Psycho-Babble Administration Thread 389694

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Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-8 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 14, 2004, at 8:44:00

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-7 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 14, 2004, at 8:37:22

Ladies and gentlemen of the forum,
Mark Morford is an editorialist for the San francisco Gate. The following link has the poem and it is the second from the last entry if you scroll down to the end.
Mr. Morford has a political agenda that I will show to you and develop the logical conclusion to my closing argument.
Lou Pilder
http://www.freewillastrology.com/beauty/pagan.shtml

 

Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-9 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 14, 2004, at 18:56:44

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-8 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 14, 2004, at 8:44:00

Ladies and gentlemen of the forum,
There are always those editorialists that take one side or the other in a war. I have no qualms with anyone writing their position about any war.
But what is at hand here that I see, is not only the war, but {God and the war}. I feel that the poem has the potential to arrouse the thought that the blame for the war should be transfered to the jews, because of the reference to, [...Realize the divine is not quite what you think it might be. that old methods of imploring, say, a cantankerious bearded patriarchal figure to please, oh yes, smite your enemies might be a bit antiquated...],and, [..bogus Iraqi attack plan...],and,[...this is a time of war mongering and bitternesss...] and that is why I am asking that this poem in question be deleted. I feel that the potential is there for others to think that the author is referring to the God of the old testament, which is the God of the jews, and that the blame for the war should be transferred to the jews . There is much more to this conflict that has not been revealed. I have friends in Israel and I have received emails of picturs and videos, of things that can not be seen on television. Things that even Mr. Morford may not know. Things that I can not post here.
I do not consider the poem to have the content to be on the faith board, for it is ,to me, a poem more of a political nature and I am asking Dr. Hsiung to make some sort of administrative act to indicate that, for I consider the poem not to be supportive to faith in God
Lou

 

Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-10 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 8:13:51

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-9 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 14, 2004, at 18:56:44

Ladies and gentlemen of the forum,
The plea that I have is to have Dr. Hsiung, in some way, attend to the poem in question so that the potential for antisemitic feelings could be thwarted. As of now, the poem stands unadmonished, with one reply stateing that it is the poster sees that what is being purported by the author, that[... the God of the old testament perhps should be reevaluated as not-so-divine...]and that is what can be seen for the poster also writes, [...seemed pretty straightforward...].
It is my greatest nightmare that one day I will wake up and the happenings in Nazi Germany will be awakened to repeat itself. These things will be done by blaming the jewish people for something. History has recorded the jews being blamed for the plague.
But why do you say that I should be concerned about that poem posted here. You see, in the 30's Hitler's propaganda machine spewing hatred to the jews and blaming them for Germany's troubles was fuled by a slow local venue. But today we have the internet that reaches very fast the whole world. This superhighway of infomation can be a highway for hate.
The poem is authored by a writer for a newspaper and his articles center on topics that have two sides. His side is highly anti- Bush and in his articles there is his use of the connection to Israel. Below is a link and in the article by Mr Morford, he states,
[...maybe the other nations...scorn us because...].
Then he writes,
[...maybe it is the message we send...when we give Israel an additional $one billion in additional aid...to help assuage any extra 'suffering" ...].
I belive that this article has the potential to arrouse antisemitic feelings.
i am making my closing argument to have this poem expunged. Not because I do not belive in free speech, for I do, but because I feel that it has the potential to arrouse antisemitic feelings and that is not a sound mental-health concept.
Lou Pilder
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/g/a/2003/06/06/notes060603.DTL&type=printable

 

Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-11 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 16:52:25

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-10 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 8:13:51

Ladies and gemtlemen of the forum,
You have seen the poem and it has been posted on the faith board. Is that a place to have that posted when the faith board is for posting about the service and worship of God? Is the poem about that?
My friends, let us see if the poem is a politicaally aimed message to arrouse anti-President Bush feelings and his constintuancy and his policys. Let us look at the poem.
The poem posted is not the entire poem written by Mark Morford. The poem posted is a poem made up of lines from the original poem by Mark Morford. Let us look at the original poem.
The original poem starts off with Mr. Morford explaining what one can do to:
He states that the war is all about[... oil and power...], not about Saddasm and Osama, for their evil has nothing to do with the war, it is only a convieniant excuse for the war...].
He then writes the list of thingss one can do. I do not think that it is a poem, but a checklist which is an answer to what you can do for the war. His checklist is nothing more than political mud-slinging by ridiculing the personalities of the Bush administration and saying that these people are acting for their own self interests and not yours ,in a very ugly manner.
The first line that is posted on this board is only one line gleaned from a paragraph.
The line here just says,"stop thinking this is all there is". One could possibly think that this is some sort of religious promise of an afterlife in heaven. Not so, for now read the entire paragraph that the one line came from.
"Choose not to believe much of the disinfomation spinning forth from the White House at this time. Look at Donald Rumfeld's shockingly beady and pithch-black eyes and realize this man, these people, they are deeply convoluted and power blinded and do not have your best interests at heart."
I ask this forum to decide if this is appropriate for a board designed for support of people mutually in faith in God.
Lou Pilder
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/g/a/2002/10/18/notes101802.DTL

 

Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-12 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 20:12:54

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-12 (nm) » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 19:54:57

Ladies and gentlemen of the forum,
Mark Morford continues with his name- calling of "these people".
He writes, [...Choose , furthermore, not to believe the world is really full of these {vile} {power-mad} {slugs}and {lizards} and {prevaricators} and {fools} and...]. "Stop thinking this is all there is, war and suffereing and apparently very pale and {egomaniacal} and {spiritless} men running the world into the ground."
These terms that Mark Morford uses to describe "these people" would seem on the surface to be terms of no significance other than to have others see them the light that Mr. Morford wants to cast on them. But there is more to those terms that Mark Morford uses. They have significance that I will show the members of this forum.
Lou Pilder

 

Doctor Bob, I agree - to a point » Lou Pilder

Posted by AuntieMel on September 16, 2004, at 16:09:29

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-12 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 20:12:54

I don't want to get political, and I couldn't possibly guess anyones motives {I always assume the best until proven wrong} BUT

I read the poem and it really isn't about faith and it *does* seem to belong on the writing board.

 

Re: Doctor Bob, I agree - to a point » AuntieMel

Posted by Gabbix2 on September 16, 2004, at 17:38:40

In reply to Doctor Bob, I agree - to a point » Lou Pilder, posted by AuntieMel on September 16, 2004, at 16:09:29

I think it depends on what your interpretation of faith is. To me the poem was very much about
faith. I read it as a philosophy of making God personal not necessarily (but not excluding) looking for signs and justification from an omnisicent God figurehead. It was about seeing yourself as part of the fabric of life and spirit recognizing it's beauty and shouldering it's responsibilites.

 

Re: Doctor Bob, I agree - to a point » AuntieMel

Posted by Cass on September 16, 2004, at 18:50:55

In reply to Doctor Bob, I agree - to a point » Lou Pilder, posted by AuntieMel on September 16, 2004, at 16:09:29

I'm really not here to debate the poem. I am spiritually inspired by the poem, and Dr. Bob already made the decision not to delete it. However I will say this -- even though the poem doesn't make a direct reference to faith, I think it's pertinent to the faith board because it encourages me to to be more conscious of my spiritual values and to act on them. It compels me to strenghten my religious principles and put my beliefs to ACTION. "Realize that this is the perfect moment to change the energy of the world, to step right up and crank your personal volume right when it all seems dark" Those lines encourage me to remember the God within me (or to have "faith")in these dark political times and to act upon my own spiritual convictions. It compels me not to shut down my creativity, love, kindness, and compassion, but to give it liberally.

In my opinion, forgiveness and reason are religious/spiritual values, and the poem seems to encourage those qualities. In the context of war and hatred, the author says, "Resist the urge toward nihilism. Seek out nuance, and counter argument and subtle irony and balance and perspective." I like the way the poem promotes peace.


The poem inspires me to tap into my spiritual resources, reminds me of our interconnectedness and gives me the hope of cosmic renewal. "Remember magic and finally, believe you are part of a groundswell, a resistance, a seemingly small but actually very, very large impending karmic overhaul, a great shift. The beginning of something important and unstoppable." Something "karmic", "great" and "unstoppable" certainly sounds like a religious or spiritual reference to me. Couldn't this be an indirect reference to God and the presence of God in us?

Anyways, I don't want to be very involved in this thread, but I do feel strongly that the poem was pertinent for the faith board.

 

Gabbix2 liked your comment..thanks (nm)

Posted by Jai Narayan on September 16, 2004, at 20:21:12

In reply to Re: Doctor Bob, I agree - to a point » AuntieMel, posted by Gabbix2 on September 16, 2004, at 17:38:40

 

Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-13 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 16, 2004, at 21:37:27

In reply to Lou's closing argument- Dr. Hsiung's decision-12 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 15, 2004, at 20:12:54

Ladies and gentlemen of the forum,
I have shown you the language used by Mark Morford . But there is more. He continues with,"resist the great surges toward nihilism about the media, in seeking them all as either a {bunch of depressing snickering} {pansy-(expletive) (expletive) liberal {scum} or corperate-controlled sensationalistic (expletive) all parroting the same old pro-Shrub war stories and beating the same thudding pro-violence drum."
There are journalistic standards. To write like this about others IMO could be declared as journalistic hate-speech. But the words of a journalist are usually carfully chosen for a reason.
Lou Pilder
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/g/a/2002/10/18/notes101802.DTL

 

Thank you Jai : ) (nm) » Jai Narayan

Posted by Gabbix2 on September 16, 2004, at 22:53:51

In reply to Gabbix2 liked your comment..thanks (nm), posted by Jai Narayan on September 16, 2004, at 20:21:12

 

Re: Lou's respons to Dr. Hsiung's decision 388469LS » Lou Pilder

Posted by SLS on September 17, 2004, at 8:03:33

In reply to Lou's respons to Dr. Hsiung's decision 388469LS » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 12, 2004, at 16:45:58

Hi Lou.

