My brother sent me this one. It's a Baylor student's blog,
and very well written. 

It describes an incident that happened to him when he 
wrote a parody email and sent it to the students and the
professors of one of his classes. 

Here is the URL, but in my opinion the background of the
blog makes the text difficult to read there, so I have
pasted it in below. 

http://90percenttrue.com/index.php?p=41

It's a long read, but a rewarding one, as is the followup:

http://90percenttrue.com/index.php?p=52


**********************************************************

                 I Am A Terrorist 
                         Or
"How I Threatened To Burn My Professor At The Stake"

.: Many of you by now have heard this story. Either I 
told you over the phone, through AIM, or in person. 
It's a long story, and for the first time I'm going 
to write down as much of it as I can.

.: It all starts with a lecture in my Introduction to 
Neuroscience class. The professor, Dr. Patton, made a 
demonstration with two very important and influential 
books: The Bible and the Origin of Species. The 
lecture can be summarized in these four lines:

Holding up the Bible: "This is not a science book."
Holding up the Origin of Species: "This is."
Holding up the Bible again: "This is a book about 
relationships with God."
Holding up the Origin of Species again: "This isn't."

.: This is a very basic idea that many people, 
unfortunately, do not yet grasp or are unwilling to 
understand. As Dr. Patton informally stated later: 
"The Bible says nothing about how I should repair 
my car. That's not why it exists." However, a student 
in the class did not agree with Dr. Patton and was 
deeply offended by his remarks. In a show of defiance, 
he walked out of the class mid-lecture in front of 
everybody. His name is Christopher Stone.

.: Later that evening, I received an email by Mr. 
Stone. He had sent it to almost everybody in the 
class, with the exception of the professors. (Intro 
to Neuroscience is a team-taught course; there are 
five professors.) I now reproduce his email in full:

Hi,

Most of you have no idea who I am, though some 
of you I know personally. To identify myself 
better, I am the guy who walked out of class 
today. In fact, that is why I am emailing all 
of you.

I realize many of you will not like or even 
agree with what I am about to say so feel free 
to delete this now if you'd like, but if you 
have a few moments I have something to say 
that you might like to hear.

The reason I walked out of class today is 
because I am a Christian. Unashamedly so. 
And after Friday's performance by Dr. Patton 
I had prepared myself to do just that very 
thing if my beliefs were once again attacked. 
Sure enough they were, so I left.

I don't know if anyone else has been deeply 
offended by some of the things Dr. Patton has 
said, but my guess is yes because of the usual 
make-up of Baylor Students. I've been thinking 
about what I should do in response — I can't 
very well let my faith be trampled upon and 
I have no intention of doing so, but as a 
student I'm not given a lot of options.

According to our syllabus we can miss 11 
classes before we fail, and Dr. Patton is 
responsible for 5 more. I plan on attending 
the first few minutes of Wednesday's lecture, 
but beyond that I intend to boycott by being 
absent from his lectures. This may be crazy 
or irrational, but it is the only recourse 
I have.

I'd like to invite any and every one to do 
the same. Any who are interested in joining 
me, I will remain in the hall outside of the 
classroom for the remainder of his lectures. 
If you would like to join me, I'd like to 
hear from you and you may email me at my 
Baylor address. If you have any other ideas, 
I'd love to hear those as well.

Thanks for your time. God bless you and 
please pray for Dr. Patton.

Christopher Stone

.: Amazed and amused by such staunch stupidity, I wrote 
a parody email and sent it to everyone in the class, 
including the professors. At this point, I had not 
yet realized that Christopher Stone did not send his 
email to everybody. I now reproduce my letter in full: 

Hi,

Most of you have no idea who I am, though 
some of you I know personally. To identify 
myself better, I am the guy who walked out 
of class today. In fact, that is why I am 
emailing all of you.

I realize many of you will not like or even 
agree with what I am about to say, but rest 
assured if you delete this email Jesus will 
frown on you.

The reason I walked out of class today is 
because I am a Christian. Zealously so. And 
after Friday's performance by "Dr." Patton 
I had prepared myself to do just that very 
thing if my beliefs were once again attacked 
by logic and reason and scientific claims 
that can be proven. Sure enough they were, 
so I left.

I don't know if anyone else has been deeply 
offended by some of the things "Dr." Patton 
has said, but my guess is yes because of the 
usual make-up of Baylor Students (70% 
Christian, 20% Adamantly Christian, 5% 
Fundamentalist Christians, 4% Fingers-In-
The-Ears-La-La-La-La-I-Can't-Hear-You 
Christians, and Me.) I've been thinking about 
what I should do in response — I can't very 
well let my faith be trampled upon and I have 
no intention of doing so, but as a student 
who accidentally signed up for a science 
course instead of the seminary I'm not given 
a lot of options.

According to the bible, "Thou shalt not suffer 
a Witch to live." (Exodus 22:18) I feel 
strongly that "Dr." Patton's heretical 
teachings in the voodoo field of neuroscience 
constitutes witchcraft. Therefore, next 
Wednesday before lecture, I call on my 
fellow Christians to gather rope and 
kindling so that we may burn "Dr." Patton 
at the stake. It is my firm belief that we 
must set fire to ALL heretics who seek to 
destory our most cherished Christian beliefs. 
This may be crazy or irrational, but it is 
the only recourse I have that might actually 
accomplish something. Sure, I could boycott 
class all semester, but who else aside from 
me would care?

I'd like to invite any and every one to attend 
the burning. If you would like to join me, 
I'd like to hear from you and you may email 
me at my Baylor address. If you have any other 
ideas (I already considered stoning, drowning, 
and drawing & quartering but feel fire to be 
more practical), I'd love to hear those as well.

Thanks for your time. God bless you and please 
pray for "Dr." Patton.

