🎨 Artcow Iconoclast / Jonathan Mack Sweet - The Chris-Chan of Arkansas

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Now if a 15 year old girl came up to him and offered sex, you know Sweet would definitely accept.

I can see that now. Some 15 year old talking about One Direction as Sweet turns, brushing the dust off of a well-buttoned hat and a pair of purple trousers, asking "Have I told you about how my father died?".

Shit, now that I think about it, I don't think he could molest anyone who had the ability to walk, because even a 15 year old would just get the hell up and leave the moment they saw what "sex" meant to Sweet. Dead fathers would only be the beginning. We haven't even gotten to the fart sex. Can you picture Sweet's old unshaven self trying to pitch the idea of sexual farting to a kid? The mind boggles.
 
Shit, now that I think about it, I don't think he could molest anyone who had the ability to walk, because even a 15 year old would just get the hell up and leave the moment they saw what "sex" meant to Sweet. Dead fathers would only be the beginning. We haven't even gotten to the fart sex. Can you picture Sweet's old unshaven self trying to pitch the idea of sexual farting to a kid? The mind boggles.

Oh god I was eating when I read this. :(
 
That post you linked to has a lot of info on Sweet. Apparently he'll only truly be happy by getting what he sees as revenge, instead of living well like Satan (the Kiwi Farmer) suggests.
I think it's funny that he complains about having to "pay higher taxes." Sweet you pay no taxes, you just take them.

BTW, I went back to read that page in the thread, and I saw:

It's not going to happen though. Since 1997? These people have moved on, established careers and families, and have mostly, if not completely, forgotten about you. But you remain obsessed with them. So who's winning?

Jeeze it's been almost a year since I wrote that (June 9, 2014). Yet another year lost for Sweet, while his "enemies" have lived more of their lives.
 
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So does Oklahoma, I live there, and I wish it was just made up.
I grew up in Oklahoma as well. :heart-empty:
It was mentioned earlier that there's something else, possibly, Sweet brings it up himself here:

"In the law's eyes I am guilty of ... conspiracy to commit carnal knowledge of a minor (a separate incident that haunts me to this day)."

This kind of reminds me of the dirty crapped briefs incident. Sweet just volunteers information that damns him.
This sounds to me like a reference to the "entrapment" scheme he was subjected to in college (i.e., when he was called for phone sex [or not] by a girl who was underage [or not]). Sweet also talked about underage girls "preying" on naive male college students; maybe that's part of what he meant.
 
This sounds to me like a reference to the "entrapment" scheme he was subjected to in college (i.e., when he was called for phone sex [or not] by a girl who was underage [or not]). Sweet also talked about underage girls "preying" on naive male college students; maybe that's part of what he meant.

Whatever happened, that "in the eyes of the law" phrase makes it sound like the cops were involved. The Department of Judicial Affairs at ASU isn't in the business of enforcing criminal statutes and doesn't have the legal standing of a court. The fact that Mr. Sweet isn't in prison does raise the possibility that the campus police may have been the investigating agency for the carnal knowled offense, along with the other crimes; university police departments have been known to let offenses slide if the student is being expelled. Prosecuting a student for conspiracy to have carnal knowledge of a minor doesn't make for good PR with the local community or the parents of prospective students.

I wonder if university police documents are open records in Arkansas. Some schools try to keep student crimes hushed up -- especially so with sex crimes -- by invoking federal privacy laws. I'd really like to know why campus police officers were visiting Mr. Sweet in Blytheville in 2002, four years after he was expelled.
 
Today's amusing find from roaming -- in my hazmat suit, of course -- the Internet world of Jonathan M. Sweet brings us the Iconoclast's own Amazon review of a book in which he paid to have one of his poems published. You'll never, ever guess what his "famous poem" is about. Never. Ever.

Here's his review:

From a Writer of a Famous Poets poem
[If you say so, Jon.]

