My middle name is John, does that make be John Barton as well?
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Yes you are John Barton also. I have it on good authority that John Barton controls half of the accounts on AZB.
My middle name is John, does that make be John Barton as well?
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how is it, this guy hasn't been banned? does someone have to report him, is that how it works? They ban knowledgeable guys like JB and this guy gets too go from thread to thread and blatantly stalk and troll selective members on here? I remember this guy relentlessly followed Jb and harassed him in all types of threads for a long time.
Why do children die? It's because God allows it to be that way.
i believe you are talking about Neil, correct? :grin: he started the stalking/trolling thing with Neil after he trolled the shit out of JBcases and then was banned. Neil leaves and we are stuck with the imbecile, i wonder who lost here![]()
Let's continue connecting the dots. Both Roadie and JB live in China.
What Neil did or didn't do has no bearing here. He alone was responsible for his actions.
When did John hit the road to China - 2006, wasn't it?
Certainly it was Neil's choice to leave. But when a person is being harassed and hounded then it's not correct to say that he acted without some influence.
You can't legislate for what people think or perceive. The tail cannot wag the dog - ever. Neil thought he was the dog. He thought he was beyond scrutiny.
I agree with the rest of your post.
I have no idea what the issue was that pushed Neil over since I am often gone for months at a time. And you're right you can't legislate thought. But you can certainly contol action by setting the climate. Other forums manage to do this and don't have the drama seen on this forum. They also don't have as much childish fun.
I think you're both right. Sure, proper moderation of the forum would prevent certain factions from "controlling" the air, or general setting of the environment.
But at the same time, it's up to each individual to legislate THEMSELVES. It's also up to each person to make his/her experience at a forum a stepping stone -- learn by their mistakes, and modify their behavior accordingly. By going through the herculean effort of removing all of his content, Neil has shown that he is incapable of adapting -- and WORSE -- that his many years at AZB have now been wasted time in his life.
It's one thing if you quit contributing because you don't like the management of a forum, but leave content out there so that even the innocent drive-by readers can still learn. That time he spent on knowledge sharing was worth his time, and he would have left a lasting, positive mark on the pool world. The old adage, "when you're handed a lemon, make lemonade" applies.
But by deleting his content, he removed his mark -- and his positive influence -- on the pool world. That is the worst sin of all -- a complete waste of one's chapter in one's life. Unfortunately, the pool world is filled with pettiness like this -- we'll never learn.
-Sean
Likewise, JB thought he was the top dog beyond all scrutiny.You can't legislate for what people think or perceive. The tail cannot wag the dog - ever. Neil thought he was the dog. He thought he was beyond scrutiny.
I don't agree. I think pulling all of your content is the ultimate protest. It shows that you are willing to sacrifice something you worked on for the greater principle. I would suggest to everyone that they pull their content from every forum which places so little value on good contributers. This is one reason some forums have a time limit on how long you can edit your posts. I don't consider Neil's action petty at all. I consider it to be an unfortunate and brave decision rooted firmly in the dysfunctional climate. Sometimes a major sacrifice is required to make a point.
But also unfortunately the greater reality is that it doesn't matter. If any of us and all of our content disappears from AZB then it makes not a bit of difference in the current atmosphere.
Likewise, JB thought he was the top dog beyond all scrutiny.
Research. Click on any user and you can read all their postings. But you know this already.
Right, and from a viewer's perspective (i.e. someone who would've stumbled across Neil's content if he'd left it), the greater principle is what, exactly? That audit trail -- and the principle that applied to it -- is now lost. The whole point -- kit and kaboodle -- went into oblivion, and the only people that remember it are the people that were there. (Yes, I know that some of Neil's content is "quoted" by posters replying to it, so yes, some of it is still out there for newbies to trip across. But the lion's share of it is gone.) I don't think it was courageous at all. In fact, I think it was cowardly. (And I say this from the standpoint of someone that does knowledge transfer for a living.)
But even if we disagree on that courage/cowardice aspect, you're right that if the whole site disappeared, it's a moot issue.
-Sean