- Joined
- Feb 7, 2015
Has ANYTHING of significance occurred in Sweet's life since being booted from ASU? I know there was the pawn shop fiasco, but aside from that, has he done anything besides post the same rant over and over?
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Sweet lives in Blytheville, AR now, ASU, if that helps you answer any of the questions people have.
Thanks for your perspective!
"People. Pride. Progress."It's a big step down. Jonesboro for all of its flaws is the closest thing to civilization until you hit Memphis.
To give you an idea of what I mean, this is the artsy section of downtown Jonesboro: http://i.imgur.com/ApLZKlQ.jpg
It doesn't look particularly run down at all, and it's not obvious from the picture that you're looking at a place that isn't particularly well off financially.
This is what downtown Blytheville, AR looks like: http://i.imgur.com/Im74j6c.jpg
Totally different story there. It's the sort of place where the only 3+ story buildings will be a hotel.
As far as I can tell, aside from ASU and the shop fiasco, as well as some attempts at publishing the comics and stories he writes, probably not. Sweet apparently wants to be a conservative hero and celebrated comic artist and author.Has ANYTHING of significance occurred in Sweet's life since being booted from ASU?
As poster ASU makes clear, the idea that the university -- which was founded and endured for many decades as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Arkansas -- is involved in a massive liberal conspiracy is ludicrous on its face. The student body and the staff and most of the faculty are rock-ribbed conservatives. The political atmosphere on campus is very much what you'd find at Texas A&M or Auburn -- dominated by conservative, Christian Republicans. The odds are 50-50 that the dean of judicial affairs who sent Mr. Sweet packing is a retired military officer who serves as a GOP precinct chair and a deacon in the Baptist church. That Mr. Sweet sees him as a sinister apparatchik of the progressive movement is further evidence -- as if any were needed -- of how severely he is disconnected from reality.
Interesting interview, @Absinthe. You can tell straight away the interviewer is being extremely sarcastic with Sweets and it just sails right over his head . . . He admits he "cussed out" a photographer who took a picture of him with an overly-bright flash, and describes her to the interviewer as a "dippy cunt" who somehow cost him the privilege of having an editorial cartoon run in the college paper alongside a column he wrote about Ross Perot.
Well, I suspect that Mr. Sweet hasn't got a real understanding of actual political positions and convictions, to him it's apparently all about class, race and status. He probably doesn't understand that poor rural white people like himself aren't automatically conservatives, just as people with wealth and authority aren't always liberals. I think that is a possible explanation to why his liberal strawmen sometimes resemble conservative strawmen.I hadn't read all of your post before I responded, but you're absolutely right that the last place anyone sane would accuse of coming up with a liberal conspiracy is a farming town in Arkansas. It's practically the definition of Good Old Boys club. Of course, Sweet wouldn't have been invited to that club, either.
That weird bio at the end of "The Second Mrs. Pecker" is the only place I've seen where he actually claims to have a BS in psychology. Everywhere else he implies that he has a degree in psychology by saying things like "graduated from ASU, where he studied psychology and English." It is possible that he attended community college for a year before going to ASU; he sometimes talks about his three years at Arkansas State, and he doesn't seem the type to graduate early. But Mississippi County Community College (or at least its successor institution) offers only two freshman-level courses in psychology -- not enough for an associate's degree, much less a BS.
Realistically, though, and I kind of alluded to this before, but do you really think the dialogue could have gone like this?The psych eval he was ordered to get could have uncovered his issues. He shouldn't have been charged for it at all, but he's a victim of our for-profit health care system. I find it increasingly difficult to laugh at him because the system really did fail him, though not in the way he thinks.
Perhaps a "corrective" ass-kicking would have positively adjusted Mr. Sweet's attitude. It might have taken several. On the other hand, it might have just reinforced his delusions of persecution. How did you track down a witness to the flash incident? Also, Sweet has mentioned several times his intention to track down the woman who trolled him with phone sex and get "her side of the story". I sincercely hope his technical ineptitude will prevent him from utilizing the many resources available on the internet to track someone down. Assuming there has been no contact between her and Sweet since she met him that one time, that means 17-18 years have passed. It is doubtful she remembers an event so insignificant, and she's probably married at this point, with children and has no desire to explain her youthful antics to some creeper she met only briefly nearly 20 years ago. I really, really hope he's unable to locate her, and if by some fluke he does, I hope she is very firm and tells him to leave her alone and never contact her again.OK, it's time for some answers from people who were there. I have tracked down a couple who are willing to talk. I have intentionally avoided taking the easy route and contacting those who are on Mr. Sweet's many hit lists. They are probably not unbiased sources; and there is no need to further fuel his clinically insane hatred of those long-suffering individuals. Others were not difficult to find.