I'm not the smartest guy in the world, but as I see it, disagreeing with the Old Testament does not equate to being anti-semitic any more than disagreeing with the New Testament makes one a hater of Christians. I doubt that you are a hater of Christians.

L’Shonah Tovah.


- Scott

 

Lou's response to SLS » SLS

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:11:39

In reply to Re: Lou's respons to Dr. Hsiung's decision 388469LS » Lou Pilder, posted by SLS on September 17, 2004, at 8:03:33

SLS,
You wrote,[...disagreeing with the old testament does not equate to being antisemitic...].
The faith board has a stipulation that posts can not have the potewntial to put down those of other faiths. The statement that has been interpreted to mean that the god of the old testament is perhaps to be reeavaluated as not-so-divine is not IMO a statement of disagreement but a statement that arrouses others to consider thinking of the God in the old testament as "lesser" than another god, which puts down the god of the jews.
Shabott Shalom,
Lou

 

Re: my thoughts

Posted by Larry Hoover on September 17, 2004, at 8:19:48

In reply to Lou's response to SLS » SLS, posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:11:39

This seems to me to be a debate about the difference between the literal and the figurative. People are bound to have differences in that regard, and we see those differences, IMHO, in relative adherence to orthodoxy. Nobody is more than or less than, just different. Agree to disagree, or don't agree to disagree. Disagreement is not inherently a putdown, but the failure to agree to disagree can be inferentially a putdown, all by itself.

Lar

 

Lou's response to SLS-2 » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:29:58

In reply to Lou's response to SLS » SLS, posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:11:39

SLS,
You wrote,[...is a disagreement...].
If the statement that causes others to think that the god of the old testament perhaps should be reevaluated as not-so-divine is a call for others to think a particular way.
Thoughout history, others have called on others to think of jews in a particular way that was defaming to the jews. It is when others call for other to think in a lesser light about the jews that the potential to arrouse antisemitic feelings occurs. These feelings promted by others to think of jews in a defaming manner is the foundation of antisemitism. The pharase, {not-so-divine} attacks the god of the jews. Attacks upon another's God is an attempt to deminish that God which puts down that God and those that have faith in that God. Are you saying that people can defame another's God and it is not hate-speech because it is a disagreement?
Lou Pilder

 

Lou's respons to Larry Hoover » Larry Hoover

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:56:26

In reply to Re: my thoughts, posted by Larry Hoover on September 17, 2004, at 8:19:48

Larry Hoover,
You wrote,[...a failure to agree to disagree can be...a put down....].
Are you saying that I can not object here to have the statement deleted or admonished or redirected that writes, [...the God of the old testament... reevaluated perhaps as not-so-divine..]? I am giving my closing argument as to why I consider the statement a violation of the stated rules for the faith board as to not posting what could put down those of other faiths. Are you saying that the statement in question does not have the potential for others to see that the statement puts down another faith?Lou Pilder

 

I think I agree with Lou

Posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 8:58:02

In reply to Lou's response to SLS-2 » Lou Pilder, posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:29:58

But I can't say for certain, as I'm not as familiar with the thread as to be certain.

It always saddens me to see the "God of the Old Testament" referred to as anything but the "God of the New Testament". I can't imagine that that was the idea, because it would have been all too easy to scrap the Old Testament if that were true. While it is true that I am a semitophile, I feel similar distress at similar types of statements about the "God of Islam".

Isn't it possible, and on the Faith Board preferable, to phrase one's own spirituality in such a way as to not in any way put down the God or the faith or the spirituality of another?

I don't really want to get enbroiled in this. But I love God. The God of Israel and Isaac and Jesus. I am generally considered a pariah at church for saying just this sort of thing.

I understand that others feel differently.

Perhaps it would be helpful to conduct a poll of devout Jews only? Or perhaps I could locate a website of devout Jews and ask them to come comment on whether the thread is considered respectful to their faith and their God? I hate to speak for others, and perhaps they wouldn't be offended. I don't know that it would be easy to find a group who would be willing to comment, but there are several synagogues here, and perhaps I could bring the printouts to several rabbis and see if any of the more computer literate are willing to comment.

