DoJ and Cypherpunks...

2001-03-09 Thread A. Melon


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Wow.  I thought this list was dead and gone, yet here we have an
Assistant US Attorney apologist copying the list to explain the
Subpoena of one of our own.

How interesting.

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Re: Bell Grand Jury

2001-01-26 Thread A. Melon

mmotyka said:

 I wonder what's the budget to date for chasing down one apparently not
 so dangerous guy? They may be creating, at great expense ( is there
 another way for a government to create? ), what it is they want to find.
 If they push him over the edge, in 5 years or so they can have a real
 manhunt with bullets and everything. What's the saying? 'The race is not
 always to the swift nor the battle to the strong, but that's the way to
 bet.' Good for The Department ultimately.


Well, what would you expect, really? Jeff Gordon and all the others
of his ilk are just a bunch of low-life, degenerate morons or they would
not be working at the jobs they do. There isn't anything of the slightest
redeeming value in *anything* they do -- their role in life is to create
as many victims as possible, destroy as many lives as possible, make as 
many decent people as miserable as possible, while they suck away at the
public tit, and generally burn up as many resources as possible.
I was really disappointed that those 7 guys from Texas got caught
so easily -- it really would have been nice if they could have wasted
a politician or two or three, or at the very least greased a few more
cops. 




Re: Unsubscribe broken while you spam this address

2001-01-24 Thread A. Melon

 Which one of our 8 lists could you not followthe instructions?
 
 Thanks-
 
 Gagler

Why don't we subscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] to the cypherpunks list? It is 
absurd that they haven't removed [EMAIL PROTECTED] from their jokes 
list, after being asked repeatedly.




Re: petro the bumpkin

2001-01-09 Thread A. Melon

Blank Frank wrote:

At 03:05 AM 1/9/01 -0500, petro wrote:
 The main difference being that the Church Goers *think* that
what they are doing is legal, while the pot smokers (for the most
part) know that what they are doing is either illegal, or legally
questionable.

Depends which church you subscribe to.  Rastafarians, for instance.
Christians in china.  Mormonism last century.

Pot is a sacrement for Rasta's, Hindu's, etc, and was for Hindu's for
instance long before the goddamned christen church ever existed.


 No, smoking pot *shouldn't* be illegal, but it is. If you get
caught buying, selling, or smoking, it's you're own damn fault.

Being Juden in Germany shouldn't have been illegal, but if they
got saponified, its their own damn fault, eh?

 I am not aware of any law against joining or attending a church.

You don't seem very aware, period...

   Rather amazing that the goddamned christians think the 1st only
means freedom of religion for them. It would be a truly good thing
if some of their goddamned churches got burned down to celebrate
Ashcroft's nomination. And more, with people in them, if he gets
approved. 




No Subject

2001-01-04 Thread A. Melon

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Re: Jim Bell

2000-11-27 Thread A. Melon

Newby puzzles:

 Right, I agree.

But what I'd like to consider is a recipe for "plain ordinary"
folk to conspire anonymously to commit murder.

Not just any murder: murder for some of the people who (some
people on this list have said), are needing killin'.

If a bunch of crypto anarchists or whoever decide to knock off
Bill Gates or Al Gore (who really didn't invent the Internet
well enough...), you can bet someone will come looking pretty hard!

Again, I see this as a serious problem in applied cryptography.


Did you even bother to read AP? RTFM, dude!




GA-CAT-CA

2000-09-09 Thread A. Melon

DNA evidence has proven so useful in police work that, the US Department
of Justice is developing a bank of DNA culled from ordinary house cats,
reports the SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER.

No, there isnt a feline delinquency problem spreading across the US. It
turns out that criminals who own cats frequently have cat hair on their
clothes, just like law-abiding cat owners. Some of that cat hair winds
up at crime scenes, and can provide important clues to solving a crime
if it can be traced to an individual cat, and from there to its owner.
The DOJ is asking cat owners to voluntarily send in a sample of Fluffys
genetic material (although why the criminally inclined would do so is a
mystery).

Cat-based crime fighting has already borne fruit: A man in Canada was
convicted of murdering his ex-wife, based partially on the fact that
hair from his cat, Snowball, was found at the murder scene.  Snowball
was questioned and released.





Re: Whipped Europeans

2000-09-02 Thread A. Melon


 People have grafted hops vines onto cannabis roots for years, that
ain't no net legend. But now that the knowledge of the high DMT content
in many common plants, such as reed canary grass (.58%-1% wet), which grow
widely all over NA and Euro and much of the rest of the world, is being 
just as widely disemminated, along with the very simple extraction 
techniques (run it through a Wheat Grass Juicer, slow dry the liquid, smoke)
the possibility of controlling strong psychedelics is nil. 
Reed Canary grass, BTW, has proven almost impossible to eradicate, where-
ever it has a foothold.