What happened in the notorious flash incident?
A female undergraduate photographer from the ASU yearbook showed up in the offices of The Herald one day when Mr. Sweet was present. Her assignment was to take photos of the staff at work. She was shooting inside an office, so she used a flash. The first time the flash went off, Mr. Sweet cursed at her. He was not the subject of the photo. (His description of the event notwithstanding, she did not sneak up on him and discharge a billion gigawatt flash in his face, blinding him for days and inducing the immediate onset of melanoma. No one wanted to photograph Mr. Sweet, with the possible exception of itinerant photographers from National Geographic or The Journal of Abnormal Psychology.)
Ignoring Mr. Sweet's outburst, the yearbook photographer continued to shoot. (Good on her!) Every time the flash went off, Mr. Sweet cursed at her. When this did not cause her to leave after a few shots, Mr. Sweet launched into a long, loud and offensive tirade about how sexually attractive he finds lesbians. The photographer continued to ignore him, and each time the flash was fired he paused in his rant about lesbians, cursed at her, and then resumed his lurid diatribe about the daughters of Lesbos.
Standard operating procedure for a yearbook photographer used to be to shoot at least one roll of film on a major organization like the college paper. It is probably safe to assume that this poor woman was cursed at on at least 24 separate occasions in addition to being the object of his obscene raving about lesbians.
The photographer complained about the loathsome vermin's abusive outbursts. (This probably came as a huge surprise to the the bad boy of college journalism.) Mr. Sweet -- who would have been expelled immediately at many universities -- was merely banned from the paper's office for one or two weeks. (If Mr. Sweet had behaved like this in the office of my college paper, one of the guys -- quite possibly me -- would have walked over and knocked his fat, repulsive ass out of his chair -- for starters. A man who treats a woman like this deserves a good ass-kicking. The people at ASU who endured his odious behavior for years without resorting to violence are destined for sainthood.)
There will be more.
Keep in mind that MCCC may have offered more courses, perhaps enough for an associate's in psychology (do those even exist?), back in the mid-90s, which the online catalog wouldn't reflect as it seems to only go back to 2006.
Realistically, though, and I kind of alluded to this before, but do you really think the dialogue could have gone like this?
Dean: You have to get a psych eval.
Sweet: I would but I can't afford it.
Dean: Well then, you're fucked. We're going to freeze your records and bann you from campus. Sucks to be you. Ha ha ha ha ha!
I think it was more like...
Dean: You have to get a psych eval.
Sweet: NO! I'm not going to pay for that unless I can question my accusers during it!
Dean: That's...not how those things work. You leave me no choice but to freeze your records and bann you from campus.
I can share a few things about ASU Jonesboro in the late 1990s, because I was a student there myself in 1997. I think I missed Sweet by a year or two, either way I didn't know him directly, and I think I was there before him so I wouldn't have heard anything based on his reputation.
The overall area is economically depressed to an intense degree. The areas in the East of Arkansas, especially along the flood plains of the Mississippi river, are some of the most destitute in the US as far as I'm aware. It's so bad they have to bus in medical supplies and vaccinations to kids, as in, literally, a bus shows up in and all the local parents bring their kids to the bus for their shots, because otherwise they won't get them. It's the kind of place where you can go on Google Maps Streetview and see people playing dominoes in the middle of a street, complete with large table and four chairs, because there's no traffic, or even other houses sometimes for miles. It's a hopeless place to be a kid of any race, but, you can imagine that once you add the racial component into the poverty, it's an even nastier place to get your world-view from.
Jonesboro itself, like most Arkansas towns, is a farming town primarily. There are cow fields literally bordering the campus in some places. Soybeans are a big local crop, as is rice. Methamphetamine was and still is a large problem. If you go to the "wrong" part of town the prostitutes and crack dealers would be brazen and out in the open at the local hotels. There is a nicer part, a more downtown part, with a small art and music scene and so on. Liquor sales were illegal in the county up until 10 or so years ago iirc, so, it was illegal to buy booze locally when Sweet was there. There are a lot of gangs in the area, although not so much as you would see in a place like Detroit or LA. They'd claim Crip, Gangster Disciple/Folk (Folk Nation doesn't exist anymore I don't think) or Blood and fight pretty openly but for the most part the squabbles didn't get into gunfights (although this was different in relatively nearby Little Rock, which was the murder capital of the US for a year or two I think, and the much closer Memphis).
