspiracy of one... | Thu Sep 27 1990 18:15 | 3 |
|
"Truth" is a label that is often used to glorify opinions.
|
316.116 | 'what *is* truth?' | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Thu Sep 27 1990 18:20 | 4 |
|
i believe the concept of truth being 'immutable' is dangerous
and wrong.
|
316.117 | Truth is what IS | THEBUS::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Thu Sep 27 1990 18:28 | 5 |
| I believe that Truth is real and immutable. It just can't be perfectly
known or "proved". Therefore, I believe it is dangerous to judge right
and wrong.
Mary
|
316.119 | NO matter how long someone tries to force others to accept it... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Fri Sep 28 1990 09:13 | 3 |
|
No one has the power to transform an opinion into reality, though.
|
316.121 | | ASABET::RAINEY | | Fri Sep 28 1990 09:35 | 42 |
| RE: Earlier replies
Robert-
Thank you for your comments.
Suzanne-
I did go back to read the comments in context of the notes you
outlined on Robert's remarks. I still don't believe they were
insulting or intended to be insulting. I think it may be a
matter of some folks (yourself included) not agreeing with style.
I will restate an earlier remark of mine-I indicated that Robert's
remarks may have been abrasive. I don't think they were so, I
think he just has a strong style of noting. In my opinion, it's
just a matter or maybe reading too much into something and turning
it into something it's not. Please remember, I'm not trying to
change your mind, (I think that would be impossible and unfair to
you) I'm just voicing my opinion based on my reactions to the notes and
I did not find anything that was objectionable.
RE: others
Those who pointed out that they felt Robert was very condescending
towards myself in his comments thanking me for his support-again, I
did not find his meaning offensive in any manner. In my opinion, it
may have been a matter of semanitics and Robert did come back to
clarify his message (not that I felt it was necessary, but it seems
others did). Unfortunately, in this medium, unless you have excellent
(ie perfect) writing skills, it is very easy to read hidden meanings
into one's writing, especially if one has already formed an opinion of
the noter. I'm not outright accusing anybody of doing so, I just know
that sometimes I have a tendancy to read a note and say to myself-
gee, I'm not surprised at that remark coming from so and so. What I'm
trying to say is that I think some folks have a tendancy to place
people in catagories when responding, espcially in such an impersonal
mode of communication. It's easy to overlook one's meaning when seeing
who the respondant is. FWIW, this is only my opinion. Perhaps some
will find it has merit, others will not. Differences do make the world
go round.
Christine
|
316.122 | | SELECT::GALLUP | Walk right thru the door! | Fri Sep 28 1990 09:49 | 11 |
| > <<< Note 316.115 by CSC32::CONLON "A conspiracy of one..." >>>
> "Truth" is a label that is often used to glorify opinions.
I agree 100%.
k
|
316.123 | An example of something that can't qualify as "truth"... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Fri Sep 28 1990 10:02 | 15 |
|
RE: .121 Christine
> I still don't believe they were insulting or intended to be
> insulting.
The whole point is that the margin for error when trying to
decide if someone else insulted or meant to insult others is
so great as to make debates about such things completely
meaningless in the absence of the original author's stated
intentions.
This is what I set out to demonstrate when I pointed out the
possible insult to you. It's an easy mistake to make, as we've
seen in this topic all along. Thanks for the corroboration.
|
316.124 | huh? | ASABET::RAINEY | | Fri Sep 28 1990 10:14 | 18 |
| Suzanne,
Perhaps I'm just being dense, but are you saying that you were
wrong in stating that Robert did insult me-after all, at someone's
request, he did clarify his statement so there would be no
mistaking his intent.
I'm not sure exactly what you are thanking me for, my reply was
not really geared towards the replies on truth, and as it wasn't
I'm not really sure I agree with the notion of your applying my
quote to an issue I didn't directly address, then indicating I
was in agreement with you. I must say tho,
that in my opinion, certain things, as EDP pointed out, will be
irrefutable facts (ie, like the reality of death) and as other's
pointed out, we all have our own "truths". Truth is a very
ambiguous notion and means many things to many people.
Christine
|
316.125 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Fri Sep 28 1990 10:40 | 27 |
| RE: .124 Christine
> Perhaps I'm just being dense, but are you saying that you were
> wrong in stating that Robert did insult me-after all, at someone's
> request, he did clarify his statement so there would be no
> mistaking his intent.
Yes, this is what I'm saying. I was wrong about it - (and, in fact,
I indicated the likelihood of this possibility when I pointed out the
statement that looked like an insult to you.)
The whole point was to show how easy it is to write things that sound
like insults.
Luckily, Robert was able to step forward to explain his meaning, but
we don't have the benefit of this input from the basenote author, so
there is no possible way to know what s/he meant by the basenote.
(At this point, I seriously doubt anyone will come forward to claim
the note, after all this, and I don't blame the person.)
So, we'll simply never know what the truth is about this, although
I'm sure we all have pretty strong opinions about it.
Opinions are *not* "truth," though.
