I'll simply direct you to read the following, which is an accurate summary of events. Which I've reprised from my comments over at The Times, and edited to be somewhat more in keeping with the freewheeling atmosphere of Rationalia.Chris Wilkins wrote:Hi Guys,
Introducing myself. I am Chris Wilkins, and a journalist, that DanDare mentioned in a previous post. I have to say up front I was never a member of the RDF, but DanDare, a good friend of mine, was and informed me of this situation.
Since then I have written about it (http://www.casualravings.com) and done some of my own investigations, including contacting the mainstream media who, as a consequence, may be thinking about taking a look at this situation. When they publish something I will post it back here (assuming they do).
Thus this post. I also wish to state I am not taking sides in this.
I can say that the "other side's" perspective, whether you disagree with it or not, is that they had to do this for technical reasons and then you all behaved badly, especially due to the language used. They also are of the opinion (now don't get mad at me. I am only the messenger) that this is a small matter which will blow over, that you have overstated your importance to RDF, and that basically if you all leave RDF will not suffer one jot as in time others will replace you. Again, please don't get mad at me.
So to get some concrete facts about this is from all of you; how many of there are you that feel this strongly about what has happened? Does anyone have any numbers? And, this is a difficult one to measure, how will the RDF be affected by your departure? Will it continue on its merry way without you, or will it indeed be greatly diminshed?
I have other questions for you but I daresay this will do for now.
Cheers,
Chris.

[1] The mod team was informed, months ago, that changes were to be made to the forum. However, details were not forthcoming. The mod team were not even shown basic screenshots of the protoptype new software in action, and all requests to provide the information we needed, in order to implement the changes being decided upon in as seamless a manner as possible, were simply ignored. I suspect a lot of foot soldiers in the IT world will be familiar with this scenario. Dilbert, anyone?
[2] When the public announcement was made to the forum membership, it was presented in such a manner as to suggest that the mod team assented in full to the changes that were being made, which was a blatant falsehood.
[3] When one of the moderators posted a message providing evidence to the membership that this was a blatant falsehood, said moderator was axed from the site. Not merely banned, but his entire user account destroyed, along with thousands of posts containing the very expositions of hard science that RD claims to be in favour of seeing more of.
[4] When forum members launched a thread critical of this move, the thread was summarily deleted, and several other users were expunged from the site, along with over 30,000 posts. Again, this included valuable material covering scientific topics, made accessible to the layman, of the very sort RD claims to be in favour of seeing posted. Which means that Josh Timonen, in deleting this material, was acting in direct contravention of the stated mission of his boss by destroying that material.
[5] Josh then placed the entire forum in read-only mode, wilfully destroyed information allowing members to maintain contact via other means, and in a move of truly juvenile petulance, redirected links intended to point to software backup portals to a Rick Astley video on YouTube (yes, he thought that rickrolling those wishing to back up their material constituted proper professional conduct).
[6] Members decanted in numbers to another forum, namely here at Rationalia, and vented their anger on that other forum..
[7] Josh lifted quote mined snippets from here, presented these to RD as if they constituted the substantive views of the exiled membership, whilst taking steps to ensure that his master never saw the substantive allegations against him with respect to the above-cited mendacious conduct, and took steps to hide his duplicity further, by destroying moderator log entries that would have revealed his wilful vandalism of the forum and its contents.
[8] RD, placing a faintly ridiculous amount of trust in this individual, accepted these quote mines as fact, without checking his sources independently, and posted the tirade that has since become newsworthy.
In short, RD bestowed plenary powers upon Josh Timonen, who wilfully and maliciously abused them to entrench his own position of power. By doing so, Timonen has inflicted enormous damage upon his master's reputation, and indeed upon his master's stated mission, as cited above. Indeed, Dawkins' enemies amongst the professional liars for creationism could not have wished for a better result, had Timonen been planted within RD's organisation by them as a mole. Twenty years' hard work by Dawkins, alerting people to the dangers of doctrine centred world views, and attempting to educate people about valid science in the face of duplicitous ideological attack, has in effect been flushed down the toilet by his protegé.