I wrote "When-One-And-Twenty (The Ballad of Aggie H.)" in the fall of 1997 for a poetry class at Arkansas State University. I was 21. I had just lost my first job: columnist on the campus paper. It meant a lot to me. In a fit of melancholy, I composed a heartfelt ode
[Well, which is it, a ballad or an ode? They're not the same thing, you non-poetry-knowin' eejit.] to The Herald as if it were a woman, [A very young woman would be my guess.] my allegorical [Clearly doesn't know what an allegory is, either. A newspaper is not an abstract idea. How the hell did he get a degree in English?] lost love (the paper was known in the early days as the Aggie Herald, hence the title). In it I spoke of a betrayal by a jealous, lying rival, with whom Aggie is now with. [sic] I asked her to come back to me; I begged for forgiveness and to be embraced again to her "inky breast". [Period goes inside the quotation mark, Mr. English Major. And "inky breast" is laugh-out-loud ludicrous. Even if it has ripened early in the Southern sun.]

Five years later I submitted it to be published in this anthology. I dedicated W.O.A.T to the copy editor whose filthy, hateful mouth cost me a career in journalism.

Aside from ripping off the title of one of A.E. Housman's most famous poems, Mr. Sweet demonstrates a woeful ignorance of standard punctuation with that hyphen between when and one. I'm gonna go out on a limb here and guess that the title is another homage, maybe even a pastiche. Possibly both.

I wonder how Mr. Sweet's version of Housman's poem reads. Perhaps something like the following.

When I was one-and-twenty
I heard a wise man say
Don't obsess over revenge
And waste your life away.

When I was one-and-twenty
He told me it was best
To live in the real world and
Resist the inky breast.

Now I am nine-and-thirty
More stubborn than a mule
And I know one thing certain
That wise man was a fool.

Warning: Jarring transition ahead!

For those of you who are unfamiliar with how the newspaper business operates in the United States, this might be a good opportunity to make clear that Mr. Sweet was never going to be employed by any newspaper other than The Herald even if he hadn't been fired for plagiarism. Newspapers don't hire recently graduated college students as columnists. Ever. Period. Those jobs go to senior reporters and editors with many years of experience. And at the smaller papers, where recent graduates almost always start their careers, there probably isn't a single person on the staff whose job involves nothing more than writing columns.

Also, Mr. Sweet has none of the skills -- and is utterly incapable of learning the skills -- that are required for entry-level jobs as a reporter, photographer, copy editor or paginator. For starters, reporters and photographers have to be able to drive to assignments and deal with the public in a polite and professional manner. Behavior that causes the public to call the police is right out. Copy editors, paginators and photographers have to possess some very serious computer chops. Copy editors and paginators also have to be able to work in an office under deadline pressure and the close supervision of senior editors who do not generally react well to having their instructions thrown back in their face along with comments about getting "a knife in the throat."

Finally, there's the fact that Mr. Sweet's work is unoriginal, badly written and racist. These talents are not in high demand, as the sales of his books and comics indicate.

 
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Whatever happened, that "in the eyes of the law" phrase makes it sound like the cops were involved. The Department of Judicial Affairs at ASU isn't in the business of enforcing criminal statutes and doesn't have the legal standing of a court.
True, but there's a good chance Sweet doesn't know this. Guy's kind of a dumbass.
 
Didn't see this posted before, it's some of Sweet's writing from a website called Bewildering Stories.

The Kestron Lenses
Part 1 - https://archive.is/7mLOn
Part 2 - https://archive.is/EnF91
Part 3 - https://archive.is/r0dPk
Part 4 - https://archive.is/4EfU0
Part 5 - https://archive.is/2k7WS
Part 6 - https://archive.is/uNIjX

Scarred Deep - https://archive.is/MFrjn

Bio and welcome page - https://archive.is/b4ZvO https://archive.is/Qjz4S

On his website, Sweet describes The Klestron Lenses as a "Serial Novellette", and summarises the plot as follows:

"Newspaperman Xavier Harold Stafford desperately needs glasses for his work. He can afford only a cheap pair, but they work...magically well. Sometimes you get what you pay for; only we have an inkling how dearly Harry is going to pay for what he gets...."

Yes, surprisingly, Jonathan M. Sweet has written a story about a young college student working on the college paper in a Southern college.

