Well, Dijkstra was wrong about BASIC programmers being mutilated by prior exposure to BASIC.
The proof is in the number of bedroom BASIC programmers who went on to become famous developers and engineers in their own right.
In fact, people like Dijkstra didn't like BASIC because it democratized programming; took it away from the computer scientists and the intellectual elites and put it into the hands of ordinary people.
That's one reason why many professional programmers today still look down their noses at BASIC. Professionals like to exclude outsiders from their clubs.
Sometimes this is for good reasons because standards need to be maintained and in some cases you need certification to be safe to practice.
But often there is a darker side; a means by which they can stop change and progress, maintain the status quo, protect their vested interests and keep their wages and fees high. Its the same with any group of professionals; exclusive knowledge is power, money and influence.
But BASIC is the 'punk rock of programming' (BBC Radio 4). It challenges the status quo, gets up the noses of the cosy programming establishment and lets ordinary people in.
Dijkstra may be dead, GO TO may be dying but BASIC still lives on!!