I think this encapsulates neatly the situation you are planning to report upon.
Well, given the comments I've seen being disseminated with respect to the parlous design of the RDF front page, which quite a few people competent in the world of web design regard as a nightmare, I suspect that the site's traffic will indeed plummet, because if there is one truism applicable to the web browsing public, it is this: websites that place obstacles in the way of their obtaining the content they seek, or handle their interactive input in a manner reminiscent of a 1970s Eastern European bureaucracy, will be ditched in favour or websites that provide content in a rapdi, fuss-free manner, and facilitate easy interaction. This is a lesson that is slowly dawning upon some corporations, though not all: some corporate websites are practically textbook examples of how not to load a website with needless bloat.Chris Wilkins wrote:So who thinks that the RDF will be greatly depleted? Will it?
I've contributed to the front page, and can tell you that it's a pain in the arse to write for. Using HTML tags isn't a problem for anyone who is internet savvy, but when a far superior system in the form of board tags exists, as implemented on here and thousands of other forums/bulletin boards, which facilitates a much more polished and fluent style of contribution, why not use it?
This suggestion is, not to put too fine a point on it, laughable.Chris Wilkins wrote:Will this have a bad impact on the discussions that Richard Dawkins has formed over the last few years? That of a scientific and athiest [sic] stand against religion and creationism?
The idea that people will abandon acceptance of valid, evidence-based science, or no longer pay heed to the dangers inherent in allowing doctrine centred world views to exert privileged and malign influence over human affairs, simply because they have developed a distaste for one particular messenger, is frankly absurd. Indeed, one of the valuable lessons that people have taken away from the Richard Dawkins Forums is that important decisions should be based upon evidence as opposed to uncritical acceptance of blind assertions, a message that I, in my time as moderator, endeavoured to bring home with particular force in the Debunking Creationism section of RDF. Indeed, I think you will find I have something of a reputation as a consequence of this activity.

Taking creationism on its own as a subject for the moment, the simple fact is that creationism is a doctrine based upon a lie at its heart, a lie that was made explicit by arch-charlatan Henry Morris, the founder of modern, corporate American creationism. I'll quote from one of his books to reinforce the point:
Basically, what this individual is saying, with the above words, is that when reality and doctrine differ, reality is wrong and doctrine is right. This is the central principle governing modern, corporate American creationism (and I emphasise here that American creationism IS a corporate entity, with well-funded and politically well-connected propaganda arms), and this is the principle that the professional liars for doctrine wish to instil as an operating principle within gullible, ill-educated followers, denied access to the truth about the valid science being misrepresented by this same corporate entity and its mouthpieces. These people are selling the idea that mythology counts for more than reality, and building lucrative careers on the back thereof. In short, the organs of corporate creationism are attacking science and all the gifts of the Enlightenment, with the deliberate aim of dragging Western Civilisation kicking and screaming back to the pre-scientific era, and putting in place an anachronistic, theocratic system of the sort that Europe rejected upon learning the bitter lessons of the Inquisition. If you think this is hyperbole on my part, then I can direct you to appropriate evidence in quantity. As John Derbyshire said in his article on the infamous Expelled propaganda screed:Henry Morris wrote:...the main reason for insisting on the universal Flood as a fact of history and as the primary vehicle for geological interpretation is that God's Word plainly teaches it! No geologic difficulties, real or imagined, can be allowed to take precedence over the clear statements and necessary inferences of Scripture.
(Taken from Biblical Cosmology & Modern Science, pp 32-33 (1970), emphasis added in above)
John Derbyshire wrote:When talking about the creationists to people who don’t follow these controversies closely, I have found that the hardest thing to get across is the shifty, low-cunning aspect of the whole modern creationist enterprise. Individual creationists can be very nice people, though they get nicer the further away they are from the full-time core enterprise of modern creationism at the Discovery Institute. The enterprise as a whole, however, really doesn’t smell good. You notice this when you’re around it a lot.
