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Paul Begg's Point to Ponder

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  • Paul Begg's Point to Ponder

    On the April 5th podcast, they were discussing the message boards. The question was posed as to whether the message boards were help or hindrance to JtR research in general. After stating ways in which forums were helpful in general, Paul stated some specifics in which it was hindrance. He pointed specifically to the Diary boards where a small group of people have so dominated the discussion that any newcomer was completely stifled coming in and is ridiculed. Now, I am happy to ridicule. There are certain people who just have got to be ridiculed for a variety of reasons. But I have also seen people who were stomped on without being given a fair and adequate chance, simply by virtue of coming on and voicing an unpopular or uninformed opinion.

    Of course, there are some forums that are tightly regulated, tightly controlled and any dissenting opinion with the management will get your post deleted and sometimes your account banned. There are forums where you can't join unless your opinions and personal philosophies are in line with the POV of the forum moderator.

    Too much moderation stifles creative debate. Too little moderation stifles creative debate. Is it actually possible to find a happy medium? I don't really think so.

    Let all Oz be agreed;
    I need a better class of flying monkeys.

  • #2
    Howard came up with the question and it was interesting to hear Paul Begg's answer.
    I rarely go into "Diary world" for fear of being laughed at, even though I have read several of the diary related books, including the "Last Victim"
    So I can understand if this puts of newbies.

    Perhaps a set Maybrick area for the hardcore, and a set area for the newbies, who have questions or queries.

    I know when I came to this board initially last year, people had mixed reactions to my Stephenson work, but to quote Maybrick, or at least his grave, "Tempus Omnia Revelat" and posters have now realised how serious I am about hard core research.
    Regards Mike

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    • #3
      Well I managed a swear word tonight that escaped your dreadful dread.
      I'm happy with that.

      Comment


      • #4
        This hard core stuff......hope its not anything rude Mike?

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
          This hard core stuff......hope its not anything rude Mike?
          I am a married man, so I no longer get "Hardcore Stuff"!!

          I am all for message boards as a medium for discussion of the case, and I am glad Stephen has re-introduced the Bloggs.

          All this in my opinion can only help the case.
          Regards Mike

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          • #6
            Hi Ally,

            interestibng point. I like it, I am right now listening to the podcast, as I type this. But anyway...

            I would say the following points - people are dominate and stiffle the views of newcombers, is not something that generally happens, for example, if someone new says they feel Stride was not a Ripper victim, some (if not plenty) of regulars will agree (or at least be open to this suggestion), will be interested in Stride threads and be generally helpful (at least that's my perception, maybe I'm wrong). Although such an area is potential controversial it is not divisive. Whereas Maybrick has been divisive from the minute he was found dead, and in Ripperology since the minute the diary was made public.

            A problem I have with Maybrick discussion is that, in effect, most people are unwilling to discuss it - as though it will go away (maybe they blame the strong opinioned individuals but in this instance although the said people have strong opinions, most Ripperologists agree to some extent with them - or at least they agree with the underlying point of the anti diary side). It is this, not regulation that allows strong willed over opinionated people (like myself) to make their opinions appear to be the ones that count the most. This is entreanched over time, and down the line it makes it harder and harder to discuss or disent, it is in affect self inflicted, because a course of forgetting and ignoring has occured this allows people to become specialist in diary matters and in doing so have 'better' or more 'factual' opinions that they are in turn more rehearsed on. In allowing this to happen the view of new people who are fresh to the whole debate is easily stiffled and overwhelemd by the more entreanched and rehersed postions of the old heads of the subject. What regulation can prevent this?

            Only denying the voices of those with the strongest and perhaps most reseached opinions on all sides to be able to make their point. But while the majority remain absent in their silence, the same thing can only then happen again. In other words it is only by denying the side which in my opinion is the most correct or strongest to put its strongest proponents forward and allowing the other side to keep its, that newcomers can have their opinon aired in detail. But why is that wrong, if no one else in the field cares enough to air their opinion. If the newbies were allowed to drive an endless discusion which was flowing in a counter way to majority thinking, would that be doing them any great favours?

