I said: “The social agenda, it would seem, is to make the world safe for high-schoolish exclusion.”
And: “I don’t think there is anything good about indulging and encouraging the worst in people.”
And: “Here is the unstated moral principle undergirding ‘realweenie’: It is a moral good for like-minded people to get together to chortle about other people they don’t like.”
To this, Joseph Ferrara asks: “Where are the examples of chortling?”
The answer was posted last night at Sellsius, with Teresa Boardman as the first commenter:
By these means do Joseph and Teresa rebut me by proving me right in every particular.
I saw every bit of this coming from Pat Kitano’s original post. I wasn’t working them, playing them like chess pieces. But people are who they are, and they will act upon their base premises, no matter what.
Michael Thoman quite properly chides me for suggesting that I had entertained the idea that Teresa’s weblog might be a joke. I never thought that was the case. In a comment at Sellsius, John Lockwood wonders if I had thought the weblog was directed at me. In fact, I thought it was directed at sites that, like BloodhoundBlog, are addressed to the industry rather than to consumers. I have seen Teresa make what I thought were underhanded comments, here and here, among others places, putting me on notice that she likes cutting people down to size, as people say.
What should you do about people like that? Avoid them, of course. There is nothing of the good in the dismantlement of oneself or the attempted dismantlement of other people.
This changed for me when I saw that weblog. I could stand up for what I know is right, knowing, in large measure, what to expect in consequence. Or I could take a chance a bunch of innocent people would get themselves cut down to size.
All week we have heard the expostulation, “But it was just a joke!” This is untrue. In the first place, “Can’t you take a joke!?,” is the ready-to-hand resort to plausible-deniability deployed by people who habitually make personal attacks disguised as jokes. This is why they’re disguised as jokes, to provide the cover of plausible-deniability — and to put you in the wrong for objecting to being attacked. Second, Teresa would not have gone to all the work to set up a weblog just to amuse Pat Kitano. She did it without having explicitly committed herself to doing it — it works the same way for vice as for virtue — in the hope of finding a pretext later. It turns out that I am that pretext by now. She is not morally culpable for doing something she herself knew in advance was wrong, it’s all my fault.
This is evil as I defined it, doing something you know in advance is wrong. Teresa’s evil is a tiny one, and you don’t have to write me to tell me she has many virtues. I’m sure she has. She has a tiny vice that I spotted, knew to watch for, and stepped on when I saw it taking root. Joseph Ferrara’s will to evil is much greater, and I knew that going into this, and I expected that he would make his true character manifest. But if Teresa’s evil is small compared to Joseph’s, his is small compared to Keith Brand’s (note that no one complains when I dissect him). And Keith Brand’s evil is nothing at all compared to true, criminal evil. People in fear, in doubt, in pain, shedding their misery to others rather than trying to heal themselves. One could wish it were uncommon.
But what we are talking about are the underlying principles, not the particular people involved. I am the perfect target for the attack embodied in that picture because I am indifferent to criticism. Either I am wrong — and I am going to some pains to demonstrate that I am not — or I’m not. If I’m wrong, I am profited to have learned better. If I am not wrong — so what? This by itself is valuable because you might not be so blithe about identifying the injustice of the attack embodied in that picture if it were you who had been depicted. For the record, I think I must look pretty much like that without clothing except I’m quite a bit taller than that guy.
Virtue is self-construction. Vice is self-destruction. And in every choice we make, every action we take, we are acting upon one motive or the other. I knew going into this fight that it would not be good for Teresa or Joseph — not that it could not be, not that they could not reflect upon their behavior and resolve to do better. But I thought the potential consequences were worse. But, ultimately, this is not about Teresa, Joseph or me. It’s about no one but you.
Vice is self-destruction, the dismantlement of your own ego. The more you indulge it, the less you will achieve. Less success, very likely, and less wealth. But these are secondary consequences. By indulging your vices, you will achieve less of the life that you yearn for, less of the interior experience of being the person you yearn to be.
In the end this is nothing to me, an intellectual exercise. I realize I have re-lit a conflagration I could have let die down. I’m doing it because I’m trying to help you — you alone in your own mind right now, reading silently, with no need to fear the disapproval of other people — help you find a better way of thinking. I don’t need to do this. I already understand all this, at much deeper level of detail than we’ve hit so far. Nothing would be easier for me than to say nothing and just go about my business. I’ve been doing precisely that for decades now. But BloodhoundBlog is about doing better, and this is the opportunity life has afforded us to do better at this moment.
The goal of all of this is Splendor, an enduring interior delight uncontaminated by pain or fear or doubt or guilt or anxiety — or envy, for that matter. Success comes as it comes. Wealth comes how it does. Neither mean anything if you cannot love yourself — without reservation — as a perfect reflection of virtues perfectly understood, perfectly mastered, perfectly executed, perfectly revered.
My apologies to Teresa and Joseph for having used them so cruelly as examples. I expect they’ll try to make me pay for that, and, even though they’ll fail, they will have my infraction as a bogus tu quoque rationale to justify their attacks. One could wish that sort of thing were uncommon…
Technorati Tags: blogging, real estate, real estate marketing
Kevin Boer says:
Dude, lighten up!
