Speaking personally, I was happy to see that the post had been removed.
The email strikes me as improper and strangely composed.
I didn't see the thread that was "disappeared," but on the whole, I think the environment on this forum is quite open and tolerant, and that one can receive a fair hearing on most liturgical/music subjects.
I didn't see anything wrong with the NPM e-mail. It presented facts, not gossip, and I thought the comments to it were reasonable.
That's fine, CDub, but the gorilla in my house is the GIRM. What NPM does, aggregate or individuals, pertaining to music, management or morals, has no bearing or effect upon me and mine whatsoever.
2477 Respect for the reputation of persons forbids every attitude and word likely to cause them unjust injury.278 He becomes guilty:
- of detraction who, without objectively valid reason, discloses another's faults and failings to persons who did not know them;
Sadly, that information has been printed in the Washington Post. As the Catholic Encyclopedia says,And I didn't need to know that. That is clearly detraction.
Both exceptions apply here, since it has been recognized by the state and published widely.If a person's misdoing is public in the sense that sentence has been passed by the competent legal tribunal or that it is already notorious, for instance, in a city, then in the first case it may licitly be referred to in any place; in the second, within the limits of the town, or even elsewhere, unless in either instance the offender in the lapse of time should have entirely reformed or his delinquency been quite forgotten.
There is no possible way that every person on that listserv had a need to know some of the information in that email. My first thought, on the very first bit of information (why a certain major player stepped down) was, "I didn't know that."
And I didn't need to know that. That is clearly detraction.
While the email confirms to many here what they always suspected about NPM, this very thread will confirm to many what they always suspected about CMAA.
But I suppose that some among us feel very "high brow," virtuous, and respectable since we limit our discussions to non-hot-button, innocuous, "happy" topics.
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