This young newspaperman, short sighted and bearded, ends up committing a string of murders. It is surely entirely a coincidence - and in no way any authorial wish-fulfillment - that among the victims are "a small, surly, dark-haired girl of 20 who was compulsively alcoholic and promiscuous" and a lecturer who was "one of the old-guard Gloria Steinem/Betty Friedan-era feminists who saw all men as potential rapists".

Klestron is pretty long (16,000 words) and full of Sweet's turgid eye-dialect, but there are some gems in it.

Not at all a racist said:
The following night, Harry decided to study in the television lounge. Faulkner Hall, his dorm, had one of the nicer TV rooms on campus, with a 52-inch screen and several small couches. When he arrived there about one in the morning, he noticed a half-dozen boisterous Negroes playing poker in the corner near the windows. Harry settled in a couch several feet from the card players, opened a copy of Keats, and tried to ignore the noise at his back.

don't compare Sweet to CWC said:
Suddenly one of the players exploded, “You dang dirty cheater!”

This is a line Sweet gives to the ancient bloodthirsty spirit possessing his Mary Sue's glasses said:
You give me a little blood, I give you a look into the future. You write it, and, badda-boom-badda-bing, instant godhood.

I really said:
Her rabid left-wing politics fast found a niche in the growingly-liberal college environment fostered by eight years of Clinton and Gore and a Democrat Congress, and she was proud of that. She had a particular disdain for conservatives, who she often referred to as “those mindless AM talk radio-spouting neo-Nazis,” and made it a point to reduce to tears any student who tried to apply his right-wing wisdom in order to disprove the principles she clung to so dear. Once she had startled her class by engaging in a red-faced shouting match with some ignorant Limbaugh-spewing junior in the front row who insisted that the Democrat was going the way of the dinosaur and feminists were really just sneering elitists masquerading as saviors while making it their mission in life to confuse women with garbled propaganda masquerading as enlightenment. He later dropped her class two months into the semester and switched to Intro to German. Apropos for a budding Nazi, she later told her friends.
 
Didn't see this posted before, it's some of Sweet's writing from a website called Bewildering Stories.

The Kestron Lenses
Part 1 - https://archive.is/7mLOn
Part 2 - https://archive.is/EnF91
Part 3 - https://archive.is/r0dPk
Part 4 - https://archive.is/4EfU0
Part 5 - https://archive.is/2k7WS
Part 6 - https://archive.is/uNIjX

Scarred Deep - https://archive.is/MFrjn

Bio and welcome page - https://archive.is/b4ZvO https://archive.is/Qjz4S

On his website, Sweet describes The Klestron Lenses as a "Serial Novellette", and summarises the plot as follows:

"Newspaperman Xavier Harold Stafford desperately needs glasses for his work. He can afford only a cheap pair, but they work...magically well. Sometimes you get what you pay for; only we have an inkling how dearly Harry is going to pay for what he gets...."

Yes, surprisingly, Jonathan M. Sweet has written a story about a young college student working on the college paper in a Southern college.

This young newspaperman, short sighted and bearded, ends up committing a string of murders. It is surely entirely a coincidence - and in no way any authorial wish-fulfillment - that among the victims are "a small, surly, dark-haired girl of 20 who was compulsively alcoholic and promiscuous" and a lecturer who was "one of the old-guard Gloria Steinem/Betty Friedan-era feminists who saw all men as potential rapists".

Klestron is pretty long (16,000 words) and full of Sweet's turgid eye-dialect, but there are some gems in it.

The only sin greater than his stories being unoriginal is that they're so insipid and boring.
 
Sweet said:
Faulkner Hall, his dorm, had one of the nicer TV rooms on campus, with a 52-inch screen and several small couches.
I'm guessing that this is based on a situation that happened in reality. Sweet wanted the TV lounge to himself, but others (probably people of a certain race) were there first. Like I said before, Sweet probably made the TV lounge like his personal living room a lot.

I also get the distinct impression that the writing Sweet made has elements like the "sub episodes" of Sonichu.
 