In short, life was (and probably still is) cheap out there. You can be born, live, and die, and not travel more than 50 - 100 miles away from home, ever. When I was in high school my health teacher once asked everyone who hadn't left the county to raise their hands, and about half the class (these are 16 - 18 year old kids) raised theirs. So it's not just isolated, it's not just economically fucked up, it's not just redneck, it's like a perfect storm of depressing.
Regardless of exactly where in North-East Arkansas he lived, this is the sort of place John Sweet called home while growing up. There are nicer places out there, but, they are exclusively for the rich, suburbs with McMansions and their own school districts, that sort of thing. Based on his fear of practically everything, he probably never even saw the inside of these neighborhoods, and probably doesn't have any concept for how much better others have it than he does.
The University was a rather typical place, but, in a setting like Jonesboro what the rest of the US would call typical does look somewhat heavenly. All around are pig fields, cow fields, farm equipment, rednecks, drug addicts, and failed lives, even the local malls are boring, dreary places with little to see, and here's this reasonably attractive campus with relatively educated people and a fairly nice environment. It had both a buffet style cafeteria (with terrible food that was "free" as in included in the overall price if you paid to live in the dorms) and a second, smaller restaurant style place serving (probably Soy) burgers and fries and so on for a few bucks. There were even a few quarter-taking arcade machines (Street Fighter I or II iirc) and so on. To John Sweet, it probably was Shangri-La.
Another thing I'll confirm is that Sweet would have stuck out like a sore thumb. You notice in the yearbook pictures that all the rest of the kids look, for lack or a better word, "normal", and that's no fluke. Growing up in the south you either conform or you are in for a rough time. There would have been several dozen kids in his high school that somewhat resembled Sweet, including female versions. More or less alone, raised in some remote fuckhole, probably a face full of acne or eczema just to add insult to injury, with shit parents, shit neighbors, no future. Most of those kids didn't bother to go to college, because no one made them, or as Sweet would put it "No one told them to". They'd take a job working fast food or security out of high school to escape their shitty home life, marry some heavyset person who churned out 2 - 3 kids, and that's it. That's their life story. In that light, it's somewhat remarkable that Sweet made it to ASU at all. I might can explain that, though, because of how I got to ASU myself. At that time, you'd take an ACT and a maybe an ASVAB, a PSAT and/or SAT as routine. If you did even marginally well on the ACT, you didn't have to take the others and you'd automatically get a full paid scholarship to a public State University of your choice. All you had to do is show up and not be completely incompetent and you were good. To give some reference for how easy it was, I showed up deeply stoned and with no math ability and I still got a scholarship on the first try. Sweet is repugnant as a personality, but he's knowledgeable enough that I wouldn't be surprised to hear he got into college in a similar way.
I can't speak for how he was treated, but I can say how we treated people who acted like Sweet; we hazed the shit out of them. Flat out. Don't get me wrong, it wasn't the sort of place where you'd get bullied just for showing up and being weird, far from it. There weren't many "freaks" or people into "alternative" music or any of that so there were tight knit cliques of rejects and stoners and so on, and you had to work really hard not to be accepted because most of us came from poverty and were in no position to judge. Being an atheist was a big deal. Being gay was a big deal. I can't imagine anyone being trans out there because they would have been hazed relentlessly and from all directions, the local adults (although not so much the professors) as well as the kids.
The stuff about pennies in his dorm door ring true. If you got on anyones nerves in the dorms they'd be sure to let you know. People would do things like coat your doorknob in.. substances, whatever substances they were I don't know, so you'd get weird crap on your hand and it would slip off when you'd try to open it, or they'd slide anon messages under your door (we didn't have the internet in dorms back then, and computers were luxuries only the rich kids had) as a warning when you were asleep. Hell, one kid was known to brag about being a woman-beater, and some kids took the plastic covers off all the lights in his dorm hall and piled them up on his door at an angle so when he'd open it they'd fall on him. They'd do it repeatedly, too, and when he'd complain about it no one would help him. I want to repeat that, for emphasis; if you were so weird you got bullied, and you were a dude and especially some creepy dude, no one had any sympathy for you. Not even the Resident Assistants. It was that kind of place. Someone like Sweet would have been the equivalent to walking around with a "Kick Me" sign on his back, and found no shortage of people willing to spare a kick.