March 17, 2007 — 11:20 pm
apella says:
I commend you in your stance and logic.
March 18, 2007 — 12:24 am
jf.sellsius says:
You were the protagonist in this affair, attacking an idea (a joke) before it had a chance to manifest itself in action. Under cover of a funny Cheez Wiz Prize (your joke) YOU attacked, and strongly, with no room for a benefit of a doubt, saying that realweenie was venal and an intentional transgression, despite the absence of a single weenie award. Yes, you had the right to attack it but ought you not be called to defend it? Does that constitute chortling?
I also find it ironic that you are more offended by the cartoon (another chortle?), specifically the naked sheriff, than the principles at issue. Deflect the attention as you may to the superficial, but the essence of the matter is your prejudgment of Teresa Boardman and the double standard here. And apparently your refusal (inability?) to defend your position in an open debate. To make strong accusations of venality and intentional transgression, without a single bad act to point to, are more cutting than a cartoon because they attack a person’s moral character and prejudge their intentions as bad. Punish the act, not the thought. God only knows what you wrote to her that hurt her so. I don’t like seeing good people hurt. I find THAT morally offensive. Others are free to disagree with my method in her defense (although she does not need my defense). We think our offer of debate is fair and one would think you would welcome the chance to fully explain exactly how Teresa had crossed into venality. I suspect you can’t and need an out. This post is your out. All you had to do was say No.
When pressed in the comments by Michael Thoman & others, you cut and run, asserting to those too stoopid to see, that the issues are not debatable.
https://www.bloodhoundrealty.com/BloodhoundBlog/?p=1146#comments
If the cartoon provides your escape hatch—so be it. IMO, the cartoon pales in comparison to your depiction of Keith Brand as an incompetent masturbating fool (your exact words escape me but I do recall a chaffing.) Your claim that no one “complained when I dissected him” should not be taken as a license to be Greg the Ripper. At some point, someone’s gonna want to take the knife out of your hands.
The cartoon is a satire on your hypocrisy, not your waistline. But I suspect you knew that. You prefer to “dissect” with Latinisms and multisyllabic conflabulations, wielding your erudition like a scapel, while I prefer the humble cartoon. (I have done others before so you know you have not been singled out. I suspect you know that too.)
If the cartoon sheriff offends you, I apologize. Just so you know, I did not set out to make the sheriff naked or large. I found the overall image and it was perfect for adding another figure and a hot dog stand—-but it just so happened the fellow was large & butt nekkid. My inability to dress him appropriately in western gear is due to my incompetence when it comes to photoshop (which I don’t know how to use–I use Microsoft PictureIt, which came with my computer), as you can probably tell from my prior cartoons. Then I thought, the nakedness is symbolic of the irony. You profess transparency but IMO you are not. Now that I think of it, the largeness can symbolize your status in blogtown. In any event, I would not call you evil, for I do not paint in such broad strokes.
I take no offense to your rant. It is your right to rant. And mine. God Bless America and Freedom of Speech!
March 18, 2007 — 1:26 am
Athol Kay says:
Apparently there is always something to howl about.
March 18, 2007 — 7:25 am
Jonathan Greene says:
Here’s a funny joke:
What do bored cowboys sing?
“Ho-Hum on the range.”
March 18, 2007 — 12:44 pm
Mike Thoman says:
Ok, that was bad, but I laughed.
Mike
March 18, 2007 — 2:05 pm
Michael Daly says:
What a powerful debate! (ironically)
March 19, 2007 — 6:04 am
Greg Swann says:
Ahem. If you’re having trouble finding the context, imagine that post (or this one for that matter) on HousingPanic. Now you know what you’re dealing with.
The rejoinders in quick summary:
Again, this is not about me, this is about you. This is an archetypical illustration of how people strive to undermine your ego. If you learn to identify and understand — and challenge — this kind of behavior, you will be immune to it.
March 19, 2007 — 8:29 am
Athol Kay says:
Greg I think you well know that Teresa’s site would have died pretty quickly. You claim to be against it, but all you are doing is empowering it to continue to exist by giving it something to fight against. For all your words to the contray, you are in practical terms, her biggest supporter.
I gave up trying to deal with Housing Panic and the other moments of turning to the dark side of blogging. Nothing is acomplished by it and momentary outbursts best forgot get enshrined in RSS feeds forever even if you try and delete the original post.
The old saying “if you wrestle with a pig, all that happens is you both get dirty and the pig likes it” holds true. We’ve all had turns being the pig.
There’s got to be something better to blog about than this stuff.
March 19, 2007 — 9:40 am
Thelma Johnson says:
http://www.stpaulrealestateblog.com/weenie/2007/03/good_or_bad.html
March 27, 2007 — 5:47 pm
Greg Swann says:
Nota bene: The IP address 216.160.39.178 has been used by three commenters to BloodhoundBlog: Thelma Johnson, 1 time; Jack Boardman, 1 time; Teresa Boardman, 19 times.
March 27, 2007 — 6:05 pm