Not to anyone who pays attention to issues instead of personalitites. Which is one of the lessons I've been trying to instil for the past 2½ years over at RDF. Namely, it doesn't matter who delivers the message, if the message being delivered is a true one. Usually, it is creationists who try to suggest otherwise, courtesy of acts of well poisoning and ad hominem attack, such as the scurrilous defamation unleashed upon Willard Libby, Nobel Laureate in chemistry, by the duplicitous Mike Riddle over at Arseholes in Genesis. Indeed, one of the contributions I posted over at RDF was the wholesale dismantling of the entire AiG web page on the subject, turning the critical laser upon the canards and wilful misrepresentations of valid science contained therein. Now since RD has explicitly stated in the past that he doesn't debate creationists (and I understand his argument about denying them the oxygen of publicity, which is what Philip Johnson openly admitted when he uttered words to the effect that he's happy with a draw in staged debates, so long as he plants seeds of doubt in people's minds), that task has been left to the poor bloody infantry, as it were, and I have some experience of this that you will be able to draw upon during the short life remaining of the current Richard Dawkins Forums. You might find it educational.Chris Wilkins wrote:That is, if this dimishes his reputation and his support base, surely it has to impact the message that "evolution is real", that the flintstones is not a documentary?
As a consequence of having engaged in that battle, I don't for one moment think I'll somehow 'unlearn' the knowledge I've acquired as a result of having thus participated, and I don't think anyone else who earned their own particular set of battle honours in that campaign will do so either. The concept is, I emphasise, frankly absurd.
Well, the Atheist Convention will certainly provide a place where people unhappy with events will be able to make their unhappiness visible and public, to an extent that will probably come as a shock to RD. I gather he's been used to cosy settings surrounded by people who don't rock his boat, and he's likely to be given a crash course in navigating stormy seas over there, not least because Australians are well known for being forthright and to the point when they are passionate about an issue. Australians are renowned for possessing an extremely low bullshit tolerance level, and since one of the moderators whose account was trashed is an Australian, I think we can look forward to what could be called, in the sense of the apocryphal Chinese curse, "interesting times".Chris Wilkins wrote:I have even heard this might have a negative impact on the Atheist Convention in Oz? If so, what?
I bloody well hope not. If these events do have such an impact, it will simply confirm how critical is the need to address bad education in the relevant scientific areas.Chris Wilkins wrote:Er, that's not quite what I meant. I mean will it lesson [sic] the strength of his arguments to the general public.
Quite a few of the people who came to the Richard Dawkins Forums as an escape from the relentless, non-stop Bible bashing that takes place in certain American states, will tell you that the social pressure to conform is not only strong, but in some of those places, reinforced with firearms. It takes a special brand of courage to swim against that sort of tide, and the Richard Dawkins Forums provided a means by which people in such a situation could do so in private, free from repercussions. That has now been taken away from them, which is another reason why Josh Timonen's Mongol-esque act of intellectual vandalism is all the more culpable, and in the eyes of many, criminally so.Chris Wilkins wrote:Put it this way. You grew up in backwoods Alabama. You really don't know what to believe. All those around you say creationism is the bee knees, and the right thing to believe in. But then you here about a book called, "The God Delusion" and this travelling English professor who has a different view. And you begin to wonder.
And this is precisely why Timonen's actions are, quite frankly, inexcusable. Because he has, as I stated above courtesy of my edited Times comment, flushed 20 years' hard work by his master down the toilet. As I stated in that comment, Timonen could not have inflicted more damage upon Dawkins' aspirations for a more secular, more scientifically literate future, if he had been planted within Dawkins' organisation as a mole by creationists.Chris Wilkins wrote:Then you hear about how this same man, or his organisation, treated their supporters badly.
