R: "Why do you keep making more and more threads when you haven't even revisited your old threads."
A while ago, Steve Wells mentioned that it might be nice if someone responded to the objections in the SAB, so that the SAB could be more balanced. I'm currently trying to make the sort of responses he had in mind -- offering my own thoughts on the issues the SAB raises, as well as providing some exposure to some of the ideas of other apologists. It's a big project.
So one reason I don't doggedly pursue every thread is that I simply don't have time. I'm doing great, imho, just to produce what I'm producing at the present rate.
Also, I may discontinue a thread if I think the initial question has been answered -- whether or not this is immediately clear to all other posters in the thread. If I've eviscerated an objection, but someone still insists that I haven't, but his reasons are manifestly flawed and/or he is using manifestly erroneous assumptions, then I may sigh, and move on, hoping that at some point in the future the individual will recollect the thread and realize how misinformed he must've sounded.
I'm also prone to leave a thread if it seems to have lost its focus and become tangential. (This thread is a good example: I started by discussing Zerubbabel, and look what I'm writing about now!) If I feel that the initial question has been resolved, I may discontinue, even if at some time during the discussion someone asks some peripherally-related question that they consider important.
Also, if a poster is unnecessarily rude -- for instance, if he casually calls my material "BS" -- or if a poster seems Beyond-Bill-the-Cat Unhinged, I may move on.
And, if I just feel satisfied with a thread, I may stop, without bothering to get in the last word, confident that both positions have been sufficiently stated and happy to leave the thread "as is" for future readers.
And, I may drop a thread if the initial subject has been replaced by something that has already been covered in an earlier discussion, or something which I plan to cover in a future discussion.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock

