Jackalgirl
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2004
- Messages
- 1,801
Seriously - don't you consider watchdogs the good guys?
Darat, I don't think it's the "watchdogs" part. I think it's complimentary to be called a watchdog, too.
It's the "barking" part. It makes it sound like speech that's just noise. Sure, a watchdog may be barking for a reason, but a watchdog does not usually bark out well-reasoned objection or expressions. It's just barking. So the comparison makes it sound like we're just making mouth-noises. At least, that's how I initially took it.
I think the suggestions so far have been very good -- i.e., explaining the process (for example, the cutting-and-pasting into a working draft) and how it could go wrong, an acknowledgement of how egregious plagairism is and how it really was a total mistake (especially since this is something we [as in the skeptical community] have taken frauds -- I mean, "psychics" -- to task for), and how it won't happen again. When I royally screw up in the Navy, I have to demonstrate how I will make sure I won't do it -- and how I'll prevent other people from doing it -- again.
The other thing that bugged me, Darat, is that I've /seen/ Randi directly quote readers (and emailers) in Swift all the time. "Reader so-and-so says" <insert quote here> "I completely agree, so-and-so." So it really seems /odd/ to see this happen. I can totally see it occuring if Randi's throwing together a bunch of thoughts and forgets that the pasted material isn't his, especially if it's almost exactly his own opinion. I'd just like to see that that's what happened, rather than us guessing about it.
And, /again/, because plagiarism is one of the things we (the skeptical community) actively pursue when we're looking at <insert fraud of choice here>, I think that it is worth a bit more attention. Reno is, IMHO, spot on.