Well, as I stated above, anyone who acquires at least some elementary thought capacity should be able to distinguish between valid ideas, tested to destruction in the hardest arena of them all, namely reality, and found via such testing to be valid, and the foibles of a few fallible human beings who cock up the dissemination thereof.Chris Wilkins wrote:This is going to sow a seed of doubt in such a person's head. And it this I was referring to.
Actually, Timonen's actions have been likened by some to the sacking of the Library of Alexandria. A comparison I am minded to agree with, knowing as I do the value of some of the material he is planning upon summarily discarding to suit his petty administrative convenience.Chris Wilkins wrote:Is saying this is akin to "book burning" too strong? Obviously that conjurs up all sorts of nasty images.
The forum as it currently stands is dead. Its replacement, always assuming that this is something other than vapourware dreamed up by the part time cameraman and his recycled yuppie sidekick, is likely to be about as much use in comparison to the old forum as the proverbial fishnet condom, especially if it is based in any way upon the Byzantine excesses of the current front page.Chris Wilkins wrote:So you are in effect saying that, yes, this this will blow over, but in time this may be the beggining of the end of the forum? And thus have a great impact on the RD Foundation?
Do I understand you correctly?
Well, Dawkins himself didn't perform the vandalism, Josh Timonen did that, along with his junior partner in crime Andrew Chalkley. The simple fact is that neither of these individuals bothered to expend any effort learning about the forum content, and consequently, assigned no value to its contents. Indeed, among the material that will vanish once the forum is killed off, is two million words written by myself, in which I presented large quantities of valid science, referencing around 400 peer reviewed scientific papers, presented around 50 of them in detail, and laboured long and hard to make that science accessible to persons lacking specialist knowledge. Fortunately, I had the foresight to back up my own writings, and some choice examples of the writings of others, offline: my own works were compiled offline and then posted, with backups extant on my own computer, and when I encountered sterling posts by other users, I took the liberty of preserving them for posterity. How fortunate that I did, it is not?Chris Wilkins wrote:Well, okay. They aren't actually burning dead trees. But they are erasing electronic information. Not a good thing if this body on information was more than a "forum" but a body of scientific papers, peer reviewed docs, reports, intellectual debates, etc. etc. If this is the case, for a scientist to be responsible for such an act, is truly amazing.
Dawkins, by posting the truly bizarre letter he did, has in effect underwritten the act of intellectual vandalism you will shortly witness. And yes, for a scientist to do this is, to use your works, "truly amazing". It's rather like watching the Pope gaze fondly on as one of his cardinals sets fire to a Gutenberg Bible.
And doubtless would make instant recourse to the old aphorism, that I originally attributed mistakenly to Arthur Koestler before realising that the real author was Heinrich Heine, that "Where they have burned books, they will end in burning human beings". Words that I note with interest, whilst checking the actual, reference, were written in 1821. And which proved to be ominously prophetic. However, I supect that Dawkins will no longer be able to make recourse to this aphorism, without being reminded of the manner in which he assented to the casual discarding of the contributions of hundreds of people, people who, moreover, were the loyal foot soldiers in his infantry.Chris Wilkins wrote:How would Richard feel if people started burning his books, text that he crafted into literary works? I daresay he would be apopleptic with rage.
If Richard Dawkins were to question the value of the material you have read, this should ring disturbing alarm bells in your head.Chris Wilkins wrote:Wow. When I start checking out some of the information, it seems like a huge body of work. Of course it's value can be questioned and, I daresay, the RDF would question it.
Still doesn't justify junking it.
Ah, someone after my own heart in some respects. You should adopt one of my maxims. Namely:Chris Wilkins wrote:As for who I work for, I am a freelancer. My own blog is at http://www.casualravings.com. And the fact I am a freelancer means I can took at things like this. If I worked for a big newspaper perhaps I wouldn't have been given permission to check it out because there isn't enough naked skin involved.
Cynical, moi? Whatever gave you that idea?

