"Well I'm back folks and I can see that Omlor now has at least three impressed fans (or should that be impressionable?): Maria, Victoria and Dougie, no less.
Wow.
Not bad going at all after only a few years."
As an opening to a post, the pettiness of this is not just remarkable but also, historically speaking, sadly typical. It is just the sort of comment that typifies Diary World and all that is a sad joke here.
The last bit of the post, addressed to me, is similarly goofy. It needs only a brief remark or two in response.
I'm certainly not going to rehash the whole McCrone fiasco yet again. Later, if it matters, when another testing process did reach the point of discussing prices I made it clear that I was willing to pay 100% of the costs.
But the raising of the issue here is fascinating. Why such a question is asked by Keith in response to a simple e-mail asking him about his public claim to have secret evidence concerning the diary's origins remains a mystery. However, it is a perfect example of just how discussions around here so often work. I send Keith an email asking three or four simple, direct questions. Not only are they not answered, but instead you get talk of everything else -- past e-mail histories from years ago having nothing to do with that evidence, questions about finances for tests that never took place and all the rest -- a boatload of irrelevancies that all serve only to muddy up the fact that, as everyone who reads the exchange can still see, the questions asked were simply not answered.
Then, of course, we get more vague warnings from Caroline about the alleged "ongoing investigation" (my, how the years do pass) being somehow "compromised" if anyone were even to dare to breathe a word of even why no one should breathe a word.
It's enough to make even the most jaded secret agent cackle, amused at the pompous self-importance and the melodramatic language of whispered catastrophe.
Honestly, sometimes the lengths people go here to defend all the secrecy (while at the same time blabbing in public and online about the alleged secret goods anyway) is staggering.
It's a strange game. It's been going on for over a decade.
I doubt it is going to end any time soon.
Never surprised,
--John
Wow.
Not bad going at all after only a few years."
As an opening to a post, the pettiness of this is not just remarkable but also, historically speaking, sadly typical. It is just the sort of comment that typifies Diary World and all that is a sad joke here.
The last bit of the post, addressed to me, is similarly goofy. It needs only a brief remark or two in response.
I'm certainly not going to rehash the whole McCrone fiasco yet again. Later, if it matters, when another testing process did reach the point of discussing prices I made it clear that I was willing to pay 100% of the costs.
But the raising of the issue here is fascinating. Why such a question is asked by Keith in response to a simple e-mail asking him about his public claim to have secret evidence concerning the diary's origins remains a mystery. However, it is a perfect example of just how discussions around here so often work. I send Keith an email asking three or four simple, direct questions. Not only are they not answered, but instead you get talk of everything else -- past e-mail histories from years ago having nothing to do with that evidence, questions about finances for tests that never took place and all the rest -- a boatload of irrelevancies that all serve only to muddy up the fact that, as everyone who reads the exchange can still see, the questions asked were simply not answered.
Then, of course, we get more vague warnings from Caroline about the alleged "ongoing investigation" (my, how the years do pass) being somehow "compromised" if anyone were even to dare to breathe a word of even why no one should breathe a word.
It's enough to make even the most jaded secret agent cackle, amused at the pompous self-importance and the melodramatic language of whispered catastrophe.
Honestly, sometimes the lengths people go here to defend all the secrecy (while at the same time blabbing in public and online about the alleged secret goods anyway) is staggering.
It's a strange game. It's been going on for over a decade.
I doubt it is going to end any time soon.
Never surprised,
--John
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