--- In [email protected], "curtisdeltablues" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> The whole thing seemed very odd to me.  Other than people saying stuff
> about me that wasn't true, I was never harmed by publicly criticizing
> the movement.  Of course the movement in Africa might share some of
> the intense qualities with businesses in Africa.  I don't know how you
> get into $600,000 deep with the movement or lose a property either.  
>  People have left messages to me that "Nature will silence you", but I
> never took that as more than wishful thinking.
> 
> But the project of writing about your experiences in the movement to
> put it into perspective is really useful for helping get your mind
> around it all.  I did a lot of writing about my experiences for my own
> benefit and I'm glad I did.  Attachment to the movement sounds like
> negative spin on a person's interest in a part of their life that was
> important.  Being critical isn't just an attack, it is sharing your
> perspective.  I will never stop being fascinated with the the movement
> and my participation in it.  At least till "Nature silences me"!    
> 
> 

Writing about your experiences and publishing them is one thing. Wasting your 
personal 
advertising in the bio space is another thing altogether.

I mean, its like the former CIA agent who split to, where, Cuba, saying "I hage 
the CIA and 
the USA cause they done me wrong, so there! Nyah."

He'd sell a LOT more books if he just gave a matter-of-fact bio and let his 
book do the 
nyahing...

> --- In [email protected], "sparaig" <sparaig@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], "Rick Archer" <rick@> wrote:
> > >
> > > http://www.writers.net/writers/19421
> > >
> > 
> > How odd...
> > 
> > Of course, one could point out that he is STILL attached to the TMO.
> How many other 
> > biographies have you ever read where the author wastes his entire
> space to attack an 
> > organization he left years ago?
> >
>


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