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The only sin greater than his stories being unoriginal is that they're so insipid and boring.

That's the big problem with Sweet's writing; since he only ever writes about his dumb college experience, there is a definite "seen one, seen them all". The manchild is utterly incapable of writing anything that does not follow the tale of himself at college. He can't even half-ass a variation, like taking his events at college and changing the scenario. It'd be at least different for instance if he had a story about a reporter (him) stumbling upon a political scandal involving the Governor of Arkansas (ASU), and his attempts to expose it being silenced and his life at risk (his idiocy getting him kicked out). But he can't do that; he is even worse than Mr. Chandler at abstract thought and creativity, and Mr. Chandler has the papers that show he has issues with those.
 
utterly incapable of writing anything that does not follow the tale of himself at college
So you're saying that Sweet couldn't come up with a fantasy story about a wizard traveling to Mount Doom to retrieve the Orb of Power from the dragon - unless the wizard is Sweet, Mount Doom is "AS(S)U," the Orb of Power is a job as a newspaperman, and the dragon are the "liberal" staff at ASU?
 
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Jeeze it's been almost a year since I wrote that (June 9, 2014). Yet another year lost for Sweet, while his "enemies" have lived more of their lives.

I understand that it is hard for someone in Sweet's position to simply turn their life around and look to the future with optimism, but Sweet just straight up refuses to acknowledge any fault on his part. The man doesn't want to grow up and accept that his behavior has had a great deal to do with the fact that his life has been a failure. Life will never be perfect for anyone, but Sweetbro really needs to learn to look at the bright side of life (which he can humorously enough, but he is under the delusion that he's perfect and that everything will work out for him with no genuine effort on his part).


On a different note, something I've always found hilarious about Sweetbro is how he is under this delusion that girls randomly call guys in their dorm rooms at college. Man, if only it were that easy. :lol: This is one of his demands that he requires to be fulfilled before returning to college (which he will never). Well I got news for ya Sweet, your demand will never be satisfied because there isn't a college in America or the world where girls will randomly call guys in their dorm room unless they're trolling you. How out of touch do you have to be to think that relationships work by having girls randomly call you while you're sitting around in your dorm room being anti-social. Sweet desperately wants to be with a woman, yet he doesn't even have the basic understanding of how a relationship works. Not to mention he's completely afraid of socializing in the normal college manner such as going to parties or drinking at bars. God help him. *sigh*

Sweet is truly interesting. He is severely clueless social-wise, yet he is capable of understanding what is considered socially wrong and also when he isn't winning socially. He will deny his creepy interests (poop fetish, interest in underage girls, etc.) despite how he constantly incriminates himself in his online postings. Also he has stopped arguing with you guys since he realizes that nobody will have his back. I guess Sweetbro isn't as delusional as he portrays himself.
 
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I wonder if Sweet has any idea how the real world works. I mean, he's never had a real job. The Herald position was arranged by someone else to give him an opportunity to better himself. The pawn shop (or whatever it was) was an attempt by his mother to give him something to do. He never mentions real-life friends, or doing anything besides ranting on the internet.

@AJMLurker thanks for giving us insight into Sweet's behavior in his natural habitat, as it were.
 
Now I'm disappointed in how that's not the case.
As evidenced by his AJM posts, Sweet can't really argue a coherent point or support any kind of argument. So arguing with him on Amazon would probably be like using a nuke to contain a termite infestation.

Sweet is a fascinating case study of how dysfunctional a supposedly normal person can be. I'm particularly intrigued by his fixation on his college days as some sort of highlight in his life, as @Dr. Merkwurdichliebe has established that Sweet was universally loathed by his peers and had no friends. I suspect that school (K-12) and college were the only time he was around large numbers of people his own age. He had a captive audience those days, but now no one has to be around him unless they want to be (except his poor mother) and it's obvious that no one in their right mind would choose to associate with Sweet.

I tried to look up court records for Mr. Sweet, to see what prompted the visit from the campus police back in 2002, but no dice. Also, I am still wondering like everyone else what this "conspiracy to commit carnal knowledge of a minor" was.
 
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