Sunday, April 13, 2014




This embarrassing display you are presenting reminds me of one of my favorite poems by Robert Frost. It applies to me perfectly. It is called "The Secret Sits".

The Secret Sits

We dance round in a ring and suppose,
But the Secret sits in the middle and knows.

What you know about my writing those letters is so minimal it doesn't warrant a serious response. What I said happened is what happened. You are frantically trying to create a fanciful scenario in hopes of saving faces after this public humiliation you've gone through, but it doesn't change the fact that I wrote a bunch of silly letters, mailed them a WIDE range of places, and made a total ass out of you. End of story.



Ralph Cinque says:

It's easy to say that, isn't it, Andersen? But, it doesn't support the structure. And the structure is that you could never make your students aware of an online campaign to expose you as SV Anderson BECAUSE YOU ARE SV ANDERSON! It would only have taken one student- just one- to think to him or herself:

"I wonder if this History teacher really is SV Anderson. It wouldn't surprise me a bit. I never liked the SOB anyway, so I think I'll go online and chat it up. I don't even have to use my name. Like him, I can use an alias so he won't know it's me. I'll call myself UC Anderson. Maybe I'll even contact this Cinque fellow and tell him what I know. This ought to be fun."

Anderson, I know you're in the History department not the Logic department, but Logic says that you couldn't take that chance. And you're not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but you're no Joe Backes either. So, there is no way you would have done that. You couldn't turn your social media obsessed students into mouthpieces for SV Anderson truth.

So, you're dancing around alrgiht- dancing around the truth. But, as usual, I am the one to hold your nose to the grindstone. And I'll start by getting this up, well, everywhere.

Here's what you said, Anderson, and it's a lie:

"I told my students how gullible conspiracy believers are so to prove my point I wrote all of those stupid letters about my daughter in Riverside, being followed by "agents" in Lousiana, of overhearing Andersen meeting with agents in his classroom at school and all that bullcrap, knowing full well you would believe everything I wrote (which you did.) When you posted that silly map of Dealey Plaza on your OIP Facebook page I thought my class would erupt with laughter. Those students learned one important lesson about the conspiracy mindset--you can tell them ANYTHING and if it deals with conspiracy--they WILL believe it."

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