They may not be, however. I have called the local rabbi of the reform synagogue more than once to cry on his shoulder at my distress in Sunday School at hearing the Law and the "God of the Old Testament??" and similar things spoken of disrespectfully, and he always encourages me to continue to go to Sunday School.

Toph seems to have an idea of what I am trying to say, but less colored by my distress. Perhaps Toph would be willing to explain it more coherently than I can?

 

Re: references

Posted by Dr. Bob on September 17, 2004, at 9:51:51

In reply to I think I agree with Lou, posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 8:58:02

> It always saddens me to see the "God of the Old Testament" referred to as anything but the "God of the New Testament".

Was the "God of the Old Testament" referred to at all?

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/faith/20040729/msgs/388469.html

Bob

 

Re: I think you did well, Dinah. (nm)

Posted by Toph on September 17, 2004, at 10:13:03

In reply to I think I agree with Lou, posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 8:58:02

 

Lou's request to Dr. Hsiung » Lou Pilder

Posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 10:50:37

In reply to Lou's request to Dr. Hsiung for expungment-388469, posted by Lou Pilder on September 11, 2004, at 13:48:33

Dr. Hsiung,
You wrote,[...does it mention the God of the old testament...].
It is the potential for others to think that the God of the old testament is being referrrred to by the author. The poster that posted it wrote that he/she thought so. That is evidence that the words chosen by Mark Medford lead others to believe that. Since the potential for that to be seen is there, it can br seen. It is my concern that others also could make that same observation and lead to some type of discussion that could have the potential to arrouse antisemitic feelings. Why not just post something to the post by the poster that responded to my request for clarification by writing that[... he/she thinks that it is the god of the old testament..]with something like [...please rephrase...] or [...this is not supportive...]? That way, his/her respomse would not be seen as the forum endorsing his/her response.
Lou Pilder

 

Re: references » Dr. Bob

Posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 11:25:12

In reply to Re: references, posted by Dr. Bob on September 17, 2004, at 9:51:51

The reference was in a followup post by the poster of the original post, so I'm guessing that would be representative of the intent of the poster, if not the poet.

 

Re: references » Dr. Bob

Posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 11:26:49

In reply to Re: references, posted by Dr. Bob on September 17, 2004, at 9:51:51

But the keywords in the poem also make it more likely than not that that was also the intent of the poet.

 

Re: Lou's response to SLS » Lou Pilder

Posted by gardenergirl on September 17, 2004, at 11:51:00

In reply to Lou's response to SLS » SLS, posted by Lou Pilder on September 17, 2004, at 8:11:39

Against my better judgement, I feel the need to post to this thread...
Lou Pilder wrote:
> The faith board has a stipulation that posts can not have the potewntial to put down those of other faiths.

Actually, neither the faith board description nor links provided on it use the word "potential" in their cautions. I think if the standard were to be that one must decide on posts' merits based on their "potential" to evoke feelings of any kind then that likely would go well beyond the moderator's ability and stamina to maintain. In addition, it would take the established civility standards into the realm of possible instead of actual, which is also difficult if not impossible to judge.

I'd like to add that whether a post has said potential is no less relevant than what is within the reader of the post. A post cannot evoke a feeling that is not already there in some degree. The opposite of feeling is indifference. If the reader of a post is indifferent, then nothing in the post can evoke a potential feeling. How do you judge, then just one side of the dynamic?

Thus, I believe that the post is within the civility guidelines as set forth by Dr. Bob. That does not mean that the post might not evoke certain feelings. Clearly it already has. But revising or sanctioning a post based on its *potential* for evoking feelings is not appropriate as I understand the rules of the Faith Board.

Regards,
gg

 

Re: But » gardenergirl

Posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 12:08:20

In reply to Re: Lou's response to SLS » Lou Pilder, posted by gardenergirl on September 17, 2004, at 11:51:00

I fail to see how it is more offensive to say that "I am the Lord thy God. Thou shalt have no other gods before me." than to say about someone's god "a cantankerous bearded patriarchal figure to please, oh yes, smite your enemies
might be a bit antiquated."

Similar controversies have arisen on PBPsych, and I believe that Dr. Bob has finally come to the conclusion that respect is a necessary component to discussion. "a cantankerous bearded patriarchal figure to please, oh yes, smite your enemies might be a bit antiquated." doesn't appear to me to be all that respectful to my God.

 

Re: However

Posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 12:11:02

In reply to Re: But » gardenergirl, posted by Dinah on September 17, 2004, at 12:08:20

I have no illusions that I can change the hearts and minds of others, including Dr. Bob. I stated my position, affirmed my love for the Lord my God, and now withdraw from the discussion.

Carry on.


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