            Jenni
            Last edited by Jenni Shelden; 04-08-2008, 12:29 AM.
            “be just and fear not”

            Comment


            • #7
              Who is Paul Begg?

              Coral

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              • #8
                I don't think anyone who knows me would ever think I was advocating allowing newbies to go on and on in opposition to all common sense. I also have very little sympathy for people who think that free speech alone gives them the right to be heard if their opinion is devoid of any facts or logic. I have never considered that all opinions are equal or should be given equal air time. And I don't have a lot of sympathy for anyone who needs coddling, there-theres or, in the most extreme cases, total ass kissing in order to participate and who can't handle dissent of any kind.

                However, I have seen occasions where a newbie, who is not of the "retarded droolers" category comes in with an opinion contrary to established fact and is jumped on and yes it's generally related to their idea that the Diary is real. Do I think the diary is real? Absolutely not. But if someone does think it's real, should we stomp someone automatically and drive them off which limits a potential poster who might have learned and added something. If not for Stephen's initial interest in the Maybrick Diary, none of us would be here.
                Last edited by Ally; 04-08-2008, 01:18 AM.

                Let all Oz be agreed;
                I need a better class of flying monkeys.

                Comment


                • #9
                  One problem with the Diary threads is that they're not exclusively about the Diary - they're also about all the rows and personality issues that have developed over the last few years. That's fair enough for the regulars, but newcomers have to master
                  1. The Diary
                  2. The history of Diary discussion

                  It's a bit daunting.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    That's an excellent point Robert and exactly what I think the problem is. It's no longer about the Diary. Or discussion about the Diary. It's now about the personalities involved. And when it's about them and their issues, there will never be any real debate. And while I think the Diary is the worst example out there, it's not the only one.

                    Let all Oz be agreed;
                    I need a better class of flying monkeys.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I though that I brought up the question on the podcast of the message boards being a help or a hinderance to research. Maybe it was How, I forget.

                      Anyway, if it was me, the gist of what I was getting at is that if a poster (does not have to be a newbie) comes along with new information (ie- the name of a local nobody who has a history of violence against women during the relevant time period, or just a new angle on how they're viewing a particular aspect of the case) and the first couple of posts are ridiculed in some way, that could discourage that particular person from doing ANY further research on their idea or individual. Message boards operate as a kind of instant peer-review that could discourage people from going further down their line of thought or research if met with initial negative responses.

                      In that way, said poster may have been better off without posting their theory or info on the boards.

                      I know, we gotta have thick skin and all, but still, message boards can in some ways lead to a stifling of research.

                      JM

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Jon:

                        It was you and I agree with you.

                        Thats why I set up the "Memory Hole" Forum elsewhere...and it might be worthwhile to put one up here for those individuals who may have been mentioned once...dismissed..and never fully researched.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by jmenges View Post

                          In that way, said poster may have been better off without posting their theory or info on the boards.

                          I know, we gotta have thick skin and all, but still, message boards can in some ways lead to a stifling of research.

                          JM
                          I disagree. The fact that the original posting remains on the boards means that, if it has any merit, someone with sense may pick it up and continue it.

                          Without the boards, what would that person have done before? Tell his co-workers? Maybe they would scoff too. Would someone who runs away tail up from the boards because of criticism be someone who would have had the guts to publish their information in a medium that would require more guts? A book?

                          The fact that it's displayed in a public medium means it has its greatest possible chance at going somewhere, provided that it has somewhere to go.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Ideas live and die on their merits; the serious do not care what Howling Monkeys think.

                            --J.D.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Kelly View Post
                              I disagree. The fact that the original posting remains on the boards means that, if it has any merit, someone with sense may pick it up and continue it.
                              Well, it was just a question I floated. And I agree with you here. As someone said (on the podcast, maybe?) that the search feature will still trigger the thread even if it falls down the 'memory hole'. So an idea could be reexamined.

                              ...said the Jayhawk to the Tennessean,

                              JM

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