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An Earlier Battle: CompuServe ACIM Forum |
A "tempest in a teapot"
was created when attorneys for FIP wrote CompuServe (CIS) in
September 1994 in response to the "unauthorized message
board and file library" which they said was "operating
on CompuServe under our client's federally registered trademark
and service mark A COURSE IN MIRACLES." The attorneys threatened
to sue CompuServe unless it forced the section of the New Age
Forum entitled "Course in Miracles" to stop using the
name of the book and its abbreviation, "ACIM", in connection
with forum activities. The response of CompuServ was quite abruptly
to terminate the existence of the ACIM Forum, which had been
an active gathering place for an international community of Course
devotees, where lessons were posted daily and an active exchange
of Course-based discourse took place. It was suggested by CIS
that students continue messaging in the "Interfaith Dialogue"
Section of the Religion Forum, and CIS subsequently transferred
some of the messages to that Section. Since students needed some
way of identifying themselves as Course students, they started
to use "ACIM" in the subject header. The CompuServe
System Operators promptly deleted all of these messages in compliance
with the FIP demands. This prompted several forum members to
write to the Foundation for Inner Peace. Joy Steadman, better
known by her screen name "Reja", was one of these members
who wrote a letter to FIP about
the disruption and concern. She received in return a phone call
from Judy Skutch who told Reja she wanted the group to use the
terminology "Miracle Studies". Eventually, with encouragement
from FIP, CompuServe agreed to open a new Section in the
Religion Forum entitled "Miracle Studies", which is
still in operation today. |
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Doug Thompson is developing a rich site in support of the theme "Course in Miracles Free Press." He espouses unshackling the Course from arbitrary censorship and argues vigorously in favor of free religious expression: http://home.golden.net/~dthomp/ACIM/index.html | ||
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Tom Whitmore: Another Point of View
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There is an increasingly vocal component of the Course community that believes something like this (from a letter to a friend):
What has incited this flurry of activity by one who normally is content to allow others to exercise themselves over such issues as "control" is a message that I received a few days ago about the seeming tightening of the already too strict (IMHO) censorship of Course discourse. I'll send that to you separately. You are, of course, referring in your post to the suit involving the folks at Endeavor Academy. I do not know what they are up to specifically. It is not germane to what I see as the real issue. For my part, I am proceeding from the belief that the Course ought to be freely available to everyone, regardless of their ability to pay. Our Course group, which is probably more affluent than many, has a couple of participants who use public library volumes to read along with us because the $25 (or whatever) pricetag on the book is too much for their budget. What if the Foundation, strapped though it may be, would permit someone to publish the material on the internet for free downloading? What is wrong with someone posting the daily lessons from the workbook on a bulletin board, with or without commentary? No one dares attempt such an activity, because the Foundation prohibits it. What is the problem with a person making attractive calligraphy cards with Course quotations and (God forbid!) selling them for a couple of bucks? The Foundation has forbidden it. There are many examples of free distribution of literature by organizations with a mission to propogate a particular message. Every time I turn on CNN, some sports figure wants to give me a book about how to gain a personal relationship with God. The Church of the Latter Day Saints still spends big advertising dollars to distribute free literature. And Bibles are still distributed free, with no watchdog agency to say that Genesis must accompany Mark or John. Such activities would serve to introduce the Course to people who would never encounter it otherwise, and would promote widespread dissemination of the material. What are we afraid of, anyway? After all, "The truth needs no defense." (I hope I don't get in trouble for that quote!). You get the point, I am sure. So, my schtick is not whether or not Endeavor should be supported or suppressed. I really have no opinion on that subject. What I am concerned with is an apparent barrier to the free circulation of the Course and the beneficial ideas that it contains. Shouldn't we be doing something different these days? We certainly have seen enough of unforgiveness and un-Love-ly behavior these past months. Or is it just business as usual? So, Jim, my Mind is open to the facts. Whatever the sorry state of the Foundation's affairs may be and however noble the motives of those in control, there is certainly a solution to be found that serves the preservation of the integrity of the document as well as the widest possible distribution of it. My solution is to admit that the basic document was given to the people, belongs to the people, is in the public domain and ought to be freely available to all. The Foundation can have the revised and edited version and the publication rights to that enhanced text." Tom
You asked why we ought expend
all this energy to find one of the pre-copyright manuscripts?
Because they are out there, and the fact that they are out there
can be demonstrated; and when it is demonstrated it will be clear
to all (lawyers, Courts, judges, copyright holders, copyright
violators and all) that the Course was given to the people and
belongs to the people, and not to the money changers who would
secularize a holy thing and turn it into an article of commerce. |
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