So you've got an atmosphere of somewhat dog-eat-dog kids, not in the competitive sense, but in the "if you're too weird we're going to haze you until you leave" sense. This is probably why the people at the school paper tried to be nice to him. They likely were trying to be the counter-balance to the hazing Sweet was taking, because they'd have realized instantly that the pennies weren't "to shower him with wealth", and maybe they thought he knew better too, but was trying to face the bullying without losing his dignity (ha). Things like the "bad boy of conservative college journalism" (double ha) or whatever he said they called him were probably some really nice older Christian ladies trying their best to support and help steer this obviously wayward guy back onto the path of semi-respectablity before he became so ostracized that he became pants-on-head crazy.
Being a staunch and outspoken conservative would have been enough to get Sweet bullied, not because of the views being unpopular (far from it), but because of who he was. A suave looking guy in a suit, or a lumbering jock from the football team, saying the same things Sweet said, even making the same off-color jokes, would have been fine socially. There are huge portions of Arkansas population that are quietly (or otherwise) racist. But Sweet would have gravitated to the weirdos, the loners, and apparently the journalists and writers. These were absolutely cliques there that were open to outcasts like Sweet, but he would have alienated them completely the first time he popped his mouth open and a "black people" joke came out. That shit does not fly down there unless you're with your racist buddies behind closed doors, and I'm 100% certain Sweet was an open target in his dorm (to the point of honestly flirting with violence, hell, I knew a high school kid who was shot dead for teasing a kid for being black) because everyone would have been talking shit about him. He would have been the local freak show on the floor he lived on, and fucking with him would have been a bonding experience for everyone doing it. I think I read in the AFD thread here where someone wrote something like "You made everyone hate you so much they united and bonded from their shared hatred of you". I think that is a perfect explanation for what happened to John Sweet.
To sum it up, Sweet could have cut his mop of hair, shaved, put on some decent clothes, and been sadly almost identical to a lot of the rest of ASU students. He probably wouldn't have had to change anything else, because it was a low-effort atmosphere where how you looked and carried yourself said a lot more about you than the things you did. He could have imitated the dress style of virtually any male he came into contact with (jeans, button up shirt tucked in, optional cowboy hat) and found his niche quite easily, probably even some girlfriends. Instead he decided to dress up like some kind of wayward hippie straight out of the 60s, alienating any conservatives who would otherwise have come at least somewhat to his aid, and then further alienating any liberals with his 1950s political views, sounding like someones cranky-ass grandpa.
I speculate that the plagiarism accusation is both true, and was more or less totally inconsequential, the sort of thing that would have been brushed under the rug for most other students. With Sweet, I think they saw the opportunity to be rid of someone who was using their paper to spread a hateful and completely unwelcome message, and took it.
Apologies for the long ass post, I think that's everything I had to say about it, hopefully I didn't sperg out too much about my own experiences, but, maybe this will add some color to the background haze of his past.
Did Sweet ever say why he gets a tugboat? Or has the reason changed through the retellings of the story.
So it's not for his obvious mental problems or is he lying about that?He first revealed, on another forum under a different name, that he gets it for his laryngitis, but now claims that he gets it because his mothers' shop went out of business (which I'm pretty sure doesn't get youalthough it could be a half-truth in that it was used to get the additional SSI money).
Yeah, that's the place. It was nearby in an unincorporated area. But yeah, you got it.This would explain his complex about "Ashleigh" supposedly spurning him because she was "rich," even though by most American standards she was middle-class at most.
Is the ease of getting in the same for the UA system or just the ASU one?
Also, was Jonesboro the place where those two kids pulled the fire alarm at their middle school and then shot the exiting students, in the '90s?
I don't know for sure. I don't even know if he knows for sure. But, he has complained on multiple occasions through the years that he's barely able to talk due to his laryngitis.So it's not for his obvious mental problems or is he lying about that?
That would be enough to preclude work, but I think laryngitis is a temporary condition.I don't know for sure. I don't even know if he knows for sure. But, he has complained on multiple occasions through the years that he's barely able to talk due to his laryngitis.
Of course, we only have Sweet's word that the eval would have cost $500. The $500 may have been for actual counseling, but regardless, Sweet doesn't think there's anything wrong with him, so even if everything had been free, he might have fought it on "principle".