Thanks for the request for clarification.
|
316.126 | I get it now! | ASABET::RAINEY | | Fri Sep 28 1990 11:05 | 8 |
| Suzanne,
Thanks for the clarification. I'm just a bit fuzzy this morning-
not used to working days yet! I see what you mean, and I do
agree, opinions are not universal truths; what's "true" and "right"
for one doesn't apply to the next person [unless they agree ;-)].
Christine
|
316.127 | Sheesh! | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Fri Sep 28 1990 11:40 | 59 |
|
I have read the replies since my last entry, and I find myself
amazed at the number of people who have read just enough of all my
entries to use them as a platform for bashing, somehow missing the
many clarifications and corrections that I made!
I am particularly disheartened by "D!"'s reactions, since I directed
a number of statements specifically to her which, had she not somehow
missed them, would have made it plain that none of the supposed "egotistical"
statements I made were even directed at her.
And I am fascinated by how individuals took my statements directed
at Christine out of context, reacting while ignoring my later clarification
-- a clarification which turned out to be unnecessary since at least one
person in this conference has enough... well... was able to take my
remarks in context without attributing some set of interpretations on them.
I strongly suggest that those who wish to take issue with what I say
make certain that they know what it is they are taking issue with. To do
otherwise weakens your moral position and makes you look less than able
to engage in a rational discussion (and before you take that statement out
of context, please note that I said "look", not that you -- whoever "you"
are since I am using no names here-- actually are "less than able"). Many
of the replies directed at me since my last entry make accusations which,
if my last few entries had really been read, would have been shown to be
false. This factor, as well as the fact that there still hasn't been any
really serious discussion of the real topic here, simply reaffirms certain
observations and conclusions I made in my entry 316.69.
Christine, I thank you for your clarification. I had become so used to
having my statements misinterpreted and taken out of context here that
I felt an explanation was in order. It is really gratifying to be in
the same Notesfile as you.
And by the way: in the event that people get the idea that my entry
316.103, in which I clarified my statement in 316.98, was prompted by
Suzanne's entry 316.99, please be aware that that idea is false. What
happened was that in my relief at seeing Christine's entry I wrote a
reply in which I accidently introduced a typo during the second pass of
my editing cycle. I later realized my error, and fearing that it would
be misinterpreted (as the replies since my entry 316.104 indicate,
though it seems that everyone EXCEPT the person it was directed to managed
to do so despite the clarification. Typical!), I entered my clarification,
THEN read Suzanne's reply and the subsequent replies, THEN entered 316.104.
In other words, the point that Suzanne was trying to make was
not only unnecessary, but displays the same kind of egotism and arrogance
that so many others have chosen to attribute to me. And to think that anyone
who uses insults and innuendoes as their primary method of communication
can have any positive effect on my behavior is to engage in egotism which
would make the arrogance that I am accused of seem small by comparison.
Can we at least get back to the subject? It is nice for some to
talk about how "umimportant" it is (while contributing greatly to the
125 replies to this Topic), but my understanding is that the NEXT UNSEEN
button is a very handy tool for those who do not wish to engage in the
discussion or who don't like the way I say things.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.128 | Back to the basenote? | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Oct 01 1990 10:35 | 8 |
|
Gosh, I never thought I'd see the day when I said, "enough process -
let's get back to the content," but I think that day has come. I think
that everyone has had ample opportunity to state, restate, and clarify
hir case, so how about if we use this note to talk about the story
introduced in the basenote?
Justine
|
316.129 | Rational discussion at last? | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Tue Oct 02 1990 14:39 | 80 |
| Justine:
I note that over the weekend there haven't been any replies except yours. It
looks like this nonsense is finally over and that we are going to be allowed to
discuss what we want to discuss here at last. This pleases me, considering how
things had gone so far downhill Friday.
Would you believe that someone actually took the time and trouble to send
a long MAIL message to me telling me how much she refused to discuss this
"bad joke" with me? Amazing!
Nonetheless, the non- contributers have finally ceased their futile attempts
to insult us (hopefully, they have taken my advise about the use of NEXT
UNSEEN). They have, however, left a lot of "trashnotes" here. Consequently, to
get us back to the original discussion, a synopsis is in order:
________________________________________________________________________________
As I stated back in 316.1, the basenote of this Topic is the most insulting
note to be entered into this Conference. It is an insult directed at the women
in this Conference. I claim this based on the following points which have been
made in previous entries:
(1) The names of people, places, and deities are corruptions of Egyptian and
Hebrew words, as described in my entry 316.20
(2) As I indicated in 316.69 (and earlier), and as Martin described more
closely in 316.95, there is a theme of "evil men" vs. "good women" --
as described by a priestess whose name means "ignorant". The entire
attitude of the narrator and the history of "Hemutlund" (Women's land)
parallels the beliefs expressed by certain people in this Notesfile and
this Notesfile's history.
(3) I also mentioned, in various places, the theme of the "oppressed becoming
the oppressors", which is indicated by certain things the Priestesses did
in "Hemutlund".
Originally, I suspected that the more... er... vocal members of this
community "got the joke" of the basenote, but were reluctant to comment on it
because, as I explained earlier, the introduction and style of the entry
suggests that the author was female. As a result, I believed that there was a
bias involved which my earlier comments were directed towards. I later
realized, from the perplexity of other responses, that I had overestimated the
knowledge of these members, making my earlier remarks inappropriate. As should
be obvious by now, my attempts to clarify and correct this error were missed.
