Hola Sergio,

Sean again. I appreciate the efforts you have made for more than a decade to 
preserve the civility of this list, and I have a great deal of respect for the 
opinions you express here. But I must respectfully disagree with you regarding 
the criticism of videos presented to the list. 

Often, videos are presented as "educational" tools. In that case, they 
certainly should be critiqued in the same way we all judge any other 
pedagogical discourse.

At best, the videos are cited as examples supporting a particular position. In 
that case, they should certainly be critically examined to determine if they 
actually apply to the case at hand. We've seen that done remarkably well by 
both sides in the "candombera, canyenguera" thread.

A third possibility is that the videos are simply offered as entertainment, in 
which case someone ought to review their entertainment value before the rest of 
us waste bandwidth downloading them.

I do agree that that would be rude to merely criticize someone's dancing in 
response to a video clip. The problem is that valuable criticism of a video 
will undoubtedly also be perceived as a personal attack on the author's 
dancing. That is the unavoidable risk of posting a video to the list. But it is 
no greater risk than posting any other form of expression to the list.

In my opinion, Huck made a fair criticism of the video which in fact resulted 
in an interesting and informative follow up discussion. If it progresses, that 
discussion might even change some people's opinions about the matter. But the 
intelligent responses were somewhat delayed; the initial response was an ad 
homenin attack on Huck's dancing. I made a humorous response to the ad homenin 
attack. (I know, some people are offended by my humor, and a lot of people 
don't get it at all. I post to entertain a small but loyal fan club.) (Hi 
guys!) Of course, I (and my innocent partner Trini) were also subjected to ad 
homenin attacks, but hey, we laugh in the face of adversity. We can take it 
because girls like to dance with me almost as much as boys like to dance with 
her. And in the end, the only relevant judges of a social dancer are the 
partners that accept or decline to dance with him or her. 

Sean


PATangoS - Pittsburgh Argentine Tango Society  Our Mission: To make Argentine 
Tango Pittsburgh’s most popular social dance!  http://patangos.home.comcast.net/



      

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