Pitt's heyday was before I came to the Cave (I reg'ed in very late 2009), and I didn't hear of him on the discussion sites I frequented in the mid-2000s. So I didn't experience (if that's the right word, I'm not even half-caffeinated yet) the snarky and snide ill will he belched and hiccoughed into his little corner of the world. Nor did I experience the humor of his breathless predictions falling flat and DUmmies' repeated disappointment and the slow realization by at least some DU-folk that WRP and "Truthout" were a less reliable information source than
Bat Boy creator "Weekly World News".
I don't know whether in publishing his falsehoods and political

-fantasies WRP was consciously evil, alcohol-fueled delusional, or played by "insiders" feeding him silliness they knew he wanted to believe true. Men like Saul of Tarsus and John Newton are reminders to me, though, that even men doing evil things can be redeemed. Plus or minus monsters like Stalin or Saddam or etc. I can't bring myself to celebrate when someone I believe did evil things dies. To me it means they have slid beyond redemption. I know I may be out of balance in this perspective and realize it, so I'm not really virtue-signalling, and I'm not trying to guilt-trip any who feel differently.
ETA:
