On May 14, 2020 7:23:11 PM AKDT, Theo de Raadt <[email protected]> wrote:
>That's incredibly insightful!
>
>You are precisely the true leader OpenBSD needs to compete in the
>harsh corporate environment that gives us no respect!
That might be going a bit far. You talk about *crying* on a public mailing 
list, and that's pretty much how it is in any case if you've got a PayPal or 
eBay account. It's nothing but a phishing scam. They "phish" you for 
information and everything you own. There's a vanity license plate "PHISH" 
parked next door to an auctioneer in Anchorage. People think it's cute because 
chartered and guided sport fishing is offered to tourists. I'm not welcome in 
town anymore, needless to say. It's an auction or a crying sale for everything, 
and some of you folks ask for people to buy computer stuff and hardware for you 
there.

People shamelessly burglarize, steal, rob, and extort in order to acquire all 
this stuff, including firearms, and then they sell it at auction, all 100% 
legal passed an FBI background check fingerprints and everything.

Meanwhile, I have been gradually and progressively shut out of the PayPal // 
eBay market and trespassed off the property of the U.S. Postal Service, Best 
Buy and other places where computer parts and hardware are sold. I can't obtain 
any of this hardware any more than anybody else can, and I usually have to pay 
a lot more for it than others do, to boot, if I'm even allowed to keep any 
computer parts in my possession without getting busted on a felony warrant by 
Nazi cops straight out of City Hall.

It's getting bad. I'm not lying here. I want to know exactly who these cops 
are, who's paying them, exactly how much, and what their political or "family"  
motivations are for suddenly striking with false accusations in court and 
filing false criminal charges from time to time, apparently at random, but year 
after year without letup, in carefully arranged "setups" against certain 
Targeted Individuals and Personae Non Gratae.

I'm not trying to be a terrorist or go off on a shooting rampage or anything 
like that: it's precisely those same gun control politicians who insist with a 
straight face in federal court that computer cryptography is a munition of war 
subject to their gun control export regulations.

>
>
>
>Justina Colmena ~biz <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On May 14, 2020 5:24:38 PM AKDT, Theo de Raadt <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>> >
>> >So you go find a mailing list noone in the industry reads,
>> >and *cry* into it.
>> >
>> >never know, it might change the world.  Or not.
>> >
>> "In the industry" again. Here we go again. I've been banlisted and
>blackballed out of all those "labor unions" since my youth. They had a
>"VICA" club at my high school many years ago, and I was not invited.
>> 
>> >> I'm not trying to be religious here, but Martin Luther and others
>> >have explained that we cannot make it to heaven or achieve success
>in
>> >this life by works of the law.
>> >
>> >nor can you by crying about hardware injustice on a mailing list
>> >read by noone
>> 
>> Certain "working class" people aggressively claim all sorts of
>collective bargaining, work-related and employment rights and then they
>ride roughshod over basic human rights for everyone and everything
>else. It's the Mob. And then the bosses play right into their hands
>with delusions of "intellectual property," 100-year corporate
>copyrights, employee non-compete agreements and non-disclosure
>agreements, business-method patent portfolios, selectively enforced
>trademarks on common dictionary words, and government top secret
>classification for business trade secrets.
>> 
>> Then the "free software" folks hired some of the same lawyers to come
>up with the "GPL," and there's an "established" Linux kernel to boot
>all that GNU software, and the Santa Cruz Operation ("SCO" out of the
>same vice district as Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, and Denver) hit them
>with poisoned code, cartel copyright allegations, and a magic solution,
>"Well, if you didn't release such reliable mission-critical code to the
>public, all would be well for the mil-spec employment market in Silicon
>Valley (San Francisco, California.)
>> 
>> Noone? I don't know. In French they say «personne» unless they're
>lawyers, in which case they say «nulle personne» … they're workers. You
>can't fire them. They never quit. They're always "serving" you in court
>or at law with something or another you didn't order and you don't
>want.
>> 
>> -- 
>> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
>> 

-- 
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.

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