The writer of the article says the Lisp proponents would say to him, "Lisp allows for creation of mini-languages specific to the problem at hand, Lisp blurs the distinction between run time and compile time, Lisp, Lisp, Lisp..." which are parts of what I like about Forth. I have an HP-50g calculator which uses RPL, or Reverse-Polish Lisp, but I never learned it. Someone gave it to me, and I found that it was going to take a huge investment in learning time before I'd be able to use it anywhere near as well as I can the other HPs I have whose power has been multiplied by third-party software add-ons. The manual that came with the 50g is terrible; but I know there's a much better 500-page one available online. RPL allows putting entire programs on the stack which seems just a tad strange to me.
At viewtopic.php?f=9&t=521&p=3271#p3271, our own Samuel Falvo, professional programmer, starts his post with,
He continues with other praise items for both, at viewtopic.php?f=1&t=39&p=264#p264, in the topic "A 65C02-based PC".
Although judging from the Lisp discussion Ed linked to (http://www.defmacro.org/ramblings/lisp.html) I won't be learning much about Lisp in an hour or even a month this reply, I will be watching with interest. It's always nice when another light comes on. As you may know by now, my structure macros are heavily stack-dependent, and I wrote them in a very Forth-like way.