Two alternative interpretations were offered: one by Jody who believed that
the story was a version of "Daughters of the Coral Dawn", and by Ann Broomhead,
who believed that the elements in the story which I had identified in 316.20 as
insulting to women were really sarcasm and that the story itself was a parable
not intended to insult women, but was intended to comment on men, society, and
(I think. Please correct me if I am wrong) a comment on how men have created
problems in this Notesfile.
I am very curious about these alternative interpretations. I am unfamiliar
with "Daughters of the Coral Dawn" for example; I would be interested in
hearing of how the basenote parallels that story.
I am also interested in knowing how one can come to the conclusion that Ann
has.
And also: "k"'s entry 316.52 is especially interesting, for reasons
mentioned before. Another reason why I find it interesting is that before I
read it it had never occurred to me that the basenote portrays the women of
Hemutlund as being completely "blameless". When I read 316.52, I went back and
reread the basenote. I find that I must agree with "k". It is almost as if the
narrator of the story is blaming any and all evil in Hemutlund on the Reth, as
if the Reth's sole purpose in existance is to make life miserable for the
"peaceful" inhabitants of Hemutlund.
That the narrator seems to shift all the responsibility for the problems in
Hemutlund onto the "invading" Reth indicates to me that the entire history, as
presented by the narrator, is very one- sided. When we incorporate this into
what has already been said, we find that we have another insult aimed at the
women in this conference: that they, like the narrator in the story, are unable
to look at facts objectively.
This is the synopsis, as I present it.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.130 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Tue Oct 02 1990 15:03 | 8 |
| I sincerely feel that, with the tone seen in the first few paragraphs
of .129, you have squelched any urge I would have had to "discuss" this
with you. I fear that perhaps I'm not the only one who may feel this
way. I'm not sure whether you see this as a loss or a gain, though.
Alas.
-Jody
|
316.132 | | MILKWY::JLUDGATE | Just a dead friend | Tue Oct 02 1990 15:58 | 38 |
| re .129
That the narrator seems to shift all the responsibility for the problems in
Hemutlund onto the "invading" Reth indicates to me that the entire history, as
presented by the narrator, is very one- sided. When we incorporate this into
what has already been said, we find that we have another insult aimed at the
women in this conference: that they, like the narrator in the story, are unable
to look at facts objectively.
skip the 'we', and say "When I incorporate this into what has already
been said, I find that I have another insult aimed at the women in this
conference:..."
i don't view things the same way that you do. what is so bad about
presenting a one sided history? isn't that what happens anyways? if
one were led to believe what is taught in schools in america, one would
think that the people who settled the west did so honorably, and only
defended themselves against savage natives. talk to a descendent of
the native americans, and you will hear a completely different story,
of newcomers settling, making agreements about the land, breaking the
agreements, forcing the rightful owners off their land into less
desirable real estate, and shooting those who tried to stand up for
their rights.
so anyways........i rather enjoyed the one sided point of view, because
it let me look at things from the non-standard point of view, that of a
minority that left the majority behind, and when some of the majority
came along and tried to impose their views, the minority stood up for
themselves. you see this as oppressed turning into oppresser.
This is the synopsis, as I present it.
yes, that is your version of the synopsis.
i don't see any insults being slung around by the original story.
jonathan
|
316.134 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Tue Oct 02 1990 20:20 | 52 |
| As another example of how difficult it is to interpret notes -
even notes that are NOT parables - try re-reading .124, .125 and
.126 - then see the reaction in .127 and .129 (some emphasis added.)
.125> Yes, this is what I'm saying. I WAS WRONG about [Robert
.125> insulting Christine] - (and, in fact, I indicated the
.125> likelihood of this possibility when I pointed out the
.125> statement that looked like an insult to you.)
.125> The whole point was to show how easy it is to write things
.125> that sound like insults.
.125> Luckily, Robert was able to step forward to EXPLAIN HIS
.125> MEANING, but we don't have the benefit of this input from the
.125> basenote author, so there is no possible way to know what s/he
.125> meant by the basenote.
.125> Thanks for the request for clarification.
.126> Suzanne, Thanks for the clarification. [From Christine.]
This is followed by: [Some emphasis added.]
.127> I have read the replies since my last entry, and I find myself
.127> amazed at the number of people who have read just enough of all
.127> my entries to use them as a platform for bashing, somehow MISSING
.127> the many CLARIFICATIONS and corrections that I made!
.127> And I am fascinated by how individuals took my statements
.127> directed at Christine out of context, reacting while IGNORING
.127> my later clarification...
The clarification mentioned in .127 was discussed at some length
in .124 - .126 (with the words "I WAS WRONG ABOUT IT.") Pretty
straight-forward.
.129> It looks like this nonsense is finally over and that we are
.128> going to be allowed to discuss what we want to discuss here
.128> at last. This pleases me, considering how things had gone so
.128 far downhill Friday.
Among the last replies on Friday were "thank you" and "thank you"
(during the exchange of a clarification.)
