Originally posted by Petrushka
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Should classical music be a more forgiving world than other forms of culture ?
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostSo I am required by law to pay for McGregor to promote the record of a convicted child offender and his victims are to be required by the law to pay for it too? No. Absolutely no. Groups of freaks in the establishment will no doubt get together in the privacy of their own sewers to produce for the similar minded. I am not going to be made to fund it without getting the tabloids involved."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Lateralthinking1
ahinton, I haven't read your latest. You live in a very grim mind. Anyhow, I'm just going to e-mail The Sun and The Mail.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostSo I am required by law to pay for McGregor to promote the record of a convicted child offender and his victims are to be required by the law to pay for it too? No. Absolutely no.
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostGroups of freaks in the establishment will no doubt get together in the privacy of their own sewers to produce for the similar minded.
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI am not going to be made to fund it without getting the tabloids involved.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWell, at least you answer your own question correctly! For one thing, you are not "required by law" to possess a working television and are therefore not legally compelled to have a TV licence and, for anotgher, you do not in any case need a TV licence to listen to BBC Radio.
I do not propose to risk appearing to dignify such a remark with a response.
As I stated, you are not "made to fund" anything unless you insist on having a working television set, but the most risible aspect of your "threat" here is in your invoking "the tabloids", as though they and their content can somehow be guaranteed to be whiter than white whereas BBC by contrast is the alleged n*gg*r in the woodpile! Talk about taking the biscuit! That's utterly hilarious!
And I do hope that the starred n word of yours isn't what it very obviously is.
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Our society routinely employs the most dreadful double standards. In often leads us to employ double standards, and in any case it is exceptionally difficult to make the correct moral or ethical judgement, or follow the correct course of action in endless daily situations.
Many people have their careers , lives etc ruined for " lesser" offences, perhaps wrongly. Like many here, I find it pretty hard to stomach the thought of a man with King's background getting the money, plaudits, resumption of a career, while other , very able musicians struggle to find work.
It's tougher, though, in my humble opinion, to see, for instance, warmongering politicians, complicit in the arms trade, living off the fat of many lands, in the pay of investment banks and so on, and yet we put up with those people on our TV, radio, intruding into and running our lives, day after day, week after week , year after year.
So, I think on the whole, I just won't buy his CD or go to his concert. I'll view the BBC with a slightly more jaundiced eye, and hope that what goes around comes around.And the old Gary Glitter records will continue to gather dust.......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Postahinton, I haven't read your latest.
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostYou live in a very grim mind.
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostAnyhow, I'm just going to e-mail The Sun and The Mail.
Anyway, once again I note that you've said nothing about those besides Mr King who have been involved in making and issuing the recording concerned (in terms of whether or not you believe that Mr King should once again be continuing his career as a professional musician and expected and getting others to help him to do this) or whether or how anyone else has reviewed it or indeed how you think BBC could maintain credibility while ignoring a product that other sources might publicly praise for its artistic merits; making some attempt to do these things would put you in a rather more positive light here than will accusing unnamed BBC people of being "amoral bimbos", damning a named one as "airheaded" for airing an artistic judgement of a recording (without even giving your own view as to whether or not you believe that it deserves such praise), claiming without a shred of had evidence that someone whom you've never met "lives in a very grim mind" and braying from the elevated position atop your high moral horse about "groups of freaks in the establishment" who "will no doubt get together in the privacy of their own sewers to produce for the similar minded".
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI feel that you have a very perverse way of comprehending "threat".
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostAnd I do hope that the starred n word of yours isn't what it very obviously is.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by ahinton View PostThat's your prerogative, but presumably you have at least seen sufficient of it to decide not to do so.
Wrong - and, in any case, you do not now where or in what I live.
It's up to you, of course, but unless you either relish or are at least prepared to assume the risk of the prospect that you'll be laughed at for doing so, I'd give a little thought to that before proceeding.
Anyway, once again I note that you've said nothing about those besides Mr King who have been involved in making and issuing the recording concerned (in terms of whether or not you believe that Mr King should once again be continuing his career as a professional musician and expected and getting others to help him to do this) or whether or how anyone else has reviewed it or indeed how you think BBC could maintain credibility while ignoring a product that other sources might publicly praise for its artistic merits; making some attempt to do these things would put you in a rather more positive light here than will accusing unnamed BBC people of being "amoral bimbos", damning a named one as "airheaded" for airing an artistic judgement of a recording (without even giving your own view as to whether or not you believe that it deserves such praise), claiming without a shred of had evidence that someone whom you've never met "lives in a very grim mind" and braying from the elevated position atop your high moral horse about "groups of freaks in the establishment" who "will no doubt get together in the privacy of their own sewers to produce for the similar minded".
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostOur society routinely employs the most dreadful double standards. In often leads us to employ double standards, and in any case it is exceptionally difficult to make the correct moral or ethical judgement, or follow the correct course of action in endless daily situations.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostThat sounds like a perpetrator's speech. The philosophy is wholly what would be said of an abuser to a child - if he says anything he will be laughed at and isolated from the group, the caution not to proceed, the dismissal of anyone he speaks to as inferior, the repeated description of what he has said as not what he actually said. And to be from your pen of all people. How uncanny.
More seriously, though, you once again make no effort to answer the questions posed in the much longer paragraph that you quote; for someone as vociferous as you can be and indeed have been on this subject, your reticent taciturnity seems somewhat out of character...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhat else could it be, whether or not he emails those journalistic organs of high moral respectability?!...Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by ahinton View PostA "perpetrator" of what? Don't beat about the bush, please - just say what you mean without equivocation. My reference to your possibly being laughed at for what you propose to do has nothing to do with whether or not your moral indignation, which is your prerogative, is justified or even with whether your expression of it is a wholly proportionate and appropriate response to an item being reviewed on CD Review; it's about the notion of your sending an email about it to those widely respected bastions of moral superiority the Daily Mail and the Sun! If I'd made that insufficiently obvious to you, please accept my sincere apologies!
More seriously, though, you once again make no effort to answer the questions posed in the much longer paragraph that you quote; for someone as vociferous as you can be and indeed have been on this subject, your reticent taciturnity seems somewhat out of character...
You ask for clarification on the word "perpetrator". The philosophy you put forward shares many of the characteristics of a child abuser's approach to shutting up a child. That was what I meant by your lengthy posts sounding like a perpetrator's speech. He will find any way to stifle discussion or to distort anything that is said until the time when there is an outright accusation which he will encourage. He will then use it to drive him from the "house". I find that uncanny coming from you of all people as I said before.
There could easily be a discussion here which goes along the lines "I disagree with your argument because" and there is even scope for a political angle as with other things. The BBC is political. The difference is in your approach to argument - "you will be laughed at", "no one will believe you", "ahinton's version of what another said, while inaccurate, is to be the authorised version".Last edited by Guest; 02-02-13, 19:22.
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