The Devil's Disciple
I LOVE THIS STINKIN' PLACE!
I am not interested in the flame wars between the various authors. I find it deadly
boring. I suspect that Mr. Parr can keep on doing what he is doing
forever if need be. And his critics seem determined as well. -- Rev.
J.D. Walker
Dear Rev. Walker,
You are correct. My critics are determined to
keep going. And thank heaven for that. I love rthis
forum, I love its contributors, and I even love poor old
NMnot Taylor Kingston and his pal Greg Kennedy..
"Love?" We mean an intense appreciation of those
who enoy prolonged and meaningless electronic struggles.
NMnot Kingston may be an enormous mincing stinker
(e.m.s.) but he is OUR enormous mincing stinker. If some
big bad guys from the USCF were ever to come over to our
trough and try to shut up e.m.s. or even that slinking cur,
Louie Blair (the nutty professor) I would mount the
barricades heroically, wave a flag like Chesterton's
Napoleon of Notting Hill, and fight off the invaders.
What was that you said?
No, really, I would!
I EVEN ENJOY KENNEDY'S RANTS
Do you consider putting Larry Evans' rancid anti-FIDE, anti-
everything opinions in order to be a real accomplishment in chess? --
help bot (aka Greg Kennedy)
From THIS CRAZY WORLD OF CHESS by GM Larry Evans (page 113)
When chess is infested with power brokers, anything
is possible, any rule can be broken. Excellence becomes a
secondary consideration. As Nikolai Krogius told a young
Kasparov, "We already have a world champion. We don't need
another one."
Long after FIDE has vanished, the games of great players
will still be remembered and enjoyed. One Fischer is worth a
thousand Campos. One Kasparov can excite the masses and
make them wonder why a dull game like chess holds so many
of us in its thrall. Ordinary people might discover what a great
game chess really is and why a few fools fight so passionately
to keep it clean.
J.D. Walker wrote:
Chess One wrote:
To have any conversation at all, there needs to be a subject, clearly
identified, to which we can agree, disagree, or keep our council. It needs
to be a chess topic. This thread, so it seems to me, is the result of never
identifiying a clear topic, nor staying the course of addressing that
topic - and the logical result of that is someone must be called a liar.
ON TOPIC?
Some time ago if ceased being a conversation and became a competition - but
unless you are a closer reader than I, no light is shed on Keres/Botvinnik
from the original materials presented here.
Therefore we have a spat on who said what and when, instead of what
substantive material was addressed in these communications.
I have at least one bias here, perhaps two of them. I have seen both public
and private writers of a principle to the affair, and secondly, if I were
Evans or his editor, I too would have eliminated Taylor Kingston's response,
since it added nothing substantive about Keres/Botvinnik than his first
did - but instead inveigled on the fairness of making further public
presentations in CL.
If that is your idea of the topical material in this thread, then we could
continue to talk in this thread about that topic. Otherwise, not!
Phil Innes
I appreciate the change in tone and I am willing to meet you half way.
This thread has been all over the place. I am interested in the
Keres-Botvinnik controversy. I did note the message earlier by
'social_justice' with interest. He claims that KGB people had
information on the controversy, and that he interviewed them. The
message in not documented. I imagine almost every KGB agent of that era
is dead by now. But just the same it suggests an avenue of research
that could be revealing. Is it possible to access old KGB files and
look for related information?
I am not interested in the flame wars between the various authors. I
find it deadly boring. I suspect that Mr. Parr can keep on doing what
he is doing forever if need be. And his critics seem determined as
well. Apparently we agree that that is an unappealing future... :^)
Given the history of the thread, and the ongoing flame war, I do not
hold out a lot of hope for a civil discussion of the topic you prefer.
Just the same I offer this much in support of the idea.
--
Cheers,
Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C.
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