This is another demonstration of how impossible it is to discern
another noter's meaning without having the noter handy to offer
clarifications. In the absence of the basenote author speaking
up about what s/he meant in the parable, there is simply no way
we will ever know what it meant.
We will never, ever know. Ever.
|
316.135 | My impression is that no malice was intended. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Tue Oct 02 1990 21:06 | 15 |
|
My personal opinion about the meaning of the basenote (although
we can't possibly know for sure without added input from the
author...)
It wasn't meant to be insulting to women or Womannotes.
The descriptions of the love (shared by the people of the Land)
were too tender to be meant as sarcasm.
Even after reading the alleged origins of the names used in the
story, the tone of the narrator is clear to me. It was written
by a female or male member of the Land.
It was written with love, too.
|
316.136 | thoughts | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Tue Oct 02 1990 23:26 | 23 |
| Actually, when I read it, I took it as a �kind of over simplified
fable about the problems that =wn= has had. Tho from my personal
point of view it made things to 'black and white'. I didn't really
care about the names, but assumed that the author made them up
with perhaps some input from a smattering of words out of history
but without intentionally picking names for any meaning other than
that they sounded 'old' or 'mythical'.
I find it interesting how often SF authors will subconsciously
pick up words from other authors or movies and use the names
in their works...
One I saw recently was 'her mother was a princess from the Leia
system'. How much of this is deliberate and how much just the
workings of the subconscious of a well read person I can't say.
My *personal* guess is that the base note author is well read and
the malign meanings of the words that have been focused on here
were just coincidence. But I may be naive.
I can't call this one.
Bonnie
|
316.137 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Danger! Do Not Reverse Polarity! | Wed Oct 03 1990 06:17 | 16 |
| re:.129
� I am also interested in knowing how one can come to
the conclusion that Ann has. �
Read .111 again (assuming that you have already done so).
re:.136
Some things are subconcious, some things are deliberate. I would
be very surprised if the example you quote wasn't deliberate. And
I would be even more surprised if the allusions that Robert cites
weren't deliberate. The entire nomenclature is too intricately
bound into a single unit to be happenstance.
--- jerry
|
316.138 | Enough | THEBUS::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Wed Oct 03 1990 12:42 | 21 |
| Re: .135
> we can't possibly know for sure without added input from the
> author...)
That's for sure. It's been 6 weeks and 137 (make that 138) replys and
so far the author has not submitted any anonymous replys clarifying
anything, despite the apparent confusion. My conclusion is, either
1) the author hasn't been reading this file for 6 weeks, or
2) the author does not want to clarify the story (reasons unknown,
but strange in light of the fact that a clarification might help
end the controversy)
Perhaps the author is enjoying watching us make fools of ourselves
arguing about a story whose meaning is ambiguous. I suggest that we
table this discussion unless the author wishes to clarify the story or
identify hirself.
Mary
|
316.139 | Two more cents on etymology | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Thu Oct 04 1990 16:27 | 12 |
| re: R. Brown's recent posting.
.0: The History of Hemutlund
I took "Hemutlund" as being derived from the Germanic word that went
into English as "homeland" ("Die Heimat" in German, assuming I spelled
it correctly, "hemlandet" in Swedish.) These words are only roughly
approximated by "homeland" -- you have to add motherhood, apple pie,
vanilla ice cream, and Fourth of July parades with the high school
band playing on the village green to come even close.
Martin.
|
316.140 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Mon Oct 08 1990 14:32 | 85 |
| Referencing 316.130 (Jody):
Frankly, it doesn't matter to me one way or the other.
Referencing 316.132 (Jonathan):
Your interpretation is very interesting; it is one which I ALMOST
made when I first read the basenote.
However, there are a number of elements in the story which caused me
to discard that interpretation:
1: The seemingly deliberate selection of names of people and places throughout
the story.
2: The introduction of the "priestesses" who came into Hemutlund and "taught"
the "real" history of the People. This is all too similar to what happened
in Christianity when certain repressed individuals gained power in the
Church, or what happened in Israel when certain right- wing fanatics formed
political groups there.
3: While I grant that the victors in any conflict get to write the history,
and that the history is inevitably one- sided, but the fact is that these
days such one- sided histories are usually viewed with suspician. While
the "white man's" side of the history of the west is well known, for
example, as you have indicated we are also aware of the American Indian's
side. The same is true of other conflicts in history; we are presented with
all sides of a conflict -- even the perspective of the Nazis during World
War II!
The point I was making in 316.129 is that the very one- sidedness of the
history, as presented by a priestess whose name means "ignorant", makes it
suspect. That so much of the rest of the story is so sarcastic indicates
that the narration itself, in its one- sidedness, makes it just another
insult. The insult is that anyone (in this Notesfile) who has the attitude
of the narrator is so ignorant that she cannot even consider the possibility
that her so- called "enemies" might actually have a legitimate reason
for acting as they do.
In summary: you may consider the basenote to be a presentation of an
alternative point- of- view, and indeed, on some level, you may have a point.
However, there are too many other elements of the story which contradicts that
thesis.
In other words, it does, indeed, present a non- standard point of view--
but that isn't all it does. And even its presentation of that point of view
is insulting to anyone who would have it.
