Date: Wed, 1 May 2013 10:44:28 -0400
From: chathammatters
Subject: Responding to Karen Crowell
Karen Crowell, I am completely confused by your post.
You seem to be confusing me with someone who writes under the name of Whatzup. I don’t know who Whatzup is or what they do for a living.
You call me (or Whatzup) a businesswoman, why? Nothing I’ve ever written would indicate that. In my case it is simply false, so why did you invent it?
You talk about my clients? What clients are you talking about? Why are you making this stuff up? In my post, I wrote about UNC and how it doesn’t lend itself to publishing politically oriented articles under your own name if you believe in individual liberty, free enterprise, or are fiscally conservative, and not jeopardize your career.
You say I have no respect for your privacy? When have I ever, in any way, shape or form, impinged upon your privacy? I said nothing at all about you in my post on anonymity. Why are you inventing this stuff?
You write “Honesty, Integrity, Truth, Respect” yet you display none of those qualities in your post.
With all the respect you deserve,
ChathamMatters
Here is Karen’s Post:
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2013 22:33:07 -0400
From: Karen Crowell <>
Subject: my privacy and your reputation
Chathammatters or whatzup – or whatever you like to call yourself- I agree that you have every reason to be concerned about what your clients might think. You are a businesswoman and your reputation is
important.
When dealing with information that is confidential, your clients need to know you will respect their privacy and use good judgment when handling their business transactions.
What you say about me and others in public probably does little to inspire anyone’s confidence in you. You certainly have no respect for my privacy. Choosing to say the things you do anonymously just
demonstrates how reluctant you are to be honest about the way you feel. Yet another quality that clients value highly in the people they choose to do business with.
Honesty. Integrity. Truth. Respect. These are the qualities that matter the most in the way we interact with each other – both in public and in private. We shouldn’t have to depend on the Constitution or
any other laws to enforce what we know in our hearts is right. We live in what most people think of as a civilized society. The least we can do is agree to be civil to one another, even if we can’t agree
on anything else.
Karen Crowell