Cody Cobb

P.S. If you don't have any kindling, your 
textbooks should work just fine.

.: Almost immediately I received praise from fellow students. 
Most people understood the joke. 

.: Most people.

.: Several people did not understand it. My email was sent 
after Mr. Stone's so, following the law of stratification, 
it appeared on the top of many people's inbox. Naturally, 
they read that one first. Some read only my email and not 
Mr. Stone's; some read both my email and Mr. Stone's at 
face value and disagreed with both of us; and some read 
both my email and Mr Stone's at face value and agreed 
with both of us. 

.: About this time I noticed my email was sent to certain 
email addresses that did not receive Mr. Stone's original 
email. This led to some confusion. I forwarded Mr. Stone's 
email to everyone I could–including the professors–but the 
damage was already done. At first I was told two students–
presumably freshman girls who've never had an original 
thought in their quaint, conservative lives and who were 
tragically born without irony-detectors–sent a complaint 
to the Baylor DPS. Later, I was told the other professors 
in the class also alerted the DPS. They thought I 
seriously wanted to burn Dr. Patton at the stake. My 
guess is, in a place like Baylor, that kind of thing 
goes on all the time. 

.: The next morning, after my first class, two Baylor 
police officers were waiting for me. They escorted me 
to their office and proceeded to interrogate me. Here 
is part of the conversation that I can remember:

(The two police officers would trade turns in speaking, 
but for all intents and purposes they are the same person.)

We received two complaints from students in your 
neuroscience class about an email you sent to everyone.

-Yes?

You are aware that what you have done is a felony? 
You have committed a terrorist act.

-Have you read the original email?

No, we have not received any original email.

-My email is a parody. Christopher Stone wrote the 
original email and sent it to almost everybody in the 
class. I wrote a line-by-line parody.

Well we got messages from people who thought it was 
real. In this day and age you cannot do things like 
this. We have Columbines and 9/11's all over the 
place, and we can't risk this kind of thing.

-It's a joke. I emailed the professor and told him that.

It doesn't matter if it's a joke. I myself figured 
it out, but that doesn't matter. What matters is 
what's written on the paper, and you said you were 
going to burn your professor.

-At the stake. It's satire. I engaged in hyperbole 
to make a point. You need to read the original email.

We'll get to that. You need to understand that this 
is no laughing matter. Smirk all you want, but 
what you've done isn't a joke.

-In all honesty I did not think anyone would take 
it seriously. But some have, so I think I've 
learned a lesson here.

Let me get this straight, this is a parody, right?

-Yes.

Why didn't you put a note at the bottom telling 
everyone it was a parody?

-In retrospect that would've been the smart thing to do.

The smart thing would have been not to send this 
stupid thing out in the first place. Now let me ask 
you a question: is this an English class?

-No.

So what are you doing writing stories?

-It's not a story.

Yes it is. You said it was a short story parody.

-No I didn't; I said it was a parody.

Well don't you write that in English class?

-No.

.: The whole time I thought to myself, "Are these 
guys eventually going to arrive at some kind of a 
point in the near future? I can't believe I'm 
missing Economics for this." Alas, they never did 
go anywhere with their line of reasoning. When I 
told them that my email was a parody and that they 
needed to read the original email, they should 
have stopped what they were doing and let me show 
them what I was talking about. But they didn't. 
The rest of the interrogation proceeded in the 
same vein. I suppose the two officers were just 
trying to scare me ("You can seriously go to jail 
for what you have written, and that's no joke" x 15), 
but the whole time I was simply astonished by their 
utter lack of logical reasoning. Had Socrates been 
present, he would have weeped. 

.: "It doesn't matter that it was a joke," they 
told me. "What matters is that your joke could be 
read a certain way that indicates a terroristic threat."

.: In my affidavit, I used the introductory paragraph 
to explain and diagram the definitions of Satire, 
Hyperbole, and Irony–they never read those things 
anyway, do they? After I signed my confession, they 
told me that I could not go to class tomorrow. 
Otherwise, I was free to go. 

.: After I was released, I immediately called my 
sister, my brother, my mother, my girlfriend, my dad, 
my grandmother, and my grandfather. Three of those 
people got in touch with my great uncle, who was 
the head coach of all athletics at Baylor. It's 
nice to have connections. 

.: After communicating with all of those people, I 
received an email from Dr. Patton. He called the 
Baylor DPS and told them to let me back into class. 
My short term as a terrorist was finally over. 

.: This morning, I returned to Intro to Neuroscience, 
somewhat sick to my stomach. Dr. Patton explained 
the whole situation to the class without naming 
names, but it was pretty obvious that the guy 
slouching way down in his seat on the front row 
was me. He made a joke to me before class started:

"If you want I can go get my coat tree and we can 
use that as a stake."

.: What a great guy. 

.: And now, with all that said, I have a few 
reflections I'd like to share with you:

~Some people are not college material. They do 
not know how to think critically nor are they 
willing to learn. They are everywhere.

~American entertainment is sorely lacking in 
irony and subtlety. Everything is too loud and 
too obvious. At least, that's my assessment. 
When people cannot discern that I am joking 
when I say I am offended by "logic and reason 
and scientific claims that can be proven," 
I am simply amazed.

~If Jonathan Swift were alive in America today, 
would he be accused of eating babies?

~Black & White thinking is terrible and dehumanizing, 
as exemplified by the police officers who interrogated 
me. When someone with authority tells you, "Well, we 
can't let you do this, otherwise we'll have to let 
everyone do it too," they are basically admitting 
that their argument is crap. They cannot explain why 
what you did in a particular situation is bad, only 
that such actions could conceivably be bad. This is 
not acceptable. 

~I do not feel more secure. 








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