Referencing 316.33 ("-d"):
Thank you for your entry. I myself have seriously wondered at the
purpose of the basenote since YUPPY::DAVIESA's entry 316.91. If the purpose
of the basenote was, indeed, to alienate members of this community, then
it has done so very effectively.
Unfortunately I do not believe that anything was "caused" here. None of
the negativity seen here was "created". What happened in this Topic was
simply a function of what each and every participant (myself included) has
within hirself.
In 316.1 I stated, erroneously, that the fact that the basenote was
allowed to exist unprotested was a sign of how this Notesfile has fallen.
I submit now that the "knee-jerk snapping..." etc. that occurred in this
entire Topic says something very unpleasent about a lot of people here.
I wouldn't mind participating in a collective apology and siblingly hug.
I doubt, however, if that is ever going to happen here.
Referencing 316.136, 316.138, and 316.139:
I really wouldn't mind seeing the author clarify her entry (I am still
convinced that the author is female), but I doubt that the author will do
so at this point. I sincerely doubt if anyone, after seeing what has happened
in this Topic, would want to clarify anything.
Despite this I make an open invitation to the basenote author: could you
please tell me, in MAIL, how close my interpretation of your entry is to
what you intended? I would like to know this for my own edification, nothing
more.
Until I hear otherwise, I will continue to say what I have said from
the beginning: that the basenote is, indeed, a satire directed at the
women in this conference.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.141 | It's so clearly written with love... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, indeed... | Mon Oct 08 1990 15:13 | 39 |
| It's funny how someone can see "satire" and "sarcasm" when a story
writes lovingly about a group of people.
As so many here have said, we each read things into words (based
on our own perspectives and feelings.)
What I see in the basenote is quite clearly love -
"In the beginning, the Land was green and good."
"...They came to this Land seeking peace..."
"And they called it Hemutland because it had so many
natural gifts for the people. They build homes in
the land and grew content..."
"They came quickly to Hemutlund, bringing the True Word.
And the People of Hem welcomed them with open arms."
"The True Word brought peace to every corner of Hemutlund."
"The Priestesses and the True Word flourished in Hemutlund,
and all the People were happy and content."
"But the Priestesses of the Great One still remain, fighting
for all the People."
"This land is given unto the People. It is our place."
"But the invaders...are envious of our land and of our love."
"Only through Her love and wisdom can we hope to bring back
the joy that once dwelled with us in Hemutlund."
Quite obviously, the People and the Land are described with love.
Perhaps one has to understand the sort of love that exists in this
conference to see the love in these passages.
|
316.143 | I can use quotes, too... | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Tue Oct 16 1990 02:37 | 69 |
| Referencing 316.141 (Suzanne):
You are quite right, Suzanne, about how people see things according to their
own perceptions.
Even the "understanding" of certain forms of love depends strongly on one's
perceptions:
"And in all the temples, forests, and lakes the Priestesses told the real
history of the People... "
(And in Russia, all the children used to be taught the REAL history of how the
decadent imperialist Capitalists are causing such strife in the world, and how
the Soviet Union would bring "enlightened" government to the rest of the
world.)
"But there came blasphemers from the other lands, who did threaten the peace
of Hemutlund. "
(Blasphemers like those members of the Anglican Church in South Africa who
dared to suggest that the Blacks there were actually human beings.)
"The Goddess Aurphel'a heard Her daughters and came upon the Land as a great
dark cloud. All those who felt Her presence became deaf to the heresies of the
Reth."
(Translation: Darkness/Ignorance [which is what Aurphel means] prevented people
from "hearing" what the "heretics" were saying.)
"Beware the priests of Reth, for to follow them is to take the path of
darkness. Their god is Ma- At and S'uit, while the True Word comes from the
Great One, who is named Shil. Only through Her love and wisdom can we hope to
bring back the joy that once dwelled with us in Hemutlund."
(Translation: Don't listen to the Reth whose gods are Truth and Light [Ma- at
being Maat, GODDESS of Truth, Justice, and Light and S'uit meaning Light], but
through our Goddess Error/Falseness [what Shil means] we will bring back the
joy we once had.)
It is indeed possible that one needs to "understand the sort of love that
exists in this conference" to "see the love" expressed by a character who is
obviously biased in favor of a land ruled by worshippers of the Goddess
Falseness. I doubt it, though. Simply because the narrator is a character who
loves her regime does not mean that the story itself expresses love. All it
means is that the character expresses love. But since her name means "ignorant
person" and her narration is so obviously biased, then the entire story takes
on a very sarcastic style. There are ample examples of this type of sarcasm
in literature.
But of course, it is possible that the love of this conference is being
expressed here, and perhaps if one does understand such love maybe one would
have a different perception of the story. But then, one's perception of the
old Soviet Union could be changed if one understands the communist "love" of
the State. I also imagine that a rational person's perception of South Africa
could conceivably be changed if one understands their "love" of "white
christian values".
It is possible. But is it desirable?