Well I can cite one immediate example off the top of my head.Chris Wilkins wrote:The more I delve into this thing, the more I am convinced the crux of the issue is; what exactly was deleted?
When it is reported, "a forum was deleted" most people think, "whoopie do. So what?" because they assume, I suspect, that it is a bunch of inane comments about weather, football, what they did the on weekend, etc.
But if it can be clearly shown that the forum was in fact a body of information that was of worth, that in fact it contained scientific and intellectual discourse and investigation, then that changes everything.
In the Evolution & Natural Selection section (which I also moderated, though with a far lighter touch than Debunking Creationism, because it was mostly populated by grown ups, and the ideological stormtroopers for doctrine were quickly relocated), one of the users whose entire posting history has been destroyed, namely CJ, pointed me to some interesting work, arising from a paper in Nature, on speciation mechanisms in Heliconius butterflies (he knew that as an entomologist, I would find this particularly interesting). His post contained a detailed exposition of the relevant scientific paper, and I followed shortly with an exposition of my own, from a related scientific paper that his searches led me to find. CJ's post was the opening post in that thread, but now it, and the exposition of that scientific paper, is now gone. The thread in question is here, and now unduly credits me with being the first poster in that thread, though if you read the end of my post, it becomes clear that there was a prior post by CJ, and that I was on the lookout for a freely downloadable copy of the paper he expounded upon. That post I refer to is now lost, along with about 13,000 others written by CJ, of which a good 6,000 or so were in a similar vein.
Oh, and the moderator whose posting history was axed, Mazille, organised a science writing competition on the forums, and I was a participant in the February edition of this. We are hoping to resurrect it here temporarily, before finding a new, more permanent home for it, and I have to say, that some of the entries were of sterling quality, considering that they were written by enthusiastic amateurs.
Of course, an even bigger cause for lament is the fact that tenured professional scientists contributed to this board. Off the top of my head, I can think of ck1 (evolutionary biologist), susu.exp (palaeontologist), Milford Wolpoff (palaeoanthropolgist), Thomas D. Schneider (molecular biologist) and Wesley R. Elsberry (evolutionary biologist). Others are almost certainly extant in the membership list, which itself will also disappear in due course.
Ask hackenslash for a list of relevant threads. He's been keeping a catalogue of them.Chris Wilkins wrote:To date I have not heard a concise detailed list of what was in there. Of course, this is why I am looking into this. And I know the Times would be far more interested in this whole thing if it can be shown that such a body of material was scrubbed clean.
If you're quick, there's a lot of material that gives you an insight into the standard of material being presented. Where else would you find enthusiastic amateurs not only discussing the latest braneworld cosmology of Neil Turok and Paul Steinhardt, but going to the trouble of downloading the original papers to read for themselves? Which I commented upon at length in several of my posts. Sadly, my tensor analysis is somewhat rusty, but I understand enough about the subject to realise that Steinhardt & Turok's papers are of momentuous importance in fundamental physics, and indeed, that they have massive import for the fatuous Kalam Cosmological Argument erected by purveyors of nebulous apologetic nonsense such as William Lane Craig.Chris Wilkins wrote:Which comes back to evidence and examples of stuff that went the way of the dodo.
Oh, and with respect to that other important part of Dawkins' mission, namely putting supernaturalist blind assertion in its place, I and at least two dozen others had a hand in that too. I've preserved offline relevant posts. I've just taken a look at the relevant folder, and in total, including the science posts, the debunking of creationist lies, and the examination of religious blind assertions, there are 1,780 files in my Dawkins Forum folder, occupying 30 megabytes of space. My total output on the Dawkins Forums probably runs to 200 megabytes. Others have contributions of a similar quantity to their name, and include their own expositions of valid science that they have alighted upon, I think you will agree, that tossing this lot into the bin, just because Dawkins has some fatuous idea that the forum is little better than a teenage chatroom, constitutes intellectual blindness of an extraordinary degree on his part.