Nobody is scolding you.
It sure sounded like it to me.
You've turned this into some other argument. Nobody said you didn't quote the words. It was my mistake about which forum, I'm new here.
I'm asking you why you wouldn't just take something down if the author requested it?
Because, to get down to the brass tacks of the matter, I truly don't think for one minute that the quotes/excerpts that I have archived at my site
really bother the CTers enough for them to start insisting I remove their quotes from my site. And to see the virtual proof that what I just said is the truth, just look at the first three pages of
this EF thread. That thread was started in February of 2016, and it took a resurrection of the discussion in 2019 for anyone to even begin to demand that their posts be removed from my site (plus to demand I be kicked off of the EF forum, to boot).
That three-year delay that it took for a single CTer to
give a damn is telling me something right there.
The fact that [you] are calling all CTs hypocrites and scumbags, makes no difference to me if you posted it before or after. It's just a dumb thing to say.
Many (many!) conspiracy theorists that I have encountered
are hypocrites. (Without a doubt.)
And some CTers
are scumbags. (Such as "Boris" at acj, plus a few others I won't mention here.)
I guess sometimes the truth can hurt.
But, like you said, you're new here. It takes a few years of regularly dealing with Internet conspiracy theorists for the true nature of them to finally sink in.
Do you add commentary to postings you take off other websites? If so, do you give the author the opportunity to know it's there, as well as the chance to respond? How?
Yes, I certainly have added my commentary to things I've grabbed off "non-forum" websites. And CTers do the exact same thing. (Go
HERE and
HERE and
HERE to read some examples of CTers doing it.)
Conspiracists have quoted me (and many others) on their own websites, which are non-forum websites that I cannot respond to. But I couldn't care less about the fact that they have done that. I've always thought of it as a compliment if someone wants to quote me on their site. I never once felt the urge to gripe about it in even the slightest way --- even though I
do think I've been quoted "out of context" on occasion. But I still never felt compelled to throw a hissy fit about the mere fact that I have been quoted on somebody else's website without my express "permission" being given. I've never
expected someone to ask for permission to quote something I have already written on a public webpage.
And I sure don't recall ever getting a heads-up from the CTer who was quoting me to inform me that they have just quoted me on their site. Why would that ever happen anyway? In my experience, it never does. And I'd never expect such a "heads-up" to be written either.
So maybe CTers should get the idea out of their heads that a guy named DVP is the only person in the world who has ever copied the public words written by another person to use on his own personal website. Because, let's face reality, such a thing is happening thousands of times every day. And the
only people I've ever heard complaining about it are a few outer-fringe JFK conspiracy theorists.