______________________________________________________________________________
Referencing 316.142 (herb):
I am not going to discuss the Deitz quote, for reasons which I explained to
you before. Even if I were inclined to discuss it, this Topic is not the
appropriate place for such a discussion.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.144 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Tue Oct 16 1990 03:18 | 30 |
| RE: .143 Robert
Well, as I said, the story could be interpreted in a number of
ways, but only some of these ways make a great deal of sense.
For instance - it wouldn't make sense to speak of the Land as though
it were South Africa (with the People being white South Africans)
when the People were so clearly lacking in power compared to those
who later invaded Hemutland. In comparing two situations, you can't
switch the positions of power as a viable analogy to describe another
set of groups with a huge power deficit. It simply doesn't work.
It would be like comparing the Holocaust to American slavery (and
suggesting that the Nazis could be compared to African-American
slaves while the Jews could be compared to Southern plantation
owners.) Such an analogy would be both untrue and unfair.
As for the names of the characters, it's been mentioned before that
women sometimes claim names with negative origins - such as witch,
defiant bitch, hags, crones, glass-chewing feminists - as an
empowering gesture. So, it's impossible to know (for sure) what
someone might have meant if it's true that the names in the story
have negative meanings about the Land, the People and the narrator.
Believe me when I tell you that such negative-sounding names are
often used in ways that are anything *but* sarcastic towards women.
Someone who truly understands the benevolent nature of the love
of this community would express love in the story quite sincerely
(even if some others found it impossible to believe or accept.)
|
316.146 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Tue Oct 16 1990 14:45 | 30 |
| RE: .145
> In the case of Hemutland, where the goddess kept the People from
> hearing the heresies of the Reth, bear in mind that the first step to
> sociopolitical collapse is censorship in the name of the state.
Well, I disagree that "censorship" is being described in the basenote.
It sounds more like the People were were able to see the "lies" of
the invaders for what they were, which is why they were no longer
influenced by them. Thus, they weren't physically prevented from
hearing the Reth, but rather they were kept from being fooled by them.
> The Christian Bible says, "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth
> shall make you free." What, I ask, was the gooddess of Hemutland
> afraid of? Losing her ignorant servants? That don't sound like
> much of a loving situation to me.
The Christian Bible doesn't encourage spending a lot of time
listening to anti-Christian doctrine, either, though. Does this
imply that the Christian God is afraid (or non-loving?)
In the story, words are used as weapons against the people (just
as language is used in our own culture as a tool of oppression.)
The invaders described the People's love as hate, which was a lie,
but a formidable weapon. The best defense against it was for the
People to seek strength from each other (and their leaders) by
keeping the truth in mind.
The People knew the truth. They also knew that they needed to be
strong at times to keep from being destroyed by lies.
|
316.147 | response by author | SMAUG::EBERT | | Fri Oct 19 1990 12:04 | 19 |
|
I am the author of the base string. I find it sad, but
predictable, that so many people missed the point. The story was a
satire. I focused on the misuse of power, how easily one is
corrupted when s/he thinks that s/he is representing a large
powerful group.
It is also a commentary on the what has been going on in
womannotes ever since a few women have assumed the mantle of
spokespersons for the group. They have flogged anyone who does
not walk within the narrow confines of THE VIEW.
Unfortunately I expect harrassment through the notes files and my
personal mail. As has been stated many times before, absolute
power corrupts absolutely.
Judy
|
316.149 | hmmm... | LYRIC::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Fri Oct 19 1990 12:14 | 12 |
| re: .147
If you, or anyone who is of the same opinion as the basenote author
would like to respond via e-mail to topic 23, particularly with
suggestions on how to better the notesfile, we are still listening. If
you see a problem, please suggest to us how to help the notesfile be
more of what you'd like to see it be. (Yes, I remove all identifying
information before passing the information on to the other moderators,
if you are more comfortable with anonymity).
-Jody
compiler-of-survey-information-on-the-notesfile
|
316.151 | And you're not alone. | SELECT::GALLUP | Drunken milkmen, driving drunk | Fri Oct 19 1990 14:02 | 16 |
|
RE: .148 (Suzanne)
How can someone's "view" be wrong?
RE: .147 (Judy)
Thanks. I DO understand.
kath
|
316.152 | Seems .152 was deleted as I was responding to it | SELECT::GALLUP | Drunken milkmen, driving drunk | Fri Oct 19 1990 14:13 | 17 |
| RE: .152
> > How can someone's "view" be wrong?
> Easily, when describing the motivations of others.
But "views" are not descriptions, they are interpretations of
occurances......opinions, judgements, perceptions. Views are
not "facts" as such, so they can't really be "wrong", can they?
kath
|
316.153 | Was going to drop it, but... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 14:23 | 27 |
| RE: .152 Kath
Perceptions can be mistaken.
For example, I noticed some men beating you up very badly for
their perception of what you were saying in Mennotes recently.
As they pummeled on you, I noticed you kept saying that your
view was more relevant as a woman (you said "we women" quite
a bit in your notes.)
You were castigated for attempting to speak for all women (by
the men arguing with you) - and you were accused of all sorts
of other things.
Were they mistaken in their "view" of you, or were their
perceptions valid?
It's ironic to see you agree with someone here whose satire was
directed at some women she claims have set themselves up as
spokespersons for the rest of the women (presumably because some
women here say "we" in reference to the people they know who do
definitely agree with their point of view.)
Is this the power that corrupts so absolutely, and if so, did
you engage in this corrupt power by saying "we women" in Mennotes
(implying that you speak for all women, as they said you were
doing?)
|
316.154 | | SELECT::GALLUP | Drunken milkmen, driving drunk | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:12 | 16 |
| > <<< Note 316.153 by CSC32::CONLON "Cosmic laughter, you bet." >>>
> Perceptions can be mistaken.
> For example, I noticed some men beating you up very badly for
> their perception of what you were saying in Mennotes recently.
> As they pummeled on you, I noticed you kept saying that your
> view was more relevant as a woman (you said "we women" quite
> a bit in your notes.)
You're right, perceptions (including yours) can be mistaken.
kath
|
316.155 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:18 | 10 |
|
RE: .154 Kath
> You're right, perceptions (including yours) can be mistaken.
Thanks for seeing my point.
And, of course, I'm sure you also realize that your perceptions
can be mistaken, too.
|
316.156 | ***comod response *** | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:36 | 9 |
| PLUEEZE?
peace and quiet?
thank you awfully much
Bonnie J
=wn= comod
|
316.157 | Gloat??? Moi????? ;-) | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:53 | 64 |
| Referencing 316.147 (Judy):
First of all, thank you for your clarification. It is about time that
someone stood up and raised the issue you did. I would have, but I don't
feel it appropriate for me to do so.
I am impressed by your courage in stepping forward.
I do not, however, believe that you will be harrassed. The reason why
I don't is because you stated that you expected to be. Anyone who would
be inclined to beat on you is now in a mode where they must prove you
wrong by "going easy" on you at worst or not responding at best. And the
worst kind of response you will get is the kind of "last word" phyrric
victory responses like 316.148.
Referencing 316.149 (Jody):
It is good that you are seeking suggestions on how to improve things
here, but I suspect that things have gone way past the point where you
will get too many people (who share Judy's view) to tell you anything.
I, for example (assuming you're interested, which I doubt) do share her
view and have ideas on how to improve things, but my previous dealings
with the Moderators here have led me to believe that any idea I have that
does not involve shutting up anyone who doesn't accept what Judy calls THE
VIEW will be ignored.
Since in this Topic alone so many individuals and even one of the
Moderators -- oops! I mean, one of the noters who "happens"
to be a Moderator-- participated in blatent violations of this file's
guidelines, well, frankly there is a credibility problem here. I could be
wrong, but I don't believe that Judy will send you anything. I also don't
believe that anyone who doesn't share what she calls THE VIEW will expend
the energy to tell you anything. I believe that they, like me, believe that
it would be a waste of time.
And now, Suzanne:
As usual, you miss the point. You missed the point I made in 316.143,
and you continue to miss it.
Despite your bringing up (impertinant) references to Kath's "battle"
in MENNOTES, the fact is that you are really in no position to call Judy's
position "wrong" (yes, I read and extracted 316.148 before it was deleted).
Saying that you disagree with her is appropriate, but in the absence of
real facts to back up your claim, then calling Judy wrong is... well...
wrong.
Now before you decide on an appropriate retort (yes, I'm expecting more
insults and rhetoric from you and am prepared to allow you to have the
last word since the main point [and my vindication] was made when Judy
entered 316.147), I leave you with the following suggestion:
That perhaps you might want to look beyond the "insults" given in an
ancient language (actually, Judy did a good job putting her insults in
English as well as Hebrew and Egyptian. It isn't her fault that you and
others chose to miss them), and look at what Judy was really saying. You might
want to consider what part you might have taken in promoting and perpetuating
the perception she has.
And while you do that, you might want to consider the possibility that
maybe you are no more the arbitor of Truth than she is.
-Robert Brown III
|
316.158 | | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:56 | 36 |
|
Maybe the problem is the way that the word power is being used.
I now see power as that within myself to change things within
my control and to accept that which is not. This is not a bad
type of power. I would guess that .0 is much more interested
in the the type of power that is over someone else and is very
distructive to the community as a whole. While it is not
possible to ignore this mindset all of the time, it is possible
not to fall into the traps that the holders of that particular
mindset deposit all over the place. - get my drift.
I choose not to engage in useless dialogue all of the time.
This is me exercising my power. I choose to question every
fact that is brought up and do a quick reality check in my own
head and based on that I choose to accept the "fact" as fact.
Sometimes I choose to not accept the "fact" and then to engage
in useless dialogue explaining why. BUT it is all my choice.
AND I can stop participating at any time I wish.
I have a favorite joke that almost no one else gets - and it
could be insulting to someone if they did get it, for me it is
more the context inwhich I understand the humor rather than
the actual joke that make it my favorite. I see .0 as someone
"favorite" story (about =wn= I guess), I don't get it and so
I am not insulted even if it was meant as an insult (which I
am not sure it was). I find it boring and uninteresting and
for the life of me I can not understand why there have been
this much discussion about it.
_peggy
(-)
|
Sometimes you just have to say HUH!!!!
|
316.159 | | GLITER::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:58 | 6 |
| re .157, I don't consider myself to be "an arbitor of truth" but I do
disagree with Judy. (You did say it was "appropriate" to say if we
disagree, didn't you?)
Lorna
|
316.160 | Quotes from Robert's note to the basenote author (and me.) | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 19:55 | 38 |
| RE: .157 Robert
> I do not, however, believe that you will be harrassed. The
> reason why I don't is because you stated that you expected
> to be.
You remind me so much of my sister when we were kids - she
would always tell me what she "made" me say and do (by telling
what she expected me to say or do, or what I was allowed to
say or do.) One day, she found out that the ploy didn't work.
Puberty was a time of great personal growth for her.
> And the worst kind of response you will get is the kind of
> "last word" phyrric victory responses like 316.148.
Well, now you've put us in a pickle, haven't you? If we don't
say anything, you've "made" us keep silent. If we do say something,
then you can gloat about your prediction. What wiiiiiiill we do?
> Now before you decide on an appropriate retort (yes, I'm expecting
> more insults and rhetoric from you and am prepared to allow you to
> have the last word since the main point [and my vindication] was
> made when Judy entered 316.147)...
Um, Robert, it might have been more prudent for you to wait to use
the basenote author's "trick" til later (when the psychology behind
"telling someone what they will/can do" wasn't still so fresh in our
minds.)
But - I'll tell ya what I'm gonna do...
I'll take your offer to have the last word - and I'll hold you to it.
This means that you're not allowed to ever address me again in this
topic (not in the first *OR* third person.) If you welch on your
agreement, I won't let you off the hook about it.
In any case, I think you should have a talk with my sister about
these "word psychology games." She could fix you up on 'em.
|
316.161 | Guess this puts us in the clear. (Whew!) | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 20:01 | 15 |
| Well, all I can say about the revelation from the basenote author
is that I'm somewhat relieved. As often as she was accused of
writing the most insulting note ever entered in Womannotes, we'd
all have been in deep trouble if the note had been written to
insult men.
In the last few days, it's come out that women of this conference
have been reported to Corporate Personnel (and God knows who else
in this company) for saying the words "Dead" and "Think."
If the basenote had been insulting to men, the author would probably
have been fired.
As it is, since it was only meant as an insult to women, she'll
probably receive a plaque and a trip to Hawaii.
|
316.163 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 20 1990 04:06 | 61 |
| By special request, a story of my own (something I wrote in another
conference about people who like to count and point out when they
think others are getting "the last word" - one of the favorite games
of children everywhere.) ;^)
Some people should be given extra allowance as 'only children'
---- ------ ------ -- ----- ----- --------- -- ---- --------
A conversation I remember between my siblings as children:
"Goodnight."
"Goodnight. Now shut up."
"Ok."
"No, I mean it. Shut up!"
"Ok."
"Why must you INSIST on having the last word every night!!!! Now
shut up and GO TO SLEEP!!!!!"
"Ok."
"This is it. I'm telling Mom that you won't quit until you're
allowed to have the last word. If you hadn't INSISTED on having
it, we'd have stopped talking A LONG TIME AGO!!!! Now shut up
and go to sleep, and STOP TALKING!!!!!!!!! YOU DON'T ALWAYS NEED
THE LAST WORD, YOU KNOW!"
"Ok."
"OK, then. I'm going to ALLOW you to have the last word - go ahead
now - have the last word because I ALLOWED YOU TO HAVE IT, AND NO
OTHER REASON!"
"Ok."
"Good. Now you've had the last word (LIKE YOU ALWAYS NEED TO HAVE,
SO I *ALLOWED* YOU TO HAVE IT), so we can go to sleep FINALLY!"
"Ok."
"You're only answering because I MADE YOU RESPOND by allowing you
to have the last word. I can make you say anything I want!"
"Ok."
"SEE???? I MADE YOU SAY THAT! Now I will MAKE you have the last
word. Go ahead - again."
"Ok."
"SEE???? I can make you say anything I want! I told you!"
............. and so it goes.
Poor Mikey Z. never had siblings close to his own age, so he thinks
he invented all this. ;^)
|
316.166 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 20 1990 18:09 | 6 |
|
Games like "made ya look" and "last word" are not the way adults
treat children. They are games that most children play with anyone
they want to annoy - until they have enough brains and dignity to
give them up (somewhere around puberty.)
|
316.168 | Some children's whining tactics are more tiring than others... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 20 1990 19:37 | 10 |
|
When adults are having a conversation, it isn't unusual at all
for a child to try to interrupt by interpreting the situation
as being something that relates to one of his own games.
It's a desperate plea for attention.
Adults usually go on having their conversation, hoping the
child will eventually be put down for his nap.
|
316.169 | Made ya look! psych! | NRUG::MARTIN | GUN-CONTROL=Holding it with both hands | Sat Oct 20 1990 21:09 | 1 |
| Skicker snicker....
|
316.170 | ***co-moderator response*** | LEZAH::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Sun Oct 21 1990 02:30 | 5 |
| Please cut out the interpersonal back-and-forth-shots. Future ones
will be deleted.
-Jody
|
316.173 | I thought this was over... | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Tue Oct 23 1990 19:49 | 40
|